Siblerud v. Colorado State Bd. of Agriculture

896 F. Supp. 1506, 1995 WL 490977
CourtDistrict Court, D. Colorado
DecidedAugust 14, 1995
DocketCiv. A. No. 93-K-516
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 896 F. Supp. 1506 (Siblerud v. Colorado State Bd. of Agriculture) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Siblerud v. Colorado State Bd. of Agriculture, 896 F. Supp. 1506, 1995 WL 490977 (D. Colo. 1995).

Opinion

896 F.Supp. 1506 (1995)

Robert SIBLERUD, Plaintiff,
v.
COLORADO STATE BOARD OF AGRICULTURE; Dean Jaros, individually and as Dean of the Graduate School, Colorado State University; A.J. Linck, individually; Rupert P. Amann, individually and as Chair of Colorado State University's Physiology Department, Defendants.

Civ. A. No. 93-K-516.

United States District Court, D. Colorado.

August 14, 1995.

*1507 *1508 Barry Satlow, Boulder, CO, for plaintiff.

Simon Lipstein, Assistant Attorney General, Denver, CO, for defendant.

AMENDED MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

KANE, Senior District Judge.

Plaintiff Robert Siblerud initiated this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action on March 3, 1993, asserting his dismissal from the graduate program at Colorado State University (CSU) was unlawful. He seeks damages, declaratory and injunctive relief, and attorney fees. In the only remaining claims,[1] Siblerud contends the actions of CSU and various members of its faculty and governing board violated his rights under the First and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution.

Both Siblerud and the CSU Defendants move for summary judgment. The Defendants also assert the claims against Rupert Amann (Physiology Department Head), Dean Jaros (Dean of the Graduate School), and A.J. Linck (Provost and Academic Vice President) in their individual capacities should be dismissed under the doctrine of qualified immunity. Finally, they argue the statute of limitations bars Siblerud's claims.

I grant CSU's motion for summary judgment because I conclude Siblerud's claims are time-barred. In an effort to put this matter to rest and to stave off similar controversies before they find their way into court, I comment extensively on the merits of the parties' claims.

I. Background

Siblerud first enrolled as a graduate student at CSU in 1983. At the time of the events in question, he was no longer enrolled because he had completed his coursework in the Spring semester of 1988. CSU scheduled him to defend his dissertation in April of that term, but the defense was canceled because two committee members, Drs. James Masken and Winslow Caughy, determined Siblerud had to do more research or "benchwork." This was Siblerud's academic situation when Amann took over as the Head of the Physiology Department on March 15, 1989.

During the semester he became Department Head, Amann informed Siblerud he needed to add three members of the Physiology faculty to his graduate committee. (Letter from Amann to Siblerud of 04/20/89 & Amann Mem. of 05/04/89, Defs.' Ex. 1, Attachs. 2 and 3.) Amann also told Siblerud that one of those faculty members had to serve as Siblerud's graduate advisor. Vacancies had been created on the existing committee because Siblerud's advisor, Dr. David Robertshaw, had left for Cornell University and resigned his position with CSU, as did Physiology department faculty members Masken and Caughy. Robertshaw resigned because he felt the distance was too great an obstacle to continue as an advisor. The file contains no explanation for either Masken or Caughy's resignation.

By the Fall semester of 1989, Siblerud had not yet reestablished a graduate committee. As a result, Amann notified Siblerud on September *1509 22, 1989 that he had been placed on academic probation for failing to make satisfactory progress towards his graduate degree. The probationary period was to last through the 1990 Spring semester. If Siblerud still did not have a graduate committee and advisor by then, he would be dismissed. This event never occurred, however, because Amann dismissed Siblerud from the graduate program on April 11, 1990 for other reasons.

In December 1989, Amann had learned that Siblerud had submitted a paper titled, "The Relationship Between Mercury Amalgam and Health" to the Journal of Environmental Pathology, Toxicology, and Oncology (JEPTO) in the spring of 1987. The cover page of the paper contained a footnote that read, "Based on a Ph.D. dissertation in process in the Department of Physiology at Colorado State University." (Defs.' Ex. 1, Attach. 12.) Amann discovered this footnote after Dr. George H. Scherr, an editor of JEPTO, contacted him.

Although Siblerud submitted the paper to JEPTO in 1987, JEPTO did not agree to publish it until the end of 1989. Siblerud thus had no correspondence with JEPTO for over two years. When JEPTO contacted Siblerud in 1989 with a letter seeking his copyright release, Siblerud refused. This refusal precipitated Scherr's letter to Amann which contained the various communications between Siblerud and Scherr. Presumably, Scherr sent the letter to express his dissatisfaction with Siblerud's lack of cooperation.[2]

Following his correspondence with Scherr, Amann wrote Siblerud on December 28, 1989. Amann ordered, "Until further notice, you will not represent yourself as a student of the Department of Physiology or utilize resources of the Department of Physiology including stationery, mailing privileges, or other privileges given an active graduate student." (Defs.' Ex. 1, Attach. 14.) Amann also told Siblerud that because he was not actively enrolled, he had to reapply for admission which would include a $30.00 fee.[3] Amann since has testified that he also provided Siblerud a copy of the footnote and copies of his correspondence with Scherr. Siblerud allegedly violated this directive when, on February 7, 1990, he submitted an article of the same title to the journal of Fundamental and Applied Toxicology (FAT) which contained a substantively identical footnote.[4]

Amann learned of the second submission on April 10, 1990 from Dean Craig Schnell, an editor of FAT. Siblerud made this submission over one month after Amann's directive. Amann also learned that both the article and Siblerud's research had been criticized by reviewers at FAT. One day after this communication with Schnell, Amann summarily dismissed Siblerud from CSU's graduate program.

Amann notified Siblerud of his dismissal by letter dated April 11, 1990. As grounds for the dismissal, Amann explained Siblerud had disobeyed his earlier directive. Amann stated the University could potentially suffer irreparable damage if Siblerud continued to represent himself as a student in the Department of Physiology or to submit manuscripts implying that the content was consistent with the University's standards. (Letter from Amann to Siblerud of 04/11/90, Pl.'s Ex. 5.) Finally, Amann told Siblerud that he could appeal the decision through the Graduate *1510 School's grievance procedures. Amann attached a copy of those procedures.

Siblerud availed himself of the grievance process. At the first level of appeal, Dean Jaros upheld Siblerud's dismissal. Next, Siblerud appealed to a formal review committee which consisted of four members. Siblerud selected one faculty member, Dean Jaros selected one faculty member, the Dean of the College selected one faculty member, and the Graduate Student Council selected one student. The committee addressed the issue of whether Amann followed the proper procedures in dismissing Siblerud. The result was a 2-2 split. The committee reported its contradicting conclusions to Dean Jaros who, after considering them, decided to uphold the dismissal. Finally, Siblerud appealed his dismissal to the Provost and Academic Vice President, A.J. Linck.

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Bluebook (online)
896 F. Supp. 1506, 1995 WL 490977, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/siblerud-v-colorado-state-bd-of-agriculture-cod-1995.