Doe v. New York College of Osteopathic Medicine of New York Institute of Technology et al
Filing
242
Order denying in part and deferring ruling on, in part, 235 NYIT's Motion for Summary Judgment. For the reasons stated in the attached Opinion and Order, NYIT's motion for summary judgment is denied as to Plaintiff's failure to accommodate claims under the Rehabilitation Act and NYSHRL. Pursuant to the Court's Order dated July 12, 2023, decision on NYIT's motion for summary judgment as to the remaining claims in the Amended Complaint is reserved pending further briefing by the parties as to whether Bahl has waived his right to oppose summary judgment on those claims. Ordered by Judge Nina R. Morrison on 7/21/2023. (JL)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
EASTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
No. 2:14-cv-04020-NRM-LGD
Ajay Bahl,
Plaintiff,
Opinion and Order
v.
New York College of Osteopathic
Medicine of New York Institute of
Technology,
Defendant.
NINA R. MORRISON, United States District Judge:
This motion for summary judgment requires the Court to consider the
reasonableness of certain proposed accommodations for a graduate student’s
disability under section 504(a) of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973
(“Rehabilitation Act”) and New York State Human Rights Law (“NYSHRL”).
In this case, the Court must determine (1) whether there is evidence from
which a reasonable jury could find that a college of osteopathic medicine
violated the relevant provisions of these statutes when it denied a disabled
student’s request for six months of additional leave from school to receive
further psychopharmacologic, cognitive behavioral, and speech therapy
treatments and prepare for an examination that he was required to pass in
order to graduate, and (2) whether the defendant’s counter-proposal of a
shorter period of leave (with certain additional conditions) satisfied its legal
obligation to reasonably accommodate the student’s disabilities.
In the fall of 2013, Plaintiff Ajay Bahl, who had by that time been
diagnosed with certain mental health and learning disabilities, requested six
months of leave from the Doctor of Osteopathic Medicine (“D.O.”) program at
the New York Institute of Technology College of Osteopathic Medicine
(“NYITCOM” or “NYIT”). Although Bahl had requested and been granted
additional periods of leave during his tenure as an NYIT student, he
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requested this additional six months of leave because, he contended, in light
of his disabilities, he required that additional time to obtain disability-related
medical treatment and prepare for the COMLEX 2, a test he needed to pass
as the final graduation requirement from NYIT.
NYIT rejected Bahl’s request. Shortly thereafter, it made a counterproposal, offering him just over three months of leave that would be
contingent upon securing certain testing accommodations from the National
Board of Osteopathic Medical Examiners (“NBOME”), the entity that
administers the COMLEX 2. Bahl declined NYIT’s proposal, and the parties
were unable to reach agreement on any other accommodation.
Bahl filed this lawsuit in 2014. A year later, Bahl filed an amended
complaint that contained seventeen claims for relief under federal, state, and
local laws. See Am. Compl. ¶¶ 99–265, ECF No. 77. Discovery eventually
concluded and on March 1, 2022, NYIT moved for summary judgment on all
claims. See Def.’s Mot. for Summ. J. 49, ECF No. 235-5. 1
On December 30, 2022, through counsel, Bahl filed a brief in partial
opposition to Defendant’s motion. In that brief, Plaintiff conceded that
Defendant was entitled to summary judgment on all but two of the claims in
the Amended Complaint and asserted that Bahl would no longer pursue
those claims. The claims in which Bahl, through counsel, did oppose
summary judgment each concern a failure to accommodate Bahl’s disability
under section 504(a) of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 (“Rehabilitation Act”)
and New York State Human Rights Law (“NYSHRL”) and arise from the
same factual dispute: whether NYIT improperly denied Bahl the six-month
period of leave from school he requested to prepare for the COMLEX-2 exam
in September 2013, or otherwise violated his right to a reasonable
accommodation for his disability in the parties’ communications following
Bahl’s September 2013 leave request. See Pl.’s Opp’n, ECF No. 236; see also
Am. Compl., ¶¶ 126–35, 243–54 (listing claims).
For the reasons stated below, NYIT’s motion for summary judgment on
Bahl’s Rehabilitation Act and NYSHRL failure to accommodate claims is
1
All page numbers refer to ECF page numbers except where noted.
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DENIED. The Court reserves decision on any outstanding claims, pending
further briefing on the question of whether Bahl, who recently terminated his
counsel, has waived his right to oppose summary judgment on those claims.
I.
BACKGROUND
The Court summarizes only the facts and procedural history relevant
to the motion for summary judgment as to Bahl’s September 2013 request for
leave, noting (where applicable) all material facts in dispute and construing
the factual record in the light most favorable to Bahl as the non-movant. 2
A.
Bahl begins at NYITCOM and is diagnosed with ADHD
and Generalized Anxiety Disorder
In 2008, Bahl began a four-year osteopathic medicine program at NYIT
College of Osteopathic Medicine. See Pl.’s 56.1 Statement ¶¶ 1–5, 27, ECF
No. 236-1. To graduate from the program at NYIT, Bahl needed to take two
exams: the COMLEX 1 exam and the COMLEX 2 exam, which consisted of
two parts: the performance evaluation (“PE”) and cognitive evaluation (“CE”).
NBOME administers the COMLEX 1 and COMLEX 2. See Pl.’s 56.1
Statement ¶¶ 10–14, 115.
In July 2011, after Bahl withdrew from the D.O. program for medical
reasons, Bahl’s psychiatrist Dr. Lenard Adler diagnosed Bahl with ADHD
and generalized anxiety disorder (“GAD”). Pl.’s 56.1 Statement ¶¶ 73–74,
93–96. In a letter to the school, Dr. Adler advised that Bahl was undergoing
an ongoing adjustment to his medications and treating with another medical
provider for psychotherapy; Dr. Adler noted at the end of that month that
Bahl’s symptoms were improving. Pl.’s 56.1 Statement ¶¶ 95–96. The next
month, Dr. Paul Yellin, a learning specialist, issued a report in which he
opined that Bahl should receive “two times the standard time” when taking
examinations; however, Bahl did not provide this report to NYITCOM until
May 2013. Pl.’s 56.1 Statement ¶¶ 106–09. By October 2012, Bahl had
successfully completed his third- and fourth-year clinical clerkships and
Bahl’s statement under Local Civil Rule 56.1 disputed the materiality
of a number of facts, but not the underlying facts in those disputes.
2
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passed the COMLEX 1; he only needed to pass the COMLEX 2 to graduate.
See Pl.’s 56.1 Statement ¶¶ 46, 112, 115. Although Bahl had previously
requested (and been granted) certain periods of leave from NYIT to enable
him to complete certain graduation requirements, by this time he had
achieved what NYIT would later summarize as an “impressive academic
history.” Pl.’s 56.1 Statement ¶ 228 (quoting email from Jordan Thompson
III, Assistant General Counsel at NYIT, to Bahl’s then-counsel).
B.
Bahl attempts to pass the COMLEX 2
After scheduling and postponing the COMLEX 2 several times, Bahl
took and failed both parts of the COMLEX 2 exam in December 2012. See
Pl.’s 56.1 Statement ¶¶ 122, 132. Under school policy, a student who did not
pass the COMLEX 2 before the student’s graduation date was eligible for a
180-day leave of absence to study for and retake the COMLEX 2. Pl.’s 56.1
Statement ¶ 116; see also Pl.’s 56.1 Statement ¶ 136 (describing school
policy); Oral Argument Tr. (“Tr.”) 26:24–27:3 (same). In other words, this
six-month leave was equally available to both disabled and non-disabled
students at NYIT who needed to retake the COMLEX 2 exam. Bahl applied
for and received a standard, 180-day COMLEX 2 leave of absence under
school policy. See Pl.’s 56.1 Statement ¶¶ 135–37.
Bahl applied to NBOME for exam accommodations in May 2013. In
connection with this request, he forwarded Dr. Yellin’s report to NYITCOM
and asked Assistant Dean Felicia Bruno to submit an addendum supporting
his request for testing accommodations from NBOME. Bruno declined,
stating that she believed that it was not her position to opine to NBOME about
whether NBOME should give Bahl COMLEX 2 Exam accommodations. Pl.’s
56.1 Statement ¶ 161. Ultimately, NBOME denied Bahl’s request for testing
accommodations. See Pl.’s 56.1 Statement ¶¶ 149–52, 155, 161–62, 167–78,
170–73.
In June 2013, while his request to NBOME was pending, NYITCOM
told Bahl that NYITCOM had changed its policies to place students who did
not pass the COMLEX 2 by their graduation date into a “directed study
course” to prepare for the COMLEX 2 Exam, and Bahl and one other student
were placed in a ten-week directed study course for the COMLEX 2 that ran
from July 2 to September 9, 2013. Pl.’s 56.1 Statement ¶¶ 177–79, 180–82.
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C.
Bahl seeks an additional six months of leave to prepare
for the COMLEX 2 exam
By September 20, 2013, shortly after the directed study course ended,
Bahl sought an accommodation directly from NYIT: a six-month medical
leave. 3 Pl.’s 56.1 Statement ¶¶ 116, 124–33, 177–82, 193–206. NYIT denied
Bahl’s request. Pl.’s 56.1 Statement ¶ 220. In doing so, Achtziger told Bahl
that he did not qualify for medical leave since he was not an active student.
Id.
On October 21, 2013, upon Bahl’s request that NYIT reconsider its
denial, NYIT Assistant General Counsel Jordan Thompson III wrote to Bahl’s
then-counsel and proposed the following:
Based upon the facts set forth above, and reviewing the
supporting documentation you have provided regarding Mr.
Bahl’s alleged learning disability, NYITCOM has concluded as
follows with respect to your client’s request for a review of the
determination denying him an accommodation in connection with
his retaking of the COMLEX Level 2 exam:
• Effective immediately NYITCOM is placing Mr. Bahl on a
“Withdrawal for Financial Aid Purposes Only” status[.]
• NYITCOM agrees to approve Mr. Bahl’s application for a retest
of the COMLEX Level 2 exams with the National Board of
Osteopathic Medical Examiners (“NBOME”), provided that (i)
NBOME grants Mr. Bahl a testing accommodation for his alleged
learning disability (the “Testing Accommodation”), and (ii) the
test date will allow the results to be available by January 31,
Bahl and NYIT dispute whether this request was made in August
2013, when Bahl had contacted NYIT’s Office of Disability Services, or in
September 2013, when Bahl had met with Mary Ann Achtziger (“Achtziger”),
who was NYITCOM’s then-Associate Dean of Student Affairs. Either way,
the exact date of Bahl’s request is immaterial for the purposes of deciding
this motion. Pl.’s 56.1 Statement ¶¶ 116, 124–33, 177–82, 193–206.
3
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2014.
• NYITCOM will not approve Mr. Bahl’s application if the
NBOME does not grant a Testing Accommodation.
• If Mr. Bahl fails to take and pass the COMLEX Level 2 exam
with the Testing Accommodation on or before January 31, 2014,
NYITCOM will dismiss Mr. Bahl on that date.
Pl.’s 56.1 Statement ¶ 228 (quoting Catalano Decl. Ex. 40, ECF No. 235-6).
Thompson continued, “NYITCOM does not in fact believe that any
accommodation is warranted as there is nothing to suggest in Mr. Bahl’s
impressive academic history, including his tenure at NYITCOM, that he
requires an accommodation to succeed based on a purported disability.” Pl.’s
56.1 Statement ¶ 229 (quoting same).
Bahl, who was placed on “withdrawn” status following Thompson’s
email, sought behavior therapy and speech therapy. He did not seek
reconsideration of NBOME’s denials of his requests for testing
accommodations. See Pl.’s 56.1 Statement ¶ 230–33.
D.
Procedural history
In 2014, Bahl sued NYIT, NBOME, and North Shore Long Island
Jewish Plainview Hospital out of events arising from (i) his clerkship at the
hospital that led to his medical leave, and (ii) his requested leave concerning
the COMLEX 2. See Compl., ECF No. 1. In 2015, Bahl filed an amended
complaint. See Am. Compl., ¶¶ 88–265, ECF No. 77.
NYIT, the sole defendant now remaining in this suit, served its motion
for summary judgment on March 1, 2022. See Def.’s Mot. 49. This suit was
reassigned to this Court in October 2022 as a matter of routine court
administration. On December 30, 2022, counsel for Bahl served opposition
papers, which stated: “Plaintiff now withdraws his claims for disparate
treatment discrimination, retaliation, hostile learning environment, aiding
and abetting discrimination, equal protection, breach of an implied
agreement, negligent infliction of emotional distress, negligent
misrepresentation, deceptive practices, and his New York City Human Rights
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Law claims.” See Pl.’s Opp’n 1. Bahl’s opposition brief then argued that
summary judgment should be denied on the remaining failure to
accommodate claims under the Rehabilitation Act and NYSHRL. 4 Id. at 5.
NYIT served its reply on these claims and filed the bundled, fully-briefed
motion on February 21, 2023. See Def.’s Reply, ECF No. 237. This Court
held oral argument on the afternoon of June 30, 2023.
On the morning of oral argument, Bahl emailed the Court and counsel
to request an “emergency adjournment.” See Pl. Letter, ECF No. 241 (June
30, 2023). 5 Bahl stated that he did not wish to be represented by his counsel.
Id. He wrote, “Several of my claims have apparently been withdrawn
without my authorization, and in some cases against my explicit instruction.”
Id. The Court allowed him to appear at oral argument for the limited
purpose of assessing whether Bahl wished to proceed pro se or through his
counsel. Tr. 2:1–7. But, the Court explained, the opposition brief in question
had been filed months earlier, oral argument had been set to discuss the
remaining failure to accommodate claims, and in light of the parties’ and the
Court’s preparation for argument, that portion of the Defendant’s motion
would be heard that day. Tr. 12:4–8. After some discussion and an
opportunity to confer off the record with his then-counsel, Bahl informed the
Court that he wanted his counsel to argue the failure to accommodate claims
on his behalf. Tr. 16:16–19. The Court heard argument from counsel,
reserved decision, and instructed Bahl to inform the Court within one week
whether he wished to continue to be represented by his then-counsel or not.
Bahl’s opposition also discussed failure to accommodate claims under
the Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”), 42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq., that
NYIT argued were not in the Amended Complaint (which was filed by
another prior counsel for Bahl). See Pl.’s Opp’n 1, 6; Def.’s Reply 4. Oral
argument proceeded on the Rehabilitation Act and NYSHRL claims. See Tr.
17:1–5. In any event, and as discussed below, these claims are evaluated
under the same standards as the ADA. See Part III.A, infra.
4
Bahl’s letter is dated June 29, 2023, but Bahl emailed the letter to
opposing counsel, his then-counsel, and the Court on June 30, 2023 at 8:16
a.m.
5
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On July 7, 2023, Bahl filed a letter stating that he intended to seek
other counsel, and his counsel filed a motion to withdraw. See Letter dated
July 7, 2023, to Judge Morrison from Ajay Bahl, ECF No. 239 (July 7, 2023);
Letter Motion to Withdraw as Attorney Conditional on Attorney’s Lien, ECF
No. 240 (July 11, 2023). The Court has given the parties the opportunity to
brief the question of whether Bahl has waived his right to oppose summary
judgment as to the remaining claims. Order dated July 12, 2023. In the
meantime, it issues this decision on the claims whose merits were the subject
of oral argument.
II.
LEGAL STANDARD
Summary judgment is appropriate only when the party moving for
summary judgment 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). “The moving party bears the burden of establishing the
absence of any genuine issue of material fact.” Zalaski v. City of Bridgeport
Police Dep’t, 613 F.3d 336, 340 (2d Cir. 2010) (citing Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
477 U.S. 317, 322 (1986)). To present a “genuine” issue of material fact
sufficient to defeat a motion for summary judgment, “the record must contain
contradictory evidence such that a reasonable jury could return a verdict for
the nonmoving party.” Horror Inc. v. Miller, 15 F.4th 232, 241 (2d Cir. 2021)
(internal quotation marks omitted). At the summary judgment stage, a court
must construe the record “in the light most favorable to the non-moving
party,” and “resolv[e] all ambiguities and dra[w] all reasonable inferences” in
that party’s favor.” Id. at 240.
III. DISCUSSION
The legal standards that govern the merits of NYIT’s motion are not
disputed by the parties. As discussed further below, to obtain summary
judgment on Bahl’s failure to accommodate claim under the Rehabilitation
Act and NYSHRL, NYIT must show that the accommodation it offered Bahl
was “plainly reasonable” as a matter of law. Alternatively, even if Bahl can
show that his own proposed accommodation was a reasonable one, summary
judgment may still be granted if NYIT demonstrates that Bahl’s request
would have created an undue hardship for NYIT or required a substantial
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modification of its educational program.
A.
Rehabilitation Act and NYSHRL
Under section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act—the nation’s first federal
statute enacted to protect the civil rights of persons with disabilities 6— “[n]o
otherwise qualified individual with a disability . . . shall, solely by reason of
her or his disability, be excluded from the participation in, be denied the
benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any program or activity.”
Dean v. Univ. at Buffalo Sch. of Med. & Biomedical Sci., 804 F.3d 178, 186
(2d Cir. 2015) (quoting 29 U.S.C. § 794(a)). Courts interpret the NYSHRL
“coextensively” with the Rehabilitation Act, Williams v. MTA Bus Co., 44
F.4th 115, 124 (2d Cir. 2022), and treat claims under both statutes through
the same legal standards as claims under the Americans with Disabilities
Act. See Noll v. Int’l Bus. Machines Corp., 787 F.3d 89, 94, 95 n.2 (2d Cir.
2015) (citations omitted).
To establish a prima facie violation of the Rehabilitation Act, a
plaintiff must show (1) that the plaintiff is a “qualified individual” with a
disability; (2) that a defendant “receive[s] federal funding;” and (3) that the
plaintiff was “denied the opportunity to participate in or benefit from
defendants’ services, programs, or activities, or was otherwise discriminated
against by defendants, by reason of her disability.” See Henrietta D. v.
Bloomberg, 331 F.3d 261, 272 (2d Cir. 2003) (citations omitted). Under the
first two prongs, NYIT does not contest Bahl’s disability status and does not
In 1973, Congress passed the Rehabilitation Act, partially in
response to federal litigation concerning the educational rights of children
with disabilities. Spencer C. Malone, Charles J. Russo & Allan G. Osborne,
Jr., Reasonable Accommodations for Students in Higher Education Under
Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act, 409 ED. LAW REP. 610, 610 (2023).
Section 504, one of the statutes at issue in this case, “attached an
antidiscrimination mandate to federal funds.” Karen M. Tani, Disability
Benefits as Poverty Law: Revisiting the “Disabled State,” 170 U. PA. L. REV.
1687, 1719 n.33 (2022). It has since served as “essentially the disability
equivalent of Title VI of the 1964 Civil Rights Act and Title IX of the
Education Amendments of 1972.” Id.
6
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dispute that the Rehabilitation Act applies to NYIT for purposes of this
motion. See Def.’s Mot. at 26 n.7, 28–29. Under the third prong, an
educational institution may be found liable if it fails to “offer reasonable
accommodations for a student’s known disability unless the accommodation
would impose an undue hardship on the operation of its program, or
fundamentally alter the nature of the service, program, or activity.” Dean,
804 F.3d at 187.
Thus, to determine whether NYIT is entitled to summary judgment,
this Court must decide whether the accommodation NYIT offered to Bahl (a
three-month leave of absence from NYIT, with certain contingencies related
to his earlier request for testing accommodations from NBOME) was “plainly
reasonable” as a matter of law. If it was not, the Court must then consider
whether, under the applicable burden-shifting framework, a jury could find
that Bahl’s original proposed accommodation—a six-month-leave of
absence—would have been reasonable. See id. at 189.
B.
Was NYIT’s counter-proposal to Bahl a “plainly
reasonable” accommodation?
“Where a defendant’s educational institution has implemented or
offered an accommodation, the institution will be entitled to summary
judgment only if the undisputed record reveals that the plaintiff was
accorded a ‘plainly reasonable’ accommodation.” Id. at 188–89 (citations
omitted). While the reasonableness of an accommodation is a “fact-specific
question that often must be resolved by a factfinder,” the “plain
reasonableness” of an accommodation “ends the analysis” and obviates the
need to engage in a burden-shifting analysis. Noll, 787 F.3d at 94 (internal
quotation marks omitted).
Instructive here is the Second Circuit’s 2015 opinion in Dean v.
University at Buffalo School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences. 804 F.3d
at 178. There, the court found that a jury question remained as to the
reasonableness of a school’s rejection of a medical student’s proposed threemonth leave to study for a licensing exam, which precluded summary
judgment on that issue. Id. at 190. After failing the exam twice, the student
became disabled within the meaning of the applicable statutes, experiencing
increased symptoms of depression right before he was slated for his third and
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final permitted examination-retake. Id. at 183. The student requested an
accommodation in the form of a three-month leave of absence before retaking
the exam, since he was informed that his psychiatric medications would need
six to eight weeks to take full effect, and he contended that he needed
additional time, with his symptoms treated by medication, to study
thereafter. Id. at 188. The school denied the request but offered an
alternative: a total of ten weeks of leave. The court found that, “by any
measure,” the school’s proposed accommodation did not give the student postmedication study time equivalent to the “six to eight weeks allegedly
afforded, as a matter of school policy, to medical students who had also failed
two prior attempts.” Id. at 189. The fact that the school had given earlier
periods of leave before the student requested a disability accommodation did
not establish that the school had offered a “plainly reasonable”
accommodation for the student’s later-developed disability. Id. at 182–83,
186–89. Considering the school’s policy affording six to eight weeks of leave
for students without disabilities, a juror “could reasonably infer that the
abbreviated study period encompassed within [the plaintiff student’s] leave
would not have been effective.” Id. at 189. In sum, the Dean court concluded
that the school’s proposed accommodation of ten weeks was not “plainly
reasonable.”
Here, Bahl requested a six-month medical leave of absence in
September 2013 that would have allowed him to take the COMLEX 2 in
February 2014. NYITCOM rejected this request, but countered with a
different proposed accommodation: what it deemed a “withdrawal for
financial aid purposes” and an offer to approve Bahl’s application for a retest
if he secured an accommodation from NBOME for the COMLEX 2 and if his
NBOME test results would be available by January 31, 2014 (meaning that
Bahl would have approximately three months to study for and take the
NBOME exam, rather than the six months he had requested). See Pl.’s 56.1
Statement ¶¶ 207, 227–29.
This Court concludes that summary judgment is inappropriate to
resolve the parties’ dispute over these proposed accommodations. After
drawing every reasonable inference in Bahl’s favor, a jury could find that
NYIT’s proposed accommodation was not “plainly reasonable” as a matter of
law when considering the two key terms of NYIT’s proposed accommodation:
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(1) the length of time and (2) the condition that Bahl secure an
accommodation from NBOME and receive his COMLEX 2 test results by
January 31, 2014.
1.
Length of leave (“withdrawal” time)
NYIT offered Bahl approximately three months away from the
program (requiring that he complete his preparation and sit for the COMLEX
2 test in time for his scores to be available by January 31, 2014). At oral
argument, NYIT clarified that there was “no difference” between the medical
leave of absence Bahl requested and “withdrawal for financial aid purposes
only” on which NYIT offered to place Bahl. See Tr. 19:10–24. Yet, when
asked why NYIT had limited the length of leave time (rather than agree to
Bahl’s requested six months), counsel for NYIT was not certain as to NYIT’s
reason for this limitation. NYIT’s counsel observed that Bahl’s request came
in around the start of the new semester, September 19, and NYIT’s proposed
end date of January 31 coincided with the end of that semester. See Tr. 23:9–
24:2. It may well be that NYIT officials concluded it would be convenient or
otherwise preferable for them to have certainty about Bahl’s graduation
plans before the next academic semester. But NYIT cited no facts in its
motion papers or at oral argument to demonstrate why this three-month
period was itself a plainly reasonable accommodation of Bahl’s disability.
NYIT argues that because Bahl had already taken a “six-month leave
[that] expire[d] in June” plus “ten more weeks after June” of a directed-study
course (approximately eight months of time away from the core program
program) prior to September 2013, it was per se reasonable to deny his
request for an additional six months to study for the COMLEX 2. See Tr.
25:5–13; Tr. 25:16–17; Def.’s Mot. 31. The Court disagrees. Indeed, this
argument appears to be foreclosed by Dean, in which the Second Circuit
concluded that a school having already given a medical student leave to study
prior to becoming disabled did not make the school’s rejection of a subsequent
leave request per se reasonable. 804 F.3d at 188–89. Like the student in
Dean, Bahl had previously taken leave from NYIT’s program—through
policies NYIT offered to disabled and non-disabled students alike—which
totaled approximately eight months, before he requested an additional period
of six months. It was only when requesting his final six-month leave in
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September 2013, however, that he cited his disabilities and need for related
medical treatment as the reason for his leave request. While school officials
may have become impatient with Bahl’s extended therapy, rescheduled
exams, and additional requests for leave, NYIT—in light of Bahl’s
disability—had a legal obligation to consider each accommodation and leave
request on its merits. Because NYIT has not shown that it actually did so
here—and, further, has not shown that its proposed shorter leave period was
a “plainly reasonable” accommodation of Bahl’s disability—summary
judgment is inappropriate.
2.
NBOME-related conditions
Similarly, NYIT also fails to show that the second feature of its
proposed accommodation—that Bahl succeed in obtaining certain testing
accommodations from NBOME before retaking the COMLEX 2 exam, and
that he complete the exam within approximately three months—was per se
reasonable. Taking all facts and drawing all inferences in the light most
favorable to Bahl, a jury could find that NYIT’s insistence on making Bahl’s
leave from NYIT contingent on a third party’s grant of testing
accommodations was not reasonable, particularly since NBOME had already
denied his accommodation request.
NYIT argues that it was reasonable to condition Bahl’s leave on a
parallel testing accommodation by NBOME because neither Bahl nor his
treating physicians could “guarantee” that an additional six months of
medical treatment, standing alone, would have enabled Bahl to pass the
COMLEX 2 exam. Def.’s Mot. at 33. But a student with a disability is
entitled to reasonable accommodations regardless of his or her ultimate
success in the program. And with good reason. For while a student with a
disability may be more likely to pass an examination with certain testing
accommodations, it is hard to see how any student—regardless of ability—
could ever “guarantee” that result. Accommodations are never a guarantee of
success: they are instead designed only to give disabled students a reasonable
opportunity to pass an exam or meet other program requirements
notwithstanding their disabilities.
Ultimately, regardless of whether NBOME provided him with his
requested testing accommodations, Bahl had made a separate request to
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NYIT to accommodate his disability with respect to its own program schedule
and enrollment status. He sought from NYIT only a 180-day period of
additional leave to obtain certain psychopharmacologic, cognitive behavioral,
and speech therapy treatments before retaking the COMLEX 2 exam. See
Catalano Decl., Ex. 35, at 2, ECF No. 235-41 (Aug. 28, 2013, letter from
Bahl’s then-counsel to NYIT). This proposal, Bahl contends, was both a
necessary and reasonable accommodation of his disability separate and apart
from whether NBOME agreed to accommodate him during the testing process
itself. And whether NYIT’s counter-proposal for a shorter period of leave,
with an additional precondition of NBOME-provided testing accommodations,
was a “plainly reasonable” accommodation of his disability is a question that
Dean and related authorities make clear is properly resolved by a jury, not by
this Court on summary judgment.
Thus, taking these facts in the light most favorable to the non-movant,
genuine issues of fact remain as to whether the terms of NYIT’s proposed
accommodation were plainly reasonable, precluding summary judgment on
this ground.
C.
Would Bahl’s proposed accommodation, if reasonable,
have led to an “undue hardship” or “substantial
modification” for NYIT?
In cases where (as here) a defendant’s accommodation was not “plainly
reasonable as a matter of law,” the Second Circuit has evaluated the
reasonableness of a plaintiff’s proposed accommodation under a burdenshifting framework. See Wright v. New York State Dep’t of Corr., 831 F.3d 64,
75–76 (2d Cir. 2016). A plaintiff has a “light burden” to show the facial
reasonableness of his or her proposed accommodation. Dean, 804 F.3d at 190.
A defendant then has the burden to show that the plaintiff’s proposed
accommodation is unreasonable. A defendant may do so by showing that the
proposed accommodation would “(a) impose undue hardship on the operation
of the defendant's service, program, or activity, or (b) require a fundamental
or substantial modification to the nature of its academic program or
standards.” Id.
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1.
Reasonableness
First, the Court finds that Bahl has met his “light” burden to show the
facial reasonableness or plausibility of his requested accommodation. Bahl
sought a six-month leave for treatment designed to remedy certain deficits
related to Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD), Generalized
Anxiety Disorder (GAD), Deficits in Executive Function, and Speech
Cluttering. See Catalano Decl., Ex. 35, at 2. Because these conditions
“impair[ed Bahl’s] ability” to take examinations like the COMLEX 2 “in a
manner which [sic] reflects his true ability,” Bahl’s attorney at the time
requested:
. . . a six month leave of absence . . . so that my client could
ameliorate these deficits with an aggressive treatment plan of
ongoing psychopharmacologic management, cognitive behavioral
therapy and increasing the frequency and intensity of his speech
therapy. In addition, my client also intends to increase his work
with a learning specialist and he has also been enrolled in a
directed course syllabus for students who have had difficulty with
the COMLEX exams.
Id. at 3. Among other reasons, a jury could find that this was a reasonable
request given Dr. Yellin’s 2011 report, which noted that Bahl suffered from
“Attention Deficit Disorder, Executive Function Disorder, Expressive
Language Disorder, and a Reading Disorder” (even though Bahl did not
request accommodations from NYIT at that time). Bahl forwarded this 2011
report to NYIT in May 2013 as additional support for his request that the
school formally endorse his request for testing accommodations to NBOME.
NYIT argues that the requested accommodation would not have
allowed Bahl to meet the “essential requirements” of the D.O. program (i.e.,
passing the COMLEX 2 exam, which was required for NYIT graduation)
because “additional time alone would not have been sufficient to permit him
to pass the COMLEX 2 Exam.” See Def.’s Reply 10. But a plaintiff’s
requested accommodation does not have to be the only accommodation that
helps a plaintiff access a service or program: here, whether NBOME granted
a testing accommodation to Bahl does not affect whether it was reasonable
for Bahl to separately request a 180-day leave from NYIT for the purposes of
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obtaining additional medical treatment prior to taking the examination, and
additional time in which to study and otherwise prepare for it.
2.
Substantial modification
Finding Bahl’s initial burden satisfied, the Court now turns to whether
NYIT has shown that the proposed accommodation would have created an
undue hardship or entailed a substantial modification to the school’s
programs or standards. Courts “ordinarily” defer to the “professional,
academic judgments of educational institutions,” but decline to do so in cases
where the record “is devoid of evidence” showing that an institution
evaluated a potential accommodation’s effectiveness and potential for undue
hardship or a substantial modification. Dean, 804 F.3d at 191 (“To do
otherwise might allow academic decisions to disguise truly discriminatory
requirements.”) (citation and quotation marks omitted). Here, NYIT argued
that the requested six-month level would require a “substantial modification
to its standards that students need to pass the COMLEX 2 Exam within a
certain period of time” and was “per se unreasonable” due to the length of
time. Def.’s Reply 11.
The record is “devoid of evidence” to support NYIT’s contention,
including any evidence that NYIT in fact evaluated whether a six-month
leave would have entailed a substantial modification of its academic
standards or programs. See Dean, 804 F.3d at 191; see also Bied v. Cnty. of
Rensselaer, No. 115CV1011TJMDEP, 2018 WL 1628831, at *19 (N.D.N.Y.
Mar. 30, 2018) (denying summary judgment where record failed to show that
a community college “diligently assessed” whether a plaintiff’s proposed
scheduling alteration would allow her to complete a marketing course
without imposing undue burdens or a substantial modification). At oral
argument, as discussed above, NYIT’s counsel did not provide any reason for
the alternate proposal of approximately three months of leave rather than six
that relates to NYIT’s core academic programs or standards. Instead, counsel
noted that the proposed period of leave ending in January 2014 may only
have been offered to coincide with the end of NYIT’s semester, allowing some
resolution of Plaintiff’s status by the end of the fall 2013 term. See Tr. 23:1–
13 (“THE COURT: Why did the school decide it was not reasonable to give
him six months[?]” “[DEFENSE COUNSEL]: . . . January 31 would, of
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course, be the commencement of the new semester . . . ”); see also Tr. 25:25–
26:5 (defense counsel characterizing NYIT’s reasoning as follows: “[B]ecause
you are essentially no longer a student at NYIT, we’ll allow you to withdraw
and you can have until the end of the semester to take the test and pass.”).
NYIT has not provided any other evidence, much less evidence
sufficient to take the issue away from the trier of fact, that permitting Bahl
to have an additional period of leave that carried over into the spring
semester would require NYIT to “fundamentally alter” or “substantially
modify” its programs or standards. Indeed, as Bahl points out, a six-month
leave was directly in line with the school’s 180-day leave policy for all
students—disabled and non-disabled—who did not pass the COMLEX 2 exam
on their first attempt. See Pl.’s 56.1 Statement ¶ 116 (undisputed that school
had policy allowing all students to apply for 180-day leave to retake the
COMLEX 2 exam). In light of the reasons given above by Bahl, and drawing
all reasonable inferences in Bahl’s favor, a reasonable factfinder could
conclude that granting Bahl’s requested six months would not have
constituted a “substantial modification” of NYIT’s programs or standards.
To be sure, a proposed accommodation can be deemed a substantial
modification when the accommodation changes program standards or
assessments themselves. See Dean, 804 F.3d at 190 (collecting cases). Some
courts have considered the possible effectiveness of a proposed
accommodation and the potential for such changes by looking at the
“particular circumstances” of a student—namely, in circumstances like a
history of disciplinary or other performance problems. See Zukle v. Regents of
Univ. of Cal., 166 F.3d 1041, 1049–51 (9th Cir. 1999) (finding that plaintiff’s
proposed accommodation was not reasonable where, “because Zukle was
doing so poorly in the clinical portion of the clerkship, [g]iving [her] time off
from the clinical portion to study for the test[ ] could not have helped, but
could only have further damaged, her already marginal clinical skills”);
Wynne v. Tufts Univ. Sch. of Med., 976 F.2d 791, 795 (1st Cir. 1992)
(upholding summary judgment after a medical school, having giving a
student multiple prior accommodations, concluded that changing a
biochemistry test from a multiple-choice format would constitute “substantial
program alterations”).
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NYIT attempts to analogize Bahl to a plaintiff-student with such a
history from one out-of-circuit case. See Def. Mot. 32, 34 (citing Halpern v.
Wake Forest Univ. Health Scis., 669 F.3d 454 (4th Cir. 2012)). But that case
is readily distinguishable. In Halpern, the court found that a medical
student’s proposed accommodation of a “special remediation plan” that
included an undefined “strict probation” period was not reasonable. Id. at
465–66. At the time the student proposed the plan, he had already “engaged
in numerous unprofessional acts that warranted his dismissal, including
acting abusively towards staff, multiple unexcused absences, repeated failure
to meet deadlines, and tardiness.” Id. at 465. The student had already
delayed graduation by a year due to a medical leave, and neither he nor his
medical expert could “specify a time at which his treatment would be
complete.” Id. at 466. There, the Rehabilitation Act could not “obligate” the
school to allow the student to continue his program “with the hope that at
some unknown time in the future he will be able to satisfy the program's
essential requirements.” Id. Yet here, notwithstanding NYIT’s emphasis on
problems with Bahl’s prior performance in a clerkship (which, after some
initial challenges, he ultimately completed) or with his first, unsuccessful
attempt to pass the COMLEX 2, Bahl requested a leave for a specific, limited
time of six months. Bahl made this request at a time when he had already
demonstrated, in NYIT’s words, an “impressive academic history,” and he did
so for a single, specific purpose: to pass an exam that was his only remaining
graduation requirement.
In short, a reasonable factfinder could conclude that (1) the 180-day
leave requested by Bahl was a reasonable proposed accommodation of his
disability, and (2) granting that request would not have constituted a
substantial modification of NYIT’s academic standards or other fundamental
changes to its program.
IV.
CONCLUSION
NYIT’s motion for summary judgment is denied as to Plaintiff’s failure
to accommodate claims under the Rehabilitation Act and NYSHRL.
Pursuant to the Court’s Order dated July 12, 2023, decision on NYIT’s motion
for summary judgment as to the remaining claims in the Amended Complaint
is reserved pending further briefing by the parties as to whether Bahl has
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waived his right to oppose summary judgment on those claims.
SO ORDERED.
/s/ NRM
NINA R. MORRISON
United States District Judge
Dated:
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July 21, 2023
Brooklyn, New York
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