Doe v. Baker, No. Cv 99-0427137 (Jan. 10, 2000)

2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 377
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJanuary 10, 2000
DocketNo. CV 99-0427137
StatusUnpublished

This text of 2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 377 (Doe v. Baker, No. Cv 99-0427137 (Jan. 10, 2000)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doe v. Baker, No. Cv 99-0427137 (Jan. 10, 2000), 2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 377 (Colo. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION
On June 9, 1999, the plaintiff, Elizabeth Schlett1, filed an application for prejudgment remedy against the defendant, Stephen Baker. Specifically, plaintiff seeks to attach sufficient property of the defendant to secure a set sum, in particular, his CT Page 378 interest in real property known as 283 Highland Avenue, Wallingford, Connecticut, in the amount of $250,000.

The plaintiff is a thirty-eight-year-old woman who has been married for fourteen years and has four children ages twelve, ten, six, and two. In March 1980, the plaintiff began attending Heritage Baptist Church at age nineteen. There she met the defendant, Stephen Baker, the pastor of the church. During this period, the plaintiffs parents were divorced and her father was not involved in her life. Moreover, the defendant became a "father figure" to the plaintiff and she became emotionally dependent on him for advice.

The defendant assisted the plaintiff in choosing to attend Marinaptha Baptist Bible College in Watertown, Wisconsin. Following bible college in June 1982, the plaintiff returned to Connecticut and became his secretary. The defendant subsequently expressed a personal interest in the plaintiff. At one point the plaintiff told the defendant that she loved him. Further, the plaintiff testified that "knowing that he approved and that he was happy with what I was doing was extremely important to me." The plaintiff and her husband pledged $10,000 to the church although they barely had enough money to pay rent. In order to satisfy the pledge, the plaintiff worked for the church without pay. After some time, the plaintiff told the defendant she would have to be paid or seek work elsewhere. The defendant stated he could figure out a way to give her a paycheck and then said, "[h]ow about a hug for your pastor." The plaintiff claimed she was surprised but leaned across the desk and gave him a hug.

In 1991, while the plaintiff was working for the church, the defendant started making sexual advances towards her. The defendant would put his arms around the plaintiff and stand close to her at the filing cabinet. The plaintiff indicated at this point she had an emotional connection to the defendant and needed his approval desperately. The plaintiff testified about how she felt regarding the defendant's physical overtures: "[w]ell, at that point in time I was glad that he wanted my attention, I guess." In June, 1991, the defendant kissed the plaintiff. On cross examination, she admitted that she drove herself to the defendant's house where the kiss took place.

When the plaintiff informed her husband of the kiss, her husband was angry. After they moved to Texas the plaintiff continued to talk and write to the defendant. Testimony by the CT Page 379 plaintiffs husband indicated that the plaintiff considered herself partially responsible for the defendant's actions. This testimony was corroborated by Mr. Pinto, a church maintenance worker and Spanish pastor, who testified that the plaintiff told him she was partially responsible for the relationship between her and the pastor. The plaintiff also told Mr. Sassi, a member of the Heritage Baptist Church school board, that "she knew what she had done was wrong, that she was partially responsible for it."

In 1992, the plaintiff and her husband returned to Connecticut after approximately four months in Texas. The plaintiff returned to work at the church without seeking employment elsewhere. At this time, the plaintiff was earning about $150 per week and two of her children were attending the church school tuition free. After her return from Texas, the defendant would ask the plaintiff if he could look down her shirt. The requests initially occurred once a week, then with increasing frequency. The plaintiff claims, initially, she was abhorred, but eventually submitted because she wanted to please the defendant.

Also, in 1992, the defendant requested that the plaintiff remove her bra. These sexual advances escalated to the point where the defendant wanted to see the plaintiff totally undressed. Although the plaintiff resisted these requests, the defendant was persistent, and eventually she submitted. At the defendant's request, she took off her underclothes, including underwear. The defendant came into the office, lifted her dress and looked up her skirt. Some of these sexual overtures occurred in the office of the defendant's wife who also worked at the church, located in the basement of the church.

On one occasion in the summer, at the defendant's request, the plaintiff entered the ladies room and removed her bra. She returned to the basement office where the defendant unzipped her dress and pulled it up over her shoulders so she was nude from the waist up. The plaintiff was embarrassed and covered herself with her arms. The defendant physically removed the plaintiff's arms from her chest in order to look at her breasts. The plaintiff also testified that defendant removed his belt, lowering his zipper and exposed himself to the plaintiff. The plaintiff testified that on at least 70 occasions she denied the defendant's requests to see her breasts while submitting only 15 times. The defendant continued the sexual advances with the plaintiff up to and including the time the plaintiff left the CT Page 380 church in June 1997.

Testimony revealed that the plaintiff had taken advances in her salary in the amount of $3,000, which she intended to work off before she left her employment. The plaintiff claims she informed her gynecologist, Dr. Tropan about the relationship. She also spoke to her regular doctor, Dr. Bertz about the relationship and was placed on Paxil, an anti-depressant. Since 1998 the plaintiff claims she has been continuously taking anti-depressants.

The plaintiffs claimed damages include $100,000 for loss of income and $100,000 for emotional distress. She further claims the tuition for the children was worth about $125,000 and she would like to be able to get counseling. Medical records introduced by the plaintiff indicate her total medical expenses were $187 for the period of January 7, 1998 to January 31, 1999. (Plaintiff's Exhibits 2 and 3.) The plaintiff testified that after she left the church in July 1997, she worked for a job placement company: as a babysitter, and as a crossing guard. The plaintiff claims she has found it difficult to work in an office with men because she feels uncomfortable.

At the hearing the defendant offered the following testimony: the plaintiff and the defendant were both adult, married, and had their own families at the time the inappropriate relationship which started in the early 1990's. The defendant admits he had an improper physical relationship with the plaintiff because he was married. The plaintiff worked as a secretary and receptionist, school secretary and bookkeeper. The defendant claims that he was not counseling the plaintiff other than he discussed college, financial matters, and family.

He testified that he kissed her a total of three times, and hugged her seven or eight times from 1991 to 1997. Further, the defendant claims he saw her partially undressed eight to ten times. The defendant testified that he never saw her fully undressed and that he never saw her genitalia. The plaintiff never refused when he asked to see her undressed. The plaintiff drove herself to the defendant's home for the purpose of ending the relationship. There the plaintiff and the defendant kissed and they decided the relationship should be ended. The plaintiff told the defendant that she loved him on several occasions.

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Bluebook (online)
2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 377, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doe-v-baker-no-cv-99-0427137-jan-10-2000-connsuperct-2000.