The former president of South Carolina State University filed a multimillion-dollar lawsuit against the school and its trustees last week, accusing board members of acting improperly in his firing last year.
Andrew Hugine’s lawsuit, filed in Orangeburg County, accuses seven trustees and one ex-officio board member of defamation of character and conspiracy.
Hugine, who took over as university president in 2003 and received a five-year contract extension two years later, was fired in December for poor performance in academics and not keeping up the university’s infrastructure. A review released by the school a month later showed that the board had given Hugine an overall score of 2.84 out of a possible 5.0.
In the lawsuit, Hugine says the seven board members appointed to evaluate his performance “defamed (Hugine) by falsely accusing him of negligent and or intentional misconduct in his evaluation.”
Specifically, the suit accuses Maurice Washington, who was board chairman at the time, of intentionally downgrading Hugine’s job performance so that he would be fired.
Washington also told a group of South Carolina State alumni that Hugine was to blame for the school’s faults, including “the loss and misuse of hundreds of thousands of dollars annually,” according to the lawsuit. Washington knew those allegations were false “and he made them with actual malice and with a reckless disregard to the truth or falsity of the matters,” according to the lawsuit.
The lawsuit also accuses Washington and six other board members — Earl Bridges, Lumus Byrd, Schylver Foster, Reggie Gallant, Shirley Martin and Martha Scott Smith — of conspiracy to harm Hugine by falsely evaluating him “with ill will … to cause unjustified harm.”