Doe v. George Washington University ( 2018 )


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  •                             UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
    )
    JOHN DOE,                                    )
    )
    Plaintiff,                     )
    )
    v.                                    )       Case No. 18-cv-553 (RMC)
    )
    THE GEORGE WASHINGTON                        )
    UNIVERSITY,                                  )
    )
    Defendant.                    )
    )
    MEMORANDUM OPINION
    As a college sophomore, John Doe encountered a young woman at a party who
    said that she wanted to have sex. They did. Two years later, Jane Roe complained to the
    university that she had been sexually assaulted because she had been obviously too drunk to
    consent. After a hearing before a panel of three, Mr. Doe was found responsible for sexual
    assault. He was suspended in January 2018 for one year, even though he had completed all
    coursework for his degree. Mr. Doe appealed the panel’s finding but his appeal was found
    inadequate to present to an appellate panel. Mr. Doe sued and now moves for partial summary
    judgment, arguing that the handling of his appeal violated the terms of the university’s contract
    with its students as defined in part by its Code of Student Conduct. The Court agrees and will
    order the university to provide the appellate review to which Mr. Doe was entitled.
    I.      BACKGROUND
    The events that prompted this lawsuit began on the night of September 12, 2015,
    when two undergraduate students at George Washington University (GW or the University), in
    the District of Columbia, met at a college party. See Pl.’s Sealed Ex. 1, GW Office of Student
    1
    Rights & Responsibilities Summary of Material Allegations (ORR Documents) [Dkt. 28-1] at 6
    (providing the complainant’s statement). John Doe was a virgin; he also did not drink any
    alcohol over the course of the night because he is a nondrinker for religious reasons. Pl.’s Sealed
    Ex. 2, Unredacted Hearing Transcript (Sealed Tr.) [Dkt. 28-2] at 54. 1 Ms. Roe was a freshman;
    she consumed a significant amount of alcohol over the course of the night, although the exact
    amount is in dispute. At the party, Mr. Doe heard Ms. Roe say she wanted to have sex; the two
    met and talked and at some point around midnight they left the party together, riding in an Uber
    taxi ordered by Ms. Roe and headed together to Mr. Doe’s dorm room, where they had sexual
    intercourse. See ORR Documents at 6 (noting in the complainant’s statement that the Uber ride
    took place from 11:56 p.m. until 12:21 a.m., when the two students got out of the car at Mr.
    Doe’s building). Ms. Roe left afterwards and walked back to her room. See id. (describing her
    walk home). Mr. Doe now insists that the encounter was consensual and initiated by Ms. Roe,
    and that his reasonable perception was that she was able to consent; she would later formally
    allege that she had been too drunk to consent to sex.
    On October 30, 2017, Ms. Roe filed a complaint with GW’s Title IX enforcement
    office, 2 alleging that Mr. Doe had sexually assaulted her during the encounter two years prior.
    See id. at 6-7. In her initial complaint, Ms. Roe described the approximate timing of her alcohol
    consumption, and stated that she had been extremely intoxicated, but did not specify the full
    amount she consumed. See id. A week later, Ms. Roe supplemented her complaint stating she
    had consumed “5 solo [sic] cups of beer” at the party in question, in addition to alcohol
    1
    When citing to the parties’ exhibits, the Court cites to the page numbers generated by the
    Court’s Electronic Case Filing (ECF) system.
    2
    Title IX, which is codified at 
    20 U.S.C. §§ 1681-88
    , is a federal civil-rights law that prohibits
    discrimination on the basis of sex in educational programs that receive federal funds.
    2
    consumed before she went to the party. 
    Id. at 8
     (providing the complainant’s supplemental
    statement dated November 2, 2017). A few days later she submitted another supplemental
    declaration, stating she had also had a large cup of a strong mixed drink after drinking beer at the
    party. 
    Id. at 10
     (providing the complainant’s supplemental statement dated November 6, 2017).
    GW investigated Ms. Roe’s complaint and on December 14, 2017 convened a hearing on her
    allegations. At the hearing, Ms. Roe presented witness testimony that she had drunk “at least
    four” mixed drinks before attending the party in question, and that she was “not . . . able to speak
    fluidly, stumbling over words, not having perfect motor skills, tripping,” and otherwise appeared
    intoxicated immediately before going to the party. Sealed Tr. at 26-27.
    Both Ms. Roe and Mr. Doe had the opportunity to present testimony, and a
    hearing panel consisting of “two students and one low-level administrator” presided and served
    as the fact-finder. Mem. in Support of John Doe’s Mot. For Partial Summ. J. (Doe Mot.) [Dkt.
    27-1] at 21 n.11. Ms. Roe testified as to her recollection of the evening, which included her
    recollection that she spoke with a friend, E.E., on the phone during the Uber ride with Mr. Doe.
    See Sealed Tr. at 8. E.E. also testified, stating that Ms. Roe had sounded incoherent and slurred
    her speech during the phone call. 
    Id. at 43-44
     (testifying that she recalled Ms. Roe “slurring
    [her] words” on the phone from the Uber). Another witness presented by Ms. Roe, J.E., testified
    that Ms. Roe had been drinking heavily and appeared drunk at a “pregame” party, although J.E.
    did not testify as to Ms. Roe’s condition at the party at which she met Mr. Doe. 
    Id. at 26-27
    .
    Ms. Roe’s third witness, R.M., testified that Ms. Roe appeared intoxicated during the party while
    she was talking to Mr. Doe. See 
    id. at 33
    . Mr. Doe testified on his own behalf that Ms. Roe did
    not appear drunk; he did not present any other witnesses at the hearing. See 
    id. at 56
     (“There
    was nothing that indicated to me that she was intoxicated. . . .”).
    3
    On January 23, 2018, GW informed Mr. Doe that the panel had found him
    responsible for sexually assaulting Ms. Roe. As a result, he was suspended for one year, which
    delayed conferral of his undergraduate degree from spring 2018 until January 2019. See Pl.’s
    Ex. 12, GW Office of Student Rights & Responsibilities University Hearing Board Adjudication
    Report [Dkt. 27-15] at 7 (finding Mr. Doe “in violation of the charge” and recommending
    suspension); Def.’s Sealed Ex. C, Decision Letter (Jan. 23, 2018) [Dkt. 33-4] at 2-3. 3
    Mr. Doe timely appealed the hearing panel’s finding of responsibility according to
    the procedures outlined in GW’s Code of Student Conduct (the Code). See Pl.’s Sealed Ex. 13,
    Doe Appeal [Dkt. 28-14]; see also Pl.’s Ex. 14, GW Code of Student Conduct (GW Code) [Dkt.
    27-17] § 33 (providing that parties have a right to appeal the outcome of a disciplinary
    proceeding, and setting forth the relevant deadlines and procedural requirements). His appeal
    included a statement from another student, Q.W., who stated that he had spoken with Ms. Roe at
    the party and that she appeared “normal” and “lucid,” and that she did not appear to be blackout
    drunk. Pl.’s Sealed Ex. 17, Email from Q.W. (Jan. 30, 2018) [Dkt. 28-16] at 3. Mr. Doe’s
    appeal also included a report by a professional toxicologist, Dr. Harry Milman, who reviewed
    Ms. Roe’s testimony regarding her alcohol consumption on the night in question and opined that
    the amount of alcohol Ms. Roe claimed to have consumed was so high that, were she telling the
    truth, she likely would have been passed out and unable to stand, speak, remember anything from
    the entire evening, or dress herself and leave Mr. Doe’s room on her own two feet; i.e., the report
    called into question her testimony regarding the level of drunkenness she had displayed. See
    Pl.’s Sealed Ex. 15, Report of Harry A. Milman, Ph.D. (Dr. Milman Rpt.) [Dkt. 28-15] at 5.
    3
    At the time of his suspension, Mr. Doe had already completed the coursework necessary to earn
    his degree.
    4
    In relevant part, the Code provides for process by which a student may appeal the
    outcome of a disciplinary proceeding:
    33. Parties have a right to appeal the outcome of a disciplinary
    hearing or conference but not the sanction. Appeals must be based
    on new information that is relevant to the case, that was not
    previously presented at the hearing or conference, and that
    significantly alters the finding of fact. . . .
    34. A timely appeal will be reviewed by the Executive Director of
    Planning & Outreach or designee to determine its viability based on
    the criteria in Article 33. . . . If an appeal is found to be viable, the
    appeal will be forwarded to the Chair of the Committee on the
    Judicial System, who shall select a Panel of three persons from the
    Committee to review and decide the appeal (the “Panel”). One
    member from each constituency—students, faculty and
    administrators—shall be appointed, but otherwise the selection of
    Panel members shall be within the discretion of the Chair. The
    decision to grant or deny the appeal will be based on information
    supplied in the written appeal and, when necessary, the record of the
    original proceedings. . . . The decision of the Panel, or the outcome
    and sanctions (if any) resulting from any new hearing or conference
    ordered by the Panel in connection with the appeal, shall be final
    and conclusive and no further appeals will be permitted.
    GW Code §§ 33-34 (emphasis added).
    Robert Snyder, GW’s Executive Director of Planning and Outreach, is tasked
    with performing the gatekeeper function for all appeals of the University’s non-academic
    disciplinary proceedings, a role he has performed for more than six years. See Def.’s Ex. E,
    Declaration of Robert Snyder (Snyder Decl.) [Dkt. 32-7] ¶ 5 (Mr. Snyder describing his role). In
    his declaration, Mr. Snyder describes his responsibility as “reviewing appeals from findings in
    disciplinary hearings to determine the viability of the appeal,” as described in Articles 33 and 34.
    Id. ¶ 4. He then details his process for making this determination, which involves determining
    “the validity of the appeal,” id. ¶ 6, and deciding whether the appeal has “merit” under Article 33
    of the Code. Id. ¶¶ 8-11. Mr. Snyder rejected Mr. Doe’s “new” evidence on the basis that both
    5
    the expert toxicology report and Q.W.’s affidavit “were not previously unavailable . . . as both
    could have been obtained prior to the hearing.” Id. ¶ 11. 4
    Mr. Doe filed suit and initially moved for a preliminary injunction; specifically,
    he sought an order from the Court requiring the University to confer his degree in May 2018 and
    to clear his record. Mot. for Prelim. Injunction [Dkt. 6]. The Court denied the motion because
    Mr. Doe had failed to establish that he would suffer irreparable harm without a preliminary
    injunction. 4/25/2018 Order [Dkt. 26]; Doe v. George Washington Univ., 
    305 F. Supp. 3d 126
    (2018) (Doe I). However, the Court found that Mr. Doe’s breach of contract claim was likely to
    succeed on the merits insofar as he argued that his appeal of the finding of responsibility was
    viable under the Code and should have been considered by an appellate panel. See Doe I, 305 F.
    Supp. 3d at 133. During this litigation, Mr. Doe subpoenaed telephone records from E.E.’s
    cellphone provider, which showed no incoming or outgoing phone calls during the time period
    when Ms. Roe and E.E. testified they spoke on the phone during the Uber ride. See Pl.’s Sealed
    Ex. 19 [Dkt. 28-18].
    Because the central focus of Mr. Doe’s complaint is his sanction, resulting in the
    University’s delayed conferral of his degree for 12 months, the matter is time-sensitive. The
    parties agreed, with the Court’s permission, to proceed directly to briefing on Mr. Doe’s motion
    for partial summary judgment on whether Mr. Doe’s appeal was denied improperly, and that Mr.
    Doe’s other claims, including breach of contract on other grounds, can be addressed later, as
    needed. See 5/2/2018 Minute Order. Mr. Doe’s motion for partial summary judgment on breach
    4
    At the time of the hearing, Q.W. was studying abroad and physically unavailable.
    6
    of contract concerning his appeal is now fully briefed. 5 The Court held a hearing on the motion
    for partial summary judgment on June 13, 2018. See 6/13/2018 Minute Entry. The motion is
    ripe for decision.
    II.     LEGAL STANDARDS
    Summary judgment may be granted if “the movant shows that there is no genuine
    dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.
    R. Civ. P. 56(a). A fact is material if it is capable of affecting the outcome of litigation.
    Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 
    477 U.S. 242
    , 247-48 (1986). A dispute is genuine if the
    evidence is such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the non-moving party. 
    Id.
    The relationship between GW and Mr. Doe, insofar as that relationship is
    governed by University codes and policies, is contractual in nature and permits suit for its
    breach. Chenari v. George Washington Univ., 
    847 F.3d 740
    , 744 (D.C. Cir. 2017) (“Under
    District of Columbia law, which governs here, the relationship between a university and its
    students is contractual in nature.”) (quotation marks and citations omitted); see also Alden v.
    Georgetown Univ., 
    734 A.2d 1103
    , 1111 n.11 (D.C. 1999); Pride v. Howard Univ., 
    384 A.2d 31
    ,
    34 (D.C. 1978); Basch v. George Washington Univ., 
    370 A.2d 1364
    , 1367 (D.C. 1977). To
    determine the material terms of a contract, courts look to whether the parties’ intent to be bound.
    See Carroll v. Fremont Inv. & Loan, 
    636 F. Supp. 2d 41
    , 49 (D.D.C. 2009).
    5
    See Mot. for Partial Summ. J. [Dkt. 27]; GW Mem. in Opp’n to Mot. for Partial Summ. J.
    (Opp’n) [Dkt. 32]; Reply to Opp’n to Mot. for Partial Summ. J. (Reply) [Dkt. 36]; Surreply to
    Reply to Opp’n to Mot. (Surreply) [Dkt. 40]. The parties provided evidence as exhibits attached
    to their briefs and in supplemental sealed filings. See Pl.’s Exs. [Dkts. 27-4 – 27-28]; Pl.’s
    Sealed Exs. [Dkts. 28-1 – 28-22]; Def.’s Exs. [Dkts. 32-3 – 32-9]; Def.’s Sealed Exs. [Dkts. 33-1
    – 33-5]; Def.’s Sealed Exs. [Dkts. 37-1 – 37-3]; Pl.’s Notice of Filing of Redacted Document
    [Dkt. 38].
    7
    III.   ANALYSIS
    Mr. Doe moves for summary judgment for alleged breach of a contract between
    him and the University. GW argues that there is no such contract and that it complied with the
    terms of the Code of Conduct.
    A. The Contract
    Over GW’s objections, this Court has followed precedent from the District of
    Columbia Court of Appeals and found that the Code forms a contract between the University and
    its students, despite the fact that the Code is written and can be changed unilaterally by the
    school. See Doe I, 305 F. Supp. 3d at 131-33 (citing Alden, 
    734 A.2d at
    1111 n.11; Pride, 
    384 A.2d at 34
    ; and Basch, 
    370 A.2d at 1367
    ; and finding that the relationship between Mr. Doe and
    GW is contractual and that the Code provisions at issue in this case are contract terms). The
    University offers an education on certain terms—tuition, attendance, behavior under the Code,
    etc.—and a student accepts and performs his part of the contract accordingly. See Basch, 
    370 A.2d at 1366
    .
    GW maintains its objection, arguing in brief that Mr. Doe has failed to show
    “sufficient facts to demonstrate the terms of the contract,” Opp’n at 13 (quoting Mosby-Nickens
    v. Howard Univ., 
    864 F. Supp. 2d 93
    , 98 (D.D.C. 2012))—in short, arguing that Mr. Doe has
    failed to demonstrate that the Code, in this case, is a contract. GW protests that the University
    did not intend to be bound by the Code and that there is no mutuality of obligation, so that the
    Code cannot be interpreted as a contract. Opp’n at 13-14 (citing Shinabargar v. Bd. of Trustees
    of Univ. of D.C., 
    164 F. Supp. 3d 1
    , 29 (D.D.C. 2016)). GW’s argument is based on the
    University’s explicit reservation of a “unilateral right to modify the Code without notice to, or
    the consent of, students.” Opp’n at 14; see also 
    id.
     (quoting the Code at 9 § I, describing the
    8
    University’s “right to modify or change requirements, rules, and fees . . . The right is reserved by
    the University to make changes in programs without notice”).
    Whether the cited language supports a unilateral right to change any and all
    policies, including those at issue here, need not be decided. Under D.C. law, the contract
    between a university and its students can include disciplinary codes and other communications
    from a university to its students. See Pride, 
    384 A.2d at 34
    ; Alden, 
    734 A.2d at 1110
    . In Pride v.
    Howard, for example, the D.C. Court of Appeals found that provisions from Howard
    University’s code of conduct, parts of which had been distributed to students in a manual,
    constituted contract terms. Pride, 
    384 A.2d at 34
    . The fact that a university reserves the right to
    modify “requirements, rules, and fees,” as does GW, does not mean that no bargain exists. GW
    has agreed to provide its students with an education and, upon satisfactory completion, a degree.
    The Code of Conduct governs student behavior while studying at the University and its sections
    on appeals from panel decisions on non-academic discipline set forth clear procedures that
    impose requirements on the University, to which the University expressed a clear intent to be
    bound. By contrast, in Basch, the D.C. Court of Appeals found that code provisions containing
    words such as “estimated” and “approximate” suggested that there was no intent to be bound to
    an exact tuition rate; words conveying a more “definite” requirement would have suggested the
    opposite. Basch, 
    370 A.2d at 1367
    . The Court finds that the Code sections at issue here are
    binding on the University, and failure to follow them, as alleged, would constitute a breach of
    contract.
    B. The Appeal
    The question presently at bar is whether Mr. Snyder improperly denied Mr. Doe’s
    appeal on what was supposed to be initial screening. The University states that “Article 33 of the
    9
    Code . . . governs appeals” and an appealing party “must present evidence that meets two
    requirements under the Code: [1] new information that is relevant to the case, that was not
    previously presented, which [2] significantly alters the findings of fact.” Opp’n at 8; see also
    GW Code § 33 (“Appeals must be based on new information that is relevant to the case, that was
    not previously presented at the hearing or conference, and that significantly alters the finding of
    fact.”)
    In its focus on Article 33, the University fails to mention Article 34, which
    describes the procedures that must be followed in reviewing appeals. As relevant, Article 34
    states:
    A timely appeal will be reviewed by the Executive Director of
    Planning & Outreach or designee to determine its viability based on
    the criteria in Article 33. . . . If an appeal is found to be viable, the
    appeal will be forwarded to the Chair of the Committee on the
    Judicial System, who shall select a Panel of three persons from the
    Committee to review and decide the appeal. . . . The decision to
    grant or deny the appeal will be based on information supplied in
    the written appeal and, when necessary, the record of the original
    proceedings. . . . The decision of the Panel, or the outcome and
    sanctions (if any) resulting from any new hearing or conference
    ordered by the Panel in connection with the appeal, shall be final
    and conclusive and no further appeals will be permitted.
    GW Code § 34.
    Mr. Snyder declares that he is “responsible for reviewing appeals from findings in
    disciplinary hearings to determine the viability of the appeal” but then explains the processes by
    which he “determine[d] the validity of the appeal” in Mr. Doe’s case and others. Snyder Decl.
    ¶¶ 4, 6 (emphasis added). When deciding the “validity” of an appeal, Mr. Snyder states that he
    decides whether an appeal has “merit” under Article 33 of the Code. Id. ¶ 8 (stating he forwards
    an appeal to an appellate panel only if he finds it “to have merit under the provisions of the
    Code”); ¶ 9 (stating that if “an appeal lacks merit according to the provisions of the Code,” he
    10
    notifies the appealing party that it is rejected); ¶ 11 (stating that he “found that Doe’s appeal was
    without merit under the Code”).
    Mr. Snyder rejected Mr. Doe’s “new” evidence on the basis that both the expert
    toxicology report and the affidavit from Q.W. “were not previously unavailable . . . as both could
    have been obtained prior to the hearing.” Id. ¶ 11. This Court has already rejected the unspoken
    requirement that “new” evidence to support an appeal must have been previously unavailable
    prior to the panel hearing, because this limitation was not then stated in the Code. See Doe I, 305
    F. Supp. 3d at 133 (“The Court cannot agree to add limitations that are not stated in the Code.”).
    As to the toxicology report, Mr. Snyder missed the point that Ms. Roe had never quantified the
    full amount she drank on the night in question until the actual panel hearing so that a toxicologist
    could not have evaluated the impact of that amount of liquor on someone of her size and weight
    prior to that hearing. Thus, the toxicology report was “new” evidence by any definition.
    Inasmuch as Mr. Snyder read the toxicology report to summarize only that Ms.
    Roe “would have had an extremely high level of intoxication,” he concluded that it would not
    have altered the hearing panel’s finding of fact because “the exact number of drinks Roe
    contended she consumed . . . [was] explicitly before the hearing panel.” Snyder Decl. ¶ 14.
    However, Dr. Harry Milman, the toxicologist, opined that the amount of alcohol Ms. Roe
    reported was so high that, if she were telling the truth, she likely would have been passed out and
    unable to stand, speak, remember anything from the entire evening, or dress herself and leave
    Mr. Doe’s room on her own two feet i.e., the report called into question her testimony regarding
    her level of drunkenness and how she had acted. See Dr. Milman Rpt. at 5. Mr. Snyder did not
    appreciate or consider whether an appellate panel might have questioned the potential
    exaggerations in Ms. Roe’s testimony once it reviewed Dr. Milman’s expert opinion. Further,
    11
    Mr. Snyder discounted the value of Q.W.’s affidavit because his statement “was not materially
    different from other testimony offered by the respondent,” Snyder Decl. ¶ 13, despite the fact
    that one of the hearing members specifically asked if Mr. Doe did not have other witnesses to
    corroborate his testimony. See Sealed Tr. at 57 (“Is there any particular reason why you haven’t
    presented any witnesses to us today?”).
    Q.W.’s testimony, which provided support for Mr. Doe’s testimony concerning
    Ms. Roe’s appearance, speech, and behavior on the night in question, was not before the hearing
    panel. Nonetheless, Mr. Snyder decided that “weighing the evidence presented by the
    complainant and her witnesses, the facts presented in Q.W.’s statement were not significant
    enough to outweigh the evidence presented by the complainant and her witnesses.” Snyder Decl.
    ¶ 13. This statement clearly weighed the evidence and decided credibility from a written record;
    it thereby failed to appreciate the separate roles of a fact-finder (a hearing or appellate panel in
    the GW system) and a gatekeeper. It thus compounds the error of ignoring the possible impact
    of the new toxicology report on Ms. Roe’s credibility or the credibility of her other witnesses
    who supported her testimony. Mr. Snyder added a summary statement in his declaration that the
    combination of the Toxicology Report and the Q.W. statement “were not independently
    significant enough to alter the findings of fact.” Id. ¶ 15. This summary adds no weight to his
    conclusions.
    The details of Mr. Snyder’s analysis are worth examining because Article 34 of
    the Code directs that, upon receiving an appeal, Mr. Snyder is “to determine its viability based
    on the criteria in Article 33.” GW Code § 34. “If an appeal is found to be viable,” it is then
    “forwarded to the Chair of the Committee” on the Judicial System for the Committee to “review
    and decide,” i.e., to “grant or deny.” Id. Thus, the Code advises students that their appeals will
    12
    go forward to a second panel if they appear “viable” but Mr. Snyder acknowledges that he
    decided whether Mr. Doe’s appeal had “validity” based on his assessment of its “merit.” Mr.
    Snyder’s declaration makes no differentiation between the terms or why he used “validity” when
    Article 33 set out a test of “viability.” Not surprisingly, this comports with GW’s argument,
    discussed below.
    Contractual terms “are to be given their common meaning.” Basch, 
    370 A.2d at 1367
    . In common parlance, viable means “having a reasonable chance of succeeding,” Merriam-
    Webster.com; “able to be done or likely to succeed,” Cambridge Business English Dictionary,
    dictionary.cambridge.org; or “possible,” “within possibility,” Thesaurus.com. See also Black’s
    Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014) (defining viable as “[c]apable of independent existence or
    standing,” as in “a viable lawsuit,” or “[c]apable of succeeding,” as in “a viable option”). Thus,
    by the direction of Article 34, Mr. Snyder’s role was to determine whether an appeal had “a
    reasonable chance of succeeding” or was “likely to succeed” based on the criteria in Article 33
    (as relevant, whether the appeal had a reasonable chance of “significantly alter[ing] the finding
    of fact”). In contrast, “valid” means “logically correct,” as in a “valid argument,” Merriam-
    Webster.com; “based on truth or reason; able to be accepted,” as in “The money was gone, and
    the only valid conclusion was that someone had stolen it.”), Cambridge Academic Content
    Dictionary, dictionary.cambridge.org (providing the definition in “American English”); or
    “credible,” “good,” “well-founded,” “solid,” “accurate,” “persuasive,” “binding,” “legal,”
    “logical,” “compelling,” Thesaurus.com. See also Black’s Law Dictionary (10th Ed. 2014)
    13
    (defining valid as “[l]egally sufficient; binding,” as in “a valid contract,” or “[m]eritorious,” as in
    “that is a valid conclusion based on the facts presented in this case”). 6
    Mr. Doe argues that the viability analysis for which Mr. Snyder was authorized in
    Article 34 did not give him authority to decide the merits of Mr. Doe’s appeal or to decide
    whether his appeal would succeed. Instead, Mr. Doe contends, Mr. Snyder was tasked only with
    determining whether there were “new” evidence and whether there were a reasonable chance of
    success on appeal. GW does not recognize or address the viability standard in Article 34 that
    defines Mr. Snyder’s review parameters, although it filed an opposition and a surreply. To the
    contrary, GW contends that Mr. Doe:
    attempts . . . to change the rules midstream – he openly, and without
    support, modifies the terms of the handbook and presents the word
    ‘viable’ to the Court as a modifier. . . . In adding this word in a place
    it does not actually appear in the Code, plaintiff asserts that Mr.
    Snyder’s role is only to determine if something has the ‘potential’ to
    succeed, portraying his role as merely a stepping stone bereft of any
    substantive obligation. This formulation is wrong.
    Opp’n at 7 (emphasis added). 7 Recognizing its error at oral argument, GW insisted that the
    definition for “viable,” as used in Article 34, is found in Article 33, i.e., “viable” means that an
    appeal must present new evidence that “significantly alters the finding of fact.” GW insists that
    such a decision is properly made by Mr. Snyder. GW had no explanation for Mr. Snyder’s use
    of the word “validity” in reviewing an appeal, but it discounted its importance since viable is,
    according to the argument, contractually defined. To be precise, GW does not argue that
    6
    The Oxford Living Dictionaries define validity as “[t]he quality of being logically or factually
    sound; soundness or cogency” and include “viability” as a synonym. English Oxford Living
    Dictionaries, oxforddictionaries.com (providing both American and British English definitions).
    However, on the whole, American sources clearly distinguish between the two terms.
    7
    GW’s surreply was devoted to the issue of phone records, which are irrelevant to the breach of
    contract analysis. See generally Surreply.
    14
    “viability” and “validity” are the same thing. Rather, for purposes of its argument concerning
    the Code of Conduct, it defines viability as used in Article 34 to mean validity.
    Contrary to the University’s position, Mr. Doe does not modify the Code and
    argue for a standard of viability without support. Viability, not validity, is the word used by the
    contract between GW and its students at precisely the place that describes Mr. Snyder’s role. To
    be sure, Article 33 comes first and identifies the ultimate analysis but the standard for the
    preliminary analysis by Mr. Snyder is guided by Article 34, which instructs him to evaluate the
    viability, or chance of success, of an appeal and not its validity, or correctness.
    To ignore Article 34, as GW does, would render it surplusage, a result that is
    contrary to the rules of contract interpretation. See, e.g., New England Power Co. v. Fed. Energy
    Regulatory Comm’n, 
    571 F.2d 1213
    , 1225 (D.C. Cir. 1977) (“Redundancy in the construction of
    contracts is to be avoided if any other reasonable interpretation is possible.”). Ignoring Article
    34 would also deprive students of a promised level of intermediate review, legitimately designed
    to weed out those appeals with no new evidence and no reasonable chance of changing the result,
    but allowing others to proceed to a second panel of review. Unlike federal circuit courts, GW
    has protected its appellate panel from hearing repeated arguments on which a decision was
    already reached but providing that those appeals which have new evidence and a “viable” chance
    of meeting the requirements of Article 33 to proceed. Such an approach does not deprive Mr.
    Snyder of a “substantive” role as GW fears, although such a substantive role is limited. Under
    the Code, as it was written at the relevant time, a person in Mr. Snyder’s position was restricted
    to determining whether there was “new” evidence (there was) and whether that new evidence,
    combined with the record evidence, had a chance of success on appeal—without the substitution
    of his opinion on the merits for that of the appellate panel.
    15
    GW promulgates the Code and writes it unilaterally as is its right. The rules of
    evidence that control in court do not limit proceedings under the Code. Indeed, as a private
    institution, GW owes no strict constitutional due process to its students. See, e.g., Board of
    Curators of Univ. of Missouri v. Horowitz, 
    435 U.S. 78
    , 88 (1978) (“A school is an academic
    institution, not a courtroom or administrative hearing room.”); Nash v. Auburn Univ., 
    812 F.2d 655
    , 664 (11th Cir. 1987) (“[Appellants’] rights in the academic disciplinary process are not co-
    extensive with the rights of litigants in a civil trial or with those of defendants in a criminal
    trial.”); see also Goss v. Lopez, 
    419 U.S. 565
    , 581 (1975) (finding that a public school’s
    disciplinary proceedings should include certain “rudimentary precautions against unfair or
    mistaken findings of misconduct and arbitrary exclusion from school,” but clarifying that an
    informal rather than formal hearing would suffice). Nonetheless, having unilaterally issued the
    Code of Conduct that governed Mr. Doe and University obligations, GW was required to comply
    with its terms. Mr. Snyder’s approach may have been more efficient, but it collapsed part of the
    appellate panel’s decision process into his own and went beyond the scope of his authority under
    Article 34.
    The Court concludes that GW violated the terms of the contract in the way it
    handled Mr. Doe’s appeal.
    C. The Remedy
    Mr. Doe asks the Court to order GW to consider Mr. Doe’s appeal on the merits
    (i.e., bypassing Mr. Snyder’s gatekeeper authority), and order GW in doing so to consider the
    additional new evidence of E.E.’s phone records. See Doe Mot. at 26. GW argues that such an
    order would constitute a “windfall in equity,” arguing that only remand to Mr. Snyder would
    constitute specific performance on the University’s contract with Mr. Doe. Opp’n at 16. GW
    16
    adds, however, the argument that any remand for Mr. Snyder to consider Mr. Doe’s new
    evidence would be “illusory” because he already did so. Opp’n at 16. The Court is persuaded
    that a remand to Mr. Snyder, who appears to have long misinterpreted his function as described
    in Article 34 of the Code, would not effect a remedy. Therefore, it will order GW to submit Mr.
    Doe’s appeal to an appellate panel, without reference to Mr. Snyder’s opinion, and with
    submission of new evidence including Dr. Milman’s report, Q.W.’s recollections, and the
    telephone records presented by both parties in this litigation.
    The Court does not decide whether the initial panel decision was correct, nor does
    it decide that any party acted in bad faith. It merely decides that GW breached its contract with
    Mr. Doe and deprived him of rights assured by the Code, and that the effective remedy is to
    order GW to convene an appellate panel to hear Mr. Doe’s appeal based on the full evidence
    available. To avoid a meaningless remedy, the appeal must be concluded no later than 28 days
    from the date of issuance of this Memorandum Opinion and its accompanying Order.
    IV.    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, the Court will grant Mr. Doe’s Motion for Partial
    Summary Judgment, Dkt. 27, and order GW to consider the merits of Mr. Doe’s appeal,
    including review of his original appeal and accompanying exhibits as well as the E.E. phone
    records subpoenaed in this litigation and other relevant new evidence, according to the
    procedures for an appellate panel outlined in Article 34 of the Code. The Court will Order GW
    to ensure that the appeal panel convene and reach a decision no later than September 12, 2018.
    Date: August 14, 2018
    ROSEMARY M. COLLYER
    United States District Judge
    17