Lemay v. Best and Brightest Scholarship Committee, 90-6777 (1992)
This text of Lemay v. Best and Brightest Scholarship Committee, 90-6777 (1992) (Lemay v. Best and Brightest Scholarship Committee, 90-6777 (1992)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The facts are as follows: The plaintiff, Nicole Lemay (Lemay) was a senior at Warwick Veterans High School, Warwick, Rhode Island in the year 1989-1990. Lemay applied for the Best and Brightest Scholarship in the 1989-90 school year. R.I.G.L. 1956 (1988 Reenactment) § 16-37 et. seq. established the Best and Brightest Scholarship Act and a scholarship fund for the Best and Brightest of the states high school graduates who planned a career in teaching. Lemay, among other eligible applicants, did not receive a scholarship. Lemay appealed the decision to the Committee. A hearing was held before the Commissioner of Education. The Commissioner of Education issued subpoenas requesting the high school records of Lemay and other scholarship candidates and recipients. Counsel to the Committee objected to the production of school records.
ENFORCEABILITY OF THE SUBPOENA
Rhode Island General Laws §
16-39-8 explicitly grants the petitioner the power to enforce subpoenas brought by any party in interest. R.I.G.L. §16-39-8 establishes the court's power to enforce subpoena as follows:If not complied with, subpoena issued under this section shall be enforceable in a contempt action brought in superior court of Providence County by . . . any party in interest.
Pursuant to this grant of authority, the Court will enforce the subpoenas issued to Warwick Veterans High School and the Best and Brightest Scholarship Committee. Warwick Veterans High School must produce the permanent records of Nicole Lemay and Jennifer Maguire. The Best and Brightest Scholarship Committee must produce any and all records of the candidates and recipient of the scholarship.
If either party served with a subpoena found the subpoena unreasonable or oppressive, the proper procedure would be for counsel to promptly file a motion to quash, vacate or move for a protective order.
Rhode Island General Laws §
To be considered for scholarship, all applicants may (a) be a graduating senior at a public, parochial, or private high school in Rhode Island (b) be accepted for admission at an accredited college or university in the United States or Canada (c) Achieve one or more of the following distinctions: (1) Be in the top 10% of the applicant's graduating class as of the end of the second quarter of the senior year (2) Have a score in the ninetieth percentile or above in either mathematics or verbal section of the S.A.T., or have a combined S.A.T. score in the eighty-fifth percentile or above.
Lemay argues that she met all the required criteria. Because the dispute arises out of the scholarship selection process and the high school records, the Commissioner of Elementary and Secondary Education must review Lemay's appeal pursuant to R.I.G.L. §
The Committee and the Warwick Veterans High School must produce the school records because all candidates and recipients by virtue of the application process have waived any rights to confidentiality in the matters contained in the application. The recipients and candidates presumably waived confidentiality of the school records by applying for the scholarship and allowing the Committee to review the records during the selection process.
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Lemay v. Best and Brightest Scholarship Committee, 90-6777 (1992), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lemay-v-best-and-brightest-scholarship-committee-90-6777-1992-risuperct-1992.