The Law of Higher Education. William A. Kaplin

The Law of Higher Education - William A. Kaplin


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of, the institution. The fact that an agent acts with the principal in mind does not necessarily excuse the agent from personal liability, nor does it automatically make the principal liable. The key to the institution's liability is authorization—that is, the institution may be held liable if it authorized the agent's action before it occurred or if it subsequently ratified the action. However, even when an agent's acts were properly authorized, an institution may be able to escape liability by raising a legally recognized defense, such as sovereign immunity. This defense is available in some states to public institutions but not to private institutions.

      The existence and scope of sovereign immunity from contract liability vary from state to state. The Texas Court of Appeals, in considering a coach's breach of contract claim against Texas Tech University, explained the genesis of sovereign immunity:

      With the discovery and population of the New World, our forefathers were called upon to establish their own system of government. Having rebelled against the tyranny of British rule, one would think that they would instill a government of limited powers… Nonetheless, not all things British were rejected for our own courts adopted much of the common law developed overseas. And, included in that body of law was the doctrine of sovereign immunity… So, though we have no king…, the government (e.g., State, county, and municipalities) and those working for it in their official capacities came to enjoy that created to protect monarchs so many years ago [Leach v. Texas Tech University, 335 S.W.3d 386 at 391 (Tex. App. January 20, 2011)].

      The court ruled that the university had not waived sovereign immunity and thus could not be sued for breach of contract. However, not all states have determined that universities enjoy the same level of immunity as the Texas courts have granted Texas Tech University.

      A U.S. Supreme Court case demonstrates that sovereign immunity from contract liability will occasionally also be available to public institutions under federal (rather than state) law. In Regents of the University of California v. Doe, 519 U.S. 425 (1997), the Court upheld the university's assertion of Eleventh Amendment immunity as a defense to a federal court breach of contract suit brought by a disappointed applicant for employment. Such a federal immunity claim applies only in those limited circumstances in which a federal district court could obtain jurisdiction over a breach of contract claim.

      Regarding contract liability, there is little distinction to be made among trustees, administrators, employees, and other agents of the institution. Whether the actor is a member of the board of trustees or its equivalent—the president, the director of athletics, the dean of arts and sciences, or some other functionary—the critical question is whether the action was authorized by the institution. Allegedly aggrieved parties can be vendors and independent contractors, campus guests, current or former employees, or current or former students. For example, Kalick v. U.S., 604 Fed. Appx. 108 (3d Circ. 2015), involved a dispute between a student and a university over tuition payment. The university withheld the student's transcript pending payment of his outstanding tuition balance. The student alleged breach of contract, and ultimately learned that the federal courts lacked subject matter jurisdiction over such a dispute.

      To determine whether the record establishes an agency by agreement, it must be examined to ascertain if the party sought to be charged as principal had delegated authority to the alleged agent by words which expressly authorize the agent to do the delegated act. If there is evidence of that character, the authority of the agent is express. If no express authorization is found, then the evidence must be considered to determine whether the alleged agent possesses implied powers. The test utilized by this court to determine if the alleged agent possesses implied powers is whether, from the facts and circumstances of the particular case, it appears there was an implied intention to create an agency, in which event the relation may be held to exist, notwithstanding either a denial by the alleged principal, or whether the parties understood it to be an agency.

      “On the question of implied agency, it is the manifestation of the alleged principal and agent as between themselves that is decisive, and not the appearance to a third party or what the third party should have known. An agency will not be inferred because a third person assumed that it existed, or because the alleged agent assumed to act as such, or because the conditions and circumstances were such as to make such an agency seem natural and probable and to the advantage of the supposed principal, or from facts which show that the alleged agent was a mere instrumentality” [quoting Corpus Juris Secundum, a leading legal encyclopedia]… The doctrine of apparent or ostensible authority is predicated upon the theory of estoppel. An ostensible or apparent agent is one whom the principal has intentionally or by want of ordinary care induced and permitted third persons to believe to be his agent even though no authority, either express or implied, has been conferred upon him.

      Ratification is the adoption or confirmation by a principal of an act performed on his behalf by an agent, which act was performed without authority. The doctrine of ratification is based upon the assumption there has been no prior authority, and ratification by the principal of the agent's unauthorized act is equivalent to an original grant of authority. Upon acquiring knowledge of his agent's unauthorized act, the principal should promptly repudiate the act; otherwise it will be presumed he has ratified and affirmed the act [540 P.2d at 74–75].

      The Brown case arose after the crash of a plane carrying the Wichita State football team. The survivors and personal representatives of the deceased passengers sued Wichita State University (WSU) and the Physical Education Corporation (PEC) at the school for breaching their Aviation Service Agreement by failing to provide passenger liability insurance for the football team and other passengers. The plaintiffs claimed that they were third-party beneficiaries of the service agreement entered into by WSU, the PEC, and the aviation company. The service agreement was signed by the WSU director of athletics and by an agent of the aviation company. The university asserted that it did not have the authority to enter the agreement without the board of regents' approval, which it did not have; that it did not grant the director of athletics the authority to enter the agreement on its behalf; that the director only had authority to act as the agent of the PEC; that WSU could not ratify the agreement because it lacked authority to enter it initially; and that, as a state agency, it could not be estopped from denying the validity of the agreement.

      For a later example of a case in which a court ruled that the individual signing a contract on behalf of the Arizona Board of Regents lacked the authority to modify a contract, making the contract modification unenforceable, see Kaman Aerospace Corp. v. Arizona Board of Regents, 171 P.3d


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