Doe v. Occidental College ( 2019 )


Menu:
  • Filed 8/27/19 Certified for Publication 9/23/19 (order attached)
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION SEVEN
    JOHN DOE,                                            B284707
    Plaintiff and Appellant,                     (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. BS147275)
    v.
    OCCIDENTAL COLLEGE,
    Defendant and Respondent.
    APPEAL from an order of the Superior Court of Los
    Angeles County, Mary H. Strobel, Judge. Affirmed.
    Werksman Jackson Hathaway & Quinn, Hathaway Parker,
    Mark M. Hathaway and Jenna E. Parker for Plaintiff and
    Appellant.
    Cynthia P. Garrett for Foundation for Individual Rights in
    Education as Amicus Curiae on behalf of Plaintiff and Appellant.
    Epstein Becker & Green, Jonathan M. Brenner and Susan
    Graham for Defendant and Respondent.
    INTRODUCTION
    Occidental College expelled John Doe for violating its
    sexual misconduct policy after he sexually assaulted Jane Doe.
    An external adjudicator found Jane was incapacitated within the
    meaning of the policy because she was intoxicated and unable to
    make “an informed and rational decision to engage in sexual
    activity.” The adjudicator found John was also intoxicated; in
    fact, so intoxicated he did not know Jane was incapacitated.
    Under Occidental’s policy, however, John’s intoxication did not
    diminish his responsibility to obtain Jane’s consent, and John
    violated the policy because he should have known Jane was
    incapacitated. The adjudicator concluded a sober person in
    John’s position should have known Jane was too drunk to
    consent.1
    After unsuccessfully appealing within the college, John
    filed a petition for writ of administrative mandate in the trial
    court. The trial court denied the petition and entered judgment
    in favor of Occidental. John argues on appeal that he did not
    have a fair disciplinary hearing and that the evidence did not
    support the adjudicator’s findings. We affirm.
    1     We refer to Occidental’s sexual misconduct policy in effect
    when Jane accused John of violating it. As of January 22, 2019
    Occidental revised its policy and issued a new interim sexual
    misconduct policy. (See https://www.oxy.edu/sexual-respect-title-
    ix> [as of Aug. 9, 2019], archived at < https://perma.cc/JDZ7-
    ETZP>.)
    2
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    A.    Occidental’s Sexual Misconduct Policy
    Two weeks before their sexual encounter, John and Jane
    both attended freshman orientation sessions on sexual
    misconduct and Occidental’s sexual misconduct policy.
    Occidental’s policy prohibits sexual assault, which it defines as
    “[h]aving or attempting to have sexual intercourse with another
    individual . . . [b]y force or threat of force,” “[w]ithout effective
    consent,” or “[w]here [the other] individual is incapacitated.” The
    policy also prohibits non-consensual sexual contact, which it
    defines as “[h]aving sexual contact with another individual . . .
    [b]y force or threat of force, “[w]ithout effective consent,” or
    “[w]here that individual is incapacitated.”
    The policy defines “incapacitation” as “a state where an
    individual cannot make an informed and rational decision to
    engage in sexual activity because s/he lacks conscious knowledge
    of the nature of the act (e.g., to understand the who, what, when,
    where, why or how of the sexual interaction) and/or is physically
    helpless. An individual is incapacitated, and therefore unable to
    give consent, if s/he is asleep, unconscious, or otherwise unaware
    that sexual activity is occurring.”
    The policy discusses the relationship between alcohol use
    and incapacitation. The language we italicize was central to the
    adjudicator’s decision here: “Incapacitation may result from the
    use of alcohol and/or drugs. Consumption of alcohol or other
    drugs alone is insufficient to establish incapacitation. The
    impact of alcohol and drugs varies from person to person, and
    evaluating incapacitation requires an assessment of how the
    consumption of alcohol and/or drugs impacts an individual’s: [¶]
    3
    decision-making ability; [¶] awareness of consequences; [¶]
    ability to make informed judgments; or [¶] capacity to appreciate
    the nature and the quality of the act. [¶] Evaluating
    incapacitation also requires an assessment of whether a
    Respondent knew or should have known, that the Complainant
    was incapacitated. [¶] . . . In general, sexual contact while
    under the influence of alcohol or other drugs poses a risk to all
    parties. Alcohol and drugs impair a person’s decision-making
    capacity, awareness of the consequences, and ability to make
    informed judgments. It is especially important, therefore, that
    anyone engaging in sexual activity be aware of the other person’s
    level of intoxication. If there is any doubt as to the level or extent
    of the other individual’s intoxication or impairment, the prudent
    course of action is to forgo or cease any sexual contact or activity.
    [¶] Being intoxicated or impaired by drugs or alcohol . . . does not
    diminish one’s responsibility to obtain consent.”
    B.     Saturday Night and Sunday Morning, September 7-8,
    2013
    Jane and John knew each other, but not well. They lived
    on different floors of the same dormitory and had one class
    together. John was 18, and Jane was one month shy of 18.
    Multiple witnesses told Occidental’s investigators or testified at
    the disciplinary hearing that, during the hours before John and
    Jane had sexual intercourse, Jane drank large quantities of
    vodka and became extremely intoxicated. The investigation
    report, witness interview summaries, and testimony at the
    hearing described the following events.
    4
    1.    9:15 p.m.-11:30 p.m.: Jane Gets Drunk
    Jane began drinking alcohol in her dormmate Liam’s room
    at approximately 9:15 Saturday evening. Jane drank orange
    juice mixed with vodka and several shots of straight vodka.
    Jane’s friend Angela said Jane was “drinking heavily.” Other
    witnesses described Jane as “a little bit drunk, but still in
    control,” and “buzzed.” Jane described herself as “tipsy.”
    At 9:45 p.m. Jane and others decided to go to a fraternity
    party. Jane went to her room to change clothes. Jane’s
    roommate Genevieve recalled Jane was drinking orange juice
    mixed with alcohol, but was “pretty lucid” and “talking and
    walking normally.”
    After leaving the dormitory, Jane became “more and more
    drunk.” She could not walk straight. She stumbled and scraped
    her knee but could not feel it. She testified, “[T]hat’s how drunk I
    was.” Angela testified, “[I]t seemed like [Jane] became more . . .
    out of touch with . . . what was going on with her . . . .” Other
    witnesses observed Jane “could not walk a straight line and . . .
    was ‘getting loud.’”
    When Genevieve encountered Jane at 11:30 p.m., Jane was
    “visibly more intoxicated” than she had been earlier in the
    evening. She was stumbling and spoke in a “high-pitched” voice.
    Genevieve believed Jane’s “decision-making capacity” was “hazy.”
    She testified: “I wouldn’t trust Jane to make sound . . . decisions
    that she would make while sober when I saw her then,” and even
    “[m]ore so later [that evening].”
    Jane decided to return to the dormitory. She told her
    friends, “I can’t walk anymore. I’m just going to go back to [the
    dormitory].” According to Chloe, who met Jane at orientation,
    5
    Jane had obviously been drinking and “was not able to walk very
    well.” Angela told Jamison, another friend of Jane, they “needed
    ‘to take care of Jane.’” Angela later told investigators: “During
    freshmen orientation . . . [we] were told [we] were supposed to
    watch out for . . . friends when they were partying. I know it
    sounds corny . . . but I was trying to be a good person and be
    there for Jane as much as I could.”
    2.    7:00 p.m.-11:00 p.m.: John Gets Drunk
    Liam saw “a lot of alcohol,” including vodka, rum, and beer
    in John’s room after 7:00 p.m. John was “‘exuberant,’ as if he had
    been drinking ‘a good amount.’” He had a bottle of alcohol in his
    hand and was dancing around the room. Liam said John was
    “not sloppy but a shot or two past tipsy.” Another resident of the
    dormitory, Aidan, also stopped by John’s room at 7:00 p.m.
    John’s friends told Aidan that John was “really drunk.” Aidan
    described John as “[k]ind of clumsy” and having “slow speech.”
    At 11:00 p.m. John’s roommate, Gavin, was getting ready to
    leave when John walked into the room. John was stumbling,
    slurring his words, and speaking in a loud voice. After observing
    John for an hour, Gavin “decided not to go out, so that he could
    ‘keep an eye’ on John.” Aidan, who was also in John’s room at the
    time, described John’s “level of intoxication” as “a ‘shit show.’”
    John “was slurring his words [and] stumbl[ing] . . . .” Aidan
    estimated “that on a 0 to 10 scale, with 10 being inebriated to the
    point of not being able to function, John was ‘maybe a 7.’”
    3.     11:30 p.m.: Jane Goes to John’s Room
    Jane returned to her room on the third floor of the
    dormitory at 11:30 p.m., but did not stay there. She was “bored,”
    6
    “wired with energy,” and “drunk.” She went to the second floor
    “because there were usually people there.” John’s roommate
    Gavin saw Jane leaning against the hallway wall and heard her
    slurring her words. Jane followed Gavin to John’s room, where
    she embraced John and started dancing with him. It seemed
    “kind of intense,” so Gavin left.
    Angela and Jamison lost track of Jane and were worried.
    Angela called Jane, who said she was in John’s room. Angela and
    Jamison found Jane and John dancing and kissing and drinking
    vodka from a bottle. Angela estimated Jane drank three or four
    more shots. Jane was stumbling and leaning on things to
    support herself. Later, Jane and John embraced on John’s bed
    and were “getting really physical.” Angela was concerned that
    Jane “was not fully aware of what she was doing” and that Jane
    “did not seem to know where she was or what was going to
    happen next.” Angela “wasn’t sure how [Jane] would feel about”
    kissing John. Angela told Jane she should stop drinking and
    tried repeatedly to take away the vodka bottle. Angela believed
    John heard her: “Yeah. I’m sure he could have . . . heard [me tell
    Jane to stop drinking].” John appeared “very intoxicated” and
    “really drunk.” John told Jamison he had been drinking since
    1:00 p.m.
    At midnight, Angela and Jamison took Jane to her room.
    By then, Jane was “super drunk” and “incoherent.” Angela put
    Jane in bed, closed the door, and left. Jamison waited outside
    Jane’s room briefly before he also left.
    7
    4.      12:20 a.m. -12:45 a.m.: Jane and John
    Exchange Text Messages
    At 12:20 a.m. Jane sent a text message to her best friend
    from home saying, “I’m wasted.” Between 12:31 and 12:45 a.m.,
    Jane and John exchanged text messages, including these:
    John: “The second that you’re away from [Angela and
    Jamison] come back.”
    Jane: “Okay.”
    John: “Get the fuck back here. Get the fuck back here.”
    Jane: “They’re still with me . . . .”
    John: “Make them leave. Tell them yo[u] want to
    sleep. . . . Just get back here.”
    Jane: “Okay do you have a condom.”
    John: “Yes.”
    Jane: “Good give me two minutes.”
    John: “Come here.”
    Jane: “Coming.”
    John: “Good girl. Knock when you’re here.”
    Jane: “[Jamison is] out ride [sic] my door.”
    John: “What.
    Jane: “[Jamison] is outside my door.”
    John: “Wtf.”
    Jane: “Right.”
    John: “Get him to leave.”
    Jane: “Working on [i]t.”
    ....
    John: “Leave. Say you’re going to the bathroom.”
    Jane: “Okay.”
    8
    Before leaving her room, Jane texted her friend from home
    again at 12:40 a.m. and said, “The worlds moving.
    I’mgoingtohave sex now.”
    5.     12:45 a.m.-2:00 a.m.: Jane Goes to John’s Room
    Again
    Gavin saw Jane on the second floor stumbling in the
    hallway and vomiting in a trash can. He helped her into a
    bathroom where she vomited again. When Jane said she felt
    better, Gavin left. Jane went to John’s room and told him she
    had just vomited. (John testified he had no memory of Jane
    vomiting.)
    At 2:00 a.m. Gavin told Aidan that Jane had been drinking,
    had thrown up, and was alone with John in John’s room. Aidan
    was concerned. He testified: “I was worried . . . if she was
    intoxicated, that she shouldn’t be . . . alone in a room with
    someone else [because] she’s not in the right mind to, like, make
    decisions like that[.]” Aidan also knew John had been “very
    drunk earlier.” Aidan expressed his concern to Gavin, who gave
    him a key to the room. Aidan found John sitting on the bed
    naked with Jane under the covers. John said, “Yo, get the fuck
    out.” Minutes later, John came out of the room and walked “in a
    normal gait” toward the bathroom. Aidan knocked on the door
    and asked three times if Jane was okay. Jane said, “Yeah, I’m
    fine.”
    Gavin also walked in on John and Jane. It was “obvious” to
    him that they were “having sex.” Gavin believed Jane was
    conscious because he saw her legs moving. He quickly closed the
    door and left. He later told investigators he “had attended sexual
    assault prevention training during orientation, and had been told
    9
    what to do if he witnessed a sexual assault. ‘This didn’t look like
    one to me[.]’” After Gavin entered the room, John told Jane he
    thought she should leave, and she did.
    6.     2:00 a.m.: Jane Returns to Her Room but
    Leaves Again
    Angela found Jane in the hallway after 2:00 a.m. “a lot less
    steady on her feet than she had been earlier” and slurring her
    words. Genevieve was there when Angela “ushered” Jane into
    their room. According to Genevieve, Jane was “very
    incapacitated,” “very obviously drunk,” even “past drunk.” Jane’s
    words were “excessive[ly] slurr[ed]” and she was incoherent.
    Jane tried to undress but could not undo her buttons. When
    Genevieve gave Jane water, “it dribbled out of her mouth.”
    Genevieve “check[ed] [Jane] for the signs of alcohol poisoning.”
    Genevieve left briefly to take a shower, and Jane disappeared.
    Genevieve found Jane in the lobby of the dormitory next
    door. Jane was “wearing her pajamas, ‘sitting on a couch on
    some guy’s lap.’” Jamison, who was also present, said Jane was
    “extremely drunk,” even more so than when they were together in
    John’s room. Jamison told the investigators, “I didn’t know it
    was possible to be more drunk than she was [earlier].” Jane
    could not walk without reaching out to balance herself. When
    Genevieve tried to help Jane up, Jane “buckled under her own
    weight.” Genevieve needed help to get Jane back to their room.
    She testified, “I was pretty sure that if we weren’t supporting her
    and keeping her upright, she would not be able to stay upright.”
    Maddie, whose room was next door to Jane’s room, saw
    Genevieve and Jane in the hallway. Jane was “pretty
    10
    intoxicated” and was “slurring her words and stumbling.”
    Maddie helped Genevieve get Jane into bed.
    7.      Later Sunday Morning: Jane Learns She Had
    Sex with John
    Angela woke at 10:00 a.m. to a text message. Jane told
    Angela “I think I had sex with John last night.” Jane had seen
    her text conversation with John but did not remember sending or
    receiving the messages. Jane subsequently asked Gavin what
    had happened. Gavin told her he had seen her having sex with
    John. Jane told Aidan “she did not remember much of anything,”
    was “not sure what exactly had happened,” and was “trying to
    piece together what had happened.” Aidan told Jane, “Well, we
    think that . . . you and John might have had sex.” And Jane said,
    “Yeah. I was worried that that might have been what happened.”
    Genevieve testified Jane told her “she couldn’t believe that it had
    happened. She didn’t remember it. She didn’t know if there was
    protection used or not.”
    C.    Occidental Investigates and Conducts a Hearing
    1.     The Investigation
    Jane submitted a complaint against John for sexual
    misconduct. When Occidental receives a sexual misconduct
    complaint, its “Title IX team”2 conducts an initial assessment “to
    2      Title IX of the Education Amendments of 1972 (
    20 U.S.C. § 1681
     et seq.) is a federal civil rights law that prohibits
    discrimination based on gender in education programs or
    activities that receive federal funding. (See 
    34 C.F.R. § 106.1
     et
    11
    provide an integrated and coordinated response.” Following the
    assessment, the college decides whether to resolve the matter
    informally or refer it for investigation. When the college decides
    to investigate, it designates one or more trained employees or
    external investigators to conduct a “thorough, impartial and fair”
    investigation that is “appropriate in light of the circumstances of
    the case” and “respectful of individual privacy concerns.” The
    investigators “are not charged with reaching a determination as
    to responsibility.” During the investigation, the complainant and
    respondent have an “equal opportunity to be heard, to submit
    evidence, and to identify witnesses who may have relevant
    information.” When the investigation is complete, the
    investigators prepare and submit a written report. The college
    notifies the parties the investigation is complete and provides
    them with information about the next step.
    Occidental appointed independent investigators to
    investigate Jane’s complaint. The investigators interviewed Jane
    and nine other witnesses. Jane told the investigators “there
    [was] a ‘big hole’ in her memory of the evening.” She
    remembered drinking vodka from a bottle and dancing with
    John. She said the vodka did not burn her throat “because she
    was already so intoxicated.” She also remembered feeling hot
    and taking off her shirt. She put her shirt back on after Angela
    “flip[ped] out.” According to Jane, John “pushed her onto the bed,
    and they ‘ma[d]e out for a while.’” John told Jane “to get rid of
    [Angela] and [Jamison].” He told her to let them take her up to
    her room and then come back to his room. John asked for Jane’s
    seq.) Occidental’s Title IX coordinator “oversees the College’s
    overall compliance with Title IX.”
    12
    cell phone number so he could text her to come back to his room
    and he could “fuck” her. (John’s subsequent testimony at the
    disciplinary hearing was consistent to the extent he remembered
    talking to Jane about “having her leave with her friends so she
    could come back down so [they] could have sex.”)
    Jane said she remembered that, after returning to John’s
    room, she asked him if he had a condom. She remembered
    “performing oral sex on him,” but did not remember “having
    sexual intercourse.” Jane also remembered that John briefly left
    the room and that she heard a knock at the door and voices
    asking if she was okay. She remembered John telling her his
    roommate had come into the room.
    On his attorney’s advice, John declined to allow the
    investigators to interview him. The investigators issued a
    written report with a summary of each witness interview.
    Consistent with Occidental’s policy, the investigators did not
    “reach[ ] a determination as to responsibility.”
    2.     The Threshold Determination
    After Occidental receives the investigation report, it
    designates a hearing coordinator who, in consultation with the
    Title IX team, reviews the report and makes “a threshold
    determination as to whether there is sufficient information upon
    which an adjudicator could find a violation of this policy. This
    threshold determination does not involve making a determination
    of responsibility, nor does it involve a credibility assessment. If
    the threshold has been established, the Hearing Coordinator will
    issue a Notification Letter to the [parties] and refer the report for
    Pre-Hearing Procedures.” The notification letter “provides each
    party with a brief summary of the conduct at issue and the
    13
    specific provision of the [alleged] policy violation(s) . . . .” The
    parties may consult attorneys, but the attorneys may not
    participate in the proceedings. The parties, however, may have
    an advisor assist them, and they have the right to review
    investigative documents and call witnesses.
    Occidental appointed a hearing coordinator who made a
    threshold determination there was sufficient evidence to support
    a finding John violated the college’s sexual misconduct policy.
    The hearing coordinator notified Jane and John in writing that
    “[g]iven the nature and severity of the allegations” there would be
    a formal hearing.
    3.     The Disciplinary Hearing
    Following a threshold determination, Occidental holds a
    disciplinary hearing before a three-member panel or, at the
    hearing coordinator’s discretion, an external adjudicator. The
    hearing is “not intended to be adversarial” and is “not comparable
    to a criminal trial.” The complainant and respondent are not
    permitted to question each other directly. Instead, “the parties
    may submit questions to the hearing panel [or adjudicator] in
    writing [both prior to and during the hearing], which may be
    posed at the discretion of the hearing panel [or adjudicator].” The
    parties “may . . . request alternative testimony options that
    would not require physical proximity to the other party.” The
    hearing panel or adjudicator determines the respondent’s
    responsibility by a preponderance of the evidence and documents
    its findings in writing. If the hearing panel or adjudicator finds
    the respondent violated the sexual misconduct policy, it
    recommends an appropriate sanction to the hearing coordinator.
    “The Hearing Coordinator, in consultation with the Title IX
    14
    Coordinator, will review the recommendations and impose an
    appropriate sanction.” When the panel or adjudicator concludes
    the respondent committed a sexual assault, the student “may
    receive a sanction ranging from suspension to expulsion.” Either
    party may appeal the decision.
    Jane, John, the lead investigator, and five freshman
    students—Gavin, Angela, Aidan, Genevieve, and Chloe—testified
    during a one-day hearing before the external adjudicator. Jane
    testified her memory of the incident was “foggy.” She
    remembered some details days and weeks later, after she had
    spoken with others. She did not remember having intercourse
    with John, but a few days after their encounter she remembered
    she had oral sex with him. She did not remember sending the
    text messages.
    John testified there was no alcohol in his room, he did not
    see Jane drink any alcohol, and he did not hear Angela express
    concern about Jane’s drinking. He also testified, somewhat
    inconsistently: “I knew [Jane] was drunk. I did not know—I
    didn’t really know she was drunk. I knew she’d been drinking. I
    didn’t know to what level of impairment she was at. But we were
    . . . conversing normally and having relatively normal
    interactions for an hour or so, in that window before she left [my
    room] and came back. In no way did I think or was she
    incapacitated during that time.”
    Based on the investigative report, the summaries of the
    witness interviews, and the testimony of the witnesses at the
    hearing, the adjudicator found by a preponderance of the
    evidence John violated Occidental’s sexual misconduct policy by
    sexually assaulting Jane and having non-consensual sexual
    contact with her. The adjudicator found that Jane’s text
    15
    messages, “coupled with her actions in returning to [John’s] room
    after that exchange of text messages[,] are conduct and
    statements that would indicate that she consented to sexual
    intercourse with [John],” but that Jane was incapacitated when
    she engaged in the conduct. The adjudicator also found that
    John, who “was more intoxicated than he had ever been,” “did not
    have actual knowledge of [Jane’s] incapacitation,” but that a
    sober person in John’s position should have known Jane was
    incapacitated and could not consent.3 The adjudicator issued a
    written decision, and Occidental expelled John.
    D.     John Files an Administrative Appeal and a Petition
    for Writ of Mandate
    As authorized by Occidental’s sexual misconduct policy,
    John appealed in writing to the hearing coordinator. John had
    the “burden of proof . . . as the original determination and
    sanction are presumed to have been decided reasonably and
    appropriately.” Counsel for Jane submitted a written response to
    John’s appeal. The hearing coordinator asked the assistant
    director for housing services to act as the appeals officer and
    review the appeal. The assistant director conducted a
    “deferential” review for “clear error” and found “no basis for
    overturning the external adjudicator’s decision.”
    John filed a petition for administrative mandate under
    Code of Civil Procedure section 1094.5 in the trial court.4 John
    3    John does not challenge the sober person standard in
    Occidental’s policy.
    4    “If a private college has a procedure for conducting sexual
    misconduct disciplinary proceedings, an accused student may
    16
    argued the hearing was unfair because the proceedings were
    “typified by [a] lack of impartiality,” the adjudicator
    “purposefully” failed to ask questions that John had proposed and
    that were “critical” to his defense, and the hearing coordinator
    denied John “reasonable access to evidence.” John also asserted
    the evidence did not support the adjudicator’s findings. The trial
    court denied the petition and entered a judgment in favor of
    Occidental. John timely appealed.
    DISCUSSION
    A.    Standard of Review
    “A university disciplinary proceeding concerning sexual
    misconduct does not involve a fundamental vested right; thus, we
    review the administrative decision applying the same standard of
    review applicable in the trial court.” (Doe v. University of
    Southern California (2018) 
    29 Cal.App.5th 1212
    , 1231 (USC III);
    accord, Doe v. Occidental College (2019) 
    37 Cal.App.5th 1003
    ,
    1013 (Occidental); Doe v. Allee (2019) 
    30 Cal.App.5th 1036
    , 1060
    (Allee).) “The question presented by a petition for writ of
    administrative mandate is whether the agency or tribunal that
    issued the decision being challenged ‘proceeded without, or in
    excess of, jurisdiction; whether there was a fair trial; and
    whether there was any prejudicial abuse of discretion.’ ([Code
    Civ. Proc.,] § 1094.5, subd. (b).) ‘Abuse of discretion is
    established if the respondent has not proceeded in the manner
    challenge the outcome of the proceedings in a petition for a writ
    of administrative mandate.” (Doe v. Westmount College (2019) 
    34 Cal.App.5th 622
    , 634.)
    17
    required by law, the order or decision is not supported by the
    findings, or the findings are not supported by the evidence.’” (Doe
    v. University of Southern California (2018) 
    28 Cal.App.5th 26
    , 34
    (USC II); accord, Occidental, at p. 1014; USC III, at p. 1230.)
    However, “[w]e review the fairness of the administrative
    proceeding de novo. ‘A challenge to the procedural fairness of the
    administrative hearing is reviewed de novo on appeal because the
    ultimate determination of procedural fairness amounts to a
    question of law.’ [Citation.]” (Doe v. University of Southern
    California (2016) 
    246 Cal.App.4th 221
    , 239 (USC I); see
    Occidental, at p. 1014 [“we review the fairness of the proceedings
    de novo, and the substantive decision for substantial evidence”].)
    B.    The Disciplinary Hearing Was Fair
    1.     The Hearing Requirements in Private College
    Sexual Misconduct Proceedings
    In several recent cases, California courts have found fault
    with the procedures in private university sexual misconduct
    disciplinary proceedings. These deficiencies include failing to
    interview or hear testimony from and assess the credibility of
    critical witnesses (Doe v. Westmont College (2019) 
    34 Cal.App.5th 622
    , 636-637 (Westmont); USC III, supra, 29 Cal.App.5th at pp.
    1215-1216, 1232-1237), failing to give the respondent notice of
    the factual basis for the charges or access to evidence (Westmont,
    at pp. 637-638; Doe v. Regents of University of California (2018)
    
    28 Cal.App.5th 44
    , 46, 58-59 (UCSB);5 USC I, supra, 246
    5     The UCSB case concerns a public university, which is
    subject to federal constitutional guarantees not applicable to
    private colleges and universities. Nevertheless, the case is
    18
    Cal.App.4th at pp. 241-244), not allowing the respondent to
    submit questions for the panel or adjudicator to ask the
    complainant and other witnesses (Westmont, at pp. 638-639; USC
    III, at pp. 1237-1238; UCSB, at pp. 46, 60; Doe v. Claremont
    McKenna College (2018) 
    25 Cal.App.5th 1055
    , 1057-1058
    (Claremont)), and failing to ensure witnesses appear, directly or
    indirectly, for cross-examination (Allee, supra, 30 Cal.App.5th at
    p. 1039; USC III, at pp. 1215-1216, 1237-1238; Claremont, at pp.
    1057-1058, 1070).
    In Westmont, supra, 
    34 Cal.App.5th 622
     the court
    summarized the requirements for a fair hearing. The court
    emphasized that a college disciplinary proceeding is not like a
    criminal proceeding: “A college’s procedure for investigating and
    adjudicating student sexual misconduct allegations is not
    analogous to a criminal proceeding. [Citation.] . . . [¶] A fair
    hearing strives to balance three competing interests: The
    accused student seeks ‘“‘to avoid unfair or mistaken exclusion
    from the educational process.’”’ [Citation.] The college tries to
    provide a safe environment for all of its students. [Citation.] The
    alleged victim—who often ‘“live[s], work[s], and stud[ies] on a
    instructive. (See Westmont, supra, 34 Cal.App.5th at p. 634
    [“[t]he common law requirements for a fair hearing at a private
    college ‘mirror the due process protections at public
    universities’”]; USC III, supra, 29 Cal.App.5th at p. 1232, fn. 25
    [public university “‘[d]ue process jurisprudence may be
    “instructive” in cases determining fair hearing standards for
    student disciplinary proceedings at private schools’”]; Doe v.
    Claremont McKenna College (2018) 
    25 Cal.App.5th 1055
    , 1057-
    1058, 1067, fn. 8 [“[federal] [d]ue process jurisprudence . . . may
    be ‘instructive’ in cases determining fair hearing standards for
    student disciplinary proceedings at private schools”].)
    19
    shared college campus”’ with the accused—wants to safeguard his
    or her own well-being. [Citation.] [¶] These competing interests
    ‘must be addressed in light of the nature of a [college] and the
    limits of its resources.’ [Citation.] A college’s primary purpose is
    education. [Citation.] Hearing requirements that are too formal
    and rigid divert resources and attention from that purpose.
    [Citation.] Accordingly, ‘all the safeguards and formalities of a
    criminal trial’ are not required. [Citation.] ‘Although [a college]
    must treat students fairly, it is not required to convert its
    classrooms into courtrooms.’” (Westmont, at pp. 634-635; see Doe
    v. Regents of University of California (2016) 
    5 Cal.App.5th 1055
    ,
    1078 (UCSD) [“‘“[p]rocedures for dismissing college students [are]
    not analogous to criminal proceedings and could not be so
    without at the same time being both impractical and detrimental
    to the educational atmosphere and functions of a university”’”];
    Doe v. University of Kentucky (6th Cir. 2017) 
    860 F.3d 365
    , 370
    [“school disciplinary proceedings, while requiring some level of
    due process, need not reach the same level of protection that
    would be present in a criminal prosecution”].)
    The court in Westmont explained: “‘[N]o particular form of
    student disciplinary hearing is required under California law.’
    [Citation.] . . . At a minimum, the college must comply with its
    own policies and procedures. [Citation.] Those procedures must
    provide the accused student with a hearing before a neutral
    adjudicatory body. [Citation.] The accused must be permitted to
    respond to the evidence against him or her. [Citations.] The
    alleged victim and other critical witnesses must appear before
    the adjudicatory body in some form—in person, by video
    conference, or by some other means—so the body can observe
    their demeanor. [Citations.] This is because ‘“the opportunity to
    20
    question a witness and observe [his or her] demeanor while being
    questioned can be just as important to the trier of fact as it is to
    the accused.” [Citation.]’ [Citation.] ‘Recognizing the risk that
    an accusing witness may suffer trauma if personally confronted
    by an alleged assailant at a hearing, [the USC I court observed]
    that mechanisms can readily be fashioned to “provid[e] accused
    students with the opportunity to hear the evidence being
    presented against them without subjecting alleged victims to
    direct cross-examination by the accused.” [Citation.]’ [Citation.]
    It is not necessary to place the alleged victim and the accused in
    the same room. [Citation.] [¶] The college must provide the
    accused student with the names of witnesses and the facts to
    which each testifies. [Citations.] The accused must be able to
    pose questions to the witnesses in some manner, either directly
    or indirectly, such as through the adjudicatory body. [Citations.]
    The body need not ask every question proposed by the accused.”
    (Westmont, supra, 34 Cal.App.5th at p. 635.)
    In particular, direct cross-examination of a complainant by
    a respondent is not only not required, it is inappropriate. “In
    administrative cases addressing sexual assault involving
    students who live, work, and study on a shared college campus,
    cross-examination is especially fraught with potential
    drawbacks.” (USC I, supra, 246 Cal.App.4th at p. 245; accord,
    Claremont, supra, 25 Cal.App.5th at p. 1067.) As the United
    States Department of Education Office for Civil Rights once
    observed, “Allowing an alleged perpetrator to question an alleged
    victim directly may be traumatic or intimidating, thereby
    possibly escalating or perpetrating a hostile environment.” (U.S.
    Dept. of Ed., Off. for Civil Rights, “Dear Colleague” letter, Apr. 4,
    2011, p. 12 < https://www2.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ocr/letters/
    21
    colleague-201104.pdf > [as of Aug. 9, 2019], archived at
    ; withdrawn by U.S. Dept. of Ed.,
    Off. for Civil Rights, “Dear Colleague” letter, Sept. 22, 2017,
    https://www2.ed.gov/about/offices/list/ocr/letters/colleague-title-ix-
    201709.pdf> [as of Aug. 9, 2019], archived at .)6
    2.    John’s Hearing Was Fair
    Occidental hired independent investigators to investigate
    Jane’s complaint. As prescribed by Occidental’s policy, the
    investigators did not determine responsibility. The hearing
    coordinator made a threshold determination the evidence
    warranted a hearing and informed John and Jane of that
    determination. She also gave them written notice of the conduct
    underlying the alleged policy violations. In doing so, the hearing
    coordinator did not assess credibility or determine responsibility.
    Jane and John each had an opportunity to review the
    investigation report and the witness interview summaries.
    Advisors assisted Jane and John and attended the hearing with
    them. The witnesses, including Jane, appeared in person. John
    proposed questions before and during the hearing for the
    adjudicator to ask Jane, and the adjudicator asked some of them.
    6      In November 2018 the Department of Education Office for
    Civil Rights issued proposed Title IX regulations pursuant to
    which, among other things: a person may not serve as both
    investigator and adjudicator; live hearings are required; and an
    accused student’s advisor may cross-examine the accuser and
    other witnesses, either in person or with technology that allows
    the decision-maker and the parties to simultaneously see and
    hear the witness. (Proposed Regulations, § 106.45, subds. (b)(3),
    (b)(4) (2018).)
    22
    The adjudicator heard the evidence and determined by a
    preponderance of the evidence John had violated the policy.
    Occidental’s policy complied with all the procedural requirements
    identified by California cases dealing with sexual misconduct
    disciplinary proceedings: both sides had notice of the charges and
    hearing and had access to the evidence, the hearing included live
    testimony and written reports of witness interviews, the critical
    witnesses appeared in person at the hearing so that the
    adjudicator could evaluate their credibility, and the respondent
    had an opportunity to propose questions for the adjudicator to
    ask the complainant. (See generally Westmont, supra, 34
    Cal.App.5th at p. 635.)
    3.    John’s Contentions the Hearing Was Unfair Are
    Meritless
    John argues his hearing was unfair because the hearing
    coordinator excluded a “charge evaluation worksheet” indicating
    the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office had declined to
    prosecute John criminally. John also argues the hearing
    coordinator and the independent adjudicator were biased. Each
    of these arguments lacks merit.
    a.      John’s arguments concerning the charge
    evaluation worksheet are forfeited and do
    not support mandamus relief
    The district attorney’s office gave counsel for John a copy of
    a “charge evaluation worksheet” reflecting the district attorney’s
    decision not to prosecute John. Counsel forwarded the worksheet
    to Occidental’s investigators. The investigators commented in
    their report that counsel for John had sent them the worksheet.
    23
    The investigators attached the worksheet as an exhibit, but they
    did not discuss it in their report.7 Someone, presumably the
    hearing coordinator, later redacted the exhibit from the
    investigator’s report.8
    John argues the adjudicator precluded him from using the
    worksheet to impeach witnesses at the disciplinary hearing. In
    particular, John contends he wanted to use this statement in the
    worksheet: “Witnesses were interviewed and agreed that the
    victim and suspect were both drunk, however, that they were
    both willing participants exercising bad judgment.” John
    contends the adjudicator “effectively precluded [him] from
    impeaching any witness who spoke with [police] investigators
    and later told [Occidental’s] investigators that Jane was not a
    willing participant.”
    There is nothing in the record of the disciplinary hearing,
    however, reflecting John ever sought to use the worksheet at the
    hearing or to question any witness about what he or she told the
    police. Nor is there any record the hearing adjudicator or
    7      The copy counsel for John gave the investigators was
    heavily redacted. The record does not show whether someone
    redacted it before or after counsel for John received it from the
    district attorney’s office.
    8     Occidental’s sexual misconduct policy authorized the
    hearing coordinator to “review the investigative report, any
    witness statements[,] and any other documentary evidence” and
    to “redact information that is irrelevant, more prejudicial than
    probative, or immaterial,” “statements of personal opinion, rather
    than direct observations or reasonable inferences from the facts,
    and statements as to general reputation for any character trait,
    including honesty.”
    24
    coordinator ever precluded John from impeaching any of the
    witnesses with the worksheet. John did not argue at the
    disciplinary hearing, in his administrative appeal, or in the trial
    court he wanted to use or was precluded from using the
    worksheet for impeachment purposes.9 By failing to make the
    argument until his appeal to this court, John forfeited it. (See
    USC III, supra, 29 Cal.App.5th at p. 1230 [“[g]enerally, a party
    cannot raise new issues . . . for the first time on appeal”]; USC II,
    supra, 28 Cal.App.5th at p. 37 [“[b]ecause this issue was not
    raised during the administrative proceedings or in the superior
    court, . . . [the university] did not have an opportunity to address
    it; and it would normally be deemed forfeited”]; id. at p. 41
    [appellant forfeited the argument the university compromised his
    ability to gather evidence to defend himself by not raising the
    issue in his administrative appeal and raising it “only . . . in
    passing” in the trial court].)
    In any event, even if John had sought to impeach someone
    with the worksheet and the adjudicator had precluded him from
    doing so, any error in such a ruling would have been harmless.
    (See Thornbrough v. Western Placer Unified School Dist. (2013)
    
    223 Cal.App.4th 169
    , 200 [“it is well settled that the improper
    admission or rejection of evidence at an administrative hearing
    does not provide ‘grounds for reversal unless the error has
    resulted in a miscarriage of justice”’ and it is “‘reasonably
    probable a more favorable result would have been reached absent
    the error’”]; McCoy v. Board of Retirement (1986) 
    183 Cal.App.3d 9
         John briefly argued in his administrative appeal the
    worksheet was new evidence that was unavailable during the
    disciplinary hearing because it was redacted from the
    investigation report.
    25
    1044, 1054 [“[a]n administrative agency is not required to observe
    the strict rules of evidence enforced in the courts, and the
    admission or rejection of evidence is not ground for reversal
    unless there has been a denial of justice”].) Whether one of the
    witnesses at the hearing had made a prior inconsistent statement
    about Jane’s willingness to engage in sexual activity with John
    would have had little if any impact on the adjudicator’s
    conclusions Jane was, and John should have known she was,
    incapacitated due to intoxication. The question the adjudicator
    decided was not whether witnesses thought Jane was willing, but
    whether Jane was able to make “an informed and rational
    decision to engage in sexual activity.” Thus, even if John had
    attempted to impeach one or more of the witnesses with the
    worksheet, there is no reasonable likelihood the result would
    have been any different.
    b.     The hearing coordinator was not biased
    John argues the hearing coordinator was, or appeared to
    be, biased against him because she made a post-investigation
    threshold determination there was sufficient information from
    which an adjudicator could find John violated Occidental’s sexual
    misconduct policy and she released information to be considered
    at the hearing only five days prior to the hearing. John also
    complains that the hearing coordinator was “vested with the
    opportunity to ‘impose an appropriate sanction’ in consultation
    with the Title IX Coordinator” and that the policy required the
    hearing coordinator to attend all meetings with the adjudicator
    and to advise the adjudicator on policy and procedure.
    John’s obligation “is to demonstrate actual bias. A
    disciplinary decision may not be invalidated solely on the basis of
    26
    an inference or appearance of bias.” (Allee, supra, 30 Cal.App.5th
    at p. 1060; see Occidental, supra, 37 Cal.App.5th at p. 1018 [“‘A
    party seeking to show bias or prejudice on the part of an
    administrative decision maker is required to prove the same
    “with concrete facts: ‘“[b]ias and prejudice are never implied and
    must be established by clear averments.”’”’”]; Gai v. City of Selma
    (1998) 
    68 Cal.App.4th 213
    , 220 [same].) A “‘mere belief that [a
    school official] acted with . . . ulterior motives is insufficient to
    state a claim for relief.’” (Allee, at pp. 1060-1061.)
    John has not shown actual bias. Unlike the policies of
    some colleges and universities, Occidental’s policy does not have
    a college or university official serving in a dual role as both
    investigator and adjudicator. (See Allee, supra, 30 Cal.App.5th at
    p. 1061 [“[t]he fact finder may not be a single individual with the
    divided and inconsistent roles [of investigator and adjudicator]”.)
    And even if Occidental’s policy had such a feature, that without
    more would not be sufficient to show actual bias. (See Westmont,
    supra, 34 Cal.App.5th at p. 637 [“‘“[t]he combination of
    investigative and adjudicative functions does not, without more,”’
    deprive a student accused of sexual misconduct of a fair
    hearing”]; USC III, supra, 29 Cal.App.5th at p. 1235, fn. 29
    [“[a]lthough the Title IX investigator held dual roles as the
    investigator and adjudicator, ‘the combination of investigative
    and adjudicative functions does not, without more, constitute a
    due process violation’”].) Moreover, in making her threshold
    determination, the hearing coordinator here played no role in
    determining whether John violated the sexual misconduct policy,
    did not make any findings on credibility or recommendations
    regarding responsibility, and did not participate in the
    adjudicator’s decision. The hearing coordinator attended
    27
    pre-resolution meetings and the disciplinary hearing only “to
    serve as a resource for the [adjudicator] on issues of policy and
    procedure, and to ensure that policy and procedure [were]
    appropriately followed throughout the hearing.”10 And the
    hearing coordinator participated in the sanction decision only
    after the adjudicator concluded John had violated the policy.11
    The coordinator’s participation in that decision did not reflect any
    bias that negatively affected John or influenced the adjudicator’s
    decision.
    John argues the hearing coordinator “unfairly released
    information that was to be used at the hearing . . . just five days
    before [the hearing]—knowing that [John], an 18-year-old
    freshman without any legal background—bore the responsibility
    of defending himself in [Occidental’s] process.” But when the
    hearing coordinator released the investigation report and
    summaries of witness statements to John and Jane, she was not
    10    Occidental’s policy provides: “The Hearing Panel [or single
    adjudicator as here] is supported by the Hearing Coordinator,
    who is present at hearing panel meetings, but is not . . . a voting
    member of the panel. He or she will meet with all involved
    parties prior to the hearing, be present during the hearing to
    serve as a resource for the hearing panel on issues of policy and
    procedure, and to ensure that policy and procedure are
    appropriately followed throughout the hearing.”
    11     The policy states: “If the [hearing] panel [or adjudicator]
    finds the Respondent responsible, the panel will then recommend
    appropriate sanctions to the Hearing Coordinator. The Hearing
    Coordinator, in consultation with the Title IX Coordinator, will
    review the recommendations and impose an appropriate
    sanction.”
    28
    exhibiting bias, she was complying with the policy to release this
    information “at least five (5) business days prior to the hearing.”12
    John has not cited any authority holding that five business days
    is insufficient or unfair. Nor is it accurate to say John was
    “defending himself.” John was represented by counsel (although
    not at the hearing), who was able to assist John and his advisor
    to prepare for the hearing. Finally, John does not identify any
    prejudice he suffered by not having the information from the
    hearing coordinator any sooner, nor does he argue what, if
    anything, he would have done differently with additional time to
    prepare for the hearing. (See USC II, supra, 28 Cal.App.5th at p.
    40 [“Doe does not indicate how his delay in reviewing” the
    information showing his academic dishonesty “prejudiced his
    case”].)
    Nightlife Partners, Ltd. v. City of Beverly Hills (2003) 
    108 Cal.App.4th 81
    , on which John relies, is distinguishable. In that
    case an assistant city attorney advocated for the city in
    connection with the plaintiff’s attempts to renew a permit to
    operate a cabaret. After the city denied the plaintiff’s permit
    application, the same assistant city attorney advised the
    decisionmaker on the plaintiff’s administrative appeal of the
    decision to deny the permit. (Id. at pp. 84-86, 96.) The court held
    the assistant city attorney’s dual role as advocate and adjudicator
    violated the plaintiff’s due process rights. (Id. at pp. 86, 97-98.)
    Here, in contrast, the hearing coordinator did not act as an
    advocate or adjudicate John’s responsibility. As discussed, in
    making her threshold determination the investigation report
    12    The hearing coordinator made the relevant materials
    available to Jane and John on Sunday, December 1, 2013 at
    9:00 p.m. The hearing was on Saturday, December 7, 2013.
    29
    contained “sufficient information upon which an adjudicator
    could find a violation of the [sexual misconduct] policy,” the
    hearing coordinator did not make findings on credibility or fault.
    c.     The independent adjudicator was not
    biased
    John argues the adjudicator was biased and “antagonistic”
    toward him because she refused to ask Jane 29 of the 38 written
    questions he submitted.13 John asserts the unasked questions
    “were designed to illustrate for the adjudicator that [Jane] had
    made statements indicating her consciousness and awareness
    before, during, and after the sexual activity, undermining her
    claim of incapacitation.” John concludes that, “[h]ad [these]
    additional 29 questions been posed to [Jane], the frailty of her
    tenuous claim, and her dubious credibility, would have become
    more apparent [to the adjudicator]. Specifically, [the adjudicator]
    would have been exposed to evidence demonstrating that [Jane]
    was able to recall extensively the events that occurred,
    undermining [Jane’s] claim that she had experienced ‘blackouts’
    and incapacitation.”
    John has again failed to show bias. Under Occidental’s
    policy, the adjudicator had the discretion not to ask questions
    that were inappropriate, irrelevant, or cumulative.14 There is
    13    John also proposed questions for the adjudicator to ask
    several of the witnesses, but he does not argue the adjudicator
    evidenced any bias in asking or not asking any of those questions.
    14    Occidental’s policy provides that “the parties may submit
    questions to the hearing panel [or, as here, the adjudicator] in
    writing, which may be posed at the discretion of the hearing
    panel [or adjudicator].”
    30
    nothing unfair about granting the adjudicator this kind of
    discretion. (See Westmont, supra, 34 Cal.App.5th at p. 635 [“[t]he
    [adjudicatory] body need not ask every question proposed by the
    accused”]; Claremont, supra, 25 Cal.App.5th at p. 1073 [“granting
    the fact finder discretion to exclude or rephrase [proposed]
    questions” is appropriate and “strikes a fair balance among the
    interests of the school, the accused student, and the
    complainant”]; UCSD, supra, 5 Cal.App.5th at p. 1085
    [permitting the hearing panel chair to screen the accused’s
    written questions and ask only those questions that are not
    repetitive or irrelevant did not, “as a procedural concern,” render
    the hearing unfair].)
    Nor has John shown the adjudicator’s failure to ask all of
    the questions he proposed caused him prejudice. (See UCSD,
    supra, 5 Cal.App.5th at p. 1086 [adjudicator’s failure to ask or
    paraphrase certain questions did not prejudice the appellant]; id.
    at p. 1088 [adjudicator’s “decision not to ask Jane question No. 4
    did not prejudice John whatsoever”].) Only five of John’s
    proposed questions concerned statements Jane made about what
    she remembered. Four of those five questions concerned what
    Jane told the investigators, and the fifth was whether Jane told
    people the day after the incident she had a hard time
    remembering what had occurred.15 Jane’s responses to those
    15    (1) “Did you tell the investigators that John told you to
    come back down ‘so he can fuck you?[’]” (2) “The next day,
    Sunday, did you tell people that you had a difficult time
    remembering what happened that night?” (3) “But in your
    statement, you told the investigators about a number of things
    that you do remember happening about that time, correct?” (4)
    “You told the investigators that you remembered asking John if
    31
    questions would have been cumulative or, as the trial court
    found, “duplicative of evidence already in the record.” The
    investigation report, the investigators’ summary of Jane’s
    interview, the lead investigator’s testimony at the hearing, Jane’s
    testimony, and the testimony of the five students, all included
    statements about what Jane said she remembered. The
    adjudicator knew what Jane told the investigators and other
    students about what she remembered. The adjudicator
    considered the extent to which Jane did or did not remember her
    encounter with John and the surrounding events. The
    adjudicator found: “[Jane] states, and the external adjudicator
    believes, she has no recollection of having sexual intercourse with
    [John].”16
    John also asserts the adjudicator “demonstrated curt and
    contentious reactions to [him].” He relies solely on the following
    exchange, which occurred during his opening statement: “[John:]
    So, to reiterate again, I didn’t sexually assault Jane Doe. I would
    never and could never do something like that. And the police
    he had a condom because you had not used any birth control, is
    that right?” (5) “You told the investigators that you remembered
    performing oral sex on John when you were in his room, correct?”
    16    Eleven additional questions John proposed asked whether
    Jane remembered specific events, for example, “You remember
    giving John your cell phone number . . . .” Five questions asked
    whether Jane had sent specific text messages.* And one question
    asked Jane to draw a legal conclusion: “So even if you don’t
    remember now, or have blocked it out, at the time you and John
    had sex in his room, you were conscious and aware, isn’t that
    right?”
    * As stated, Jane testified she did not remember sending
    any text messages.
    32
    investigation agrees. [¶] [The Adjudicator]: I’d like to stop you
    from any reference to the police investigation, please.” Of course,
    a hearing transcript does not convey the speaker’s tone of voice.
    But there was nothing inherently curt or contentious about the
    adjudicator’s statement. Nor does the hearing transcript contain
    any evidence the adjudicator was curt to or contentious with John
    at any other time during the proceeding. To the contrary, the
    record reflects the adjudicator was consistently polite to all
    participants.
    d.    There was no “cumulative impact”
    John contends “this Court should find that the cumulative
    impact of how [Occidental] conducted its disciplinary proceeding
    against [him] contains a notable stench of unfairness.” As
    discussed, there was no instance of unfairness, let alone
    cumulative unfairness.
    C.      There Was Substantial Evidence John Should Have
    Known Jane Was Incapacitated
    “When reviewing a university’s disciplinary actions, ‘“[t]he
    power of an appellate court begins and ends with the
    determination as to whether there is any substantial evidence,
    contradicted or uncontradicted, that will support the finding.”
    [Citation.]’ [Citation.] . . . ‘[T]his does not mean we must blindly
    seize any evidence in support of the [determination] in order to
    affirm the judgment . . . . “[I]f the word ‘substantial’ [is to mean]
    anything at all, it clearly implies that such evidence must
    be . . . reasonable . . . , credible, and of solid value . . . .”
    [Citation.] The ultimate determination is whether a reasonable
    trier of fact could have [made the findings] based on the whole
    33
    record.’” (USC I, supra, 246 Cal.App.4th at pp. 248-249; see M.N.
    v. Morgan Hill Unified School Dist. (2018) 
    20 Cal.App.5th 607
    ,
    616 [“[t]he court must ‘accept all evidence which supports the
    successful party, disregard the contrary evidence, and draw all
    reasonable inferences to uphold the [administrative decision’”].)
    “‘Credibility is an issue of fact for the finder of fact to resolve
    . . . .’” (M.N., at p. 616; accord, Occidental, supra, 37 Cal.App.5th
    at p. 1019.)
    There was substantial evidence that Jane was
    incapacitated and that, despite her possible apparent assent, a
    sober person in John’s position should have known she was
    incapacitated. Jane was extremely intoxicated. In John’s
    presence, Jane drank at least three or four shots of vodka and
    was stumbling and leaning on walls and furniture for support.
    Angela, in John’s presence, told Jane to stop drinking, and
    Angela repeatedly tried to take the vodka bottle away from Jane.
    According to Angela, Jane was too drunk to know what she was
    doing, where she was, or where she was going. When Jane
    returned alone to John’s room, she told him she had just vomited.
    Jane’s intoxication increased while she was alone with John.
    When she left John’s room, Jane was, according to her roommate,
    “past drunk.” The next morning, Jane suspected but did not
    know whether she had sex with John. The adjudicator
    reasonably concluded that Jane was unable to make “an informed
    and rational decision to engage in sexual activity” and that John,
    had he been sober, should have known it.
    34
    DISPOSITION
    The order denying John’s petition for a writ of mandate is
    affirmed. Occidental is to recover its costs on appeal.
    SEGAL, J.
    We concur:
    PERLUSS, P. J.
    STONE, J.
    
    Judge of the Los Angeles Superior Court, assigned by the
    Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California
    Constitution.
    35
    Filed 9/23/19
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    SECOND APPELLATE DISTRICT
    DIVISION SEVEN
    JOHN DOE,                                                B284707
    Plaintiff and Appellant,                          (Los Angeles County
    Super. Ct. No. BS147275)
    v.
    ORDER CERTIFYING OPINION FOR
    OCCIDENTAL COLLEGE,                                     PUBLICATION; NO CHANGE IN
    APPELLATE JUDGMENT
    Defendant and Respondent.
    THE COURT:
    The opinion in this case filed August 27, 2019 was not certified for
    publication. Because the opinion meets the standards for publication specified
    in California Rules of Court, rule 8.1105(c), the respondent’s request for
    publication under California Rules of Court, rule 8.1120(a), is granted.
    IT IS HEREBY CERTIFIED that the opinion meets the standards for
    publication specified in California Rules of Court, rule 8.1105(c); and
    ORDERED that the opinion be published in the Official Reports.
    This order does not change the appellate judgment.
    PERLUSS, P. J.                         SEGAL, J.                           STONE, J.*
    *       Judge of the Los Angeles Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article
    VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: B284707

Filed Date: 9/23/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/23/2019