Leyva v. The University Of Idaho

CourtDistrict Court, D. Idaho
DecidedAugust 21, 2025
Docket1:24-cv-00263
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Leyva v. The University Of Idaho, (D. Idaho 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF IDAHO

ROSA MARIA LEYVA, Case No. 1:24-cv-00263-DCN Plaintiff, SUCCESSIVE REVIEW ORDER v.

THE UNIVERSITY OF IDAHO,

Defendant.

I. INTRODUCTION On September 10, 2024, the Court issued an Order dismissing this case without prejudice (hereinafter “Initial Review Order”). Dkt. 4. In the Initial Review Order, the Court granted Plaintiff Rosa Maria Leyva’s Application for leave to proceed in forma pauperis. Id. at 6. However, after screening Leyva’s Complaint pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1915(e)(2), the Court deemed it insufficient to state a claim. Id. at 7–21. The Court granted Leyva leave to file an amended complaint within thirty days of the Court’s Order. Id. at 21. After requesting and receiving a brief extension (Dkts. 5, 6), Leyva timely filed her Amended Complaint on November 1, 2024. Dkt. 7. The Court has conducted a successive review of Leyva’s Amended Complaint and finds she has satisfied the requirements of 28 U.S.C. § 1915(e)(2) with respect to her: (1) Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972, 20 U.S.C. § 1681 et seq. (“Title IX”) claim involving Professor Jason Dykstra’s alleged sexual harassment and discrimination; (2) Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. 2000d et seq. (“Title VI”) claim regarding the University of Idaho College of Law’s (the “Law School”) racial discrimination after the Women’s Law Caucus (“WLC”) election; and (3) Idaho Human Rights Act, Idaho Code § 67-5901 et seq. (“IHRA”) claim with respect to Dykstra’s alleged sexual harassment and

discrimination and the Law School’s purported racial discrimination after the WLC election.1 II. BACKGROUND Leyva is an Idaho resident who recently graduated from the Law School. During her final year at the Law School, Leyva served as the first Latina president of the WLC. She also participated in the Law School’s Housing Clinic, a class wherein law students work

with local organizations and individuals looking for legal aid related to housing. In her Amended Complaint, Leyva alleges the Law School discriminated and retaliated against her on the basis of her sex, race, national origin, and color, in violation Title IX, Title VI, and the IHRA. See Dkt. 7. Leyva’s claims arise out of the Law School’s actions after a WLC election she administered as the WLC’s president, and her treatment

by a male professor during her participation in the Housing Clinic. A. WLC Election At the end of each school year, the WLC holds an election to choose club officers for the following year. Under the WLC Constitution, the club’s president plays a significant role in election administration. Leyva’s Amended Complaint explains she administered the

1 As further explained below, Leyva’s IHRA retaliation theories—with respect to both the Housing Clinic and the WLC election—are insufficient to state a claim and are accordingly dismissed. In addition, the portions of Leyva’s Title IX claim involving the WLC election, and her Title VI claim regarding the Housing Clinic, are dismissed. As outlined in the Court’s Order, infra Section VI, Leyva may choose between again attempting to amend, or foregoing further amendment and proceeding with the narrowed claims outlined herein. spring 2023 WLC election using the procedure that had been taught to her by prior WLC officers, and which she understood was authorized under the WLC Constitution. More

specifically, consistently with the historical practice of WLC elections and the procedure of all past presidents of the WLC—each of whom were white—Leyva ensured all Law School student votes were counted regardless of whether the voter was a “member” of the WLC, or whether the voter had previously come to a WLC meeting or participated in WLC events. When Leyva administered the 2023 WLC election, two white female students

complained (once the results were announced) that Leyva had committed voting fraud because she allowed individuals who were not members of the WLC to vote. Leyva does not deny this, but explains the standard procedure was to allow all Law School students to vote in WLC elections. Leyva also highlights the WLC has no formal membership criteria, so excluding non-members from voting would have been impossible. In addition, Leyva

contends she had prior run-ins with the complaining students, both of whom were also part of the WLC’s leadership. According to Leyva, during their time in Law School together, the two complaining white students displayed racial animosity towards her by making stereotypical remarks about her during class and intentionally excluding her from planning WLC events.

Leyva alleges the white complaining students also displayed racial animosity towards her by holding a meeting with faculty during which she was mocked and humiliated. Specifically, during the dispute over the WLC election, one of the complaining students requested a meeting with the WLC’s executive board members and faculty advisors, as well as with Leon Samuels, the Law School’s Dean of Students. During the meeting, Leyva alleges she was falsely accused of telling students that the WLC’s Constitution did not

matter. Leyva contends she was also both generally stereotyped and mocked by the white complaining students, and accused of intentionally violating the WLC’s Constitution. Leyva suggests neither Samuels nor the Faculty Advisors present at the meeting (Law School Professors Kathryn Ball and Wendy Couture) did anything to stop the white students’ unfounded accusations against her. In response to the white students’ complaint, an executive board member, Laegan

Meyers, emailed Leyva, “demanding that [Leyva] turn over the secret Google voting poll” for review. Dkt. 7, ¶ 45. Leyva believed this was wrong for several reasons, but particularly because no other WLC president had ever been forced to turn over sensitive voting information. When Ball later “demanded” that Leyva turn over the voting results, Leyva did so immediately via email. Id. With her email, Leyva provided Ball and Samuels with

information regarding the WLC custom of permitting all Law School students to vote in WLC elections, including the sections of the WLC Constitution that authorized this practice. At some point after the meeting, Samuels reviewed the voting data, along with screenshots of text messages and social media posts submitted by the white complaining students. At the end of his review, Samuels concluded that only votes by WLC members

should have been counted. Samuels modified the election results accordingly, which resulted in the white candidate—preferred by the white complaining students—becoming the new WLC president. Leyva subsequently scheduled an “urgent meeting” with the Dean of the Law School, Johanna Kalb, to discuss Samuels’ decision. Dkt. 7, ¶ 57. During the meeting, Leyva alleges Kalb repeatedly cut her off when she tried to explain the history of allowing

all Law School students to vote in WLC elections, and exasperatedly questioned whether Leyva “really wanted her to investigate past elections.” Id. Leyva maintains Kalb also repeatedly highlighted “all the papers she had written about minorities,” as she simultaneously ignored Leyva’s concerns about Samuels’ reversal. Id. On or about April 25, 2023, Ball and Couture told Law School students the WLC election result had been modified.

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