Doe v. Magoffin County Fiscal Court

174 F. App'x 962
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedApril 13, 2006
Docket05-5162, 05-5304, 05-5517
StatusUnpublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 174 F. App'x 962 (Doe v. Magoffin County Fiscal Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doe v. Magoffin County Fiscal Court, 174 F. App'x 962 (6th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

ROGERS, Circuit Judge.

Jan Doe appeals the district court’s order of summary judgment that dismissed her federal and state claims concerning the defendants’ hiring and supervising practices. The Magoffin District Court ordered Doe, who was sixteen years old at the time of the events surrounding this case, to complete community service at the Magoffin County Courthouse. Doe alleges that she was under the supervision of defendant Paul Hudson Salyer, the Magoffin County Judge Executive, 1 and Lloyd Monk Patton, the custodian of the courthouse. In July 2001, Patton sexually assaulted and raped Doe at the courthouse. Patton was later found guilty of rape in criminal proceedings. Although Doe has settled her civil claim against Patton, she has not settled her claims against the Magoffin County Fiscal Court and against Salyer, in both his individual and official capacities.

We affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment in favor of the defendants as to all claims. Ultimately, the district court accurately summarized this case: “Patton’s alleged acts are reprehensible and unconscionable. Whether Ma-goffin County and Salyer, however, are responsible for the alleged acts is another matter.” JA 183. Doe’s federal claims brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 fail because Doe has failed to create a genuine issue of material fact as to whether the defendants were deliberately indifferent to her constitutional rights in their hiring and supervising of Patton. Doe’s state-law claims fail because sovereign or official immunity shields the defendants from suit. Finally, the fact that Doe provided an affidavit of an expert witness declaring that he believed that the defendants were negligent and deliberately indifferent does not create any genuine issue of material fact.

I.

Background

Jan Doe was sixteen years old when Magoffin District Court Judge Terry Ja *964 cobs ordered her to perform community service at the Magoffin County Courthouse. Doe alleges that she was assigned to work for Lloyd Monk Patton, the courthouse janitor. In July 2001, Patton sexually assaulted Doe by forcing her to touch his exposed penis. About an hour later, he locked her in the courthouse’s jury room during a recess in court proceedings and raped her. Patton was later convicted of first degree rape, and he is currently serving a sentence of ten years’ imprisonment.

Paul Hudson Salyer, the Magoffin County Judge Executive, hired Patton as the courthouse’s custodian with the unanimous approval of the Magoffin County Fiscal Court. Salyer and his wife Marcella, who served as Deputy County Judge Executive, were Patton’s supervisors. Salyer testified that the Magoffin County Clerk asked him to hire Patton. The county clerk told Salyer that Patton had “been [working at the courthouse for] six months without pay and he’s done an excellent job and he hadn’t drank [sic] any in two years.” JA 150.

Salyer also testified that he was unaware that Patton had a criminal record prior to Doe’s lawsuit. Neither the Ma-goffin County Fiscal Court nor Salyer verified whether Patton had a criminal background. The defendants submitted an affidavit from paralegal Crystal Tucker. Tucker declared that she had performed a criminal search regarding Patton, and “at the time there were no convictions of any violent crimes regarding Mr. Patton in this criminal search.” JA 74.

Salyer testified that he had never performed a criminal-background check on any employee. Dr. Charles Hardin, the former Magoffin County Judge Executive, was also deposed. He testified that he had never performed formal criminal-background checks when in office because “most people in a small community are pretty well known to the people of that community.” JA 171.

After Doe filed her lawsuit, Salyer learned of Patton’s criminal record. Patton told Salyer that Patton had served a term of imprisonment for attempted arson. Salyer also learned that in the mid-1990s Patton had assaulted Dr. Hardin on Founder’s Day by hitting Hardin over the head with a liquor bottle. 2 Salyer had run against Hardin three times for the office of Judge Executive. Salyer also testified that he knew that Patton had been banned at some point from the courthouse, but Salyer did not know why. Salyer testified that he would have hired Patton even if he had known of Patton’s assault conviction. Patton continued working at the courthouse after Doe accused Patton of raping her.

Salyer testified that Patton had “at one time” supervised prisoners in the courthouse with Salyer’s approval. JA 297. Salyer earlier testified, however, that “[Patton] was the janitor and we would just send him out there to help. We didn’t give him no authority to supervise anyone. He was supposed to show them what to do and if they done it or if they didn’t do it.” JA 296. Salyer testified that he was unaware that the district court was ordering juveniles to complete community service at the courthouse and that Patton was supervising juveniles. Judge Jacobs, who ordered Doe to complete her community ser *965 vice at the courthouse, declared that he did not know that Patton supervised juveniles in the courthouse and that, based on his prior knowledge of Patton, he would not have consented to Patton’s supervising juveniles.

Procedural History

Doe filed her complaint in federal district court. She brought federal and state claims concerning the hiring and supervising of Patton. She named Patton, in both his individual and official capacities, and the Magoffin County Fiscal Court as defendants. She also asserted state-law claims of assault, battery, and outrageous conduct. Over a year later, Doe amended her complaint to add claims against Salyer in his individual capacity and in his official capacity as County Judge Executive.

The defendants filed a motion for summary judgment. Doe filed a response and memorandum opposing summary judgment. She included in her motion an affidavit from Joseph Smith. Smith had previously been appointed by United States District Judge Joseph M. Hood as an expert witness in a case concerning allegedly discriminatory hiring practices in another Kentucky county. Smith declared that, after reviewing relevant depositions and affidavits, he found it unconscionable that Salyer did not know that Patton was supervising juveniles. He also stated that he believed that the failure to complete a criminal-background check played a “substantial role in causing harm to the juvenile.” JA 147. He declared that Salyer’s entrusting of a female juvenile to a custodian with a criminal background was in “wanton disregard of the rights of the juvenile.” JA 148.

The district court granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment on all claims. 3 The district court, referring to Board of County Commissioners v. Brown, 520 U.S. 397, 117 S.Ct.

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Bluebook (online)
174 F. App'x 962, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doe-v-magoffin-county-fiscal-court-ca6-2006.