Subbiondo v. Temple University

21 Pa. D. & C.3d 689, 1981 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 282
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County
DecidedAugust 5, 1981
Docketno. 3536
StatusPublished

This text of 21 Pa. D. & C.3d 689 (Subbiondo v. Temple University) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Subbiondo v. Temple University, 21 Pa. D. & C.3d 689, 1981 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 282 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1981).

Opinion

WILSON, J.,

And now, after trial and consideration the court renders its decision by way of this adjudication making the following findings of fact, conclusions of law and entering the attached decree nisi:

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. Plaintiff, Joseph Subbiondo, enrolled as a student in the Ph.D. program of the Graduate English Department of Temple University of the Commonwealth System of Higher Education in September 1966. He passed his preliminary examinations for the Ph.D. degree in December 1969.

2. Defendant, Temple University of the Commonwealth System of Higher Education, is an institution of higher education accredited and authorized to award the degree of Doctor of Philosophy.

3. The University awards its degree of Doctor of Philosophy upon the recommendation of the Graduate School of the University. The recom[691]*691mendation of the Graduate School is, in turn, based upon the recommendation of the faculty of that department in the Graduate School in which the student seeking the degree is enrolled.

4. At all relevant times, the Graduate Faculty of the Department of English consisted of those persons who taught graduate level courses in the Department of English. The Graduate Committee of the Department of English consisted of members of the Graduate English Faculty who held the academic rank of Professor.

5. The recommendations of the Graduate School and the Graduate English Faculty for the award of the Ph.D. degree are based primarily upon their respective academic evaluations of the student’s knowledge of his particular subject and the student’s preparation to advance knowledge in that subject by his own investigations. The recommendations are not granted automatically upon the student’s completion of a given number of courses or other formal requirements.

6. The rules, requirements and policies of the University’s Graduate School, including the requirements and procedures prerequisite to the recommendation of the Graduate School for an award of a Ph.D., are formulated by the Graduate Board. The Graduate Committee (full graduate English professors) propose the requirements to the Graduate English Faculty (all graduate English teachers) who further recommend to the Graduate Board for final formulation the requirements for the award of a Ph.D. in English.

7. The rules, requirements and policies of the University’s Graduate School, including those requirements and procedures prerequisite to the recommendation for an award of a Ph.D., are set forth in various publications, including the Handbook [692]*692for Doctor of Philosophy Students and the Graduate School Bulletin.

8. Beginning in 1968, the rules, requirements and policies of the Graduate English Faculty, including those requirements and procedures prerequisite to the Graduate English Faculty’s recommendation for an award of a Ph.D, as well as rules, requirements and policies of the Graduate School as a whole were compiled and set forth in publications known as the “Rule Hoard.” The Rule Hoard was amended and revised from time to time.

9. It is the sole responsibility of the student seeking an award of the University’s Ph.D to apprise himself of and to follow the requirements and procedures prerequisite to the recommendation of the faculty of his department and the Graduate School for the award of a Ph.D. degree.

10. At all relevant times, among the written requirements and procedures prerequisite to the recommendation of the Graduate English Faculty and the Graduate School for an award of a Ph.D. degree were the following:

(a) registration for at least three credit hours of work each semester until the final award of the degree (unless official leave of absence is granted);

(b) formation and approval of the Graduate Committee of a dissertation committee consisting of a dissertation advisor who is a member of the Graduate English Faculty and two other members of the Graduate English Faculty;

(c) completion of a formal dissertation proposal for submission to and approval by the student’s dissertation advisor, his dissertation committee and the Graduate Committee;

(d) recommendation of the student for candidacy for the Doctorate of Philosophy from the Graduate English Faculty to the Graduate Board;

[693]*693(e) submission to and approval of each section of the dissertation by each of his dissertation committee members as each section is completed;

(f) approval of the dissertation by the dissertation committee; and

(g) passage of the oral defense of the dissertation.

11. As a student, Mr. Subbiondo was or should have been familar with the requirements set forth in the Graduate School Bulletin, the Handbook for Doctor of Philosophy Students, and the Rule Hoard. He was aware, or should have been aware of the requirements and procedures prerequisite to the recommendation of the Graduate School for an award of a Ph.D, as those procedures were set forth in those documents.

12. After passage of his preliminary examinations in December 1969, Mr. Subbiondo chose to ignore completely the written requirements and procedures prerequisite to the recommendation of the Graduate English Faculty and Graduate School for the award of the Ph.D.

13. At no time has Mr. Subbiondo fulfilled the requirements and procedures prerequisite to the recommendation of the Graduate English Faculty for an award of a Ph.D. degree. Mr. Subbiondo failed, among other things, to (a) maintain his registration as a student, (b) give notice of intended graduation, or (c) pay the required graduation fees at any time during that academic year. In addition, he failed to secure the recommendation of the Graduate English Faculty for the conferral of Candidacy for the Doctorate of Philosophy at any time prior to the end of that academic year.

14. At all relevant time, the Graduate English Faculty approved of dissertation proposals, dissertation supervisors and dissertation committee [694]*694members through a process whereby a formal dissertation proposal with the names of the supervisor and committee members was circulated to the Graduate English Faculty for approval.

15. Although Mr. Subbiando claims to have completed all of the requirements for the award of a Ph.D. prior to June of 1972, at no time prior to the fall semester of 1972 did Mr. Subbiondo form an approved dissertation consisting of three members of the Graduate English Faculty.

16. At no time prior to the spring semester of 1973 did Mr. Subbiondo complete a formal dissertation or submit such a proposal to his dissertation advisor, dissertation committee or to the Graduate English Faculty for their approval. Hence, at no time prior to the spring semester of 1973 was a dissertation proposal of Mr. Subbiondo approved by his dissertation advisor, his dissertation committee or the Graduate English Faculty.

17. From January 1970 through June 1972, Mr. Subbiondo merely corresponded about his dissertation project with Dr. Dennis Lebofsky, a junior member of the Graduate English Faculty who only recently had received his own Ph.D. and whom Mr. Subbiondo desired to be his dissertation supervisor. However, Mr. Subbiondo did not take the required steps to secure the approval of the Graduate English Faculty of his choice for a dissertation ad-visor.

18.

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21 Pa. D. & C.3d 689, 1981 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/subbiondo-v-temple-university-pactcomplphilad-1981.