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Students' Refund Claims Against U. Michigan, Over Switch to Distance Learning, Can Go Forward
Plaintiffs are suing for breach of contract and unjust enrichment.
From Milanov v. Univ. of Mich., decided July 27, 2020 by Judge Michael J. Kelly of the Michigan Court of Claims, but just posted on Westlaw:
Plaintiffs in this putative class action are students at defendant university. Their complaint arises out of actions defendants took in response to the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. Plaintiffs allege that defendants' actions deprived them of benefits for which they had already paid, including the benefit of in-person instruction, housing, meals, and student activities. Plaintiffs seek refunds of the amounts they paid, on a pro-rata basis, for the remainder of the 2020 winter/spring semester.
Plaintiffs allege that, in approximately March 2020, defendant university announced that it would cancel all live, in-person instruction and would transition to online distance learning for the remainder of the semester. In addition, defendants instructed students who lived in residence halls and on-campus housing to move out if they were able to do so. Plaintiffs contend that nearly half of the semester remained at this time, yet defendants did not offer adequate refunds of tuition and fees for the services that were no longer available to students.
Plaintiffs note that defendants offered a $1,200 credit—which both plaintiffs accepted in this case—for students who followed the directive to move out of the residence halls by March 25, 2020. However, plaintiffs contend that this credit is not commensurate with the financial losses they have suffered, nor is it equal to a prorated, unused amounts for room and board. Plaintiffs allege that defendants failed to offer a refund for the difference in value between online distance learning and live, in-person instruction in a classroom setting….
[Plaintiffs] allege that the online classes are not the equivalent of live, in-person instruction. In particular, plaintiff Kliment Milanov alleges that two of his classes were essentially cancelled because defendant university's online method of instruction failed to provide an adequate learning environment. Plaintiffs assert that the decisions to transition to online classes and to encourage students to leave campus were "responsible" ones; nevertheless, they allege it is unlawful for defendants to retain the full tuition and fees paid by plaintiffs under the circumstances….
Defendants moved for summary judgment, but the court allowed the case to go forward. It held that the cases deferring to universities as to educational judgments didn't apply here:
Plaintiffs are not asserting a due process violation or arguing that the University's decision to switch methods of instruction ran afoul of any constitutional rights. Instead, they are arguing that the university promised one method of instruction, charged tuition and fees commensurate with that method of instruction, yet provided a different (allegedly lesser) method of instruction. This is a claim potentially sounding in contract or in quasi-contract, not in due process. The Ewing decision [deferring to academic judgments] does not stand for the notion that any decision regarding academics is beyond review for a court….
{While the same is unnecessary for rendering a decision at this stage of the litigation, the Court notes troubling aspects of defendants' position. For instance, adopting defendants' position could lead to the conclusion that the university could simply cancel all classes and then retain tuition and fees, having made the academic judgment that instruction was unnecessary or unwarranted.}
The court held that the plaintiffs sufficiently raised a breach of contract claim:
Defendants next argue that … plaintiffs' claims must be dismissed because this state's jurisprudence does not recognize the existence of a contract between universities and students. To this end, they argue that courts have repeatedly held that student handbooks, codes, or other informational materials given to students do not create contracts between universities and students.
The Court disagrees and finds the authorities defendants cite inapposite. The instant case is not one where plaintiffs are alleging that they had a contractual right to continued enrollment or to graduation. As plaintiffs point out, "[i]t is a bedrock principle of American contract law that parties are free to contract as they see fit, and the courts are to enforce the agreement as written absent… a contract in violation of law or public policy."
Moreover, plaintiffs have attached to their responsive briefing a number of documents, such as housing contracts and meal plan contracts, between students and defendants. These documents expressly state that they are, in fact, binding agreements between students and defendant university. In short, if the law does not recognize contractual relationships between universities and students, this would appear to be news to defendants, based on the record before the Court. That is not to say that plaintiffs have established their breach of contract claims or the existence of the pertinent contracts in this case; rather, it is simply a rejection of defendants' legal argument that such agreements cannot exist….
[Plaintiffs'] claims … plead the elements of a breach of contract cause of action. For instance, of the complaint identifies the parties to the contract, the subject-matter (live, in-person instruction, room and board, and "fees"), the consideration provided by each side, and each side's obligations. Paragraph 67 expressly alleges a breach by defendant university, and ¶¶ 69-70 allege damages suffered by plaintiffs. The aforementioned elements, including the element of damages—which is repeatedly mentioned throughout the complaint—are sufficient to satisfy this state's notice-pleading requirements….
The court likewise held that the plaintiffs' unjust enrichment claims could go forward:
The elements of an unjust enrichment claim are: "(1) receipt of a benefit by the defendant from the plaintiff, and (2) which benefit it is inequitable that the defendant retain." "Not all enrichment is unjust in nature, and the key to determining whether enrichment is unjust is determining whether a party unjustly received and retained an independent benefit." Unjust enrichment "describes the result or effect of a failure to make restitution of or for property or benefits received under such circumstances as to give rise to a legal or equitable obligation to account therefor." …
Here, defendants ask the Court to dismiss the unjust enrichment claims because they contend plaintiffs failed to allege that the monies collected by defendant university were used for anything other than legitimate purposes. Hence, the retention of the benefits was not inequitable, argue defendants…. [But] the allegations by plaintiffs are that defendants did not provide the full extent of the services that were secured by plaintiffs' payment of amounts for tuition, fees, and room and board. While plaintiffs might have received a benefit from attending classes in an online environment, … [they] allege that they received a lesser education than that which they stood to receive from live, in-person instruction….[P]laintiffs have alleged that they yielded excess in comparison to what they received. Defendants' documentary evidence has not negated this element of plaintiffs' claim. Furthermore—and as it concerns the room-and-board claim—defendants have not presented evidence in support of their brief, one-sentence argument that their retention of excess amounts paid for room and board provided a benefit to plaintiffs….
And the court concluded that the defendants' impossibility and impracticability defenses don't preclude the plaintiffs' claims:
"A promisor's liability may be extinguished in the event his or her contractual promise becomes objectively impossible to perform." A party asserting this affirmative defense need not show "absolute impossibility"; instead, the party must demonstrate "impracticability because of extreme and unreasonable difficult, expense, injury or loss involved." Here, defendants argue that the COVID-19 pandemic and Governor Whitmer's Executive Orders rendered live, in-person instruction and the provision of room and board impossible and/or impracticable.
In response to defendants' arguments, plaintiffs argue that they are not contesting whether defendants could provide the contracted-for services. Instead, they argue that they should be entitled to a refund of the services, for which plaintiffs pre-paid, that defendant university stopped providing in light of the pandemic. As plaintiffs point out, caselaw holds that, even when performance has become impossible, a party who was deprived of the promised performance is entitled to a refund of consideration for services not rendered due to impossibility.
Defendants have not articulated a compelling argument as to why impossibility or impracticability would be a valid defense to this type of refund claim. As a result, summary disposition is not appropriate based on defendants' stated affirmative defenses.
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It is hard to believe that the plaintiffs win on the issue of lost in-person instruction.
However, the matter of breech of contract with respect to housing and meals will be much harder for the university to sustain as it claims that room and board agreements are binding on the students
They didn't win. They just got past the summary judgement stage.
My college refused to call snow days until 10pm the night before even with a foot of snow on the ground because they once got sued and lost for cancelling too many days of school. The students here are very very likely to win this claim based on previous court rulings.
I can't talk to the legal merits, but I suspect that the students will have no trouble finding helpful faculty and staff to bolster their claims.
The general consensus at my university about this sort of thing during the spring was, this is ridiculous, obviously we are all trying and this move had to be made, and we shouldn't punish the university for doing the best they can.
As the fall rolled around and that too was a mess (though not terribly executed all things considered) sympathies for the university decreased substantially.
Which makes these sort of things interesting because the real anger is how badly the follow up was but the case itself is about the spring, where honestly people made the best choices available to them imo.
My university offered some money but through I mismatch of communication I was kinda screwed out of it (allowed you to leave your stuff just get out of the university, than they claimed they never made that offer to allow you to leave your stuff. Which the more I think about it probably is more legitimate injury than this lawsuit is alleging ...
But I would be in favor of, when this is all over, a blanket tort immunity for everyone for any pandemic related claims, any contracts claim that the pandemic may have interfered with, and any liability associated with pandemic related rules. If the second violates the contracts clause, at the very least that would now be a thing again.
1. If you paid for something that was not delivered due to the pandemic I think you are owed a refund. Otherwise you end up with very unreasonable results. Buyers who bought prepaid items lose their money but buyers who contracted to buy COD lose their money.
2. Blanket tort immunity for any contract claims that the pandemic interfered with is totally unreasonable. If I agreed to buy 1,000,000 widgets from your factory and paid $10,000,000 up front as a deposit and then you were unable to deliver due to the pandemic you should need to refund me. It may make sense to ban punitive and consequential damages that I may have suffered due to not having the widgets, but that is a different matter. In general, it should probably be handled according to the Acts of God and/or Force Majeure clauses of the contract depending on whether the failure to deliver was due to the pandemic itself or the government actions to combat the pandemic.
Remember student loans -- the students didn't really prepay in that they will be paying later for something they never got.
My eyes hurt just reading that word soup.
What happens if someone has a one year magazine subscription and the magazine goes out of business in six months? I have had a few, and some subscribed me to a similar but different magazine for the remainder; I guessed the replacement took on the new subscribers as a quick and cheap alternative to advertising campaigns, possibly aided by some cash from the failed magazine. But would any subscriber be able to sue for a partial refund?
How about leasing a townhouse for a year which is destroyed or rendered uninhabitable through no fault of the townhouse owners? If you pay by the month, but are obligated by the lease to pay for a full year, can you get a refund for the partial month, and get out of the full year obligation?
"How about leasing a townhouse for a year which is destroyed or rendered uninhabitable through no fault of the townhouse owners? If you pay by the month, but are obligated by the lease to pay for a full year, can you get a refund for the partial month, and get out of the full year obligation?"
I mean, yes? It doesn't really matter if it was intentional or not ... or at least it shouldn't matter per Posner.
You might be able to sue said magazine, but good luck collecting with the magazine going bankrupt, which would likely preclude any lawsuits regarding loss of service.
"How about leasing a townhouse for a year which is destroyed or rendered uninhabitable through no fault of the townhouse owners? If you pay by the month, but are obligated by the lease to pay for a full year, can you get a refund for the partial month, and get out of the full year obligation?"
These are state law questions, but everywhere I'm aware of has an implied warranty of habitability in any lease which means that yes, you don't have to pay on a residential lease where it's not possible to live in the place (presumably unless it's the renter's fault that it becomes uninhabitable).
If the magazine goes out of business, you become one of the many, many unsecured creditors. And with no one to represent your interests, you're likely out of luck. But that scenario has no clean analogy to the case above because the university did not go out of business. They are still available to (theoretically) make things right to their customers.
Re: the townhouse - it depends on many things but probably it depends most importantly on the text of the contract. And because leased properties do burn down regularly, that's a scenario that's clearly covered in any competently drafted contract.
The university's better approach would be to invoke their Force Majeure clauses. And if they didn't have such clauses, well, shame on them and ambiguity gets interpreted in favor of the students. Universities are certainly big enough and sophisticated enough to know of the concept.
When you subscribe to a magazine, what the publisher owes you are magazine issues. The contents of that magazine are, I would hope obviously, at the discretion of the publisher.
So, if a multi-magazine publisher simply cancels one title (say, in a case I experienced, McGraw-Hill cancelling Byte), they are generally free to substitute one of their other titles (in my case, the utterly boring Red Herring). This is because the publisher owes you magazines, but not specific content. Consider, is there really any difference between sending you a different magazine, and changing the staff, title, and editorial direction of the magazine you subscribed to? Given the latter choices are within the publisher's discretion, so is the substitution.
However, if they stop sending you magazine issues, they owe you a refund.
The plaintiff's argument, then, is that the University of Michigan hasn't delivered their in-person classes, housing, and food, and so owes them refunds. That the university has a recognized right to change its personnel, the content of the classes, what food's at the cafeteria, and the like does not allow for nondelivery without refund.
This is obviously a weaker case on the classes (since online classes were made available) than the room and board. I, personally, can't imagine what the university is thinking on the room and board.
We've got your money and we are keeping it because fuck you that why!.
I can imagine what the university is thinking on room and board.
"We need the money. We have the money. We want to keep the money. Let's try to keep the money"
One of the Ferenghi Rules of Acquisition is if you have their money, don't give it back.
My dad got burned when a local department store went bankrupt right after Christmas, and the $400 gift card for my grandma became void. It went to court, so many got burned, but ruled a contract thing rather than "good as cash", which every store screams when selling them. So it couldn't even be used for the going out of business sale.
The owners knew they were going to do this, yet didn't go to jail over it.
"I, personally, can’t imagine what the university is thinking on the room and board."
I can -- "We are the university and can do anything we f****** please."
They've gotten away with this for so long that they don't think...
If you have ever argued any case against counsel representing a university, they truly do believe that the courts should defer to any decision made by the university under the guise it is "educational." And they get really mad when you point out that isn't supported by the case law.
Jimmy, I don't know what your deal is but if you are a lawyer, I suspect your opposing counsel may have gotten mad for reasons other than your in-court arguments about caselaw.
Jimmy, don't you understand?
Much as Federal law takes precedence over state law, university policy takes precedent over all law... 🙁
Seems like the university needs to write better contracts and include some type of waiver statement.
The university retains the right to curtail the services listed herein in the event of unforeseen events, (e.g. natural disasters [earthquakes, etc], pandemics, fires, etc). The university may offer alternative services or reimbursement.
Isn't there something in business law about a contract that violates public policy?