Helen L. Hyde v. The Roman Catholic Bishop of Providence Jeffrey Thomas v. The Roman Catholic Bishop of Providence

139 A.3d 452
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 22, 2016
Docket14-174, 14-175
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 139 A.3d 452 (Helen L. Hyde v. The Roman Catholic Bishop of Providence Jeffrey Thomas v. The Roman Catholic Bishop of Providence) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Helen L. Hyde v. The Roman Catholic Bishop of Providence Jeffrey Thomas v. The Roman Catholic Bishop of Providence, 139 A.3d 452 (R.I. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION

Justice FLAHERTY,

for the Court.

The plaintiffs, Helen L. Hyde and Jeffrey Thomas, brought suit against the Roman Catholic Bishop of Providence, seeking damages arising from their alleged sexual abuse at the hands of Father Brendan Smyth more than four decades ago. The Superior Court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendant. The plaintiffs appealed, arguing that the trial justice erred when she decided that the statute of limitations barred their claims because, they argue, their inability to recall the abuse tolled the statute of limitations until such time as they became aware of their claims against the institutional, nonperpetrator defendant. Moreover, the plaintiffs argue that the trial justice erred when she denied their request to seek discovery on the alternate tolling theory that the defendant fraudulently concealed their causes of action from them. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.

Facts and Travel

The plaintiffs filed complaints in Providence County Superior Court against the *455 Roman Catholic Bishop of Providence (defendant), alleging that Father Brendan Smyth sexually abused them on numerous occasions, beginning in 1967 until approximately 1970. The plaintiffs alleged that the acts of abuse visited upon them all occurred while Smyth was under defendant’s supervision. At the time of the alleged abuse, Smyth was a visiting priest, counselor, and teacher at Our Lady of Mercy School and Church in East Greenwich. In these positions, Father Smyth had unsupervised interactions with young parishioners and schoolchildren; it was during those encounters that he allegedly took advantage of and sexually abused several children. After he left Rhode Island, Father Smyth returned to his native Ireland, where he was later convicted of serial child molestation. Around 1997, Smyth died in prison.

According to Hyde, Smyth began abusing her in 1967, when she was six years old and a student at Our Lady of Mercy School. Hyde maintained that Smyth sexually abused her in a classroom, in the schoolyard, in church, in her home, and in the woods outside her house.

Hyde was not the only victim of Smyth’s claimed sexual abuse to come forward. Thomas alleged in his complaint that, soon after Smyth began to abuse Hyde, he also raped and molested him in the church’s rectory and in Hyde’s backyard.

In their respective complaints, plaintiffs claim that defendant and his predecessors knew that Smyth was a pedophile by the late 1940s, but that they nonetheless continued to allow him to serve as a priest under their supervision. They maintain that defendant not only knew of Smyth’s pedophilia, but also that Smyth’s level of sexual abuse caused him to be sent away, for treatment before he was eventually allowed to return to Our Lady of Mercy. Relying on their claim that defendant knew Smyth was a pedophile, plaintiffs filed their complaints, in which they alleged numerous counts of negligence, negligent supervision, vicarious liability, fraud, intentional nondisclosure, and intentional failure to supervise. The plaintiffs also asserted that each of them had repressed recollection of the crimes perpetrated against them and that they did not recover their memories of the abuse until within three years of the filing of the lawsuit.

In response, defendant filed motions to dismiss the complaints. First, defendant argued that, because the statute extending the time for childhood victims of sexual abuse who suffered from repressed memory applied only in the case of perpetrator defendants, the action was time-barred. Second, he argued that plaintiffs had failed to allege sufficient facts that would support tolling of the statute under the “unsound mind” provision found at G.L.1956 § 9-1-19. The plaintiffs opposed the motions to dismiss, arguing that repressed memory, in and of itself, was a possible tolling mechanism under the “unsound mind” provision of § 9-1-19, that an evi-dentiary hearing on repressed memory, pursuant to this Court’s decision in Kelly v. Marcantonio, 678 A.2d 873 (R.I.1996), was in order, and that plaintiffs’ fraud claims were timely because plaintiffs could not have discovered defendant’s fraudulent conduct until they remembered the underlying abuse.

At the hearing on the motions to dismiss, defendant argued that this Court has never held that repressed and subsequently recovered memories, standing alone, without any other indicia, could constitute an unsound mind. The defendant also argued that § 9-1-51 did not apply to non-perpetrator defendants and that there was no requirement for an evidentiary hearing *456 in this case. 1 Much of defendant’s argument focused on his position that, for the “unsound mind” tolling provision of § 9-1-19 to apply, plaintiffs were required to show some inability to manage their day-to-day affairs, and that, with respect to these particular plaintiffs, Hyde and Thomas had experienced successful careers as a lawyer and as a businessman, respectively.

The trial justice denied defendant’s motion, without prejudice, pending an evi-dentiary hearing to “receive scientific and other data to assess whether repressed recollection ha[d] been established * * *.”■ The trial justice agreed that Kelly had definitively held that suits against non-perpetrator defendants could not be tolled under § 9-1-51. However, the hearing justice also said that it was her opinion that this Court had yet to hold definitively that a trial court “cannot permit repressed memory to toll the [sjtatute of [limitations unless the [cjourt also finds that the [pjlaintiff was unable to conduct his or her day-to-day activities.” The trial justice directed that an evidentiary hearing be held to determine if plaintiffs could demonstrate having repressed memories that would qualify as “unsound mind” under § 9-1-19. The motion to dismiss having been denied, defendant subsequently filed answers to the complaints.

More than a year later, defendant filed a motion for entry of a scheduling order, attaching a proposed schedule. 2 The plaintiffs’ counsel objected to the proposed order, not on the grounds that it was inadequate for discovery on plaintiffs’ repressed-memory claims, but because plaintiffs’ counsel asserted the right to conduct discovery on an intentional concealment tolling theory pursuant to § 9-1-20. 3 This, defendant argued, would frustrate the intent of the court’s order as to an evidentiary hearing, which was limited to the question of whether repressed memory could constitute “unsound mind” so as to toll the statute of limitations under § 9-1-19. The defendant also argued that plaintiffs had not alleged sufficient facts to support such a theory, and, further, that they had waived the right to present a fraudulent concealment tolling argument.

The plaintiffs responded with a scheduling order of their own; theirs included a provision for discovery based on fraudulent concealment.

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139 A.3d 452, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/helen-l-hyde-v-the-roman-catholic-bishop-of-providence-jeffrey-thomas-v-ri-2016.