Younis v. American University in Cairo

30 F. Supp. 2d 390, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19045, 1998 WL 851521
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedDecember 7, 1998
Docket98 Civ. 4260(LAK)
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 30 F. Supp. 2d 390 (Younis v. American University in Cairo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Younis v. American University in Cairo, 30 F. Supp. 2d 390, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19045, 1998 WL 851521 (S.D.N.Y. 1998).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

KAPLAN, District Judge.

Plaintiff, an engineering professor whose employment ended after his application for tenure was denied at The American University at Cairo (“AUC”), here seeks recovery against his former employer for breach of contract. 1 AUC moves to dismiss on the ground of forum non conveniens. As there is no substantial basis for litigating this case in the United States and there is a readily available forum in Egypt, where the parties currently are locked in litigation concerning the same dispute, the motion is granted.

Facts

Plaintiff Mahmoud Younis, who then was in Egypt after having spent 13 years teaching in Kuwait, applied to AUC for a teaching position in Cairo. 2 He was hired in 1991 as a professor of engineering and embarked upon his duties in the same year. His application for tenure was denied in 1997, and his employment by AUC ended, in accordance with AUC’s standard policies, on August 31, 1998.

Dr. Younis brought this action for alleged breach by AUC of his employment contract. But this is not the only forum in which he seeks redress. On September 6, 1998, he submitted a complaint to the West Cairo Labor Relations Office (“LRO”), alleging that his dismissal by AUC was wrongful. 3 On or about September 16, 1998, the LRO referred the ease to the Labor Court of Cairo, Egypt, where it now is pending. 4 Dr. Younis there seeks reinstatement and back pay. 5

The facts pertinent to the forum non con-veniens issues are straightforward. While AUC has a small representative office in New York, it engages here only in coordinating recruitment, fund raising, public relations and personnel benefit administration. Everything else is done in Egypt. No one in the New York office had anything to do with the events at issue here apart from sending *392 Dr. Younis a proposed employment contract after the offer of employment was extended to him and correcting an error in the description of Dr. Younis’ academic rank following agreement by the chairman of the engineering department in Cairo. 6

Dr. Younis’ 1996 application for tenure was considered by an ad hoc committee in the engineering department, by the tenured faculty in and the chairman of that department, by the tenure committee of the School of Science and Engineering, by the Provost Advisory Committee, and by the Provost and President of AUC. The entire review took place in Cairo, and everyone involved in it then resided and worked there. 7 Dr. McDonald ultimately decided not to recommend that the Board of Trustees grant tenure and, according to AUC, therefore did not forward the application to it. 8 Dr. Younis, however, suggests that Dr. McDonald discussed the decision with some trustees while at a meeting in New York in June 1997. 9 To the best of his information, the individuals with whom such discussions took place reside in Texas and Ohio. 10

Following Dr. McDonald’s resignation, Dr. Younis asked AUC’s acting president, Dr. Frank E. Vandiver, to review Dr. McDonald’s decision. Vandiver did so in Cairo but declined to overturn the decision. 11

As might be expected, almost all of the evidence pertaining to this matter is in Cairo. Of the nineteen people who participated in the review of Dr. Younis’ tenure application, sixteen still reside in Egypt. 12 As far as the evidence before the Court shows, any trustees with whom the issue was discussed live in Texas and Ohio. 13 AUC has indicated also, without contradiction, that there are seven documents totaling 25 pages in its New York office that are responsive to plaintiffs document request while there are tens of thousands of pages — including copies of the New York documents — in Cairo. 14

Discussion

The analysis of forum non conve-niens motions requires consideration of whether there is an adequate alternative forum 15 and, if so, a balancing of “a series of private and public interests in determining whether to retain the case or dismiss it in favor of [the] alternative forum.” 16 The principal battleground in this case is whether the courts of Egypt provide adequate alternative fora.

Adequacy of Egyptian Forum

AUC has submitted declarations of Dr. Tarek F. Riad, a member of the Egyptian Bar as well as a member of the Egyptian Council of State, the holder of LL.M. and S.J.D. degrees from the Harvard Law School, a former lecturer on conflicts of laws at the Cairo University Law School, a partner in an Egyptian law firm, and special legal counsel to the President of the Egyptian parliament. His firm is defending AUC in the Egyptian litigation brought by Dr. Youn-is. Dr. Younis, for his part, has submitted a declaration of Dr. Mohamed Abdel Moteleb Abmed, also an Egyptian lawyer, holder of LL.M. and S.J.D. degrees from New York University School of Law, and counsel for Dr. Younis in his Egyptian lawsuit.

Drs. Riad and Abmed agree on the broadest of propositions: Egypt has courts that hear civil cases including claims for breach of *393 contract and wrongful termination. Dr. Younis may pursue, indeed is pursuing, such a suit against AUC in Cairo. Beyond that, they differ on details.

Dr. Abmed contends that “[a]n action for breach of an employment contract by denial of tenure can only be brought in an Egyptian court while there is still a work relationship between the employee and the employer” and that Dr. Younis no longer may bring such an action because his employment by AUC terminated on August 31, 1998. 17 Dr. Riad disputes this, asserting that Article 698 of the Egyptian Civil Law permits the commencement of an “[a]ction[ ] arising out of a labor contract ... [within] one year from the time of the termination of the contract” and that claims by Dr. Younis with respect to the denial of tenure and the termination of his employment would be timely if commenced by August 31,1999. 18

Next, Dr. Abmed contends that Article 72 of the Egyptian Labor Code permits an action for wrongful termination when there is a fixed period which has been renewed, as is the ease here, but that such an action may not be brought by a “foreign hire.” He maintains that Dr. Younis is a Canadian citizen, that Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
30 F. Supp. 2d 390, 1998 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 19045, 1998 WL 851521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/younis-v-american-university-in-cairo-nysd-1998.