William Guess v. St. Martinus Univ.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 26, 2022
Docket21-1478
StatusUnpublished

This text of William Guess v. St. Martinus Univ. (William Guess v. St. Martinus Univ.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
William Guess v. St. Martinus Univ., (6th Cir. 2022).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 22a0170n.06

Case No. 21-1478

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

FILED ) Apr 26, 2022 WILLIAM PATRICK GUESS, DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk ) Plaintiff-Appellant, ) ) ON APPEAL FROM THE v. ) UNITED STATES DISTRICT ) COURT FOR THE EASTERN ST. MARTINUS UNIVERSITY and ) DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN OAKLAND PHYSICIANS MEDICAL ) CENTER, LLC, ) Defendants-Appellees. ) OPINION )

Before: McKEAGUE, GRIFFIN, and READLER, Circuit Judges.

McKEAGUE, Circuit Judge. Plaintiff William Patrick Guess, a medical student who has

attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), claims that his former medical school and an

affiliate violated Title III of the Americans with Disabilities Act by failing to provide him a

reasonable accommodation during a preparatory exam. The district court granted summary

judgment in favor of the defendants, reasoning that they did not “offer” the exam in question and

therefore the defendants were not liable under Title III as a matter of law. The court also denied

Guess’s motion for leave to file a third amended complaint. We affirm. Case No. 21-1478, Guess v. St. Martinus Univ., et al.

I.

A. Factual Background

Guess, a resident of Michigan, enrolled at St. Martinus University medical school in 2013.

St. Martinus University is a private school located in Curaçao. Curaçao is an island country located

in the southern Caribbean Sea, just north of Venezuela, and a constituent of the Netherlands.

Prior to enrolling at St. Martinus, Guess communicated with the school regarding

accommodations for his ADHD. According to Guess, the school assured him that his requested

accommodations, such as extra time for exams, would be provided. During Guess’s time at St.

Martinus, the school gave him extra time to complete school-administered exams to accommodate

his ADHD.

St. Martinus, though not located in the United States, prepares students for medical careers

in the United States. To become a physician in the United States, medical students must pass three

phases of testing administered by the National Board of Medical Examiners (NBME), referred to

as Step 1, Step 2, and Step 3. Medical students generally attempt Step 1 after completing their

second year of medical school. St. Martinus requires students to take preparatory exams prior to

taking the Step 1 exam from the NBME. The NBME creates the prep exams, and Prometric, a

company that provides testing centers around the world for a variety of subjects, administers them.

Neither entity is a party to this case. St. Martinus policy requires that students perform at a

sufficient level in the Prometric-administered NBME prep exam to become eligible to take the

NBME Step 1 exam.

In 2016, after struggling academically during his first two years at St. Martinus, Guess left

Curaçao and returned home to Michigan. Guess remained enrolled at St. Martinus and continued

to self-study by using his professors’ class slides. Guess took school exams at Pontiac General

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Hospital in Pontiac, Michigan. Pontiac General is owned by Defendant Oakland Physicians

Medical Center, LLC (OPMC). St. Martinus and OPMC had an agreement under which St.

Martinus students could “participate in the medical education, research, and patient care programs”

at Pontiac General. R. 39-10.

By 2018, Guess had yet to take the Step 1 NBME exam. That October, Guess emailed

Marc Poulin, the Associate Dean of Clinical Affairs for St. Martinus Administrative Services, LLC

(a separate entity that handles the school’s administrative services and is not a party to this lawsuit).

The email informed Poulin that Guess had requested an extension for his Step 1 exam because he

had not yet taken his Prometric prep exams. In that email, Guess also stated that he wanted to take

“at least” three Prometric exams prior to taking the Step 1 exam. R. 39-19 at PID 1494. In

February 2019, Poulin emailed Guess to let him know that he “scheduled the [Prometric] exams

for the blocks we discussed a few weeks back.” Id. at 1491. Poulin stated that he “scheduled the

first two for normal time and the last 2 with 1.5X accommodation” because he “realized only after

the first two that [Guess] had requested accommodation and the NBME registration process has

no mechanism for me to make changes to an order once I push the order button and add to the

roster.” Id.

Guess took a Prometric exam in February, one in March, and one in June 2019. The exams

were administered by Prometric at Prometric testing sites in Michigan. Guess had planned to take

his first two Prometric exams without an accommodation to evaluate his level of preparedness.

Based on the email from Poulin, Guess believed that he would have an accommodation for his

third exam in June. When Guess arrived for the third exam, he asked the Prometric employee

about his accommodation. Guess informed her that Poulin “made sure that this test had [his]

accommodations.” R. 30-5 at 47. The employee told him that she did not see any accommodations

-3- Case No. 21-1478, Guess v. St. Martinus Univ., et al.

listed and that Guess would have to speak to Poulin. Guess took the exam without the timing

accommodation.

According to Guess, he was supposed to take a fourth prometric exam in 2019 but St.

Martinus canceled that exam due to unpaid balances on his account. St. Martinus assessed LAP—

or “lack of academic progress”—fees in the amount of $200 per month if students did not complete

their Step 1 exam within six months of completing basic medical sciences (courses taught during

the first two years of medical school). Back in December of 2018, Poulin informed Guess that if

a fourth prometric exam was to be taken, Guess would need to clear his “LAP fee balance.” R. 39-

19 at 1493.

The LAP fees were not the only financial issue Guess encountered at St. Martinus. In July

2016, Guess signed an “acknowledgement of debt” agreeing that he owed the school an

outstanding balance of roughly $20,000, setting a payment schedule, and declaring (among other

things), “My transcripts will be withheld until the full payment [is] made.” R. 30-8. Guess did

not make the payments laid out in the acknowledgement of debt.

In May 2019, prior to Guess taking the Prometric exam in June, Guess left St. Martinus

and enrolled at Washington University of Health and Science in Belize. Guess claims that he was

only partially accepted into Washington University because St. Martinus did not release his official

transcripts, so he applied using only an unofficial transcript. St. Martinus released Guess’s official

transcript in November 2020, during this litigation.

B. Procedural Background

In July 2019, Guess sued St. Martinus and OPMC, asserting claims for violating the ADA

and for breach of contract. Guess amended his complaint once in August 2019 and again in

January 2020. Guess’s second amended complaint alleges that St. Martinus failed to provide him

-4- Case No. 21-1478, Guess v. St. Martinus Univ., et al.

with a reasonable accommodation during his June 2019 Prometric exam. Guess also claims that

St. Martinus and OPMC breached a contract by charging him LAP fees and withholding his

transcript.

Shortly after discovery closed, defendants moved for summary judgment. While the

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