Kevin Ross filed suit against Creighton University (Creighton or the University) for negligence and breach of contract arising from Creighton’s alleged failure to educate him. The district court dismissed Mr. Ross’ complaint for failure to state a claim. For the following reasons we affirm in part and reverse in part the judgment of the district court.
I
BACKGROUND
A. Facts
When reviewing the grant of a motion to dismiss, we assume the truth of all well-pleaded factual allegations and make all reasonable inferences in favor of the plaintiff.
Webster v. New Lenox School Dist. No. 122,
In the spring of 1978, Mr. Ross was a promising senior basketball player at Wyandotte High School in Kansas City, Kansas. Sometime during his senior year in high school, he accepted an athletic scholarship to attend Creighton and to play on its varsity basketball team.
Creighton is an academically superior university. Mr. Ross comes from an academically disadvantaged background. At the time of his enrollment at Creighton, Mr. Ross was at an academic level far below that of the average Creighton student. For example, he scored in the bottom fifth percentile of college-bound seniors taking the American College Test, while the average freshman admitted to Creighton with him scored in the upper twenty-seven percent. According to the complaint, Creighton realized Mr. Ross’ academic limitations when it admitted him, and, to induce him to attend and play basketball, Creighton assured Mr. Ross that he would receive sufficient tutoring so that he “would receive a meaningful education while at CREIGHTON.” R.44 at Count I, no.
*412 Mr. Ross attended Creighton from 1978 until 1982. During that time he maintained a D average and acquired 96 of the 128 credits needed to graduate. However, many of these credits were in courses such as Marksmanship and Theory of Basketball, and did not count towards a university degree. Mr. Ross alleges that he took these courses on the advice of Creighton’s Athletic Department, and that the department also employed a secretary to read his assignments and prepare and type his papers. Mr. Ross also asserts that Creighton failed to provide him with sufficient and competent tutoring that it had promised.
When he left Creighton, Mr. Ross had the overall language skills of a fourth grader and the reading skills of a seventh grader. Consequently, Mr. Ross enrolled, at Creighton’s expense, for a year of remedial education at the Westside Preparatory School in Chicago. At Westside, Mr. Ross attended classes with grade school children. He later entered Roosevelt University in Chicago, but was forced to withdraw because of a lack of funds. In July 1987, Mr. Ross suffered what he terms a “major depressive episode,” during which he barricaded himself in a Chicago motel room and threw furniture out the window. R.44 at Count I, ¶ 26. To Mr. Ross, this furniture “symbolized” Creighton employees who had wronged him. Id.
B. District Court Proceedings
Mr. Ross filed suit against Creighton in Cook County (Illinois) Circuit Court for negligence and breach of contract. Creighton, which is located in Omaha, Nebraska, removed the case to federal court on diversity grounds, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1332 and 1441.
Mr. Ross’ complaint advances three separate theories of how Creighton was negligent towards him. First, he contends that Creighton committed “educational malpractice” by not providing him with a meaningful education and preparing him for employment after college. Second, Mr. Ross claims that Creighton negligently inflicted emotional distress upon him by enrolling him in a stressful university environment for which he was not prepared, and then by failing to provide remedial programs that would have helped him survive there. Third, Mr. Ross urges the court to adopt a new cause of action for the tort of “negligent admission,” which would allow recovery when an institution admits, and then does not adequately assist, a woefully unprepared student. The complaint also sets forth a contract claim, alleging that Creighton contracted to provide Mr. Ross “an opportunity ... to obtain a meaningful college education and degree, and to do what was reasonably necessary ... to enable [Mr. Ross] to obtain a meaningful college education and degree.” R.44 at Count III, ¶ 24. It goes on to assert that Creighton breached this contract by failing to provide Mr. Ross adequate tutoring; by not requiring Mr. Ross to attend tutoring sessions; by not allowing him to “red-shirt,” that is, to forego a year of basketball, in order to work on academics; and by failing to afford Mr. Ross a reasonable opportunity to take advantage of tutoring services. Mr. Ross also alleges that Creighton breached a promise it had made to him to pay for a college education.
Creighton moved to dismiss the complaint under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6), and the district court granted this motion.
Ross v. Creighton Univ.,
With regard to the contract claims, the court recognized that the relationship between a student and a university is at least partly contractual.
Id.
at 1330-31 (citing
Carr v. St. John’s Univ.,
II
ANALYSIS
A. Guiding Principles
As an appellate court, we review de novo a Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal for failure to state a claim.
Bethlehem Steel Corp. v. Bush,
B. The Negligence Claims
Mr. Ross advances three separate theories of how Creighton was negligent towards him: educational malpractice for not educating him, a new tort of “negligent *414 admission” to an educational institution, and negligent infliction of emotional distress. We believe that, on the facts of this case, Illinois law would deny Mr. Ross recovery on all three theories.
1. Educational malpractice
Illinois courts have never ruled on whether a tort cause of action exists against an institution for educational malpractice. However, the overwhelming majority of states that have considered this type of claim have rejected it.
2
Only Montana allows these claims to go forward, and its decision was based on state statutes that place a duty of care on educators, a circumstance not present here.
B.M. v. State,
Courts have identified several policy concerns that counsel against allowing claims for educational malpractice. First, there is the lack of a satisfactory standard of care by which to evaluate an educator.
Smith v. Alameda County Social Servs. Agency,
We believe that the Illinois Supreme Court would find the experience of other jurisdictions persuasive and, consequently, that these policy considerations are compelling. Consequently, the Illinois Supreme Court would refuse to recognize the tort of educational malpractice. We therefore affirm the district court’s dismissal of Mr. Ross’ claim based on that theory.
2. “Negligent admission”
In his complaint, Mr. Ross alleges that Creighton owed him a duty “to recruit and enroll only those students reasonably qualified and able to academically perform at CREIGHTON.” R.44 at Count I, ¶ 24. He then contends that Creighton breached this duty by admitting him, not informing him of how unprepared he was for studies there, and then not providing tutoring services or otherwise enabling him to receive a meaningful education. As a result, Mr. Ross underwent undue stress, which brought about, among other things, the incident at the motel.
We believe that Illinois would reject this claim for “negligent admission” for many of the same policy reasons that counsel against recognizing a claim for educational malpractice. First, this cause of action would present difficult, if not insuperable, problems to a court attempting to define a workable duty of care.
See Peter W.,
3. Negligent infliction of emotional distress
Finally, Mr. Ross argues that his allegations that Creighton wrongfully admitted him, and then caused him emotional harm, present a claim under the traditional tort theory of negligent infliction of emotional distress. In
Corgan v. Muehling,
C. The Contract Claims
In counts two and three of his complaint, Mr. Ross alleges that Creighton breached an oral or a written contract that it had with him. When read as a totality, these allegations fairly allege that Creighton agreed, in exchange for Mr. Ross’ promise to play on its basketball team, to *416 allow him an opportunity to participate, in a meaningful way, in the academic program of the University despite his deficient academic background. The complaint further alleges, when read as a totality, that Creighton breached this contract and denied Mr. Ross any real opportunity to participate in and benefit from the University’s academic program when it failed to perform five commitments made to Ross: (1) “to provide adequate and competent tutoring services,” (2) “to require [Mr. Ross] to attend tutoring sessions,” (3) to afford Mr. Ross “a reasonable opportunity to take full advantage of tutoring services,” (4) to allow Mr. Ross to red-shirt, and (5) to provide funds to allow Mr. Ross to complete his college education. R.44 at Count II, 111128 and 81, and Count III at ¶¶ 26 and 29.
It is held generally in the United States that the “basic legal relation between a student and a private university or college is contractual in nature. The catalogues, bulletins, circulars, and regulations of the institution made available to the matricu-lant become a part of the contract.”
Zumbrun v. University of Southern California,
There is no question, we believe, that Illinois would adhere to the great weight of authority and bar any attempt to repackage an educational malpractice claim as a contract claim. As several courts have noted, the policy concerns that preclude a cause of action for educational malpractice apply with equal force to bar a breach of contract claim attacking the general quality of an education.
Wickstrom,
To state a claim for breach of contract, the plaintiff must do more than simply
*417
allege that the education was not good enough. Instead, he must point to an identifiable contractual promise that the defendant failed to honor. Thus, as was suggested in
Paladino,
if the defendant took tuition money and then provided no education, or alternately, promised a set number of hours of instruction and then failed to deliver, a breach of contract action may be available.
Paladino,
We read Mr. Ross’ complaint to allege more than a failure of the University to provide him with an education of a certain quality. Rather, he alleges that the University knew that he was not qualified academically to participate in its curriculum. Nevertheless, it made a specific promise that he would be able to participate in a meaningful way in that program because it would provide certain specific services to him. Finally, he alleges that the University breached its promise by reneging on its commitment to provide those services and, consequently, effectively cutting him off from any participation in and benefit from the University’s academic program. To adjudicate such a claim, the court would not be required to determine whether Creighton had breached its contract with Mr. Ross by providing deficient academic services. Rather, its inquiry would be limited to whether the University had provided any real access to its academic curriculum at all.
Accordingly, we must disagree respectfully with our colleague in the district court as to whether the contract counts of the complaint can be dismissed at the pleadings stage. In our view, the allegations of the complaint are sufficient to warrant further proceedings. We emphasize, however, the narrow ground of our disagreement. We agree — indeed we emphasize — that courts should not “take on the job of supervising the relationship between colleges and student-athletes or creating in effect a new relationship between them.”
Ross,
Conclusion
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is affirmed in part and reversed and remanded in part for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Affirmed in part, Reversed in part and Remanded.
Notes
. Creighton also moved for dismissal under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(2) for lack of personal jurisdiction. The district court rejected this argument, holding that even though Creighton was a Nebraska institution, sufficient minimum contacts existed between it and the forum state of Illinois to satisfy the requirements of the Illinois Long-Arm Statute and the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution. Ross v.
Creighton Univ.,
. Courts in at least eleven states have considered and rejected claims for educational malpractice: Alabama, Alaska, California, Florida, Idaho, Iowa, Kentucky, Maryland, New Jersey, New York, and Wisconsin.
See, e.g., Blane v. Alabama Commercial College, Inc.,
. For further discussion of the contractual nature of the relationship between student and institution
see Zumbrun v. University of Southern California,
