Loans guaranteed by the federal government are available to persons who attend accredited trade schools. Federal agencies do not accredit schools; instead they accredit accrediting agencies, which apply standards of their own devising but satisfactory to the national government. The Accreditation Alliance of Career Schools and Colleges, an approved accrediting agency, declined to renew the accreditation of the Chicago School of Automatic Transmissions, Inc., which promptly went out of business — as very few people were willing to pay their own money for its services. The School sued the Alliance, seeking as damages the federally underwritten tuition it lost. (Actually the School sued a predecessor to the Alliance; we use the current name for clarity.) Magistrate Judge Lefkow recommended a grant of summary judgment to the Alliance, 1994 WL. 758340,
The School sees this as a contract ease, to be decided under Illinois law. By applying for accreditation and sending in its fee, the school believes, it accepted the Alliance’s offer, the terms of which were established by the Alliance’s rules and bylaws.
Courts could in principle derive federal law from the common law of the states, see
O’Melveny & Myers v. FDIC,
— U.S.-,
Many courts applied these principles of administrative law to accreditation decisions before the enactment of § 1099b(f), although usually without explicit recognition of the choice-of-law implications. E.g.,
Medical Institute of Minnesota v. National Association of Trade and Technical Schools,
The Alliance yanked the School’s accreditation after concluding that it had not complied with several rules. Only one concerns us now: the requirement that trade schools promptly refund the tuition of students who withdraw. The School concedes that it routinely took months to make refunds. During the initial round of examination and review, the School blamed this on negligence by the back office staff. The Accrediting Commission (the Alliance’s governing body) removed the School’s accreditation, ruling that persistent negligence is intolerable. At the School’s request, the Commission appointed a three-member Appeals Panel. In presenting its case to the Appeals Panel, the School changed course. It now asserted that the delay had been deliberate, a tactic to encourage students to stay in school, and it promised to change its ways if the Alliance so demanded. The Appeals Panel accepted this explanation and remanded to the Commission.
Proceedings before the Panel are governed by Document G of the Commission’s standards. At the time, Document G permitted an Appeals Panel to consider new evidence that was “in existence at the time of the Commission action ... but ... not presented to the Commission because of an honest mistake or misunderstanding by the school.” 2 The School did not argue that its change of position — presented by way of new evidence — was either “in existence at the time of the Commission action” or that it had remained undisclosed “because of an honest mistake or misunderstanding”. Under Document G, therefore, the Appeals Panel was not entitled to receive or consider the new evidence. Acting on the remand, the Commission ruled that the evidence had not been properly received. Unimpressed by the School’s about-face, the Commission adhered to its original decision. And because the School had no additional arguments to make, the Commission put its decision into effect without affording the School a second go-round with an Appeals Panel. As the School sees things, this violated two rules: the provision of Document G permitting an Appeals Panel to receive new evidence, and the promise in other bylaws that decisions could be reviewed by an Appeals Panel.
If this were a contract dispute, we would have to make an independent judgment about the meaning of Document G and the Alliance’s internal operating procedures. In administrative law, however, the first question is how the agency understands its own rules — for an agency possessed of the ability to adopt and amend rules also may interpret them, even if the interpretation chosen is not the one that most impresses an outside observer. See
Stinson v. United States,
— U.S.-,-,
The School protests that it was entitled to another crack at an Appeals Panel. But it had no new evidence to offer (none, that is, that an Appeals Panel could have considered), and there was therefore no point to additional proceedings. If the Commission’s refusal to allow a second appeal was a departure from the Alliance's rules, it was a harmless departure. This, too, is something all three members of the Appeals Panel informed the district court; each asserted that further proceedings on the same record were fated to end in a denial of accreditation no matter who last signed off. Harmless deviations from prescribed procedures do not lead to the whopping damages the School requests, so the judgment of the district court is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Which is not at all to imply that an accrediting agency is a “state actor” or "federal actor” with special constitutional obligations in addition to those created by statutes and common law. A governmental body may rely on the decisions of a private association without turning that association into "the government” itself. See
Sanjuan v. American Board of Psychiatry & Neurology, Inc.,
. Document G was revised after the events of this case to bar the presentation of new evidence to an Appeals Panel; the amendment does not apply to these proceedings. Document G originally permitted the consideration of new evidence pertaining to an issue "as to which the school had not had an opportunity ... to make its position known." That provision is irrelevant, so we disregard it in the text.
