Sweet v. Everglades College, Inc., No. 23-15049 (9th Cir. 2024)
Annotate this Case
A class of over 500,000 federal student loan borrowers sued the U.S. Department of Education for failing to process their borrower defense (BD) applications. The Department and the plaintiffs reached a settlement, which included automatic debt forgiveness for certain borrowers and streamlined adjudication for others. Three for-profit universities (the Schools) listed in the settlement as having substantial misconduct intervened, claiming reputational harm.
The U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California approved the settlement and denied the Schools' motion to intervene as of right but allowed them to object to the settlement. The Schools appealed, arguing that the settlement caused them reputational and financial harm and interfered with their procedural rights.
The United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit held that the Schools had Article III standing due to alleged reputational harm but lacked prudential standing to challenge the settlement because they did not demonstrate formal legal prejudice. The court found that the dispute between the plaintiffs and the Department was not moot, as the Department's voluntary cessation of issuing pro forma denials did not render the case moot. The court also affirmed the district court's denial of the Schools' motion to intervene as of right, concluding that the Schools did not have a significantly protectable interest and failed to show prejudice from the denial of intervention as of right.
The Ninth Circuit dismissed the appeal in part and affirmed the district court's denial of intervention as of right.
Court Description: Standing / Mootness / Intervention. In an appeal by three intervenor for-profit university organizations (“the Schools”) from the district court’s final approval of a class action settlement between the United States Department of Education (“the Department”) and a class of over 500,000 federal student loan borrowers (“Plaintiffs”), the panel held that (1) the Schools had Article III standing but lacked prudential standing to challenge the final approval of the settlement; (2) the dispute between Plaintiffs and the Department was not moot at the time the district court approved the settlement; and (3) the district court did not err in denying the Schools’ motion to intervene as of right.
The settlement resolved Plaintiffs’ class action complaint regarding the Department’s backlog of hundreds of thousands of unprocessed applications for borrower defense relief. The Schools alleged that the Department’s inclusion of the Schools on Exhibit C, a list of schools with strong indicia of substantial misconduct, damaged their reputation.
The panel held that the Schools met their burden to establish Article III standing based on their alleged reputational harm because the Department’s statement could cause reputational injury that supports Article III standing and the reputational injury was redressable by a favorable decision. However, because the Schools were not parties to the settlement and had not shown that the settlement could cause them formal legal prejudice, the Schools lacked prudential standing to challenge the approval of the final settlement.
The panel held that the dispute between Plaintiffs and the Department was not moot at the time the district court approved the settlement because, even assuming that the Department mooted Plaintiffs’ original claims by processing many, but not all, pending applications, that action did not moot Plaintiffs’ supplemental claims. And the Department’s voluntary cessation of issuing pro forma denials of Plaintiffs’ supplemental claims did not render the case moot where the Department could easily resume its conduct if the case were dismissed.
The panel held that the district court did not err in denying the Schools’ Fed. R. Civ. P. 24(a) motion to intervene as of right because the Schools did not have a significantly protectable interest as required by Rule 24(a), and they failed to explain how they were prejudiced by the district court’s denial of intervention as of right.
Dissenting, Judge Collins agreed with the majority that the case was not moot and that the Schools had Article III standing to challenge the settlement. However, he disagreed with the majority’s conclusion that the Schools lacked prudential standing, and would hold that the district court did not abuse its discretion in allowing the Schools to permissively intervene for the purpose of objecting to the settlement. Because the district court properly reached the merits of the Schools’ objections to the settlement, the Schools have a right to appeal that adverse ruling, and he would hold that the district court erred in approving the settlement.
Some case metadata and case summaries were written with the help of AI, which can produce inaccuracies. You should read the full case before relying on it for legal research purposes.
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.