(PS) Santillan v. California Bar Examiners

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. California
DecidedAugust 15, 2024
Docket2:24-cv-00571
StatusUnknown

This text of (PS) Santillan v. California Bar Examiners ((PS) Santillan v. California Bar Examiners) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
(PS) Santillan v. California Bar Examiners, (E.D. Cal. 2024).

Opinion

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 9 FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 10 11 CHELSIE M. SANTILLAN, Case No. 2:24-cv-00571-DJC-JDP (PS) 12 Plaintiff, ORDER 13 v. DENYING PLAINTIFF’S MOTION FOR SANCTIONS AND GRANTING HER 14 CALIFORNIA BAR EXAMINERS, et al., MOTION TO ISSUE SUMMONS 15 Defendants. FINDINGS AND RECOMMENDATIONS 16 THAT DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO DISMISS BE GRANTED AND PLAINTIFF’S 17 MOTIONS FOR INJUNCTIVE RELIEF BE DENIED 18 ECF Nos. 4, 21, 22, 23, 24, 28, & 29 19 OBJECTIONS DUE WITHIN FOURTEEN 20 DAYS 21 22 Plaintiff is a law school graduate who has been unsuccessful in her endeavor to become a 23 licensed attorney in California. Her seventh amended complaint alleges that the Committee of 24 Bar Examiners (the “Committee”) and seven of its employees have denied her admission to the 25 California State Bar by both interfering with her attempts to pass the bar examination and 26 improperly evaluating her moral character application.1 ECF No. 20. Plaintiff claims that 27 1 Since commencing this action, plaintiff has filed amended complaints in rapid 28 succession. Her original complaint named the Committee as the sole defendant, but she has 1 defendants’ conduct violated her First and Fourteenth Amendment rights, Title II of the 2 Americans with Disabilities Act, and California law. Id. The Committee moves to dismiss for 3 both lack of jurisdiction and failure to state a claim. ECF No. 28. Also pending are plaintiff’s 4 motion for sanctions, ECF No. 21, motions for injunctive relief, ECF Nos. 4, 23, & 24, and 5 motion for issuance of summons, ECF No. 29. I will grant plaintiff’s motion for issuance of 6 summons and deny her motion for sanctions. I also recommend that the Committee’s motion to 7 dismiss be granted and plaintiff’s motions for injunctive relief be denied. 8 Motion for Sanctions 9 On April 23, 2024, the Committee filed an ex parte application for an extension of time to 10 respond to plaintiff’s sixth amended complaint.2 ECF No. 21. Plaintiff subsequently filed a 11 motion for sanctions under Rule 11, arguing that the Committee’s ex parte application 12 intentionally misrepresented that plaintiff had not served all individual defendants named in her 13 amended complaints. ECF No. 21 at 3-4. 14 Although plaintiff may have attempted to complete service for the individual defendants, 15 it was not possible for her to do so since the Clerk of Court has yet to issue summons for those 16 defendants. Accordingly, there is no basis for finding that the Committee’s counsel violated Rule 17 11, and plaintiff’s motion for sanctions is therefore denied. 18 Motion to Dismiss 19 I. Background 20 Plaintiff alleges that after she graduated from law school, she registered to take the 21 October 2020 bar examination, which was administered remotely due to the Covid-19 pandemic. 22 ECF No. 20 at ⁋⁋ 13, 26. Plaintiff, however, was unable to sit for that exam because she did not 23

24 added additional defendants in her amended complaints. In the most recently filed complaint, the seventh amended complaint, plaintiff asserts claims against the Committee and seven individual 25 defendants. Although plaintiff did not seek leave to file any of the amended complaints, given her pro se status, I will permit her to proceed on the seventh amended complaint. I will also grant 26 her motion to issue summons for the individual defendants, ECF No. 29, who have yet to be 27 served. 2 After this application was filed, plaintiff submitted her seventh amended complaint. 28 ECF No. 20 1 have the financial means to pay for highspeed internet and a laptop that were required to take the 2 exam online. Id. ⁋ 26. In July 2020, she published a “Memorandum of Public Concern” 3 (“memo”) which criticized the Committee for “not having in place preemptive measures for 4 administering the . . . Bar Exam when there is a disaster and an in-person administration of the 5 examination is impracticle.” Id. ⁋⁋ 26, 43. Plaintiff also wrote a song and produced a music 6 video, which she posted on Facebook and Youtube, that were critical of the Committee. Id. ⁋⁋ 7 34, 41. 8 Plaintiff unsuccessfully took the bar exam in July 2023, missing a passing score by sixty 9 points. Id. ⁋ 21. Being dissatisfied with that “false Fail score,” plaintiff asked that the Committee 10 produce information about its grading protocols and procedures. Id. ⁋ 37. Plaintiff subsequently 11 registered to sit for the February 2024 exam. She also submitted a request to take the exam in 12 Ontario, California, and to be provided testing accommodations due to her disability.3 Id. ⁋⁋ 15, 13 37. The Committee granted her request for testing accommodations but not the request to 14 administer the test at the Ontario test site. It notified plaintiff that the requested accommodations 15 were not offered at the Ontario site, and that she would have to take the exam in Sacramento. Id. 16 ⁋⁋ 15, 77. She contends the Committee denied her request to take the exam in Ontario as 17 retaliation for inquiring about the Committee’s grading and for publishing her Memorandum of 18 Public Concern and music video.4 19 Plaintiff also claims that the Committee thwarted her efforts to gain admission to the State 20 Bar by improperly handling her moral character application. Plaintiff alleges that within a few 21 months of publishing her memo and music video, the Committee notified her that it would defer 22 making a final determination due to plaintiff’s history of substance abuse. Id. ⁋ 33. Instead, it 23 offered plaintiff an abeyance agreement that required her to participate in the State Bar’s Lawyer 24 3 Plaintiff alleges neither the nature of her disability nor the specific accommodations she 25 requested. 4 Plaintiff claims that applicants who take the exam in Ontario are more likely to receiving 26 a passing score than those who take it in Sacramento. ECF No. 20 at ⁋ 16. According to plaintiff, 27 the Ontario “applicant pool of test-takers for which exams are piled together for curved grading are less competitive” because the surrounding law schools are not accredited by the American Bar 28 Association. Id. 1 Assistance Program, which would have required her to pay for frequent and expensive drug 2 testing. Id. ⁋ 33. After plaintiff notified the Committee that she could not afford the cost of drug 3 testing, it notified her that she could attend three self-help meetings each week in lieu of drug 4 screenings. Id. ⁋ 33. Plaintiff, however, rejected that offer, claiming that it was “void for 5 vagueness” because the Committee did not define the term “self-help meetings.” Id. ⁋⁋ 33, 68. 6 Plaintiff then filed an appeal challenging the Committee’s adverse moral character 7 determination. Id. ⁋ 34. While that appeal was pending, defendant Mills, an investigator 8 employed by the Committee, demanded that plaintiff produce her medical records, which showed 9 that plaintiff had been involuntarily hospitalized within the past year. Id. ⁋ 34. Shortly after these 10 records were produced, one of the Committee’s attorneys, defendant Stine, deterred plaintiff from 11 pursuing her appeal by stating to plaintiff, “Do you really think you can represent someone after 12 looking at your medical history?” Id. ⁋⁋ 69, 76. In May 2022, plaintiff dismissed her appeal 13 challenging the Committee’s adverse moral character determination. 14 Plaintiff alleges that the Committee’s actions violated her right to free speech under the 15 First Amendment and her rights to procedural and substantive due process and equal protection 16 under the Fourteenth Amendment. She also alleges that the Committee failed to provide 17 reasonable testing accommodations in violation of Title II of the ADA. Finally, she alleges 18 various state law causes of action, including claims for intentional infliction of emotional distress, 19 defamation, undue influences, and obstruction of justice.

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Bluebook (online)
(PS) Santillan v. California Bar Examiners, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ps-santillan-v-california-bar-examiners-caed-2024.