Helmly v. Bebber

335 S.E.2d 182, 77 N.C. App. 275, 1985 N.C. App. LEXIS 4077
CourtCourt of Appeals of North Carolina
DecidedOctober 15, 1985
Docket8422SC1347
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 335 S.E.2d 182 (Helmly v. Bebber) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Helmly v. Bebber, 335 S.E.2d 182, 77 N.C. App. 275, 1985 N.C. App. LEXIS 4077 (N.C. Ct. App. 1985).

Opinion

COZORT, Judge.

On 24 November 1982, plaintiffs husband committed suicide in the Alexander County Jail by hanging himself with his belt from the cell bars. On 15 May 1984 plaintiff filed an amended complaint in this wrongful death action alleging that defendants were negligent in failing to take reasonable measures to prevent her husband’s suicide. Defendants moved for summary judgment on *276 24 July 1984. The motion was granted by Judge Collier on 8 October 1984. We reverse in part and affirm in part.

A forecast of plaintiffs evidence tends to show the following:

On Monday, 22 November 1982, plaintiffs husband, Vernon Helmly (hereinafter “Helmly”), voluntarily entered the psychiatric ward of Catawba Memorial Hospital for drug abuse treatment. On Wednesday morning, 24 November 1982, against his doctor’s and wife’s wishes, he discharged himself from the hospital. Upon his discharge, Helmly repeatedly called his wife at work and later at home asking her to pick him up and bring him home. Eventually, Helmly got a ride home around 6:10 p.m.

Prior to her husband’s returning home, plaintiff called Robert P. Davis, Magistrate for Alexander County, and inquired about having him committed. Plaintiff told Magistrate Davis that her husband had checked out of the psychiatric ward of Catawba Memorial Hospital against his doctor’s wishes; that he had been drinking; that he had been on drugs; and that he was “dangerous to himself and others.” Davis advised plaintiff that since her husband was currently in an adjacent county (Catawba), she would have to call the Catawba County Magistrate.

When Helmly arrived home around 6:10 p.m., he was drunk and wanted the keys to his truck. When plaintiff would not give him the keys, he became belligerent and started breaking and throwing dishes and furniture. Helmly beat his wife and daughter Kathey. Plaintiff went next door to her neighbor’s house and called the sheriffs department. Plaintiff spoke with the dispatcher, gave him her name and address, and told him (1) her husband had checked out of the psychiatric ward at Catawba Memorial Hospital that morning for drug abuse; (2) he was very dangerous and was breaking everything in the house; (3) she was scared to death and her husband was crazy. Plaintiff talked with the dispatcher between three and five different times before sheriffs deputies arrived at her house. Sometime during these conversations she told the dispatcher that her husband was “dangerous to himself and others” and that her husband, who by now had obtained the keys to the truck, was ramming the truck into the house. Helmly had driven the truck repeatedly into their car pushing the car through a garage wall and had rammed the truck into the house.

*277 Lt. Gerald Dial of the Sheriffs Department arrived at the scene at approximately 7:02 p.m. At the Helmly residence Lt. Dial saw that the front of the pickup truck was damaged, the back of the car was badly damaged, and the back wall in the garage had a big hole in it. Lt. Dial observed Mr. Helmly standing at the front door of the residence with a cinder block in his hand. Helmly had broken the window out beside the door. Helmly’s son was trying to keep Helmly from reaching inside the window. Before Lt. Dial got to Helmly, Helmly had gotten the front door open and was going up the stairs with the cinder block raised above his head with both hands. Lt. Dial saw Helmly’s wife, daughter, and son at the top of the stairs. Lt. Dial noticed that Mrs. Helmly’s face was bloody and Kathey Helmly had some blood or bruises on her. Lt. Dial overtook Helmly just before he got to the top of the stairs. Lt. Dial calmed Helmly and took him into custody.

Another officer, Deputy Chris Bowman, and an ambulance arrived a few minutes later. Deputy Bowman went to the patrol car where Helmly was seated and started talking to Helmly. Deputy Bowman noticed Helmly had blood on his hands, and he asked Helmly if he needed the EMTs to take a look at him. Helmly said he did not want the EMTs to look at him. Deputy Bowman could smell a strong odor of alcohol about Helmly. Helmly asked Deputy Bowman how bad his pickup was damaged. Helmly told Deputy Bowman that he had run his truck into the back of the car and that he had run the truck into the house. Deputy Bowman told Helmly that the front end of the truck had been damaged and that “seemed to satisfy” Helmly, though he was still mad at his family.

Plaintiff was taken to the hospital. At the hospital, plaintiffs daughter told Lt. Dial that her father was in “a very bad condition,” he needed “mental help,” and he was “dangerous to himself and others.” Plaintiff maintains that she also told the deputies that her husband was “dangerous to himself and others.”

Once Helmly was taken into custody he was brought before Magistrate Davis for a bail hearing and commitment proceeding at approximately 8:45 p.m. He was charged with assault on a female and assault inflicting serious injury and was placed in cell D-l, the “drunk tank.” Bond was set at $500. At that time, Helmly was the sole occupant of cell D-l, and the only jailer on duty was *278 Loy Hensley, the radio dispatcher, although there were other deputies in the office. The cell block was not visible from the office or from the radio dispatch center where Hensley was stationed. A closed-circuit monitoring system had been installed in the jail but was not functioning at the time.

Prior to plaintiffs arrival at Magistrate Davis’s office, Lt. Dial related to the magistrate plaintiffs desire to see about getting Helmly psychiatric treatment. Plaintiff arrived at the Sheriffs office from the hospital between 9:50 and 10:15 p.m. and proceeded to the magistrate’s office with her son, her daughter, and a neighbor. During the discussion with the magistrate, plaintiff, as well as her neighbor, Sharon Cruzan, related to the magistrate the troubled history of Mr. Helmly.

Mrs. Cruzan told Davis of Helmly’s recent threats of suicide. Plaintiff related her husband’s history of alcoholism and psychiatric treatment and expressed her opinion that he was suicidal. Plaintiff admits this was the first time she had told any law enforcement figure that her husband might try to commit “suicide.”

During the discussion with the magistrate, a groan was heard from the cell block area. Magistrate Davis remarked “Well, Vernon [Helmly] must be waking up.” Helmly had been “hollering” off and on since he had been placed in the cell at approximately 9:00 p.m. At about 10:25 p.m., Officer Stan Durmire went to the cell block door and called to Helmly. At the earlier bail hearing, the prisoner had indicated his desire to remain at the jail overnight; now he told Durmire he “wanted out of the jail.” Durmire responded that he would “check on seeing about getting him out.” At about the same time, the meeting in Davis’s office concluded, and plaintiff and the others left.

Durmire was met by the magistrate, who informed him and the other deputies of plaintiffs statements that Helmly was suicidal. Officers Durmire and Hensley returned to the cell, where, at approximately 10:38 p.m., they found the prisoner hanging by his belt from the cell bars. Lt.

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Bluebook (online)
335 S.E.2d 182, 77 N.C. App. 275, 1985 N.C. App. LEXIS 4077, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/helmly-v-bebber-ncctapp-1985.