Doe v. Potter

225 S.W.3d 395, 2006 Ky. App. LEXIS 321, 2006 WL 3040128
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedOctober 27, 2006
DocketNo. 2006-CA-001873-OA
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 225 S.W.3d 395 (Doe v. Potter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doe v. Potter, 225 S.W.3d 395, 2006 Ky. App. LEXIS 321, 2006 WL 3040128 (Ky. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinions

OPINION AND ORDER

ABRAMSON, Judge.

Following the settlement of a class action against the Roman Catholic Diocese of Covington in which an $84 million fund was established to compensate approximately 350 victims of child sexual abuse, Senior Judge John W. Potter ordered the [397]*397court-appointed Special Master overseeing claims processing to provide detailed reports to the appropriate Commonwealth Attorneys regarding the abusers, the abuse and the victims. Having concluded that the Respondent, Senior Judge Potter, was acting within his jurisdiction and further that no irreparable harm will result from the reporting of the names of the living abusers and the details and scope of their abuse, we deny the writ sought by Petitioners, the John Doe Class (the “Class”), to the extent that it challenges the judge’s authority to order such reports. However, because wholesale disclosure of the names and addresses of the victims could cause irreparable harm to some members of the Class and such disclosures may ultimately be unnecessary for protection of the public interest, we grant the writ to the extent that the trial court’s order requires victims’ names and contact information to be released to prosecutors at the time of the reports. We further find no compelling public interest in the release of information regarding deceased abusers and, therefore, grant relief as to any reporting of the individual misconduct of deceased abusers.

RELEVANT BACKGROUND

This original action seeks to prohibit enforcement of an order entered by Senior Judge Potter, directing the Settlement Master in class-action litigation to report to the appropriate Commonwealth Attorneys comprehensive information regarding criminal conduct which came to light in the course of civil proceedings. Plaintiffs in the underlying action brought suit against the Roman Catholic Diocese of Covington, Kentucky (“the Diocese”) and its Bishop for injuries they suffered after being sexually abused as children by priests or other employees of the Diocese. Shortly after the filing of the complaint in February 2003, the individual plaintiffs (who later became Class representatives) and others who joined the litigation were permitted to proceed anonymously through the use of pseudonyms. No individual priests or other diocesan employees were named as defendants.2 On October 21, 2003, Senior Judge Potter’s predecessor entered an order certifying the litigation as a class action. Senior Judge Potter was assigned as Special Judge and began presiding over the litigation on December 19, 2003.

In May 2005, the parties reached a settlement which was submitted to the court for approval, along with a proposed plan for publication of notice of the class action settlement and a request to schedule a fairness hearing prior to final approval. In July 2005, the trial court preliminarily approved the settlement and method of publication, along with a notice which included the following statements regarding confidentiality: “The Court has ordered the parties to keep the identity of Class Members confidential to the extent reasonably possible. Names of Class Members are not currently a matter of public record.” (emphasis supplied).

The trial court entered an order on March 22, 2006, which reflected the parties’ agreement concerning the manner in which the settlement would be administered: “[The parties] agreed that a single settlement master could be appointed who would not only monitor the process but have complete control over, and responsibility for, the conduct of the entire settlement process and that this master would report directly to the Court.” In the same order, Senior Judge Potter appointed a [398]*398retired federal judge, Thomas Lambros, as Settlement Master and required him to file written status reports every ninety days. The trial court specifically retained jurisdiction “to supervise and implement the settlement.”

The present controversy was precipitated by the entry of a June 21, 2006, sua sponte order which required the Settlement Master to report “every act of suspected abuse against a victim who was minor at the time of the abuse of which [the Settlement Master], or any person acting under his direction, became aware as part of the settlement process.” The order specified that the report was to contain the nature and extent of the abuse and the location in which it occurred; the name, address, and contact information for the suspected abuser; the name, address and contact information for the abused person (or his parents if the victim was still a minor); any information concerning similar acts of abuse by the same abuser or against the same victim regardless of where that abuse occurred; and any other information which the Settlement Master believed to be useful to a prosecuting authority in deciding whether to prosecute a case or, if necessary, to protect the abused person or others from further abuse. The trial court directed that the report “shall request that the information be kept confidential except as necessary to investigate or prosecute a crime or to protect persons from the suspected abuser.” Finally, Senior Judge Potter required the Settlement Master to include in his periodic reports to the court summaries of the abuse reports made to the authorities, reciting the number of incidents reported, the number of abusers involved, the type of abuse involved and the name of the Commonwealth Attorney to whom each report was made.

After the Class moved the court to reconsider this order which they contended would violate the confidentially promised in the settlement agreement, the trial court conducted a hearing in an attempt to determine what had been reported regarding the incidents of abuse for which the $84 million settlement fund had been established. Several facts of particular relevance to this original action were established: 1) no suspected abusers were reported by the Diocese through its reporting procedures as a result of this litigation; 3 2) no criminal prosecutions involving sexual abuse of minors by priests or other diocesan personnel have occurred since the year 2000; 3) Class counsel could not identify the number of suspected abusers involved in the civil litigation; 4) the class census procedure had collected approximately 350 claims of child sexual abuse ranging from inappropriate touching to repeated instances of rape; and 5) the names of Class members who had sought counseling directly from the Diocese had already been reported to authorities, but without any contact information. After the hearing, the trial court amended the reporting order to the extent that the name of the victim could be replaced by a number where the abuser was deceased.

The trial court granted the Class’s request to stay the effectiveness of the order until appellate relief could be sought by way of an original action. This Court then granted emergency relief to preserve the status quo until oral argument could be heard on the matters asserted in the Class’s petition. This Court also concluded that the Commonwealth was an appropriate real party in interest under CR 76.36(8) and gave the Attorney General an opportunity to file a response on behalf of [399]*399the Commonwealth and to participate in oral argument.

In its petition for relief, the Class argues that the trial court was without jurisdiction to order reports to the Commonwealth Attorneys.

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Bluebook (online)
225 S.W.3d 395, 2006 Ky. App. LEXIS 321, 2006 WL 3040128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doe-v-potter-kyctapp-2006.