H.A.L. Ex Rel. Lewis v. Foltz

551 F.3d 1227, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 25046, 2008 WL 5204801
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedDecember 15, 2008
Docket07-15791
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 551 F.3d 1227 (H.A.L. Ex Rel. Lewis v. Foltz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
H.A.L. Ex Rel. Lewis v. Foltz, 551 F.3d 1227, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 25046, 2008 WL 5204801 (11th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Plaintiffs H.A.L., J.H.L., and S.L.L., minor children, filed through their parents and next friends a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claim against Defendants Ed Foltz (“Foltz”), Deborah Jones (“Jones”), and Virginia Jordan (“Jordan”), employees with the Florida Department of Children and Families (“DCF”), in their individual capacities. Plaintiffs allege that Defendants violated the childrens’ Fourteenth Amendment substantive due process rights to physical safety and to be free from an unreasonable risk of harm. Plaintiffs contend that Defendants, through deliberate indifference, failed to prevent child-on-child sexual abuse the children suffered while they were involuntarily in the custody of Florida’s foster-care system.

Defendants appeal on interlocutory review the district court’s denial of their motion to dismiss Plaintiffs’ Third Amended Complaint on the basis of Defendants’ qualified immunity. Based on the alleged facts, we conclude that Defendants knowingly subjected the children to a substantial risk of serious harm and exhibited deliberate indifference to the known risk: conduct already clearly established as unconstitutional. Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s denial of Defendants’ motion to dismiss based on qualified immunity.

Background

Based on the complaint, the gist of Plaintiffs’ cause of action is this contention: when faced with the known risk of child-on-child sexual abuse occurring in Plaintiffs’ foster home, Defendants were deliberately indifferent to Plaintiffs’ safety by doing nothing to guard against this known and significant risk. Plaintiffs suffered sexual abuse as a result. First, Defendants knowingly placed Plaintiffs in a home with another sexually aggressive child, but failed to implement a safety plan to protect the children. Then, after reports of child-on-child sexual abuse between other children in the home were made, Defendants allowed Plaintiffs to remain in the home without taking steps to guard Plaintiffs’ safety. The following facts are alleged. 1

*1229 A. What Defendants Knew Before Placing Plaintiff’s in the Shick Home

Edwin and Donna Shick (the “Shicks”) were frequent foster parents. At any given time, multiple foster children lived with the Shicks and their natural children. Around June 1997, eleven-year-old R.S. was placed in the Shick foster home. 2

Around October 1997, Defendant Foltz, a DCF licensing counselor, learned that— before R.S.’s placement — three foster children were removed from the Shick home because the Shicks could not manage the childrens’ emotional and behavioral problems. Nevertheless, Foltz recommended that the Shicks be re-licensed to provide care for three foster children.

Around May 1998, fourteen-year-old D.C. was placed in the Shick foster home. 3 Defendant Jordan, a DCF employee, was D.C.’s assigned family-services counselor. When she placed D.C. in the Shick home, Jordan specifically knew that D.C. had a history of aggressive sexual behavior toward younger children. She also knew that D.C. had previously suffered sexual abuse by an adult male caretaker.

Around September 1998, a third foster child, J.S., was placed in the Shick home. J.S. was nine when he moved in with the Shicks.

All three Defendants knew that the Shicks worked outside the home full-time and that they allowed foster children R.S. and D.C. to supervise, without adults present, younger foster children. Around January 1999, DCF amended the Shicks’ foster-care license and reduced their housing capacity to two foster children. At that time, three foster children — R.S., D.C., and J.S. — lived with the Shicks and the Shicks’ natural children.

B. Plaintiffs’ Placement in the Shick Home

Despite amending the Shicks’ license, DCF did not remove any foster children from the home. Instead, DCF placed more children with the family. Plaintiffs H.A.L., J.H.L., and S.L.L., children in custody of Florida DCF, were placed in the Shick foster home between January and March 1999. 4 At the time, H.A.L. was three years old; J.H.L. was five; and S.L.L. was eight.

Defendant Jordan, who had been foster child D.C.’s family-services counselor, was also Plaintiffs’ assigned counselor. Before she placed Plaintiffs in the Shick home, Jordan was repeatedly advised that Plaintiffs may have been sexually abused by their biological parents. Jordan also knew that D.C. was already living in the Shick home. Because of her previous work with D.C., Jordan was aware of D.C.’s aggressive sexual behavior toward younger children.

In addition, all three Defendants were aware, by virtue of their employment at DCF, of the following things: that child sex-abuse victims are typically more vulnerable to subsequent victimization; that child sex-abuse victims are more likely to perpetrate sex offenses than non-victims; and that “sexually abused children would sexually assault other children if safeguards and appropriate supervision were not put in place.” .

Despite this knowledge, Jordan neither implemented a plan to secure Plaintiffs’ *1230 safety nor conducted a background investigation into the three foster children already living with the Shicks. Because Jordan knew that Plaintiffs may have suffered previous sexual abuse, and because she knew about D.C.’s sexual aggression toward younger children, she knowingly subjected Plaintiffs to a substantial risk of victimization.

C. What Defendants Knew After Plaintiffs Were Placed in the Shick Home

Plaintiffs were placed in the Shick foster home from January to March 1999. Three other foster children — R.S., D.C., and J.S. — were already living with the Shicks when Plaintiffs were placed in the home.

In July 1999, eleven-year-old R.S. sexually assaulted J.S. in the Shick home. At that time, all three Plaintiffs lived in or received unsupervised after-school care in the home. The sexual assault was reported to DCF through the Florida Abuse Hotline, and both R.S. and J.S. confirmed that the assault occurred.

Plaintiffs allege that all three Defendants were informed of the child-on-child sexual assault: Defendant-license supervisor Jones was advised of the assault that month; 5 Defendant-licensor Foltz was informed of the incident some time before September 1999; and Defendant-counselor Jordan became aware of the incident “pursuant to Department policy and procedure.” Despite Jordan’s previous knowledge of D.C.’s aggressive sexual behavior and despite all three Defendants’ recent knowledge of R.S.’s sexual assault, no Defendant took steps to guard Plaintiffs’ ongoing safety.

Notwithstanding the reported assault, Defendants Foltz and Jones recommended in September 1999 that the Shick home be re-licensed and its foster-child capacity increased. Although Defendants Foltz and Jones knew that D.C. and R.S.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
551 F.3d 1227, 2008 U.S. App. LEXIS 25046, 2008 WL 5204801, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hal-ex-rel-lewis-v-foltz-ca11-2008.