Minto v. Molloy University

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 6, 2024
Docket2:16-cv-00276
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Minto v. Molloy University, (E.D.N.Y. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK

-----------------------------------X

Janice Minto, Debra Bacchus, and Dytra Sewell,

Plaintiffs, MEMORANDUM & ORDER

- against - No. 16-cv-276 (KAM) (AYS) No. 16-cv-278 (KAM) (SIL) Molloy University, formerly known No. 16-cv-279 (KAM) (LGD) as Molloy College,1

Defendant.

KIYO A. MATSUMOTO, United States District Judge:

Janice Minto, Debra Bacchus, and Dytra Sewell, all Black women who were over forty years old when they enrolled at Molloy University (then Molloy College), each brought an action against Molloy for race, sex, and age discrimination after Molloy academically dismissed them from its Respiratory Care Program following the Fall 2012 semester. After the Court consolidated the three actions,2 it dismissed some of the plaintiffs’ claims but allowed them to proceed on others. Molloy now moves for summary judgment on the remaining claims. For the reasons

1 Molloy College changed its name to Molloy University during this litigation. See Molloy College Becomes Molloy University, Molloy University (Mar. 31, 2022), https://www.molloy.edu/news/molloy-college-becomes-molloy-university [https://perma.cc/E5EM-F98N]. 2 To avoid clutter, the Court cites only the filings in Minto’s action, No. 16-cv-276 (KAM) (AYS), not the filings in Bacchus’s action, No. 16-cv-278 (KAM) (SIL), or in Sewell’s action, No. 16-cv-279 (KAM) (LGD), each of which the Court consolidated into Minto’s action on January 23, 2020, (see Order Consolidating Case, Jan. 23, 2020). stated below, the Court grants Molloy’s motion. BACKGROUND The facts and procedural history of this eight-year-long litigation are described in more detail in the Court’s

Memorandum and Order dismissing the plaintiffs’ original complaints, Minto v. Molloy Coll. (“Minto I”), No. 16-cv-276, ECF No. 48, 2019 WL 4696287 (E.D.N.Y. Sept. 26, 2019), and Magistrate Judge Shields’s Report and Recommendation regarding Molloy’s motion to dismiss the plaintiffs’ amended complaints, Minto v. Molloy Coll. (“Minto II”), No. 16-cv-276, ECF No. 87, 2021 WL 1394329 (E.D.N.Y. Jan. 21, 2021). The Court recounts the facts and procedural history here only to the extent necessary to explain its resolution of the present motion. I. Factual Background Janice Minto, Debra Bacchus, and Dytra Sewell were enrolled in Molloy College’s Respiratory Care Program during the 2012–13

academic year. (ECF No. 150-5, Minto Acad. Tr.; ECF No. 150-7, Bacchus Acad. Tr.; ECF No. 150-9, Sewell Acad. Tr.) In January 2013, each plaintiff was informed that she had been academically dismissed from the program after receiving a grade of C or lower in Respiratory Science III in the Fall 2012 semester. (ECF No. 150-11, Jan. 17, 2013, Ltrs. from R. Tralongo.) The plaintiffs, all Black women who were over forty years old when they enrolled, do not dispute that they were ineligible to continue in the program under a literal reading of Molloy’s written academic standards; however, they allege that Molloy discriminated against them by allowing white, male, and younger

students “greater latitude in retaking [Respiratory Care] courses they had failed in order to pass the program” that Molloy did not allow the plaintiffs. (ECF No. 150-2, Minto Am. Compl., ¶ 39; ECF No. 150-3, Bacchus Am. Compl., ¶ 39; ECF No. 150-4, Sewell Am. Compl., ¶ 39.) They also allege Molloy discriminated against them by refusing to allow them to apply the credits they earned in the Respiratory Care Program toward a degree in Molloy’s Health Service Leadership program. (Minto Am. Compl. ¶ 43; Bacchus Am. Compl. ¶ 43; Sewell Am. Compl. ¶ 43.) A. The Respiratory Care Program’s Academic Standards To graduate from the Respiratory Care Program when the plaintiffs were enrolled at Molloy College, a student had to

complete a set of general education courses, Respiratory Care courses, and “related requirement” courses (math, science, psychology, and ethics courses) with a grade of C+ or better in each Respiratory Care course and related requirement course. (ECF No. 151-2, Course Catalog, pp. 152–53.) Respiratory Care courses could “be repeated one time,” and “[f]ailure to attain a grade of at least ‘C+’ when taking [a Respiratory Care] course for the second time [would] necessitate withdrawal from the Program.” (Id. p. 153.) Additionally, “[a] maximum of two [Respiratory Care] courses [could] be repeated within the major,” and “[o]n the third failure to achieve a ‘C+’” in a

Respiratory Care course, “the student [would] be removed from the Program.”3 (Id.) One exception was the Computers in Respiratory Care course, which was not subject to either of the program’s restrictions on repeating courses. (ECF No. 150-13, Fitzgerald Dep. Tr., 64:14–65:9, 70:4–71:8.) Although a student was required to earn a C+ or higher in each related requirement course to complete the program, the program-specific restrictions on repeating courses that applied to Respiratory Care courses did not apply to related requirement courses. (See Course Catalog pp. 152–53; see also Fitzgerald Dep. Tr. 65:10– 21.) A student who withdrew from a course before taking the

final exam would receive a grade of either W (withdrawn) or WF (withdrawn failing) depending on the student’s performance when he or she withdrew. (ECF No. 150-17, Student Handbook, p. 59.) Although Molloy counted a WF as an F for purposes of calculating

3 The plaintiffs dispute this fact, arguing that students could retake a maximum of four courses. (ECF No. 151-1, Pls.’ Rule 56.1 Counter Statement, ¶ 7.) In support, they cite page 51 of the Course Catalog, which states that “[a] student may be allowed to repeat a maximum of four different courses while at Molloy.” (Course Catalog p. 51.) The same page, however, also advises students to “[c]heck with the major program of study and the course descriptions for restrictions on repeating.” (Id.) The Court thus finds no genuine dispute that the restrictions stated at page 153 of the Course Catalog are program-specific “restrictions on repeating” consistent with the policy stated at page 51 of the Course Catalog. the student’s grade point average, (id.), the Respiratory Care Program did not count grades of W or WF in assessing whether a student complied with the program’s rule that Respiratory Care

courses could be repeated only one time, (Fitzgerald Dep. Tr. 61:7–62:17). In other words, a student could complete a Respiratory Care course by taking the final exam only twice but could attempt the course three times if one of the first two attempts resulted in a W or WF. B. The Plaintiffs’ Academic Performance Minto received a D+ in Respiratory Science I and repeated it, earning a B+ on the second attempt. (Minto Acad. Tr. at 3.) She also received a C in Respiratory Science II and repeated it, earning a C+ on the second attempt. (Id.) Her C in Respiratory Science III in the Fall 2012 semester, (id.), was her third grade of C or lower in a Respiratory Care course – excluding Computers in Respiratory Care – and thus rendered her ineligible to continue in the Respiratory Care Program, (see Course Catalog

p. 153). Bacchus received a C in Respiratory Science III in the Fall 2011 semester. (Bacchus Acad. Tr. at 3.) To continue in the program, she had one opportunity to complete Respiratory Science III again and earn a grade of C+ or higher. (See Course Catalog p. 153.) She received a C- when she repeated it in the Fall 2012 semester, (Bacchus Acad. Tr. at 3), thus rendering her ineligible to continue in the Respiratory Care Program. Although Bacchus had received a second and third grade of C or lower in the Fall 2011 semester, (see id.), she was not

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