Texas Southern University Dannye Holley, in His Individual and Official Capacities Edward Maldonado (a/K/A Spearit), in His Individual and Official Capacities Gabriel Aitsebaomo, in His Individual and Official Capacities v. Ivan Villarreal

CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedApril 16, 2021
Docket19-0440
StatusPublished

This text of Texas Southern University Dannye Holley, in His Individual and Official Capacities Edward Maldonado (a/K/A Spearit), in His Individual and Official Capacities Gabriel Aitsebaomo, in His Individual and Official Capacities v. Ivan Villarreal (Texas Southern University Dannye Holley, in His Individual and Official Capacities Edward Maldonado (a/K/A Spearit), in His Individual and Official Capacities Gabriel Aitsebaomo, in His Individual and Official Capacities v. Ivan Villarreal) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Texas Southern University Dannye Holley, in His Individual and Official Capacities Edward Maldonado (a/K/A Spearit), in His Individual and Official Capacities Gabriel Aitsebaomo, in His Individual and Official Capacities v. Ivan Villarreal, (Tex. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TEXAS

No. 19-0440

TEXAS SOUTHERN UNIVERSITY; DANNYE HOLLEY, IN HIS INDIVIDUAL AND OFFICIAL CAPACITIES; EDWARD MALDONADO (A/K/A SPEARIT), IN HIS INDIVIDUAL AND OFFICIAL CAPACITIES; GABRIEL AITSEBAOMO, IN HIS INDIVIDUAL AND OFFICIAL CAPACITIES, PETITIONERS,

V.

IVAN VILLARREAL, RESPONDENT

ON PETITION FOR REVIEW FROM THE COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FIRST DISTRICT OF TEXAS

Argued December 1, 2020

JUSTICE BUSBY delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this case, we address whether a state university’s dismissal of a student for poor

academic performance implicates a liberty or property interest protected by the Texas

Constitution’s guarantee of due course of law. Texas Southern University’s Thurgood Marshall

School of Law (the School) dismissed Ivan Villarreal after one year because he did not maintain

the required 2.0 grade point average. Villarreal sued the School, alleging claims for breach of

contract and deprivation of his liberty and property without due course of law. The School filed a

plea to the jurisdiction invoking sovereign immunity, which the trial court granted. The First Court

of Appeals reversed in part, holding that Villarreal had alleged viable procedural and substantive

due course of law claims. We hold that an academic dismissal from higher education carries insufficient stigma to

implicate a protected liberty interest. And assuming without deciding that Villarreal had a

protected property right in his continuing education, the procedures followed by the School in

connection with his dismissal were constitutionally adequate. We therefore reverse the court of

appeals’ judgment with respect to Villarreal’s constitutional claims and render judgment

dismissing the case.

BACKGROUND

Ivan Villarreal entered Thurgood Marshall School of Law in August 2014. He completed

his first year with a 1.976 grade point average. The School’s Student Rules and Regulations

handbook includes a non-waivable requirement that a first-year student maintain an average of at

least 2.0 to continue in the program. Villarreal was dismissed on June 10, 2015 for failing to meet

this requirement.

Villarreal filed an untimely petition with the School’s Academic Standards Committee that

challenged his grade in criminal law based on irregularities in the administration of the School’s

uniform examination. He asked the committee to change his grade or readmit him immediately,

waiving the two-year waiting period that would otherwise apply. Villarreal alleged that the School

had mishandled a cheating investigation into reports that a professor held unauthorized review

sessions in which some students received advance copies of certain exam questions. Villarreal did

not attend the sessions, but he contended that cheating by others negatively affected his own grade.

Before the committee could rule on Villarreal’s first petition, he filed a second petition challenging

all of his fall 2014 grades.

2 The committee reviewed Villarreal’s first petition and denied it, explaining that the dean

had already addressed the alleged cheating administratively. The dean’s remedy gave each student

the opportunity to challenge his or her criminal law grade individually by March 2015, which

Villarreal did not do. The School had also implemented a class-wide remedy that gave students

the higher of two test scores: the score they originally received and a score that disregarded answers

to the allegedly compromised questions. Villarreal’s score did not change under this remedy.

Villarreal was invited to meet with the committee and later with the dean regarding his

second petition. Following those meetings, the petition was denied based on his unsatisfactory

grades.

Villarreal then sued the School as well as the dean and other faculty members in their

official and personal capacities, alleging that they mishandled the investigation into the alleged

cheating incident and seeking declaratory and injunctive relief. He asserted a claim for breach of

contract against the School, and he contended that the School and the faculty members violated

his substantive and procedural rights under the due course of law clause of the Texas Constitution.

The School and the individual defendants filed a plea to the jurisdiction that asserted sovereign

immunity from suit and included evidence responding to some of Villarreal’s allegations. The

defendants contended that Villarreal lacked any constitutionally protected interest to support viable

ultra vires claims under the due course of law clause and that Villareal’s contract claim was barred

by immunity. The trial court granted the plea to the jurisdiction in its entirety.

The First Court of Appeals reversed in part, holding that Villarreal alleged viable

constitutional claims against the School and the individual defendants in their official capacities.

Villarreal v. Tex. S. Univ., 570 S.W.3d 916 (Tex. App.—Houston [1st Dist.] 2018). As a threshold

3 matter, the court concluded that Villarreal had a constitutionally protected liberty interest in his

graduate education under this Court’s holding in University of Texas Medical School at Houston

v. Than, 901 S.W.2d 425, 429 (Tex. 1992). See Villarreal, 570 S.W.3d at 922.

Turning to whether Villarreal was unconstitutionally deprived of that interest, the court of

appeals held that he had “adequately alleged a procedural due-course-of-law claim based on his

allegation [regarding] the university’s bad-faith mismanagement of an exam-grading controversy.”

Id. at 924. As to substantive due course of law, the court held sufficient his allegations “that the

‘class-wide remedy’ for irregularities in the criminal-law exam was arbitrary [and] implemented

in bad faith.” Id. at 925. The court therefore remanded the constitutional claims to the trial court

for further proceedings. Id. at 925–26. Justice Massengale concurred in the judgment based on

controlling precedent, but he questioned whether Texas courts should interpret our Constitution to

protect a liberty interest in a student’s reputation associated with the pursuit of graduate education.

Id. at 926–29, 932 (Massengale, J., concurring). We granted the School’s petition for review.

ANALYSIS

As part of a state educational institution, the School and its employees acting in their

official capacities have sovereign immunity from suit. Fed. Sign v. Tex. S. Univ., 951 S.W.2d 401,

405 (Tex. 1997); see Franka v. Velasquez, 332 S.W.3d 367, 383 (Tex. 2011). Whether sovereign

immunity defeats a trial court’s subject-matter jurisdiction is a question of law properly raised in

a plea to the jurisdiction. Tex. Nat. Res. Conservation Comm’n v. IT–Davy, 74 S.W.3d 849, 855

(Tex. 2002). Thus, we review de novo whether a plaintiff has alleged or offered undisputed

evidence of facts that establish jurisdiction. Tex. Dep’t of Parks & Wildlife v. Miranda, 133

S.W.3d 217, 226 (Tex. 2004). If disputed evidence creates a fact question regarding a

4 jurisdictional issue that also implicates the merits, however, a jury should resolve the dispute. Id.

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