Giovenco-Pappas v. Berauer

2020 IL App (1st) 190904
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedSeptember 9, 2020
Docket1-19-0904
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2020 IL App (1st) 190904 (Giovenco-Pappas v. Berauer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Giovenco-Pappas v. Berauer, 2020 IL App (1st) 190904 (Ill. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

2020 IL App (1st) 190904

THIRD DIVISION September 9, 2020

No. 1-19-0904

IN THE APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS FIRST JUDICIAL DISTRICT ______________________________________________________________________________

MARIANNE GIOVENCO-PAPPAS, Individually and as ) Guardian of the Person and Estate of Rosemary Giovenco, ) ) Appeal from the Plaintiff-Appellant, ) Circuit Court of ) Cook County ) v. ) 15 CH 12484 ) MATTHEW BERAUER, PATTY KEHL and THE ) Honorable KENNETH YOUNG CENTER, a Not-for-Profit ) Robert E. Senechalle Jr., Corporation, ) Judge Presiding ) Defendants-Appellees. ) _____________________________________________________________________________

JUSTICE ELLIS delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion. Presiding Justice Howse and Justice McBride concurred in the judgment and opinion.

OPINION

¶1 Plaintiffs sued a private “provider agency” and two of its social workers, working under

contract with the Illinois Department on Aging, for their alleged negligent investigation of an

allegation of elder abuse. Before trial, defendants asserted the defense of sovereign immunity.

¶2 The court agreed that sovereign immunity barred this lawsuit and dismissed the matter

for lack of subject-matter jurisdiction. We likewise agree that defendants’ alleged misconduct

were actions of the State and thus protected by sovereign immunity. We affirm the judgment.

¶3 BACKGROUND

¶4 In 1998, Rosemary Giovenco (Rosemary) suffered a traumatic brain injury after she was

involved in a car accident. This injury caused significant neurological disability and required her No. 1-19-0904

to be placed in adult guardianship. Plaintiff Marianne Giovenco-Pappas, Rosemary’s daughter

(Marianne), was appointed as her mother’s guardian in 2000. At all relevant times, Judge

Carolyn Quinn, a judge in the Circuit Court of Cook County, oversaw Rosemary’s guardianship.

¶5 Although Rosemary was significantly disabled, she was able to communicate in a limited

manner, walk (with the assistance of a walker), and provide basic care for herself such as

dressing, cooking, and eating. Although she had some expressive language, as result of the 1998

injury, in Marianne’s words, “when someone tries to communicate verbally with Rosemary[,]

she turns her head and makes a wincing, grimincing [sic] face[,] especially when she is nervous,

interacting with strangers, or any disruption of her normal routine.” This “is not an expression of

pain, fear, or negativity.”

¶6 In late 2014, Rosemary underwent knee replacement surgery. During the rehabilitation on

her knee, she developed a methicillin-resistant staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) infection in her

skull. This infection had a devastating effect on Rosemary’s cognitive abilities. “Because of the

MRSA infection Rosemary cannot walk; she is incontinent and wears diapers, she cannot speak

and is non-verbal.” After extended treatment and rehabilitation for the MRSA infection,

Rosemary was able to return to Marianne’s care sometime in the middle of 2015.

¶7 On August 8, 2015, while serving dinner, Marianne noticed that Rosemary’s right hand

and wrist had become swollen and red and was warm to the touch. There were also “2 small

blister like areas on the dorsal aspect of her right hand.” As the family ate dinner, Marianne

become increasingly concerned about her mother’s hand. She called 911, and the emergency

responders took Rosemary to St. Alexius Hospital in Hoffman Estates (Hospital). The Hospital’s

emergency room physician diagnosed Rosemary with cellulitis, a skin infection. Because this

infection required treatment with two potent antibiotics, Rosemary was admitted. After her

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admission, she came under the care of Dr. Gopal Rao. Dr. Rao also diagnosed Rosemary’s hand

condition as cellulitis. Rosemary received the antibiotic treatment and was scheduled for

discharge on August 12.

¶8 The Hospital is within the service area of The Kenneth Young Center (KYC). KYC is a

“provider agency,” selected by the Illinois Department of Aging (Department) to receive and

assess reports of alleged or suspected abuse, neglect, or financial exploitation of the elderly.

KYC, as a provider agency, is tasked with assisting the Department in administering a protective

services program for the elderly in Illinois. See 320 ILCS 20/3 (West 2014). These provider

agencies “are agents of the Illinois Department on Aging.” 89 Ill. Adm. Code 270.215(c),

amended at 39 Ill. Reg. 2156 (eff. Jan. 23, 2015). To accomplish their work on behalf of the

Department, provider agencies may assign caseworkers to investigate allegations of elder abuse.

Defendants Matthew Berauer and Patty Kehl are two of KYC’s caseworkers.

¶9 The day before Rosemary’s scheduled discharge, a Hospital social worker, Paul Kutylo,

reported his suspicion that Rosemary was the victim of neglect or abuse to KYC. Kutylo

specifically reported a suspicion that Marianne had burned Rosemary’s hand. The KYC

investigation was assigned to Berauer.

¶ 10 The same day that Kutylo reported his suspicions, Berauer began his investigation. He

reviewed some of Rosemary’s medical records and interviewed Rosemary. While interviewing

Rosemary, Berauer noted that she would grimace when he mentioned Marianne. Specifically,

when he asked Rosemary if she wanted to go home, she “became tearful and curled into the fetal

position.” These grimaces caused him to believe that Rosemary was fearful of Marianne.

¶ 11 The next morning, the date of Rosemary’s expected discharge, Berauer called Marianne.

What was said during this call is highly contested. Marianne claims that Berauer told her that his

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investigation had determined that Marianne had burned, abused, and otherwise neglected

Rosemary. Berauer claims that he simply told her that there had been allegations of a burn,

abuse, and neglect. According to Marianne, she was shocked by these allegations, especially

since no doctor had diagnosed a burn. Later that day, Marianne went to the Hospital and met

with Berauer. Their accounts of that meeting differ, but ultimately, after speaking with both

Marianne and Rosemary, Berauer still had concerns about the allegations of abuse.

¶ 12 Berauer’s response to his investigation is also hotly contested. Most notably, Marianne

contends that Berauer refused to allow Rosemary to be discharged into Marianne’s care. Instead,

Marianne claims that Berauer, personally, cancelled Rosemary’s August 12 discharge and

ordered her to be discharged to a subacute rehabilitation facility. The record is clear, and even

Berauer admits, that Berauer did not possess the authority to cancel Rosemary’s discharge.

¶ 13 From his perspective, Berauer did not cancel or order anything. His deposition testimony

on this point is difficult to follow, but he claims that he only made recommendations about

Rosemary’s discharge. Kutylo testified that Berauer did not cancel Rosemary’s discharge—the

Hospital did, because its policy was not to discharge a patient into a potentially harmful

environment. In an affidavit, Dr. Rao states “[t]hat on August 12, 2015, Matthew Berauer

advised me that he cancelled my order discharging Rosemary Giovenco on August 12, 2015.”

Dr. Rao “believe[d] that [Berauer] had the power and authority to take that type of action as an

Adult Protective Service Worker.”

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Related

Green v. State
2023 IL App (1st) 220245 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2023)
Giovenco-Pappas v. Berauer
2020 IL App (1st) 190904 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2020)

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2020 IL App (1st) 190904, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/giovenco-pappas-v-berauer-illappct-2020.