P Katelyn Zwiker v. Lake Superior State University

CourtMichigan Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 10, 2022
Docket355128
StatusUnpublished

This text of P Katelyn Zwiker v. Lake Superior State University (P Katelyn Zwiker v. Lake Superior State University) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
P Katelyn Zwiker v. Lake Superior State University, (Mich. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

If this opinion indicates that it is “FOR PUBLICATION,” it is subject to revision until final publication in the Michigan Appeals Reports.

STATE OF MICHIGAN

COURT OF APPEALS

FOR PUBLICATION KATELYN ZWIKER, Individually and on Behalf of February 10, 2022 All Others Similarly Situated,

Plaintiff-Appellant, v No. 355128 Court of Claims LAKE SUPERIOR STATE UNIVERSITY and LC No. 20-000070-MK LAKE SUPERIOR STATE UNIVERSITY BOARD OF TRUSTEES,

Defendants-Appellees.

KEVIN HORRIGAN,

Plaintiff-Appellant, v No. 355377 Court of Claims EASTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY and LC No. 20-000075-MK EASTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY BOARD OF REGENTS, Defendants-Appellees.

JAEL DALKE,

Plaintiff-Appellant, v No. 357275 Court of Claims CENTRAL MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY and LC No. 20-000068-MK CENTRAL MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY BOARD OF TRUSTEES, Defendants-Appellees.

Before: SWARTZLE, P.J., and K. F. KELLY and REDFORD, JJ.

-1- SWARTZLE, P.J. (concurring in part and dissenting in part).

In these three consolidated appeals, the student plaintiffs allege that they bargained for in- person instruction when they registered for courses and paid tuition for the winter/spring 2020 semester. The university defendants counter that they promised nothing of the kind. This is not a dispute about good intentions; rather, this is a dispute about what was promised and what was received. And what was received lacked much, if any, pedagogical value, according to the student plaintiffs.

Although my colleagues have provided a well-reasoned, thoughtful opinion affirming summary disposition on all of the student plaintiffs’ claims, I cannot join the opinion in full. With respect to the student plaintiffs’ claims apart from those for breach of contract involving tuition, I join my colleagues in affirming summary disposition. On the remaining tuition-based claims, however, I part company for the following reasons:

First, the parties’ tuition agreements center on the exchange of educational services for tuition payments. Described broadly, the student plaintiffs had to pay tuition to the university defendants, and, in exchange, the university defendants had to offer educational services to the student plaintiffs. Thus, the question of what constitutes educational services is key here. On this question, neither the offering of registration nor the granting of credits carries the weight that the university defendants suggest; these are more accurately characterized as incidences of educational services rather than the services themselves.

To see this, consider registration. Registration in-and-of itself is not an educational benefit to a student—no one has ever gotten smarter just by registering for a course. Registration is, rather, the means by which the student selects the educational services that best fit the student’s needs. For a university, registration serves to aid with allocating resources and sorting students and instructors. Although a student’s obligation to pay tuition might be triggered by that student’s registering for a course, the university does not fulfill its contractual obligation to the student solely by offering the registration—the university must then follow-up by actually offering the promised course to that student. Any agreement that purportedly required a student to pay tuition in exchange for the mere opportunity to register for a course without the subsequent offering of that course would fail for lack of consideration. See Gen Motors Corp v Dep’t of Treasury, Revenue Div, 466 Mich 231, 238-239; 644 NW2d 734 (2002); Prentis Family Foundation v Barbara Ann Karmanos Cancer Institute, 266 Mich App 39, 58; 698 NW2d 900 (2005). Thus, the university defendants did not fulfill their end of the bargain merely by providing the opportunity for the student plaintiffs to register for winter/spring 2020 courses.

Similarly, the university defendants did not fulfill their end of the bargain merely by awarding credits to the student plaintiffs. Although credits are an important component of educational services, the credits alone are not sufficient to satisfy the provision of such services. I am not yet cynical enough to conclude that students go to university solely to gather credits for a diploma; in any event, there is nothing in the record to suggest that this was the case with any of the student plaintiffs here. Thus, to hold up their end of a valid bargain, the university defendants had to offer the bargained-for educational services to the student plaintiffs separate and apart from the offering of registration or the awarding of credits.

-2- Second, unlike with the room-and-board claims, the university defendants have not pointed to any force-majeure provisions relevant to the tuition claims. Nor have the university defendants fully developed impossibility as a defense on appeal,1 though even if they had, the argument would raise the matter of which party should properly bear the “risk (i.e., the financial burden)” of the pandemic-related campus closures. Rosado v Barry Univ Inc, 499 F Supp 3d 1152, 1158 (SD Fla, 2020). Discovery in these three cases has been quite limited thus far, however, so I do not want to stress these points beyond what the current record permits.

This brings me to my third and final point. It is useful to conceptualize the provision of educational services along a spectrum. At one end, there is the traditional, in-person university course, taught for a full semester by a qualified instructor, with the student earning a grade and receiving a credit at the conclusion of the course. At the other end, there is nothing—the university takes the student’s tuition and cancels the course. There is little question that the former would meet the requirements of educational services, and there is likewise little question that the latter would not. Analogous to the traditional, in-person course, I would also place in the category of “educational services” an online/virtual course that was designed, prepared, and marketed to students as an online option from the outset of the semester. Analogous to the outright cancellation of the course, I would place in the category of “no educational services” an audio recording of a textbook, with no further instruction, to be followed by an AI-mediated exam, surely an extreme form of “asynchronous education.”

Where along this spectrum do the courses that the student plaintiffs took in the winter/spring 2020 semester fall? The current record appears to show that from the beginning of the semester until mid-March, the courses fell within the category of actual educational services. Yet, when governments across the state imposed pandemic-related public and private restrictions, including lockdowns, the university defendants immediately pivoted from traditional in-person instruction to what the student plaintiffs have labeled “emergency remote teaching.” Although the university defendants have resisted the use of this label, I find it useful to differentiate between the transitioned courses at issue in these appeals from those courses offered by the university defendants that were marketed to students as online/virtual courses from the very start of the semester.

Returning to our spectrum outlined above, if the university defendants had simply canceled courses in mid-March for the remainder of the winter/spring 2020 semester, then I would have little trouble concluding that the university defendants breached the parties’ tuition agreements. The student plaintiffs paid tuition for a full semester of educational services, and had they been provided with half a semester of educational services, this would have constituted only partial performance by the university defendants, resulting in a breach of the tuition agreements. See Blazer Foods, Inc v Rest Properties, Inc, 259 Mich App 241, 252 n 7; 673 NW2d 805 (2003).

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Related

General Motors Corp. v. Department of Treasury
644 N.W.2d 734 (Michigan Supreme Court, 2002)
Page v. Klein Tools, Inc
610 N.W.2d 900 (Michigan Supreme Court, 2000)
Blazer Foods, Inc v. Restaurant Properties, Inc
673 N.W.2d 805 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 2004)
Cheesman v. Williams
874 N.W.2d 385 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 2015)

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Bluebook (online)
P Katelyn Zwiker v. Lake Superior State University, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/p-katelyn-zwiker-v-lake-superior-state-university-michctapp-2022.