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FIREto New York鈥檚 highest court: Hold Fordham to its promises in FIREfor Justice in Palestine case
FIRE filed a brief in New York鈥檚 highest court today, asking the court to accept an appeal from the Fordham students who have been trying to form a pro-Palestinian club since 2015.
The filing comes on the same day Fordham was named one of 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 2021 10 Worst Schools for Free Speech.
As we have covered in depth previously, a Fordham dean denied recognition to a chapter of FIREfor Justice in Palestine in 2016 after a year-long approval process because its 鈥渟ole purpose is advocating the political goals of a specific group鈥 and could lead to 鈥減olarization.鈥 The approval policies given to the students not only failed to state that the dean鈥檚 approval would be needed at that stage, but did not list 鈥減olarization鈥 as a basis for rejection.
With the help of , the students sued under permitting students to challenge the decisions of private colleges when those decisions are arbitrary or the university . In August 2019, the students in the trial court; in December of 2020, the appellate court reversed that decision.
The appellate division鈥檚 brief ruling rested primarily on the legal doctrine of mootness. The original plaintiff had graduated, and the court therefore determined there was no need to decide this case, because a future student could sue if they wanted to. The court then went further, stating that even if they reached the merits, Fordham 鈥渇ollowed its procedure鈥 in rejecting the club. The first rationale is a misstatement of the law; the second is a misstatement of the facts.
FIRE鈥檚 brief today asks the New York Court of Appeals, the state鈥檚 highest court, to review the intermediate court鈥檚 decision.
The case fits an exception to the mootness doctrine
The mootness doctrine is rooted in the idea that if a court cannot actually provide relief in a case, it lacks the power to hear the case. If a student has already graduated, he or she can鈥檛 form a club, and the case is moot. But there is an exception to the mootness doctrine for cases that are 鈥渃apable of repetition but evading review,鈥 and this case is a classic example of why that exception exists.
As of today, it has been five years, two months, and 30 days since the Fordham students applied for club recognition, and the case still isn鈥檛 fully resolved. If a student is going to sue Fordham for denying a club application and have that resolved within the four years that Fordham students take to graduate, apparently they鈥檒l have to apply for club recognition in the middle of their junior year in high school.
But we don鈥檛 need to look at hypotheticals to see this fact pattern is evading review. As 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 brief observes, borrowing a phrase from editorial cartoonist :
To the best of amicus FIRE鈥檚 research, this Court has never considered an Article 78 case involving a university鈥檚 suppression of a college student鈥檚 free speech rights. Article 78 has been the law of this state since 1937; in that time, New York has produced millions of college graduates, and this Court has heard thousands of Article 78 appeals. Statistically speaking, this pattern of conduct is not just evading review, it is a 鈥渇ugitive from the law of averages.鈥
Fordham didn鈥檛 follow its procedure
The appellate court went beyond mootness to state that, if it had reached the merits, it would have found that Fordham 鈥渇ollowed its procedure.鈥 In making that point, the court where a school had a specific rule and used its discretion to determine the rule was violated. But, and this is critical, Fordham had no rule against forming 鈥減olarizing鈥 clubs.
In fact, to the extent Fordham has rules about expression, it purports to protect expression. And having promised to offer that protection, FIRE鈥檚 brief notes, Fordham can and should be held to the promises it makes:
This case is not about interfering with Fordham鈥檚 right as an educational institution to create and enforce academic standards. Rather, it is about holding Fordham accountable for abandoning its voluntary, binding commitments in a way that frustrates students鈥 expectations and is antithetical to the role of a university as a venue for open inquiry.
Fordham鈥檚 conduct is a pattern
This case is going on while Fordham remains under investigation by the Department of Education for its handling of the Austin Tong case, in which a student was expelled for posting a picture of himself holding a gun on Instagram.
In a court filing in that case (which was subsequently ), Fordham asserted its 鈥減rerogative to limit a student鈥檚 free expression rights[.]鈥 Meanwhile, it promises students 鈥渁 right to freely express their positions and to work for their acceptance whether they assent to or dissent from existing situations in the University or society.鈥 Fordham lost its prerogative to deny student rights when it promised to protect them.
At a basic level, Fordham鈥檚 conduct is little more than a bait and switch. If a store advertised a business suit but delivered a bathing suit, consumer protection laws in New York wouldn鈥檛 let the store get away with it. The state of New York has to be willing to provide the buyer of a $200,000 education the protection it offers to buyers of $200 suits.
The brief was filed by of , who also filed a brief on 果冻传媒app官方鈥檚 behalf at the appellate level. We are grateful for his ongoing assistance in defending the rights of these students.
Disclosure: A long, long time ago, the author attended Fordham College at Lincoln Center and Fordham University School of Law.
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