Case Information
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT NORTHERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA SAN JOSE DIVISION
VINEY SAROYA, Case No. 5:20-cv-03196-EJD Plaintiff, ORDER GRANTING IN PART AND v. DENYING IN PART MOTION TO DISMISS; GRANTING MOTION TO STRIKE UNIVERSITY OF THE PACIFIC,
Defendant. Re: Dkt. No. 31, 33
Thе COVID-19/Coronavirus pandemic has affected several sectors of our society. In particular, the COVID-19 pandemic has reverberated throughout the higher education system. Beginning in March, higher education institutions across the country made the unprecedented decision to close their campuses, hitting pause on the “full collegiate experience.” At the same time, universities began transitioning their classes to online and other remote learning formats for their students to avoid a lost quarter or semester. Plaintiff Viney Saroya filed this putative class action against Defendant, University of the Pacific (“UOP”), alleging UOP breached a contract with its studеnts (Claim I) or, alternatively, unjustly enriched itself at its student’s expense (Claim II) when it retained the full amount of tuition and fees it collected for the Spring 2020 semester despite ceasing in-person instruction and closing its campus facilities and resources with just six weeks left of the semester. The class action also raises a claim of conversion (Claim III) and a claim of money had and received (Claim IV). Currently at issue is UOP’s Motion to Dismiss all claims pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6). Dkt. No. 31, (“Mot. to Dismiss”). UOP has also moved to strike specific allegations from the First Amended Compliant (“FAC”). Dkt. No. 33, (“Mot. to Strike”). Having considered the parties’ arguments and submissions, and for the reasons set forth below, the Court GRANTS in part and DENIES in рart the Motion to Dismiss and GRANTS in part and DENIES in part the Motion to Strike.
I. BACKGROUND
Plaintiff brings this class action on behalf of all people who paid tuition and fees for the Spring 2020 semester at UOP, and who lost the benefit of the education and services that they paid for as a result of UOP’s response to COVID-19. FAC ¶ 1. UOP is a private university, with a total enrollment of over 6,000 students across eleven schools and colleges with campuses located in Sacramento, San Francisco, and Stockton, California. Id . ¶ 2. The university offers over 40 degrees encompassing more than 80 areas of study for undergraduate students, as well as a number of graduate and professional programs. Id . Plaintiff is an undergraduate student at UOP’s San Francisco campus pursuing a bachelor’s degree in business and economics. Id . ¶ 15. UOP’s Spring 2020 semester commenced on or about January 13, 2020. Id . ¶ 22. Before paying tuition and fees for the spring semester, Plaintiff consulted UOP’s course catalogue where he came to understand and believe that every course he enrolled in would be taught in-person. Id . ¶ 16. The course catalogue is directed at students and provides information about the courses offered, the instructors, the days and times during which the courses would be held, and the on- campus location where the courses would be taught. Id . ¶¶ 5, 16. According to Plaintiff, UOP promotes its “on-cаmpus experience” on its website, while other publications such as course specific syllabi and university attendance policies highlight the in-person nature of the courses that were offered for the spring semester. Id . ¶¶ 6, 30.
On March 11, 2020, UOP interim President, Maria Pallavicini, announced that because of the COVID-19 pandemic, spring break would be extended through March 20, 2020, and that effective March 23, 2020, all in-person classes would be suspended for the remainder of the Spring 2020 semester. . ¶ 26. UOP did not hold any in-person classes from March 23, 2020, through the end of the spring semester which concluded on or around May 6, 2020. Classes that continued after March 23, 2020 were provided in an online format, with no in-person instruction.
Plaintiff alleges that UOP and its students “entered into a contractual agreement where Plaintiff would provide payment in the form of tuition and fees and UOP, in exchange, would provide in-person educational services, experiences, opportunities, and other related services.” Id . ¶ 3. Plaintiff, it is argued, was deprived of the opportunity for collaborative learning and in-person dialogue, feedback, and critique. Id . ¶ 31. According to Plaintiff, UOP did not deliver the educational services, access, or opportunities that Plaintiff and other students like him contracted and paid for. Id . ¶ 28.
The approximate cost of tuition аnd fees at UOP for the Spring 2020 semester was $24,794 for full-time undergraduate students, and $24,687 for full-time graduate students. Id . ¶ 24. At the beginning of the semester, Plaintiff paid approximately $15,000 in tuition and fees to UOP. Id . ¶ 15. Through this action, Plaintiff seeks individually and on behalf of the class, UOP’s disgorgement of the pro-rated portion of tuition and fees, proportionate to the amount of time that remained in the Spring 2020 semester when classes moved online and UOP halted in-person services. . ¶ 34. UOP moves to dismiss the FAC as legally insufficient. The matter is now ripe for adjudication. II. LEGAL STANDARDS A. Motion to Dismiss
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) is designed to “test[ ] the legal sufficiency of a
claim.”
Navarro v. Block
,
B. Motion to Strike
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(f) permits a court to “strike from a pleading an
insufficient defense or any redundant, immaterial, impertinent, or scandalous matter.” Fed. R. Civ.
P. 12(f). “[T]he function of a 12(f) motion to strike is to avoid the expenditure of time and money
that must arise from litigating spurious issues by dispensing with those issues prior to trial.”
Sidney-Vinstein v. A.H. Robins Co.
,
III. DISCUSSION
A. Judicial Notice
UOP requests that the Court take judicial notice of two sets of exhibits. Dkt. No. 32, (“RJN”). UOP first asks the Court to take judicial notice of Exhibits A-H attached to the declaration of Dr. Maria Pallavicini (the “Pallavicini Decl.”). All exhibits are readily available on UOP’s public website. RJN at 5. Exhibits A-D are UOP’s course catalogs for the 2019-2020 academic year, which are referred to throughout Plaintiff’s FAC. Pallavicini Decl. ¶¶ 5-8; see also FAC ¶¶ 3-5, 16, 46-48, 50. Exhibit E is a copy of the Financial Responsibility Agreement Acknowledgements (“Financial Agreement”). Pallavicini Decl. ¶ 9. Exhibits F-H are periodic communications UOP sent to students concerning the university, campus, and COVID-19. Id . ¶¶ 11, 13-14. Next, UOP asks the Court to take judicial notice of Exhibits A-J attached to the declaration of Kristina S. Azlin (the “Azlin Decl.”). The exhibits include state and local orders and announcements concerning response to COVID-19.
The Court GRANTS IN PART and DENIES IN PART UOP’s RJN. The Court does not
take judicial notice of Exhibits A-J attached to the Azlin Declaration. The Court does not find
these materials necessary to consider for the Court’s analysis. However, the Court takes judicial
notice of Exhibits A-H attached to the Pallavicini Declaration. Generally, district courts may not
consider material outside the pleadings when assessing the sufficiency of a complaint under Rule
12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
Lee v. City of L.A.
,
Here, Plaintiff does not argue that the Court cannot take judicial notice of Exhibits A-H.
Plaintiff’s FAC incorporates by reference Exhibits A-H because Plaintiff explicitly and repeatedly
refers to excerpts of these exhibits to support his claims. Moreover, Exhibits A–H are all publicly
available documents and thus are subject to judicial notice.
See In re Restoration Robotics, Inc.
Sec. Litig.
,
B. Motion to Dismiss
UOP moves to dismiss all of Plaintiff’s claims on three grounds. First, UOP argues that Plaintiff’s claims should be dismissed because they are fundamentally demands for judicial intervention in academic decisions regarding mode of instruction, which is a claim for “educational malpractice.” Alternatively, UOP contends that even if the allegations are not barred under the educational malpractice doctrine, Plaintiff fails to plead the elements of his state law claims. Third, UOP argues that Plaintiff’s demands for speculative damages warrants dismissal of all claims. UOP also moves to dismiss Plaintiff’s demand for punitive damages. i. Educational Malpractice Doctrine UOP contends that Plaintiff’s FAC fails to state a claim because California law precludes
monetary damages for what UOP characterizes as a tort claim for educational malpractice. According to UOP, allegations in the FAC which describe remote learning as “subpar” and “in no way the equivalent of the in-person education putative class members contracted and paid for,” demonstrate that this action is ultimately about a perceived decline in the quality of education following UOP’s transition to distance learning. See Mot. to Dismiss at 6-9; see also FAC ¶¶ 10, 31-32. Plaintiff, however, asserts that his claims arise from UOP’s failure to provide specific services to its students and the university’s decision to still make students pay full tuition and fees for the Spring 2020 semester. Thus, Plaintiff argues, his claims are not academic in nature and do not “require an inquiry into the nuanсes of educational processes or theories.” Opposition to Mot. to Dismiss., Dkt. No. 34 at 4 (quoting Kashmiri v. Regents of Univ. of California , 156 Cal. App. 4th 809, 826-27 (2007) (citation omitted). The Court agrees with Plaintiff.
The basic legal relationship between a student and a private university is contractual in
nature.
Zumbrun v. Univ. of S. California
,
In
Peter W.
, an 18–year–old former public school student, who graduated high school with
a fifth grade reading level, sued his school district for failure to provide an adequate education.
The California Court of Appeal concluded that the complaint failed to allege a breach of a duty the
law would recognize, noting that “classroom methodology affords no readily acceptable standards
of care, or cause, or injury .”
Peter W
.,
While courts may not have a role in adjudicating claims for educational malpractice, the
Court does not read Plаintiff’s FAC as alleging a failure of the university to provide him with an
education of a certain quality. The considerations identified in
Peter W.
do not apply to claims
where resolution “does not require judgments about pedagogical methods or the quality of the
school’s classes, instructors, curriculum, textbooks, or learning aids,” nor “require evaluation of
individual students’ educational progress or achievement, or the reasons for their success or
failure.”
Wells v. One2One Learning Found.
,
Here, the FAC alleges Plaintiff “entered into a contractual agreement where [he] would
provide payment in the form of tuition and fees and UOP, in exchange, would provide in-person
educational services, experiences, opportunities, and other related services.” FAC ¶ 3. The rights
asserted include access to campus buildings, including the buildings where classes were scheduled
to meet, participation in on-campus activities, hands-on training and face-to-face instruction as
promised by UOP. . ¶¶ 4-9; 13; 16; 26-34. Thus, construing the FAC in the light most
favorable to Plaintiff, his claim is not that UOP failed to provide students with an adequate
education, but that it failed to provide certain services as promised. Notwithstanding Plaintiff’s
allegations comparing remote learning to in-person learning, “[r]uling on these issues would not
require an inquiry into pedagogical methods, the quality of Defendant’s instructors and
curriculum, or an evaluation of Plaintiff’[s] “progress or achievement, or the reasons for their
success or failure.”
See Wells
,
ii. Breach of Contract
First, Plaintiff asserts a claim for breach of contract relative to the payment of tuition and
fees for the Spring 2020 semester. Under California law, the elements of a breach of contract
claim are: (1) the existence of a contract, (2) performance or excuse of nonperformance, (3)
defendant’s breach, and (4) damages.
Oasis West Realty, LLC v. Goldman
,
Here, UOP asserts that it entered into an express Financial Agreement with students such as Plaintiff, which contains “Plaintiff’s sрecific promise to pay tuition and fees upon registration or receipt of services . . . and in exchange, [UOP] agrees to confer certain benefits, including ‘course registration, grades, and diplomas.” Mot. to dismiss at 10. The Financial Agreement lacks any promise that the university would guarantee in-person instruction and thus, UOP argues, Plaintiff is unable to allege that UOP has breached an enforceable promise. However, while the Financial Agreement may lack a promise of in-person instruction, Plaintiff has sufficiently alleged that UOP’s publications when considered together established a contractual agreement where students like Plaintiff would provide payment in the form of tuition and fees for the Spring 2020 semester and UOP, in exchange, would provide in-person educational services, experiences, opportunities, and other related services. See FAC ¶ 3.
Specifically, Plaintiff alleges that in consulting UOP’s course catalogue, Plaintiff understood and believed that every course in which he enrolled would be taught in-person. Id . ¶ 16. The course catalogues include information about the “days and times” and “the location” in which the courses would be held. See id. ¶¶ 5-6, 30. Plaintiff has also alleged that other UOP materials such as course syllabi and university policies reference the in-person nature of the spring semеster and also tout “campus life.” . Moreover, while it is true, that Plaintiff does not identify any express or specific promise that was breached, the FAC does allege that tuition and fees paid to UOP cover not just the academic instruction but encompass, face-to-face interaction with professors, mentors, and peers; access to facilities such as libraries, laboratories, computer labs, and study rooms; extra-curricular activities, groups, and intramural sports; hands on learning and experimentation; and networking and mentorship opportunities among other things. Id . ¶ 32. The Court finds these allegations, at this stage, are sufficient to state а claim for breach of an implied-in-fact contract.
Moreover, it was reasonable for Plaintiff to expect that when he was billed for the Spring
2020 semester, he would receive the in-person educational services that were allegedly promised
to him. In
Kashmiri
, the California Court of Appeal affirmed summary judgment for plaintiff
students after the university billed students for the spring and summer terms, but then increased
the fees after the students had received their bills.
Kashmiri
,
Here, UOP billed Plaintiff for tuition and fees for the Spring 2020 semester. Plaintiff alleges that prior to beginning classes, he paid full tuition and fees. Thus, like the students in Kashmiri , it was reasonable for Plaintiff to expect that when he was billed for the Spring 2020 semester, he would receive all of the services that were allegedly promised to him. When UOP changed the nature of the educational services students reasonably expected to receive in exchange for his tuition and fees payment, it arguably breached its contract with Plaintiff.
UOP also contends that its tuition refund policy and reservation of right to change or modify services and fees warrant dismissal of Plaintiff’s breach of contract claim. UOP’s remaining arguments, including its damages argument, as well as arguments about the qualitative value of the “campus lifestyle and benefits” at a satellite campus and others are more appropriate at the dispositive motion stage. At this time, the Court expresses no opinion on the merits of the breach of contract claim. Accordingly, UOP’s Motion to Dismiss Plaintiff’s breach of contract claim is denied.
iii. Unjust Enrichment
Plaintiff’s next claim is for unjust enrichment. He asserts that UOP received tuition and
fees for the Spring 2020 semester, which were supposed to cover in-person educational services
from January through May 2020. Plaintiff claims, however, that UOP failed to provide the
education, experience, and services for which the tuition and fees were collected or return the pro-
rated portion of Plaintiff’s tuition and fees for educational services not provided after UOP shut
down on March 6, 2020. According to Plaintiff, “[i]t would be unjust and inequitable for [UOP]
to retain the benefit conferred by Plaintiff and Class Members’ overpayments.”
Id
. ¶¶ 58-62.
“[I]n California, there is not a standalone cause of action for ‘unjust enrichment,’ which is
synonymous with ‘restitution.’”
Astiana v. Hain Celestial Grp., Inc.
,
Here, Plaintiff expressly alleges the existence of an enforceable agreement.
See
FAC ¶¶ 3-
4. A plaintiff may assert inconsistent theories of recovery at the pleading stage, including
inconsistent claims alleging both the existence and the absence of an enforceable contract.
See
Fed. R. Civ. P. 8(2)(2), (3);
see also Clear Channel Outdoor, Inc. v. Bently Holdings Cal. LP
, No.
C-11-2576 EMC,
iv. Conversion
Plaintiff’s third claim is for conversion. “Conversion is the wrongful exercise of dominion
over the property of another. The elements of a conversion claim are: (1) the plaintiff’s ownership
or right to possession of the property; (2) the defendant’s conversion by a wrongful act or
disposition of property rights; and (3) damages.”
Lee v. Hanley
Here, Plaintiff is not seeking to recover all of the tuition and fees he paid to UOP, but
rather only an unspecified “prorated portion” of tuition and fees for educational services not
prоvided.
See
FAC ¶ 34. An obligation to pay money, like Plaintiff’s claim for partial tuition
reimbursement, is insufficiently tangible to qualify as property under these facts.
See PCO, Inc.
,
v. Money Had and Received
Plaintiff’s final claim is one for money had and received. “[A] plaintiff may not maintain
quasi-contract claims such as . . . mоney had and received . . . ‘if the parties have an enforceable
agreement regarding a particular subject matter.’”
Allen v. Hylands, Inc.
, No. CV 12-01150 DMG
(MANx), 2012 1656750 at *5 (C.D. Cal. May 2, 2012) (quoting
Klein
,
Plaintiff bases his claim for money had and received on UOP’s retention of students’
Spring 2020 semester tuition and fees, despite not providing in-person educational services,
activities, opportunities, resources, and facilities for which those monies were paid. FAC ¶ 74.
The Court finds Plaintiff fails to state a claim. As discussed above, Plaintiff alleges the existence
of an enforceable agreement.
See
FAC ¶¶ 3-4. He cannot succeed on a quasi-contract claim if the
parties have an enforceable agreement regarding a particular subject matter. “A plaintiff may not .
. . pursue or recover on a quasi-contract claim if the parties havе an enforceable agreement
regarding a particular subject matter.”
See Klein
,
Furthermore, Plaintiff fails to sufficiently аllege a sum certain. Although Plaintiff argues allegations that he paid “approximately $15,000 in tuition and fees” and that UOP “delivered approximately 50%” establish a sum certain, Plaintiff fails to demonstrate that his request for a pro-rated reimbursement and mere estimates substantiate his money had and received claim. Without more from Plaintiff, an attempt to amend his money had and received common claim is unwarranted. Plaintiff’s claim for money had and received is dismissed with no leave to amend. vi. Demand for Punitive Damages
Lastly, UOP claims that none of Plaintiff’s claims entitle him to an award of punitive
damages. However, a complaint is not subject to a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim
under Rule 12(b)(6) because the prayer seeks relief that is not recoverable as a matter of law.
See,
e.g.
,
Monaco v. Liberty Life Assur. Co.
, No. C06-07021 MJJ,
Semester 2020 tuition. The tuition and fees for in-person instruction at UOP are higher than tuition and fees for other online institutions because such costs cover not just the academic instruction, but encompass an entirely different experience which includes but is not limited to: • Face to face interaction with professors, mentors, and peers;
• Access to facilities such as libraries, laboratories, computer labs, and study room; • Student governance and student unions; • Extra-curricular activities, groups, intramural sports, etc.;
• Student art, cultures, and other activities; • Social development and independence; • Hands on learning and experimentation; • Networking and mentorship opportunities.
33. This is further evidenced by the fact that UOP is waiving all course fees for the upcoming fall semester as well as various campus recreation fees. FAC ¶¶ 32-33. UOP contends that any mention of the university’s plans for the fall 2020 semester is impertinent and irrelevant as Plaintiff’s claims for a pro rata fee reimbursement concern only UOP’s response to COVID-19 during the spring 2020 term. UOP also argues that its changes in policy for the fall 2020 semester is evidence of subsequent remedial conduct which is inadmissible pursuant to Federal Rule of Evidence 407. Thus, UOP’s position is that unless stricken, these allegations pose a serious risk of jury confusion and prejudice against the university. Plaintiff opposes the Motion to Strike, arguing that both allegations are material to the case. The Court disagrees as to a portion of Paragraph 32. Plaintiff argues that the provost’s letter about the university’s plans for the fall 2020 semester sеts forth UOP’s stance on the quality of online learning. However, this has no connection to Plaintiff’s claims, which relate exclusively to the Spring 2020 semester and how UOP’s response to COVID-19 allegedly breached a contract it had with its students to provide in-person educational services during that semester. The allegation is immaterial and impertinent to Plaintiff’s FAC and should be stricken from any amended pleading. The Court accordingly grants UOP’s Motion to Strike language from Paragraph 32 that discusses the university’s plans for the fall 2020 semester and its stance on the quality of online learning. [2]
Plaintiff next argues that the allegation in Paragraph 33, which discusses UOP’s intention of waiving all course fees for the Fall 2020 semester as well as various campus recreation fees, relates to the feasibility of providing tuition and fee refunds to account for the provision of services that are of a different value. The Court does not agree. Plaintiff’s claims relate exclusively to pro-rated refunds, whereas the decision to waive fees for a semester does not implicate issues with pro-rating an unidentified amount or refunding money as no money was paid. Thus, the allegation is immaterial and impertinent. Moreover, UOP’s intentions and acts for a period of time that follows the relevant Spring 2020 semester raises an issue that will serve to cause рrejudice to UOP. See Cal. Dep’t of Toxic Substances Control v. Alco Pac., Inc. , 217 F. Supp. 2d 1028, 1033 (C.D. Cal. 2002) (“The possibility that issues will be unnecessarily complicated or that superfluous pleadings will cause the trier of fact to draw ‘unwarranted inferences’ at trial is the type of prejudice that is sufficient to support the granting of a motion to strike.”) (citation omitted). Accordingly, the Court grants UOP’s Motion to Strike Paragraph 33. IV. CONCLUSION For the forgoing reasons, the Court GRANTS in part and DENIES in part UOP’s Motion to Dismiss. Claim 2 is DISMISSED with leave to amend. Claim 3 and 4 are DISMISSED without leave to amend. UOP’s Motion to Strike is GRANTED. Plaintiff shall file any amended complaint within 21 days of the date this Order is filed. IT IS SO ORDERED. Dated: November 27, 2020
______________________________________ EDWARD J. DAVILA United States District Judge
Notes
[1] UOP also moves to strike the accompanying footnotes
[2] Additionally, the entirety of footnote 5 related to Paragraph 32 is stricken.
