Fried v. Archer

775 A.2d 430, 139 Md. App. 229, 2001 Md. App. LEXIS 114
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 3, 2001
Docket0912, Sept. Term, 2000
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 775 A.2d 430 (Fried v. Archer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fried v. Archer, 775 A.2d 430, 139 Md. App. 229, 2001 Md. App. LEXIS 114 (Md. Ct. App. 2001).

Opinion

ADKINS, Judge.

Fifteen year old Tiffany Fouts, daughter of Sarah Fried, appellant, paid far too high a price for drinking alcohol. At a residence she was visiting for the first time, Tiffany got drunk *237 in the company of her girlfriend and four underage boys she had just met. Tiffany became ill and semi-conscious. Some of the guests sexually assaulted Tiffany, then dragged her outside in the freezing rain. In an effort to avoid legal trouble but summon a rescuer, three of them called the Harford County Sheriffs Department. They reported to police communications officer Kim Archer, appellee, that there was a girl who had been “over here drinking” laying in the woods to the rear of “1436” Harford Square, “K Court.” Archer replied that she would “send someone out.”

Unfortunately, in order to prevent police officers from coming to their residence at 1443 Charleston Drive, K Court, the assailants hastily invented a street number, and insisted on anonymity. Unfortunately, there is no 1436 K Court, because K Court only has odd-numbered addresses. Unfortunately, the dispatcher directed the responding police officers to “1436 ----J Court,” an address that does exist. Unfortunately, despite searching behind that address and the entire row of townhomes along J Court, the officers did not find Tiffany, and discontinued their search. Unfortunately, no search was conducted in the woods behind the K Court townhomes, where Tiffany lay until she was found the next day, dead from hypothermia.

In this appeal, we address an issue of first impression in Maryland — the negligence liability of a police dispatcher. We conclude that the tort duty owed by police dispatchers must be determined by applying the same “special duty rule” that governs the tort liability of other public and private defendants. Applying that rule, we hold that Archer did not have a special duty to rescue Tiffany, because Tiffany, who was unconscious, did not specifically rely on Archer’s promise to “send someone out,” and because the assailants who called on her behalf did not justifiably rely on that promise. Thus, Archer did not have a “special relationship” with Tiffany, or a special duty to aid, protect, or rescue Tiffany. Because appellant cannot establish that Archer had a private duty to Tiffany, the trial court properly dismissed appellant’s negligence claims against Archer. For substantially similar reasons, we *238 also affirm the dismissal of appellant’s negligent training claims against James Terrell, appellee, who is chief of Harford County’s Emergency Management and Operations Division.

FACTS AND LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

We review the allegations in the complaint, and accept them as true for purposes of reviewing this dismissal. See Valentine v. On Target, Inc., 353 Md. 544, 548, 727 A.2d 947 (1999). On November 11, 1995, Tiffany Fouts made plans to spend the night with her school friend, Melanie M. Early in the evening, the two girls went to 1443 Charleston Drive, K Court, located in the Harford Square townhome development in Edgewood. This was the home of Melanie’s acquaintance, Eric F., and his mother, Ms. F. Tiffany, Melanie, and Eric were joined by three of Eric’s friends, Donte, Ricky, and Louis. Tiffany had never met Eric or any of his friends.

The complaint alleges that Ms. F. and Louis supplied alcohol to the minors, who “partied” in the basement of Ms. F.’s home. Within an hour of her arrival, Tiffany began to vomit and lapsed into semi-consciousness. Some of the guests then assaulted and abused Tiffany. They “engaged in nonconsen-sual sexual acts with [her], heavy objects were dropped upon her head and certain guests urinated upon her as well.”

To conceal Tiffany’s condition, Eric F. and Ricky dragged her out a back door. They left Tiffany, wearing only a tee shirt, skirt, socks, and shoes, in an area of woods located directly behind the townhome. The weather was cold and rainy, and a snowy winter storm had been forecast.

Melanie and Louis then left the Fox residence. Ricky and Donte were staying the night with Eric. Aware that Tiffany was in danger from exposure, Donte, in the presence of Eric and Ricky, called the Harford County Sheriffs Department (“HCSO”). His report to Kim Archer, the police communications officer who answered the phone, was as follows:

HCSO DISPATCHER [ARCHER]: Harford County Sheriffs Office, PCO Archer.
CALLER: Hello.
*239 HCSO DISPATCHER: Yes.
CALLER: Um, there’s a girl in the back of the woods like.
HCSO DISPACTHER: Back of what woods.
CALLER: Um, Harford Square.
HCSO DISPATCHER: Okay. What’s the exact address?
CALLER: There ain’t no exact address where she’s at.
HCSO DISPATCHER: Okay. What’s the residence where she is? Can you give me the residence in front of where she’s to the rear of?
CALLER: What’s the address to those people over there? Cause she’s further that way. 1436? (Inaudible.) 1436. HCSO DISPATCHER: Okay. Harford Square?
CALLER: Yes, K Court.
HCSO DISPATCHER: Okay. And what’s she doing, sir?
CALLER: Just laying there.
HCSO DISPATCHER: Okay. She’s just laying to the rear of the house?
CALLER: Yes, she was. She was over a — . She was over here drinking and she was laying there.
HCSO DISPATCHER: Okay. Is she a white female? Black female?
CALLER: Yeah.
HCSO DISPATCHER: Which one?
CALLER: White female.
HSCO DISPATCHER: Okay. White female. Okay. And your last name, sir?
CALLER: I’d just say anonymous.
HCSO DISPATCHER: Okay. We’ll send someone out.
CALLER: Thanks.

The complaint acknowledged that the boys, “[ijntending for the emergency personnel to locate Tiffany Fouts, but attempting to avoid potential problems related to underaged drinking, ... provided ... a fictitious street address of T436’,” but asserted that they “provided a factually accurate street identification indicating [that Tiffany was] ‘in the back of the woods’ *240 on ‘K Court’....” It asserted that Archer failed “to obtain further substantive information ... which would have been instrumental in successfully locating and rescuing Tiffany Fouts,” and “misinformed the [HCSO] and/or Deputy Sheriff Kevin L. Thomas as to the proper location of the semiconscious girl.... ” The dispatcher directed responding officers to investigate “the well-being of a number 2 female ... lying to the rear of’ “1436 Harford Square Drive....

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Bluebook (online)
775 A.2d 430, 139 Md. App. 229, 2001 Md. App. LEXIS 114, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fried-v-archer-mdctspecapp-2001.