Flanagan v. Grant

897 F. Supp. 637, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12751, 1994 WL 842905
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedAugust 8, 1995
DocketCiv. A. 93-12463-RCL
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 897 F. Supp. 637 (Flanagan v. Grant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flanagan v. Grant, 897 F. Supp. 637, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12751, 1994 WL 842905 (D. Mass. 1995).

Opinion

*639 LINDSAY, District Judge.

ORDER

Report and Recommendation Accepted— Judgment shall enter for the defendants.

REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION RE: DEFENDANTS’ MOTION TO DISMISS OR, IN THE ALTERNATIVE, MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT (DOCKET ENTRY #4)

December 15, 1994.

BOWLER, United States Magistrate Judge.

Pending before this court is a motion to dismiss or, alternatively, a motion for summary judgment (Docket Entry # 4) filed by defendants Gary I. Grant (“Gary Grant”) and Mercia Grant (“Mercia Grant”) (collectively: “defendants”). Defendants contend that the complaint is subject to dismissal or summary judgment because it is barred by the statute of limitations or collateral estoppel. (Docket Entry #5). Plaintiff Charlotte Flanagan (“plaintiff’) opposes the motion (Docket Entry # 11) and also submits a reply brief (Docket Entry # 17). After conducting a hearing (Docket Entry # 18), this court took the motion (Docket Entry # 4), construed as a motion for summary judgment, under advisement.

BACKGROUND

Plaintiff filed this complaint against her parents on November 12, 1993. Plaintiffs claims arise out of the alleged sexual abuse of plaintiff committed by her father, Gary Grant.

The parties do not dispute that the three year statute of limitations applicable to tort claims in Massachusetts applies to plaintiffs action. 1 The parties do dispute, however, whether Massachusetts’ discovery rule tolls the running of the statute thereby making this action timely filed.

Plaintiff was bom on December 19, 1965. (Docket Entry ## 1 & 7, ¶¶ 5). Defendants are her parents. (Docket Entry ## 1 & 7, ¶¶ 5). Plaintiff avers that from the time she was 14 years old in 1980 to the time she was 18 years old in 1984, Gary Grant forced plaintiff to engage in sexual acts with him, including sexual intercourse, on approximately 40 to 50 occasions. (Docket Entry # 12).

In 1983, plaintiff told her sister, Carol Grant, about the sexual abuse. On May 28, 1984, Mercia Grant, along with plaintiff and Carol Grant, went to the police department in North Andover, Massachusetts (“North Andover police department”). (Docket Entry ## 1 & 7, ¶¶ 11; Docket Entry # 12, ¶ 5). According to the May 28, 1984 police report, plaintiff described a 1980 incident during which her father inappropriately touched her breasts during a business trip to California. Plaintiff also detailed a March 1981 incident during which her father forced her to have sexual intercourse with him. She also related how her father had fondled her on “numerous occasions.” Plaintiff was 18 years old at this time. (Docket Entry # 1, Ex. A; Docket Entry # 5, Ex. A).

Plaintiff attests that the North And-over police department then began an investigation into Gary Grant’s conduct and filed criminal complaints against Gary Grant in Massachusetts district court. 2 (Docket Entry # 12, ¶ 5). Thereafter, in July 1984 plaintiff signed an affidavit recanting her story. (Docket Entry # 5, Ex. D-3). The affidavit, which plaintiff now maintains is false, explains that she fabricated the story in order to get her father removed from the house. (Docket Entry # 5, Ex. D-3). Plaintiff asseverates that her parents pressured her to recant the story by telling her that her father might kill himself and that she would be responsible for anything which happened *640 to him. Plaintiff further swears that, “Because [she] believed [her] family would get some help, and it would be the end of a very ugly part of [her] life, [she] agreed to recant [her] accusations against [her] father.” 3 (Docket Entry # 12, ¶¶ 6-10).

In 1984, therefore, plaintiff was aware that her family, including her father, needed help and that she had an extremely unpleasant or “ugly” life. She further admits that she has “always remembered what [her] father did to [her].” (Docket Entry # 12, ¶ 11). Although explained in greater detail infra, Karen P. Wayment, Psy.D. (“Wayment”), who initially evaluated plaintiff in October 1993, avers that upon evaluating plaintiffs condition she believed that plaintiff could recall her father’s incest and intellectually understood the relationship between her father’s incest and her feelings. Wayment, however, further opines that plaintiff experienced a dissociation between her thoughts and her feelings with respect to the incidents. (No Docket Entry No. Assigned, Wayment Affidavit).

On October 5 or 15, 1990, plaintiff, together with her sister Eileen Grant, went to the North Andover police department for a second time in an effort to refile charges of sexual abuse against her father. (Docket Entry # 5, Ex. A, p. 27). Plaintiff was 24 years old at this time. Both sisters were concerned about their younger sister, Laima Grant, then ten years old. Plaintiff admitted to the police detective that she had thought about pursuing “this,” presumably criminal charges against her father, for years. 4 (Docket Entry #5, Ex. E).

On October 20, 1990, plaintiff returned to the North Andover police station indicating that “she remembers a lot and would like to charge her father if this is still possible.” (Docket Entry # 5, Ex. E). Plaintiff proceeded to describe a number of incidents of sexual abuse committed by her father as well as the control exerted by her father over the family. She portrays one incident in which she thought she was dreaming. And, at one time, she attempted to commit suicide. The October 1990 report also notes that plaintiff remembers her father saying that, “[H]e can’t wait till the statute of limitations runs out in 7 years.” 5 (Docket Entry # 5, Ex. E).

In December 1990 plaintiff began psychotherapy. She avers that, “[S]he started to see [that] what [her] father had done to [her]” was reflected in all aspects of her life. (Docket Entry # 12). Thus, she began to realize the dramatic and pervasive extent of her emotional injuries.

In June 1991 plaintiff testified at a state court hearing in In re Laura Grant, No. 9018 CP 126A. According to her testimony, she had been thinking about bringing a civil suit against her father. The determining factor as to whether plaintiff would file a civil suit at that time was “[w]hether or not [she was] emotionally ready for it.” (Docket Entry # 5, Ex. A).

As previously noted, in October 1993 plaintiff began seeing Wayment for psychotherapy. Wayment avers that plaintiffs diagnosis “was and is Posttraumatic Stress Disorder ... causally related to the episodes of incest to which she was subjected as a child by her father.” (No Docket Entry No. Assigned, Wayment Affidavit).

Wayment asseverates that plaintiff knew about the incestuous acts committed by her father and also intellectually knew the relationship between the acts of incest and her *641 feelings.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
897 F. Supp. 637, 1995 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12751, 1994 WL 842905, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flanagan-v-grant-mad-1995.