Thanks, is there a good place to look up local lawyers, like a website or something you'd recommend?
As for my case, to make a long story short, an instructor failed me very clearly out of spite. I think I can prove malicious intent, I can prove that she lied on a few points, and I can prove that she treated me differently than any of my other classmates. There may also be a discrimination aspect worth pursing, but I don't know about that. So I was dismissed from the program purely based on her arbitrary, malicious decision, and it forced me to get my higher-paying license in my field one year later. So for damages, I would mainly be seeking lost wages equal to the average wages of someone working under the license I was seeking minus the wages I actually earned during the past year.
I'm not sure if I should be looking at suing the instructor, the school, or both, or if the case is even worth pursuing. Part of me thinks you shouldn't be able to lose when you can prove some of the stated reasons for the failure were lies. After all, only someone motivated by malicious intent would lie in order to fail someone. And the way that the actions of the instructor led to my damages seems very straight forward to me. On the other hand, I anticipate there is great bias in favor of the defendant in cases like this, my instructor might be able to construct a good defense by telling further lies, and there are other details I don't know that could make it not worth it. I don't know if there's some kind of statute of limitations, I don't know if I am allowed to seek legal expenses as compensation, and I don't know if I want to have to shred the good letter of recommendation I got from the instructor I had a few weeks ago when I came back and finished the program a year later.
Thanks for the replies, everyone.