Late one night, as Thomas Osteen, an undergraduate at Northern Illinois University, was leaving a bar in the company of two male friends and the girlfriend of one of them, the girlfriend began “mouthing off to a male [another student] who was outside of a bar who decided to mouth off to her and the two of them mouthed out to each othеr and he didn’t realize she was with three football players so when he realized that he was mouthing off to a young lady that was being accompanied by three football players one of
The suit is against a variety of university officials in both their individual and official capacities and seeks both injunctive relief — the reinstatement of Osteen with or without the restoration of his football scholarship — and damages. If the requеst for injunctive action were the only thing before us, we would be inclined to remand for a hearing on possible mootness. We were told at argument that after being expelled from NIU Osteen enrolled in another college, and for all we know he will have received his degree from that college before hе could possibly be readmitted to NIU. (The record is silent as to what year of college Osteen was in when he was expelled.) More important, the expulsion was only for two years, and the two years are up, so that there is, at least as far as the record discloses, no obstacle to his being readmitted. But sinсe the entire case would not be moot even if the injunctive aspect of it were, we shall soldier on, merely adding that the district court was incorrect to bypass the issue of standing and deny injunctive relief on the ground that such relief is barred by the Eleventh Amendment. That amendment is not a bar to injunctions against state offiсials even when they are named in their official capacities, because all that such an injunction does is require the state to confine its future activity within the limits set by federal law. Kentucky v. Graham,
But insofar as the defendants are being sued for damages in their official capacities, the suit is against the university and if the university is the state is therefore barred by the Eleventh Amendment. Kentucky v. Graham, supra,
Despite the similarity in their names, these three universities have separate provenances and are governed by separate statutes. 110 ILCS 505, 605, 705. But as Osteen has pointed us to no difference in their governance that might bear on the Eleventh Amendment, he has the uphill fight of persuading us that Cannon and Davidson— which are consistent with decisions concerning other state universities, as noted in Kroll v. Board of Trustees, supra,
Insofar as the defendants are also being sued for damages in their individual capacity, the Eleventh Amendment does not bar the suit. Almost certainly, qualified immunity does. (Conceivably, absolute immunity is avаilable to the university’s judicial officers, though this is most unlikely given the Supreme Court’s refusal to grant such immunity to members of school boards that adjudicate violations of school disciplinary regulations, Wood v. Strickland,
Bolles mailed Osteen a notice of charges and a copy of the university’s student judicial code, thus initiating disciplinary proceedings. According to the code, Bolles’s function as university judicial officer was to meet with Osteen аnd attempt to resolve the matter without a hearing, but if this failed he was to present the ease against Osteen at a hearing. The two met and in Bolles’s presence Osteen signed a form in which he pleaded guilty to the charges but requested a hearing on Bolles’s proposed sanction, which was a two-year еxpulsion. The hearing was held before an appeals board consisting of the university’s assistant judicial officer (i.e., assistant to Bolles) presiding and in addition one faculty member and two students. The case against Osteen was presented by Bolles, Osteen being represented by a student advocate. Os-teen, his advocate, and Bolles addressed the board (we quoted part of Bolles’s statement earlier), which in addition considered character references and other documents and concluded that the two-year expulsion was the proper sanction. Osteen attempted to appeal to the univеrsity’s vice-president for student affairs but was told that the vice-president’s authority under the judicial code had been delegated to an associate vice-president. After considering Osteen’s appeal that officer upheld the expulsion but postponed it to the end of the semester.
The suit attacks а number of features of the disciplinary proceeding. Bolles had played a dual role as judge and prosecutor. The presiding officer of the appellate tribunal was Bolles’s assistant. She cut off Osteen’s advocate on the ground that the issue of guilt was not before the board, just the issue of sanction, when the advocate was trying to give Osteen’s version of the assaults. Osteen was not allowed to cross-examine. His lawyer (his real lawyer, not the student advocate) was not permitted to participate in the proceedings. At the oral argument before us Osteen’s counsel repeated, what had been in his сomplaint but not in his briefs, the alarming further charge that Bolles had induced Osteen to plead guilty on the representation that on appeal the two-year expulsion would
In his opening brief in this court Os-teen raised just three issues; the others are therefore waived, and we will not consider them. The issues he raised are the defendants’ failure to comply with all the requirements of the student judicial code, the interruption of himself and his advocate by the appeals board, and the denial of a right to counsеl. The first point has no possible merit. As we tirelessly but unavailingly remind counsel in this court, a violation of state law (for purposes of this case the student judicial code may be treated as a state law) is not a denial of due process, even if the state law confers a procedural right. See, e.g., Archie v. City of Racine,
As for the interruption of his student advocate, Osteen had by pleading guilty to the charges against him conceded his guilt, so the presiding officer was entitled to cut off what appeared to be an attempt to reopen the issue. Osteen was allowed to make a statement in mitigation; his advocate was interrupted only when it appeared that she was trying to revisit the issue of guilt. The interruption, designed to confine the proceeding to relevant matters, was well within the outer bounds of the presiding officer’s discretionary authority over the scope of the hearing — and it is the outer bounds that the due process clause patrols.
The most interesting question is whether there is a right to counsel, somehow derived from the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, in student disciplinary proceedings. An oldish case (by the standards of constitutional law at any rate) says yes, Black Coalition v. Portland School District No. 1,
Even if a student has a constitutional right to consult counsel — an issue not foreclosed by Baxter, as we shall see — we do not think he is entitled to be represented in the sense of having a lawyer who is рermitted to examine or cross-examine witnesses, to submit and object to documents, to address the tribunal, and otherwise to perform the traditional function of a trial lawyer. To recognize such a right would force student disciplinary proceedings into the mold of adversary litigation. The university would have to hire its own lawyer to prosecute these cases and no doubt lawyers would also be dragged in — from the law faculty or elsewhere — to serve as judges. The cost and complexity of such proceedings would be increased, to the detriment of discipline as well as of the university’s fisc. Concern is frequently voiced about thе bureaucratization of education, reflected for example in the high ratio of administrative personnel to faculty at all levels of American education today. We are reluctant to encourage further bureaucratization by judicializing university disciplinary proceedings, mindful also that one dimension of academic freedom is the right of academic
The canonical test for how much process is due, laid down by the Supreme Court in Mathews v. Eldridge,
The last point gives us the most pause, as we suspect, though the record is barren on the pоint, that the expulsion cost Osteen scholarship assistance that he or his family needed. But when we consider all the factors bearing on his claim to a right of counsel, we conclude that the Constitution does not confer such a right on him. We doubt that it does in any student disciplinary proceeding. After Walters v. National Association of Radiation Survivors,
We do not condone trickery and coercion, alleged by Osteen but abandoned in this court. And we are sensible of the anomaly of having one’s own assistant (Bolles’s) sitting in judgment on one’s case (Bolles was the “presenter” — in effect the prosecutor), although this kind of conflict of interest has not been thоught in the previous cases involving school disciplinary action to violate due process. Newsome v. Batavia Local School Dist., supra,
Affirmed.
