J.S., A Minor, by and through James Segroves and Yan Ping Zhong, Her Natural Guardians and Next Friends v. Ocean Springs School District

CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedApril 3, 2025
Docket2023-CA-01009-SCT
StatusPublished

This text of J.S., A Minor, by and through James Segroves and Yan Ping Zhong, Her Natural Guardians and Next Friends v. Ocean Springs School District (J.S., A Minor, by and through James Segroves and Yan Ping Zhong, Her Natural Guardians and Next Friends v. Ocean Springs School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
J.S., A Minor, by and through James Segroves and Yan Ping Zhong, Her Natural Guardians and Next Friends v. Ocean Springs School District, (Mich. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2023-CA-01009-SCT

J.S., A MINOR, BY AND THROUGH JAMES SEGROVES AND YAN PING ZHONG, HER NATURAL GUARDIANS AND NEXT FRIENDS

v.

OCEAN SPRINGS SCHOOL DISTRICT

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 12/19/2022 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. ROBERT P. KREBS TRIAL COURT ATTORNEYS: JIM L DAVIS, III ROBERT W. WILKINSON NICOLE WALL SULLIVAN WILLIAM ROBERTS NORMAN ANN LANDGRAF GRIFFIN JOSEPH O’CONNELL VICTORIA JONES RAINS BRIAN CHRISTOPHER WHITMAN MATTHEW G. MESTAYER COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: JACKSON COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: MATTHEW G. MESTAYER BRIAN CHRISTOPHER WHITMAN ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: JOSEPH O’CONNELL ANN LANDGRAF GRIFFIN NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - PERSONAL INJURY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED - 04/03/2025 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:

EN BANC.

COLEMAN, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Eight-year-old J.S. was sexually battered by her bus driver, Sergio Sandoval,

numerous times to and from school for more than a month. J.S., through her parents, brought

the following claims under the Mississippi Tort Claims Act against the Ocean Springs School District in the Jackson County Circuit Court: (1) negligence; (2) negligent hiring, retention,

supervision, and training; (3) failure to adopt, implement, and/or follow policies and

procedures; (4) negligent infliction of emotional distress; and (5) civil assault, civil battery,

and false imprisonment. The Jackson County Circuit Court found that the District was

entitled to discretionary-function immunity under the Mississippi Tort Claims Act and that

the bus driver’s criminal conduct was otherwise not reasonably foreseeable because the

District lacked notice of his abusive proclivities. The plaintiff appealed. As more fully set

forth below, we reverse the trial court’s grant of summary judgment, holding that most of the

plaintiff’s claims against the District are not barred by sovereign immunity and that the

plaintiff has demonstrated a genuine issue of material fact regarding foreseeability.

BACKGROUND

¶2. From September 15, 2014, to October 7, 2014, Sergio Sandoval, a bus driver for Oak

Park Elementary School, sexually assaulted and battered eight-year-old J.S. more than thirty

times to and from school. On the evening of October 7, 2014, J.S. reported the abuse to her

parents, and her father, James Segroves, alerted the police and then informed the school’s

principal, Jennifer Pope. The next morning, Sandoval was immediately ordered to leave the

school premises. Sandoval’s transportation supervisor, Tim Weimer, pulled the hard drive

from Sandoval’s bus and observed video footage of Sandoval calling J.S. to the front of the

bus while en route in violation of school policy. As a result, Sandoval was terminated on

October 8, 2014, and later was convicted of touching a child for lustful purposes and sexual

battery.

2 ¶3. The plaintiff filed her initial complaint against the Ocean Springs School District on

October 26, 2020, and her second amended complaint on December 16, 2021. The plaintiff

brought the following claims in the Jackson County Circuit Court against the District under

the Mississippi Tort Claims Act: (1) negligence; (2) negligent hiring, retention, supervision,

and training; (3) failure to adopt, implement, and/or follow policies and procedures; (4)

negligent infliction of emotional distress; and (5) civil assault, civil battery, and false

imprisonment. Essentially, the plaintiff alleged that Sandoval’s conduct was imputed to the

District; that the District breached its duty to provide a safe school environment; that the

District failed to use reasonable care in hiring, training, and supervising Sandoval; and that

the District’s negligence inflicted emotional distress.

¶4. The District filed its answer to the second amended complaint on January 6, 2022, and

denied all liability. The District then filed a motion for summary judgment on July 29, 2022.

In support of its motion, the District attached the affidavits of Brooks McKay, the District’s

director of operations, and Weimer, as well as its transportation handbook, employee

handbook, the Mississippi Pupil Transportation Handbook, the District’s policies on sexual

harassment, and Sandoval’s personnel file. McKay stated that “[he] never observed, heard,

or otherwise became aware of any incident or development involving Mr. Sandoval that

foreshadowed, or even vaguely or remotely suggested, the possibility of any type of sexual

misconduct with a student, either on a school bus or anywhere else.”

¶5. McKay further stated that if anyone had complained about Sandoval having any sort

of inappropriate contact with a student, it would have been documented in Sandoval’s

3 personnel file but that his file contained no such concerns. Rather, the only complaints in

Sandoval’s personnel file “all pertained in some way or another to misbehavior or

misconduct by students.” The first documented incident in Sandoval’s file recorded in 2008

pertained to a student who was written up for disrespectful behavior, and the student’s

mother complained that other students who acted similarly were not written up. McKay

testified that, in response to the complaint, the video footage from Sandoval’s bus was

reviewed and that Sandoval’s supervisor, Charles Lee, found that Sandoval was “fair to each

and every one of the students.”

¶6. The next incident documented in Sandoval’s personnel file took place in 2009 when

Sandoval reported two brothers who were disrespectful and threatened him with physical

violence. In response, the District interviewed and obtained statements from several

students, and the students reported “issues about an alleged attempt by the brothers’ mother

to remove them from the bus, the speed at which Mr. Sandoval drove, and the way he

traveled around corners.” Finally, in 2013, two mothers requested that their children be

moved to different seats on the bus because they were being bullied by other students. One

mother pointed out that her son was moved for using inappropriate language but was not

moved when he was being bullied. In response, Sandoval moved the two students as

requested. McKay emphasized that prior to the events at issue in the present case, the school

had not received any complaints or causes for concern about Sandoval having inappropriate

contact with a student.

¶7. McKay further described how the District conducts a criminal background check for

4 each bus driver application, as required under the District’s transportation handbook. The

background check surveys Mississippi criminal history, FBI records, as well as the

Mississippi Department of Human Services’ Child Abuse Registry. McKay stated that

Sandoval’s background check did not reveal any concerns, and the school also reviewed his

employment history per its transportation handbook.

¶8. McKay also elaborated on Sandoval’s training, which included initial and annual

certification by the Mississippi Department of Education, also required under the

transportation handbook; Sandoval repeated the certification in 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012, and

2014. McKay further stated that in addition to the bus driver certifications, Sandoval also

participated in service training through the District related to both general and specific duties

as a bus driver. Additionally, Sandoval was evaluated each year by his transportation

supervisor, Tim Weimer.

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J.S., A Minor, by and through James Segroves and Yan Ping Zhong, Her Natural Guardians and Next Friends v. Ocean Springs School District, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/js-a-minor-by-and-through-james-segroves-and-yan-ping-zhong-her-miss-2025.