UPON DUE CONSIDERATION, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED, ADJUDGED, AND DECREED that the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Plaintiff-appellant Ayal Rosenthal was convicted of violating federal securities laws when he provided material, nonpublic information — gained in his capacity as a certified public accountant — to his brother, an active securities trader. At the time he committed the crime, Rosenthal was a candidate for the Master of Business Administration ("MBA") degree at defendant-appellant Stern School of Business ("Stern"), a subdivision of defendant-appellant New York University ("NYU"). Before Rosenthal had graduated, a Stern faculty member learned about Rosenthal's crime, which Rosenthal had not disclosed to any member of the faculty. Stern pursued thereafter a disciplinary proceeding that resulted in its decision to refuse to certify Rosenthal as qualified for the MBA. Rosenthal sued, asserting various contractual and Article 78 claims, seeking to require NYU and Stern to award him the degree. On September 20, 2010, the district court entered judgment, following a bench trial, declaring that NYU was under no legal obligation to award Rosenthal an MBA and dismissing Rosenthal's various claims for relief.
On appeal, Rosenthal argues that NYU breached its implied contract with its students by failing to observe its own rules and procedures. We review the district court's findings of fact for clear error, and its conclusions of law de novo.
While "there is an implied contract between the student and the university that, if he complies with the terms prescribed by the university, he will obtain the degree which he sought,"
Similarly, with regard to Article 78 claims, "the judgment of professional educators is subject to judicial scrutiny to . . . determine whether they abided by their own rules, and whether they have acted in good faith or their action was arbitrary or irrational."
The University's Bylaws declare, in part, that "it is the duty of each faculty to determine. . . the standards of academic achievement to be attained for each degree offered . . . ." Bylaws 61(b). The first inquiry, then, is whether Stern's refusal to certify Rosenthal as a Master of Business Administration after learning about his criminal insider trading could constitute a determination Stern's "standards of academic achievement" under the university's bylaws. The district court held that it could, and concluded that Rosenthal's "elaborate jurisdictional and procedural arguments" that Stern was without jurisdiction to withhold Rosenthal's MBA after learning of his criminal activity were "entirely without merit."
We agree with the district court. Rosenthal pled guilty to violating federal securities laws. More particularly, he admitted that he divulged material, non-public information about a confidential acquisition — material he had obtained in his position as a professional accountant — to his brother, and "turned a blind eye" to the likelihood that the brother, an active securities trader, would trade on the information.
Rosenthal does not contest the logic of the foregoing analysis. Indeed, he concedes that a university could in principle withhold a degree under these circumstances. Instead, he argues that his contract with NYU and Stern specifically forbids Stern from punishing him for off-campus conduct, however egregious the conduct or connected it may be to his academic pursuits. This argument fails for two reasons. First, Stern's own published rules — particularly its Code of Conduct, which specifically admonishes students to "reflect a personal honesty, integrity, and respect for others" in their conduct — provide ample indication, to us and to its students, that Stern did not intend to enter into any such contract with Rosenthal. Because Stern advises its students that the faculty's disciplinary power includes jurisdiction over, inter alia, "[v]iolations of federal, state and local laws," Stern was within its contractual rights to discipline Rosenthal for his dishonesty demonstrated by his violation of federal law.
Second, even if Stern's authority to discipline Rosenthal is tempered by NYU's commitments as identified in its University-wide rules and policies, nothing in those policies precludes Stern from pursuing the course that Rosenthal now contests. Rosenthal essentially makes an argument regarding NYU's internal constitutional law. To do so, he points to a proviso to the aforementioned Bylaw that "subject[s]" the faculty's duty to determine the academic fitness of its degree candidates "to the approval of the Board and to the general University policy as defined by the President and the Senate." Rosenthal then attempts to identify "general University policy" against disciplining students for violations of law outside certain narrowly-defined academic contexts. By this logic, Stern's own rules inconsistent with that University policy are themselves without force.
This argument is unavailing. Rosenthal points to two specific policies, promulgated by the University Senate,
In another, a Policy on the Division of Jurisdiction establishes that some kinds of misconduct are within the jurisdiction of either the academic faculty or the University Senate. None of the categories identified in the Policy address criminal conduct identical to that of Rosenthal. A final provision of this Policy addresses conduct that violates "Federal, State, or Local Law." That provision states that "[i]t is the policy of the University to discourage such acts by its members, and such offenses, . . . may be referred to the appropriate outside authority," and concludes that, "[t]o the extent that such acts also fall within one of the categories defined [above], they may also be subject to applicable disciplinary measures within the University." Rosenthal contends that, by negative implication, the Policy prohibits university discipline for criminal conduct, like his, not falling within one of those categories.
While these jurisdictional rules are admittedly in some tension with Stern's own strictures on general honesty and assertions of disciplinary jurisdiction over violations of federal law, Rosenthal's attempt to resolve that tension in his favor is unavailing, for two reasons. First, even if Bylaw 61 did preclude action by the Stern faculty inconsistent with Senate policy, the succeeding section, University Bylaw 62, awards Stern's faculty the power to suspend and dismiss its students, and that power is without reservation: the phrase "subject to the approval of the Board and to the general University policy as defined by the President and the Senate," on which Rosenthal relies, is missing from Bylaw 62.
As do Rosenthal's brief and the district court's opinion, the foregoing analysis amply demonstrates that NYU's governance provisions are confused and confusing. Fortunately, we need not unwind their internal tangles to resolve this case. To the extent that they are susceptible to conflicting interpretations, the New York courts' emphatic warning that courts must afford "great respect for the faculty's professional judgment" in the case of a "genuinely academic decision,"
We have considered Rosenthal's remaining arguments and find them without merit.