Dismuke v. Quaynor

637 So. 2d 555, 1994 WL 131519
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 5, 1994
Docket25482-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 637 So. 2d 555 (Dismuke v. Quaynor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dismuke v. Quaynor, 637 So. 2d 555, 1994 WL 131519 (La. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

637 So.2d 555 (1994)

Evonne DISMUKE, et al., Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
Alexander QUAYNOR and Grambling State University, Defendants-Appellants.

No. 25482-CA.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Second Circuit.

April 5, 1994.
Writ Denied July 1, 1994.

*557 Winston G. DeCuir & Associates by Winston G. DeCuir and Michael R.D. Adams, Baton Rouge, for defendants-appellants.

Jack Wright, Jr., Monroe, for plaintiffs-appellees.

Before MARVIN, NORRIS and VICTORY, JJ.

NORRIS, Judge.

Elvin Dismuke, on behalf of his then minor daughter, Evonne, sued defendants Alexander Quaynor and Grambling State University for injuries sustained when she was allegedly raped by Quaynor, a Grambling employee.[1] In March 1992 Quaynor pled guilty to carnal knowledge of a juvenile. Prior to the civil trial, Mr. Dismuke confirmed a preliminary default against Quaynor for $110,000. At trial, the court found Grambling vicariously liable and awarded Evonne $110,000. Only Grambling has appealed, contesting the finding of vicarious liability and the assessment of damages in the same amount awarded in Quaynor's default proceeding (which it was not informed of and did not attend). For the reasons expressed, we affirm.

Factual and procedural history

In the summer of 1989, Evonne, 15 years old, enrolled in the National Youth Sports Program ("NYSP"). The NYSP was sponsored by Grambling as an educational day camp for boys and girls ages 10 through 16 and staffed by Grambling employees and student aides. NYSP campers attended classes on Grambling's campus daily from 9:00 a.m. through 3:00 p.m. Before the program began, staff members were instructed to maintain constant supervision over the campers, especially to see that they did not go around unsupervised on the campus. In particular, staff members were to assure that campers stayed away from the Student Union, the "Village," and caught their rides directly after classes ended each day. When the campers arrived on the first day, the counselors held an orientation at which they specifically instructed the campers to stay out of the Student Union; it was "off limits." R. pp. 181, 327. Evonne's aerobics class, however, was actually held in a room (the Black and Gold Room) in the Student Union; campers were closely supervised during this class. According to Coach Collins, NYSP staff members were told to maintain constant supervision of the campers, even to accompany them to the restroom. R. p. 167. They were specifically instructed to make sure that campers did not go to the Student Union unless they were supervised.

Quaynor, a 25 year old Grambling college student and former member of the football team, was hired as an aide to the professional trainer coaching NYSP boys flag football. *558 According to Evonne, Quaynor was her counselor on the first day of the program and gave her group a tour of the campus facilities where the program would be conducted. Coach Willis, the liaison officer for NYSP, testified that they did not conduct campus tours at orientation; both he and Coach Collins, the NYSP director, testified that Quaynor was hired to instruct boys only and did not supervise girls. The record shows, however, that all students and staff were together at roll call each morning and at the end of each day. Evonne testified that a few weeks before the sexual encounter, Quaynor approached her as she was walking to class, touched her back and asked her if she was a virgin. When she said she was, he told her, "You ought to let me be your first." She testified she also told him she was not a Grambling student but an NYSP camper. R. p. 137. In his deposition, Quaynor admitted that he saw Evonne on Grambling's campus several times before the incident in question, but denied knowing that Evonne was in NYSP; he thought she was a college student.

Quaynor's final contact with Evonne occurred on June 27, 1989, and forms the basis of this appeal. On that morning, Coaches Willis and Collins decided to dismiss the campers at noon or shortly thereafter instead of 3:00 p.m. because of bad weather. According to Coach Willis, they did not phone the parents, but told them (and the bus drivers) about the early dismissal as they dropped off the children that morning. Evonne, however, missed this instruction. Evonne and her friend Melissa Neal, also an NYSP camper, rode to and from school with Melissa's mother. Mrs. Neal took classes at Louisiana Tech and would therefore drop the girls off shortly before 8:00 a.m., when her classes started, and pick them up shortly after 4:00 p.m., when her classes ended. For one hour in the morning and afternoon, Evonne and Melissa were to wait with Mrs. Neal's sister-in-law, Mrs. Iris Champion, who worked on the Grambling campus in Adams Hall, three blocks from the gym.

Around noon, Evonne's aerobics instructor, Ms. Betty Jordan, released her when Evonne and a friend told her they were going to catch their ride home. R. p. 332. Instead of walking to Mrs. Champion's office, the girls walked straight to the Student Union. They went upstairs to the second-floor game room, but found it was closed. Evonne then told Melissa she had to use the restroom; Melissa replied she would wait for Evonne downstairs. Evonne testified that as she entered the second-floor restroom, Quaynor grabbed her from behind, dragged her to the Black and Gold Room, and raped her. Quaynor admitted in deposition that he had sexual intercourse with Evonne, but claimed he was "seduced." Evonne testified that Quaynor threatened to kill her if she told anyone; she told no one about the incident until she got home.

Coach Willis testified that he dismissed his entire staff around 12:30 that day, after all the campers had boarded their buses. He insisted that Quaynor was not on duty when he went to the Student Union. According to Quaynor, however, he went to the Student Union that day in his capacity as a counselor to see if the boys in his program were "acting up." Quaynor dep., 29. The previous day he had heard that some NYSP boys were causing a disturbance in the Student Union, and he wanted to check on the situation. Coach Willis testified that he did not ask Quaynor to check the Union, and this was not one of Quaynor's assigned duties. However, Quaynor testified that one of his duties was to make sure that NYSP campers caught their rides and went home. Dep., 48. This understanding of his assigned duties corresponds with the goal of constant supervision that the sponsors impressed on the staffers at the outset of the program.

Testimony from Evonne, her parents, social worker and pastor showed that her personality changed after this incident. She suffered depression, nightmares and social withdrawal. Initially she was treated by a male psychologist, but felt uneasy and began seeing a female psychiatric social worker, Dr. Susan Davidson. Dr. Davidson testified that Evonne's symptoms were common among rape victims. Dr. Davidson diagnosed post traumatic stress disorder, and opined that Evonne could suffer future emotional problems such as low self-esteem and difficulty with sexual intimacy.

*559 Evonne's father filed suit on her behalf against both Quaynor and Grambling. Quaynor did not answer so Mr. Dismuke took a default judgment against him for $110,000. After Mr. Dismuke confirmed the preliminary default, Grambling filed a rule to set aside the judgment alleging, as codefendant, that its presence was required at the confirmation hearing. The trial court dismissed Grambling's rule, finding it failed to show fraud or ill practices as required to set aside a final judgment.

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Bluebook (online)
637 So. 2d 555, 1994 WL 131519, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dismuke-v-quaynor-lactapp-1994.