MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — The Minnesota Supreme Court overturned a $1 million award against the University of Minnesota
and men's basketball coach Tubby Smith on Wednesday, ruling that
although they treated a prospective assistant coach unfairly, they
couldn't be held financially responsible for backing out of a job offer
that Smith lacked the authority to make.
Jimmy Williams
quit as an assistant coach at Oklahoma State University in 2007 because
he believed Smith had hiring authority when he offered him an assistant
coaching position shortly after Smith became head coach at Minnesota.
That fell through after Minnesota's athletics director, Joel Maturi, learned that Williams was cited for multiple major NCAA rules violations while working as a Golden Gophers assistant coach from 1971 to 1986, the court noted.
Williams
sued, claiming he reasonably relied on Smith's statements during the
negotiating process and that Smith therefore had a legal obligation to
him.
A Hennepin County jury and the state appeals court sided with Williams, but the high court overturned those decisions Wednesday.
"We
believe that the manner in which appellants treated Williams regarding
his prospective employment with the University was unfair and
disappointing. We do not condone their conduct," Justice Christopher
Dietzen wrote for the majority.
The court
concluded that Smith didn't owe Williams legal protection against
negligently misrepresenting his authority. It said publicly available
information showed that Maturi had the authority to hire the assistant
men's basketball coach and that Smith didn't. It also said Smith told
Williams just before Williams submitted his resignation to Oklahoma
State that Maturi would have to sign off on their deal.
"Williams never asked whether Smith had the authority to hire; he simply assumed that authority existed," the court said.
In
dissent, Justice Helen Meyer wrote that the high court should have
affirmed the jury's verdict, saying Smith did have a legal obligation to
Williams.
"Smith knew the limits of his
hiring authority and simply had a duty not to falsely represent the
scope of his hiring authority when he knew that Williams would rely on
that authority to resign from his position at OSU," Meyer wrote. "On the
other hand, the failure to use due care had enormous consequences for
Williams, who suffered losses exceeding $1 million in reasonably relying
on Smith's false representation that he had final authority to hire
assistant coaches."
University general counsel Mark Rotenberg called the decision "a major vindication" after five years of litigation.
"Coach Smith
feels vindicated that the court has now clearly said that he did not
snooker Jimmy Williams into leaving his job and coming to Minnesota,"
Rotenberg said.
Rotenberg added that the court
recognized that Smith never told Williams he had a final job offer and
indeed told him just the opposite — that the athletics director would
have the final say.
Williams' attorney, Donald Chance Mark Jr., issued a statement expressing disappointment.
"While
we believe the decision of the Supreme Court is in error, and we are
considering our remaining legal options, we simply note for now that the
university should be neither proud of nor emboldened by this decision
relieving it of the legal consequences for its actions. It is hoped this
experience will prompt the University to instead do what's right and
provide truthful and accurate information to prospective employees in
the future," the statement said.
Williams has been an assistant at the University of Memphis since last December. His profile on the Tigers' website says Williams trained players by himself and worked at the John Lucas basketball camp in Houston after leaving Oklahoma State.
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