Brown v. Youth Services International of South Dakota, Inc.

89 F. Supp. 2d 1095, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3645, 2000 WL 287512
CourtDistrict Court, D. South Dakota
DecidedMarch 15, 2000
DocketCiv 98-4165
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 89 F. Supp. 2d 1095 (Brown v. Youth Services International of South Dakota, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. South Dakota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Youth Services International of South Dakota, Inc., 89 F. Supp. 2d 1095, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3645, 2000 WL 287512 (D.S.D. 2000).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

PIERSOL, Chief Judge.

Defendant, Youth Services International of South Dakota, Inc. (“the Academy”), has filed a motion for summary judgment on each count of a complaint which alleges that the Academy is liable for the sexual abuse, molestation, and exploitation committed by its former employee, James Johnson. Plaintiffs have also filed a motion to allow the jury to consider punitive damages. For the reasons stated below, the Academy’s motion for summary judgment is granted in part and denied in part, and plaintiffs’ motion to proceed at trial regarding punitive damages is granted.

BACKGROUND

The Academy does business in South Dakota under the name Chamberlain Academy, providing “residential and other rehabilitative programs for troubled juveniles and young adults.” A majority of the children and young adults who reside at the Academy are placed there by state courts, state departments of correction, and the Federal Bureau of Prisons. Each of the six plaintiffs is from a state other than South Dakota, and, during the relevant times discussed below, each of them was a resident at the Academy pursuant to a juvenile court order.

James Johnson was a counselor at the Academy from July 1995 through late January or early February 1996. Before Johnson was hired, he had to provide three references and submit to a background check. When asked how Johnson would handle adolescents, one of Johnson’s references wrote, “Not sure.” The Academy did not follow up on that response, and the summary judgment record does not disclose what the Academy might have learned if it had followed up. The other two answered, respectively, “Good,” and “Yes.” The background check, which was performed by the South Dakota Department of Social Services, Office of Child *1099 Protection Services, checked South Dakota’s Central Registry of Child Abuse/Neglect, and did not turn up any “substantiated report of abuse or neglect as defined by the department by rule.” The background check did not find Johnson’s name on the Texas Central Registry of Child Abuse/Neglect, either.

According to plaintiffs, Johnson sexually assaulted, molested and exploited them during his tenure at the Chamberlain Academy. Plaintiffs claim that Johnson performed most of his sexual misconduct when he entered their bedrooms during room checks at night, and in spite of the Academy’s “no [physical] contact” and “no one-on-one meetings” policies. It was there, plaintiff Jason Johnson says, that the counselor massaged his back as a prelude to rubbing his rear end and touching his penis. Plaintiff Jesse Eliason stated that Johnson gave him numerous back rubs and once grabbed his penis, and that he saw Johnson inappropriately touching other plaintiffs in the shower. Plaintiff Harvey Brown stated that, despite the Academy’s policy against staff members taking residents home, Johnson took Brown to his home where he sexually assaulted Brown by giving him a back rub and touching his rear end. Plaintiff Jumal Frazier says that Johnson engaged in an escalating series of sexual assaults over a period of time, starting with touching Frazier’s penis, moving to mutual masturbation, and ending with oral and anal sex. Plaintiff Edward Warner claims that Johnson would grab the inside of his leg when Warner approached Johnson at his desk to ask a question, and that Johnson rubbed his back and butt on two occasions. Plaintiff Steve Higdem says that, on one occasion, Johnson rubbed his chest and quadriceps under the sheets of his bed. For his part, counselor James Johnson denies any inappropriate behavior toward any of the plaintiffs.

In late January 1996, approximately eight months after he was hired, Johnson’s alleged sexual misconduct resulted in a report to the Chamberlain Academy staff. Plaintiff Steve Higdem made the initial report to Renae Santana, another counsel- or at the Academy, a few days after Johnson rubbed Higdem’s chest and legs. (The summary judgment record does contain the exact date of Higdem’s report.) In his conversation with Santana, Higdem referred to Johnson as “Chester the Molester.” When Santana asked Higdem what he meant, Higdem replied that he thought he was gay, and that he thought Johnson was gay. At this point, Santana cut the conversation off, and told Higdem that his statement would have to be reported to his team leader, Gerald Barnett. In the meantime, Santana reported the statement to Barnett herself.

The day after Santana’s conversation with Higdem, Barnett received the following unsigned letter:

Dear Mr. Barnett:
I am leaving this on the floor so you don’t know who this is because I’m to [sic] hurt inside, cause I am scared of Mr. Johnson feeling up on me (boy). And I have seen Mr. Johnson feeling up Rashod.
If you do find out who this is please don’t tell the group. I am not doing this to get out either. So I would appersi-yate [sic] it if you wouldn’t say I did this to get him in trouble or when I’m doing good when I go for the next level your team wouldn’t hold it against me.

Barnett suspected that the note was from Higdem, and called Higdem into his office, where Higdem personally reported the incident to Barnett. Although Barnett did not believe Higdem, he placed Johnson on leave, and alerted the Department of Social Services. That same day, Higdem ran down the hallway yelling, “the motherfucker felt me up.” (Eliason Dep. at 64.) Based on the advice of the Department of Social Services, Johnson was not allowed to return to work at the Academy, and was eventually dismissed.

Johnson was later charged with two counts of abuse of or cruelty to a minor, SDCL 26-10-1, in connection with his conduct toward Jumal Frazier and Steve Hig- *1100 dem, and one count of simple assault, in connection with his conduct toward Jumal Frazier. The charges of abuse of or cruelty to a minor were dropped, and Johnson pleaded no contest to the charge of simple assault.

The parties dispute the extent to which the Academy staff knew about or suspected Johnson’s sexual misconduct before he was dismissed. While plaintiffs state that Barnett received several complaints of sexual misconduct, most of those complaints were made the day before Johnson was dismissed, apparently as the result of Hid-gem’s note to Barnett. While their depositions do not use exact dates, two of the students apparently claim that they reported being abused some time before Johnson was dismissed. Harvey Brown says that he reported being abused to Barnett the day after the incident, when he was discharged from the Academy, but plaintiffs do not say what day that was. In December 1996, Brown filed a police report which states that the back rubbing incident took place in the fall of 1995, describing Johnson as a short, married man who walks with a limp and wears a beard. Jumal Frazier says that he told Barnett about Johnson fondling his penis but that Johnson continued to molest him and to escalate the level of the sexual assaults.

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Bluebook (online)
89 F. Supp. 2d 1095, 2000 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3645, 2000 WL 287512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-youth-services-international-of-south-dakota-inc-sdd-2000.