Texas A&M Fires Back at Law Graduates' Suit
Texas A&M University School of Law concedes that Texas Wesleyan University School of Law graduates might be disappointed that their alma mater no longer exists, but it asserts disappointment does not a class action make.
October 12, 2015 at 02:10 PM
3 minute read
Texas A&M University School of Law concedes that Texas Wesleyan University School of Law graduates might be disappointed that their alma mater no longer exists, but it asserts disappointment does not a class action make.
On Oct. 9, Texas A&M filed its motion to dismiss a proposed class action brought by 33 Wesleyan graduates who argue that they were disavowed as alumni by Texas A&M after it acquired Wesleyan's law school in 2013. The graduates of the Fort Worth school sued Texas A&M's law school, dean Andrew Morriss, Texas Wesleyan University and Texas Wesleyan's president, Frederick Slabach, in the Northern District of Texas in August.
The plaintiffs, who graduated from Wesleyan's law school between 1994 and 2013, want the court to order Texas A&M to reissue diplomas to them with the school's new name and give them with access to alumni resources.
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