Current:Home > InvestJudge dismisses Birmingham-Southern lawsuit against Alabama state treasurer over loan denial -Elevate Profit Vision
Judge dismisses Birmingham-Southern lawsuit against Alabama state treasurer over loan denial
View
Date:2025-04-12 21:48:18
MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — An Alabama judge has dismissed Birmingham-Southern College’s lawsuit against the state treasurer over a loan denial, a decision that could put the future of the 167-year-old private college in jeopardy.
Birmingham-Southern College filed a lawsuit last week against state Treasurer Young Boozer, saying Boozer wrongly denied a $30 million loan from a program created by lawmakers to provide a financial lifeline to the college. On Wednesday, Montgomery Circuit Judge James Anderson granted the state’s request to dismiss the lawsuit on the grounds that the state treasurer could not be sued for exercising his duties. Anderson said the legislation gave discretion to the treasure to decide who qualified for a loan.
“I’m sympathetic to the college and the position they are in, but I’m looking at the legislative language,” Anderson said.
Birmingham-Southern is exploring an appeal to the Alabama Supreme Court, college President Daniel Coleman said in a statement. The college had argued it met the loan requirements set out in the law and that Boozer was acting in bad faith or under a misinterpretation of the requirements.
“Our good faith was betrayed over the several months of working with Treasurer Boozer to deliver this bridge loan to the college,” Coleman said. “The timeline of our interactions clearly demonstrates that his behavior was arbitrary and capricious. We also believe he is misinterpreting the language of the act pertaining collateral.”
The Alabama Legislature created the Alabama Distressed Institutions of Higher Education Revolving Loan Program this year after Birmingham-Southern officials, alumni and supporters lobbied for money to help the college stay open. Supporters of the loan legislation said it was a way to provide bridge funding while the college worked to shore up its finances.
Birmingham-Southern applied for a loan and was told by Boozer this month that that the loan was being denied.
The college will likely close without emergency relief from the court, lawyers wrote in the lawsuit. The private college, located a few miles from downtown Birmingham, has 731-full time students and 284 employees.
During a hearing Wednesday, Deputy Attorney General Jim Davis, who is representing the state treasurer, said the college was seeking to have the judge supplant his judgement for that of the state treasurer.
“The application has been looked at,” Davis said. ”Whether the assets were sufficient, that requires judgement.”
veryGood! (259)
Related
- Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
- Stock market today: Asian shares mostly rise, led by gains in Chinese markets following policy moves
- China expands access to loans for property developers, acting to end its prolonged debt crisis
- Doomsday clock time for 2024 remains at 90 seconds to midnight. Here's what that means.
- Highlights from Trump’s interview with Time magazine
- Biden campaign tries to put abortion in the forefront. But pro-Palestinian protesters interrupted.
- 3 dead, 4 seriously injured after helicopter carrying skiers crashes in Canada
- Milwaukee Bucks to hire Doc Rivers as coach, replacing the fired Adrian Griffin
- Behind on your annual reading goal? Books under 200 pages to read before 2024 ends
- Sofía Vergara Shares Her One Dating Rule After Joe Manganiello Split
Ranking
- Meet first time Grammy nominee Charley Crockett
- The colonoscopies were free but the 'surgical trays' came with $600 price tags
- Nokia sales and profit drop as economic challenges lead to cutback on 5G investment
- Residents of northern Australia batten down homes, businesses ahead of Tropical Cyclone Kirrily
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- A man is charged with 76 counts of murder in a deadly South African building fire last year
- Peter Navarro, ex-Trump official, sentenced to 4 months in prison for contempt of Congress
- What's next for Eagles? Nick Sirianni out to 'reprove' himself; GM defends Jalen Hurts
Recommendation
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
Pakistani Taliban pledge not to attack election rallies ahead of Feb. 8 vote
Alabama's Kalen DeBoer won't imitate LSU's Brian Kelly and adopt fake southern accent
Witness says fatal shooting of American-Palestinian teen in the occupied West Bank was unprovoked
Realtor group picks top 10 housing hot spots for 2025: Did your city make the list?
Biden extends State of the Union invitation to a Texas woman who sued to get an abortion and lost
Danish report underscores ‘systematic illegal behavior’ in adoptions of children from South Korea
Turkey's parliament approves Sweden's NATO membership, lifting key hurdle to entry into military alliance