Leech v. Mississippi College

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Mississippi
DecidedJanuary 17, 2023
Docket3:21-cv-00647
StatusUnknown

This text of Leech v. Mississippi College (Leech v. Mississippi College) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Leech v. Mississippi College, (S.D. Miss. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF MISSISSIPPI NORTHERN DIVISION

VICTORIA LOWERY LEECH PLAINTIFF

V. CIVIL ACTION NO. 3:21-CV-647-KHJ-FKB

MISSISSIPPI COLLEGE DEFENDANT

ORDER

Before the Court is Defendant Mississippi College’s [30] Motion for Partial Dismissal. The Court grants the motion in part and denies it in part for the following reasons. I. Background In 2005, Defendant Mississippi College (“MC”) hired Plaintiff Victoria Leech “to build a new and improved Advocacy Program” for its law school. First Am. Compl. [29] ¶ 6. After achieving this goal, MC awarded Leech a “five-year presumptively renewable contract” in 2010 that granted her “the ABA’s coveted Standard 405(c) status.” ¶ 18. Standard 405(c) status is like tenure for non- doctrinal law school faculty, providing “protections of academic freedom” and job security. ¶ 19. Leech alleges that “once 405(c) status is incorporated into an employment contract, the employment contract cannot be terminated except for good cause or for the termination or material modification of the entire program.” ¶ 22. Over the next decade, Leech received “at least two renewals” of her five- year contract. ¶ 23. Despite her success, in 2014 Leech contends she “began to experience discrimination” after MC appointed Jonathan Will, a white male, as Associate Dean of the law school. ¶¶ 26, 28. Leech alleges Will “engag[ed] in discriminatory and

retaliatory behavior against [her]” for the rest of her time at the law school. ¶ 28. This alleged behavior included Will publicly reprimanding Leech during faculty meetings, publicly “maligning” her Advocacy Program, “micromanag[ing] each of [Leech’s] decisions relating to her curriculum,” removing her from leadership roles at the law school, and “shouting and making derogatory comments about [Leech] inside his office.” ¶¶ 29–30, 33, 36, 43. More broadly, Leech alleges Will

generally treated male faculty members with respect but “[Leech] and other female employees received harassment and discrimination instead.” ¶¶ 29, 34, 44– 46. After Will removed Leech from a committee assignment, Leech reported Will’s conduct to Patricia Bennett, the law school’s Dean. ¶ 38. Although Leech’s committee assignment was reinstated, MC did not take any action against Will. Instead, Leech contends Will “continued his discrimination” against her and

“caused [her] to be removed” from her position as a legal writing and appellate advocacy instructor, replacing her with “inexperienced, younger, and cheaper professors.” ¶¶ 39–41. Leech alleges she and other faculty members reported Will’s behavior to MC on many other occasions, but MC did not take any action. ¶¶ 47–51. In February 2020, the American Bar Association (“ABA”) visited the law school for its required seven-year assessment. ¶ 52. The ABA questioned Leech and other faculty members about their experience with 405(c) contracts. ¶ 53.

Some faculty members expressed concerns about the contracts, as well as discriminatory conduct and other employment issues. ¶ 55. After the ABA reported its concerns to the administration, Bennett “expressed her frustration with [Leech] and other professors . . . who would dare to ‘air the school’s dirty laundry.’” ¶ 57. In May 2020, Leech “grew concerned when she did not receive her annual

Letter of Contract from the school.” ¶ 60. Leech contacted Dean Bennett, who assured Leech several times that her contract would be issued soon. ¶¶ 61–62. But in June, the law school administration called a meeting of tenure and tenure- track faculty to discuss 405(c) faculty. ¶ 63. Leech and other non-tenure faculty “were not informed of the meeting and were not invited to attend.” ¶ 64. At the meeting, Leech alleges Dean Bennett “wrongfully and falsely” told the tenured faculty that the ABA “had expressed concerns about the 405(c) employment

contracts that would require an end to such contracts or a limitation of their use.” ¶ 67. Dean Bennett allegedly misled the tenured faculty to believe that “unless some or all of the 405(c) faculty members were terminated,” she would have to terminate the tenured faculty’s contracts or reduce their pay. ¶ 71–72. Based on these representations, Dean Bennett recommended that the faculty vote to terminate Leech and one other 405(c) faculty member, both of whom are white. ¶ 73. At a second meeting of tenured faculty, eight professors voted to terminate Leech’s position and eight professors voted to keep it.1 ¶ 81. Faced with a tie, Dean Bennett referred the matter to MC’s main campus for final

determination. ¶ 82. Leech continued to work over the summer without knowing whether MC planned to renew her 405(c) contract. ¶ 90. Finally, on August 4, Dean Bennett contacted Leech and tried “to persuade [her] to forgo her position as a [405(c)] faculty member and accept a staff position at the school.” ¶¶ 91–92. Leech refused. Later that month Leech received a “one-year non-405(c) contract,”

stating that this would be her last contract as Director of Advocacy for the law school. ¶¶ 99–100. Leech did not sign the contract. ¶ 104. On August 25, 2020, the ABA released its official report about MC’s law school. ¶ 106. The ABA explained it received multiple reports of discrimination from law school’s faculty; the law school took no concrete efforts to create a diverse faculty; and several faculty members who qualified for 405(c) status had not received it.

In September 2020, Dean Bennett called a meeting to discuss the ABA’s findings. ¶ 107. Dean Bennett again “scolded the faculty for raising concerns regarding discrimination,” claiming that such accusations “were jeopardizing the law school’s accreditation.” ¶¶ 111–12. She also announced the administration’s

1 The actual decision made at this meeting was whether Leech’s advocacy program “had been materially modified or terminated.” [29] ¶ 80. If the faculty found that it had, then Leech could be terminated. plan to grant 405(c) status to a black faculty member. ¶ 118. Leech alleges they did this so the law school could “bring itself into compliance with the ABA’s 405(c) concerns” and increase faculty diversity. ¶ 120. The law school then offered

405(c) status to another black legal writing instructor in Spring 2020. ¶ 122. Leech alleges MC’s decision to cut her Advocacy Program and to not renew her 405(c) status was a “plot” to “kill three birds with one stone.” MC could (1) increase faculty diversity; (2) punish Leech for not lying to ABA investigators; and (3) punish Leech for reporting Will’s discriminatory conduct. ¶¶ 84, 89. After the September meeting, Leech filed a formal complaint with Dean

Bennett about Will’s discriminatory conduct and the non-renewal of her 405(c) status. ¶ 125. Neither Dean Bennett nor MC responded. ¶ 126. And, although Leech’s new contract reflected she would be employed by the law school for the rest of the school year, her name “no longer appeared on the 2021 Spring Semester schedule.” ¶ 130. Leech told Dean Bennett that “she believed she had been constructively terminated due to the law school terminating her classes for the Spring 2021 semester.” ¶ 133. Dean Bennett did not deny that Leech had been

“ousted from the classroom,” but she insisted that Leech would remain as a faculty advisor to the Moot Court Board. Dissatisfied with this, Leech notified Dean Bennett that “she had been constructively terminated” and resigned from her position on November 17, 2020. Def.’s Mot. Dismiss [30-1] at 8. Leech filed a Charge of Discrimination with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (“EEOC”) on November 23, 2020. She received her Right to Sue letter on July 12, 2021. Def.’s Mot. Dismiss [30-2]. She then sued MC, alleging twelve counts: 1. Breach of Contract/Wrongful Termination;

2.

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