Case Information
*1 Before RILEY, HANSEN, and COLLOTON, Circuit Judges.
________________
HANSEN, Circuit Judge.
Craig Mershon appeals the district court's [1] grant of summary judgment to St. Louis University and its trustees (collectively "the University") in this action alleging a failure to accommodate and retaliation in violation of Title III of the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 (ADA), 42 U.S.C. § 12182 (2000), and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 as amended, 29 U.S.C. § 794 (2000). We affirm.
I.
The following is a summary of the undisputed facts. Mershon is wheelchair- bound and sight impaired due to complications of cerebral palsy. He took courses at St. Louis University from 1997 through the spring of 2001 in both graduate and undergraduate studies. Mershon first applied to the graduate school in 1997 to pursue a Master of Arts degree in the Department of English as a classified student. While the application process was pending and the University was awaiting the receipt of necessary application materials, the University permitted Mershon to enroll in classes as an unclassified graduate student and later upgraded his status, pursuant to Mershon's request, to that of a conditional admit. [2] The University allowed him to remain in conditional status for two terms instead of following the usual one-term limit. When Mershon sought to change his proposed field of study from English to American Studies, the graduate school granted this request, changed his field of study, and reclassified his status from a conditional admit to an unclassified graduate student *3 with an incomplete application. To complete his graduate school application, he still needed to submit additional materials.
In early August 1998, the University granted Mershon's application to enroll in the College of Arts and Sciences as an undergraduate student on a probationary basis, due to his poor academic performance (he had a cumulative graduate grade point average of 1.417) (Appellees’ App. at 21). This status rendered him ineligible to maintain his enrollment as an unclassified graduate student. Mershon stated that he received several requested accommodations from 1998 through 2000, including large print materials, a tape recorder, note takers, and extra time. (Appellant's App., Mershon's Depo. at 19-20.) The University changed his status from probationary to that of a classified student with an undeclared major to enable him to qualify for financial aid because he was not eligible for financial assistance from the state vocational rehabilitation agency when he was not taking graduate-level courses. After the fall 1998 term, his undergraduate GPA was 3.5. His cumulative GPA fell to 3.0 by the spring 1999 term, and by the end of the spring semester for the 1999-2000 academic year, Mershon's cumulative GPA had fallen to 2.423 as a probationary undergraduate student. (See Appellees’ App. at 20.) Mershon asserts that the University stopped providing accommodations in 2000, resulting in his inability to complete course work for a number of courses.
In July 2000, Mershon requested reinstatement as an unclassified graduate student. This status would entitle him to certain benefits and financial support from the state rehabilitation agency. Dr. Mancini, the Chair of the Department of American Studies, refused to allow Mershon to enroll in a graduate-level American Studies course until he completed his graduate school application, eliminated several incomplete undergraduate grades, and was admitted to the graduate school. Mershon's graduate school application would not be complete until he had taken and submitted his Graduate Record Examination General Test score and submitted a combined autobiographical sketch/statement of career goals. Mershon protested this decision *4 by meeting with the University's Associate Provost, Dr. Ellen Harshman. Mershon explained his need to be an unclassified graduate student in order to obtain benefits and financial support from the state rehabilitation agency, but Dr. Harshman would not interfere with Dr. Mancini's academic judgment. Dr. Harshman stated in her affidavit that she had several meetings with Mershon regarding academic matters, library privileges, and accommodation concerns. Dr. Harshman stated that she had to instruct Mershon to limit his contact with her office staff because his behavior was aggressive and upsetting to her staff.
In October 2000, Mershon petitioned the graduate school to be classified as an unclassified graduate student in the American Studies Department. The University granted the petition, certified him as eligible to receive federal financial aid, and changed his status from a classified undergraduate student to an unclassified graduate student with an open and incomplete application file to become a graduate student in American Studies. As such, to register for a particular graduate course, Mershon was required to obtain prior permission of the department chair of any department offering a course he wished to take. During both the fall 2000 and spring 2001 terms, Mershon attempted 12 credit hours and earned 0 credit hours. In January 2001, the Chair of the History Department denied Mershon's request to register as an unclassified graduate student in a graduate-level history course because Mershon had not been formally admitted into that department's graduate program, his GPA was below the standard accepted by the department, and he lacked adequate undergraduate course preparation.
In May 2001, the University's Director of Financial Aid disqualified Mershon from receiving federal financial aid because he did not meet the academic progress requirements established by federal regulation – his cumulative GPA as an unclassified graduate student was 1.214 in the spring of 2001 (Appellees’ App. at 22), and his cumulative GPA in undergraduate-level courses was 2.4 (id. at 20). Mershon registered for three courses in August 2001, but the University administratively *5 dropped his enrollment because he failed to make adequate payment of tuition, as required of all students.
In November 2001, Jan Chapin, an investigator for the Office for Civil Rights,
United States Department of Education, reported to Officer David Wright of the
United States Federal Protection Services (now part of the Department of Homeland
Security) that Mershon had contacted her by telephone regarding a potential complaint
of discrimination against the University. She represented to Officer Wright that
during their phone conversation Mershon had twice stated, "[M]y professor makes me
so mad that I want to put a bullet in his head." (Appellant's
Officer Wright contacted Jack Titone, the University's Director of Public Safety, and relayed the report made by Chapin. Director Titone, in turn, consulted the Associate Provost for Enrollment Management, Edwin Harris, informing him of the threats and requesting confirmation of whether Mershon was currently enrolled as a student or could be restricted from campus. Harris confirmed that Mershon was not enrolled and agreed that the University could prohibit him from entering its premises. Director Titone then issued a directive to University Department of Public Safety Officers informing them that Mershon should be prohibited from entering the campus because of the threats he had made against a professor. The same day, three officers stopped Mershon from entering the campus.
Mershon filed suit against the University and its trustees, asserting discrimination on the basis of his disability in the failure to accommodate him while he was a student and retaliation for expelling him from campus after he complained of the failure to accommodate. The district court granted the University's motion for summary judgment, concluding that Mershon had failed to present any evidence of *6 a retaliatory motive in his expulsion from campus or of a failure to accommodate. Mershon appeals.
II.
"We review the grant of summary judgment de novo, viewing the facts in the
light most favorable to the non-moving party. In doing so we apply the same standard
as the district court and may affirm on any grounds supported by the record."
Simpson v. Des Moines Water Works,
In the absence of direct evidence of discrimination, we analyze discrimination
and retaliation claims under the burden-shifting framework announced in McDonnell
Douglas Corp. v. Green,
A. Retaliation
Mershon argues that the district court erred in finding that he failed to establish
a prima facie case of retaliation. The ADA prohibits discrimination against any
individual who has opposed an unlawful act of discrimination, made a charge of
discrimination, or participated in any manner in an investigation or proceeding under
the ADA.
[3]
42 U.S.C. § 12203(a). To establish a prima facie case of retaliation and
survive summary judgment, a plaintiff must demonstrate "(1) that he engaged in a
statutorily protected activity, (2) that an adverse action was taken against him, and (3)
a causal connection between the adverse action and the protected activity." Amir, 184
F.3d at 1025. If this prima facie showing is made, "the burden then shifts to the
defendant to proffer a legitimate nondiscriminatory reason for the adverse action." Id.
at 1025-26 (citing Hicks,
Mershon established a prima facie case sufficient to shift the burden of production to the University. He demonstrated (1) that in November 2001 he called Jan Chapin of the Office for Civil Rights of the United States Department of Education to complain that he believed the University was not accommodating his disability, which is a statutorily protected activity; (2) that the University took an adverse action against him by banning him from the campus; and (3) that the adverse action, which occurred the very next day when he attempted to enter the campus, was causally related to his telephone call to Chapin. The burden then shifted to the University to proffer a legitimate nondiscriminatory explanation for the adverse action. The University presented evidence indicating that Mershon's complaint to *8 Chapin was perceived as a threat to harm a professor and that campus security simply acted to protect the University faculty and students from threatened violence. The district court concluded that Mershon failed to present evidence sufficient to show that the University's decision to ban him from campus was a mere pretext for disability discrimination rather than a legitimate response to a perceived threat. After a thorough review of the record, we agree.
Mershon argues that he never threatened to harm Dr. Mancini when he spoke
to Chapin, and thus, a question of fact existed and the district court impermissibly
resolved a credibility determination. In the summary judgment context, we accept
Mershon's statements of fact and do not resolve credibility disputes. See Yates v.
Rexton, Inc.,
Once the University set forth a legitimate nondiscriminatory reason for the
adverse action of banning Mershon from campus, Mershon had the burden to establish
"that he was the victim of intentional discrimination 'by showing that the
[University's] proffered explanation is unworthy of credence.'" Reeves v. Sanderson
Plumbing Prods., Inc.,
Mershon asserts that the short amount of time between his conversation with
Chapin and the University's adverse action against him is suspicious and lends an
inference of discrimination on account of his disability. Our review of the record
convinces us that the timing of Mershon's expulsion from campus casts no doubt on
the veracity of the University's explanation. The close proximity between his
conversation with Chapin and the University's swift action instead supports its
assertion that it acted quickly out of a legitimate concern for the safety of its faculty
and students, and nothing in the record indicates that the University's explanation was
a mere pretext for discrimination. See Euerle-Wehle,
B. Failure to Accommodate
Mershon argues that the district court erred in granting summary judgment on his ADA and Rehabilitation Act claims that the University failed to provide him with reasonable accommodations for his disability. Title III of the ADA prohibits a private person who owns a place of public accommodation from discriminating against an individual "on the basis of a disability in the full and equal enjoyment of the goods, services, facilities, privileges, advantages, or accommodations of any place of public accommodation." 42 U.S.C. § 12182(a). Discrimination under Title III specifically includes the failure to make reasonable modifications in policies, practices, or procedure to accommodate a disabled individual, unless the entity can demonstrate that making such modifications would fundamentally alter the nature of the services. 42 U.S.C. § 12182(b)(2)(A)(ii).
Likewise, the Rehabilitation Act requires reasonable accommodations when an
"otherwise qualified" disabled student, 29 U.S.C. § 794(a), "would otherwise be
denied meaningful access to a university," Stern v. Univ. of Osteopathic Med. &
Health Sciences,
Thus, in the higher education context, a person alleging a failure to
accommodate under Title III or the Rehabilitation Act must show (1) that the plaintiff
is disabled and otherwise qualified academically, (2) that the defendant is a private
entity that owns, leases or operates a place of public accommodation (for ADA
purposes) and receives federal funding (for Rehabilitation Act purposes), and (3) "that
the defendant failed to make reasonable modifications that would accommodate the
plaintiff's disability without fundamentally altering the nature of the public
accommodation," Amir ,
*12
First, there is no real dispute here that Mershon is disabled within the meaning
of the ADA and the Rehabilitation Act. Second, St. Louis University is a place of
public accommodation within the meaning of the ADA and receives federal funding
for purposes of the Rehabilitation Act. See Amir,
As to the third requirement, Mershon bears the initial burden of demonstrating
that he requested reasonable accommodations, see US Airways, Inc. v. Barnett, 535
U.S. 391, 401-02 (2002), and that those accommodations would render him otherwise
qualified for admission to the professional degree program, see Falcone v. Univ. of
Minn.,
We conclude that Mershon's assertions are much too general and conclusory to
demonstrate that he requested reasonable specific accommodations that would have
rendered him qualified for admission into the graduate school or that the University
unreasonably failed to provide every requested accommodation. The district court
found, "Plaintiff's academic record is replete with defendants' efforts to accommodate
him in his academic endeavors until he became a perceived threat." (Appellant's Add.
*13
at 17.) We agree with the district court that the record indicates the University offered
Mershon many accommodations, such as many changes in his academic status and
permission to remain in conditional academic status longer than school policy
permitted, as well as the accommodations that he admitted receiving in some classes.
Mershon's list of accommodations that he did not receive does not specifically identify
which were sought and rejected for any particular course, nor does he explain how
each requested accommodation was necessary to enable him to participate in light of
his disabilities and the particular course requirements. His conclusory assertions that
he made many phone calls and wrote many letters provide no basis for evaluating
whether each request was adequately communicated to the University regarding a
specific course or whether each was necessary to enable him to participate in a
particular course in light of his disability. See Stern,
Mershon complains that the University stopped providing accommodations
sometime in 2000 and that this resulted in several incomplete grades in courses that
he does not identify and for reasons not clearly articulated. Again, even accepting his
conclusory allegations as true, Mershon's lack of specificity is an obstacle to
determining whether he requested and was denied reasonable accommodations. "A
plaintiff may not merely point to unsupported self-serving allegations, but must
substantiate his allegations with sufficient probative evidence that would permit a
finding in his favor." Bass v. SBC Communications, Inc.,
The record also indicates that Mershon never completed his graduate school
application, he lacked undergraduate course work preparation, and his overall
academic performance was not up to the standard necessary for admission into the
graduate school. "When the accommodation involves an academic decision, 'courts
should show great respect for the faculty's professional judgment.'" Amir, 184 F.3d
*14
at 1028 (quoting Regents of Univ. of Mich. v. Ewing,
Mershon also asserts that the University failed to engage in an interactive
process despite his "countless letters, phone calls, and personal visits" attempting to
obtain accommodations. (Appellant's Br. at 21.) "Even if such an interactive process
is required in an academic setting," Stern,
III.
Accordingly, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
Notes
[1] The Honorable Henry Edward Autrey, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri.
[2] A "classified" graduate student is one who has been admitted into the graduate school to pursue an advanced degree, an "unclassified" graduate student is not formally pursuing a degree but is typically completing prerequisites for subsequent degree pursuit or taking courses for educational enrichment, and a "conditional" student typically has a classified application in progress and has been formally admitted to permit the initiation of course work prior to full approval of classified status. (Appellees' App. at 25.)
[3] We will refer only to the ADA, but the legal principles involved are equally
applicable to claims under the Rehabilitation Act. See Perkins v. St. Louis County
Water Co.,
[4] While there are minor differences between Title III of the ADA and the
Rehabilitation Act, none of those differences are material in this case. We will
therefore consider cases dealing with each Act as "applicable and interchangeable."
Stern,
[5] The statement of elements for a Title III discrimination claim listed in Amir
also includes the element of an adverse action based upon the plaintiff's disability.
