Kaci May v. Dorchester School District Two

CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedMarch 6, 2024
Docket2020-001352
StatusPublished

This text of Kaci May v. Dorchester School District Two (Kaci May v. Dorchester School District Two) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kaci May v. Dorchester School District Two, (S.C. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA In The Court of Appeals

Kaci May and Kaci May as guardian ad litem for A.R.M., J.H.M., J.T.M., C.B.M., J.R.M., and J.W.M., Appellants,

v.

Dorchester School District Two, South Carolina Department of Social Services, Michael Leach, and Jasmine Flemister, Respondents.

Appellate Case No. 2020-001352

Appeal From Dorchester County Maite Murphy, Circuit Court Judge

Opinion No. 6053 Heard June 7, 2023 – Filed March 13, 2024

AFFIRMED

Deborah J. Butcher and Robert J. Butcher, both of The Camden Law Firm, PA, of Camden, for Appellant.

Kenneth P. Woodington and William H. Davidson, II, both of Davidson, Wren & DeMasters, of Columbia, for Respondents South Carolina Department of Social Services, Michael Leach, and Jasmine Flemister; and Thomas Kennedy Barlow, Susan Marie Fittipaldi, and Dwayne Traynor Mazyck, all of Halligan, Mahoney, & Williams, of Columbia, for Respondent Dorchester School District Two. MCDONALD, J.: Kaci May filed this circuit court action seeking to enjoin the South Carolina Department of Social Services (DSS) from interviewing her children at school and to prevent Dorchester School District Two (School District) from facilitating such interviews without a court order, warrant, subpoena, or new allegation of abuse or neglect. May appeals the order denying injunctive relief and challenges the circuit court's finding that because Respondents acted within their express statutory authority, their efforts to interview the children did not implicate the Fourth Amendment. We affirm the well-reasoned order of the circuit court.

Facts and Procedural History

Kaci and Warren May (collectively, the Mays) 1 were the parents of seven children: four biological children (J.T.M., C.B.M., A.R.M., and J.W.M.) and an adopted sibling group (J.H.M., J.R.M., and L.C.M.). 2 One or more of the adopted children suffered severe sexual abuse while with their biological family.

On March 27, 2017, the Mays attended a daylong meeting with School District personnel at Sand Hill Elementary School to discuss four of the children. At this meeting, May alleged in graphic detail that one of the adopted children had brutally raped one or more children in the May home. May called this child, who was present at the meeting, a rapist and made other concerning statements.

The School District reported May's statements to DSS, which opened an investigation. As a part of the investigation, DSS conducted—or attempted to conduct—interviews with the five school-aged children at Sand Hill Elementary School on March 29 and March 30. On March 31, two DSS caseworkers went to the family home in an effort to contact May and see the children they were unable to interview at school, but May would not allow the caseworkers to enter the home and did not allow them to interview the children. DSS continued to investigate, and caseworkers conducted a combined school interview of three of the children

1 Warren May passed away in 2020. 2 The Mays adopted J.H.M., J.R.M., and L.C.M. from foster care in June 2015. At the time of the circuit court's bench trial, the three adopted children had been moved from the May home to residential facilities. on May 12. 3 Later that day, DSS indicated a case of physical neglect against May; the Mays subsequently filed an administrative appeal of that determination.

On June 15, 2017, Dorchester County DSS Director John Dunne advised the Mays that he had conducted an interim review of the case and "concluded that the decision to indicate the case for Neglect is supported by a preponderance of the evidence." Dunne also informed the Mays that DSS would seek intervention in family court. On June 23, DSS stayed the administrative appeal pending the outcome of the family court case.

Despite the serious safety concerns she had raised, May resisted all DSS efforts to contact the children or visit their home during June, July, and August 2017. Instead, she referred the caseworkers to her attorney. 4 At the start of the new school year, May instructed the School District that no further interviews with her children were to occur without someone first contacting May or her counsel.5 On September 13 and 14, 2017, May withdrew J.H.M. and J.R.M. (two of the adopted children) from Sand Hill Elementary and Gregg Middle School and transferred them to Connections Academy, South Carolina's virtual charter school.

DSS filed a family court case seeking non-emergency removal of the children from the May home on September 14, 2017. May counterclaimed, seeking, among other things, an order restraining DSS caseworkers from speaking with the Mays about legal issues in the case. She also filed a motion seeking an order restraining DSS from "interrogating [her] children at school."

3 DSS was later able to interview two of the children on May 25. May conceded she did not object to DSS interviewing the children at school while the case was still within the investigative period. 4 DSS's concerns are reflected in the caseworker's September 22, 2017 notes: "Kaci and Warren May have not allowed the department in their home. No assessments have been made for this family. The [Mays] have not been in direct contact with the department. The family's attorney is not responding to emails to schedule visits. . . . The department is concerned about the allegations and the inability to get in the home. The department is unable to properly assess for the safety and wellbeing of the minor children." 5 The Sand Hill Elementary principal disregarded these instructions because the School District needed "a court order signed by a judge to make this happen." DSS conducted additional in-school interviews in the fall of 2017. Three of the children were interviewed on September 18, one child was interviewed on September 22, and DSS conducted a brief, combined interview with three of the children on November 20.6

On December 7, 2017, May, individually and as guardian ad litem for the seven children, filed this circuit court action seeking preliminary and permanent injunctive relief to prevent DSS from interviewing her children at school. She also sought to enjoin the School District from facilitating such interviews unless DSS presented a court order, warrant, subpoena, or new allegation of abuse or neglect.

On June 14, 2018, the family court action was dismissed by voluntary stipulation. DSS agreed the "investigation beginning on or about March 28, 2017[,] resulting in a finding of abuse and/or neglect on or about May 12, 2017[,] is hereby overturned." DSS closed its case on June 21.

Following a hearing, the circuit court denied May's motion for a temporary restraining order, finding May failed to establish irreparable harm or the lack of an adequate remedy at law. The School District and DSS then moved to dismiss. The circuit court granted these motions in part and dismissed the individual School District defendants. The remaining governmental defendants answered May's complaint and denied she was entitled to permanent injunctive relief. At the subsequent August 2020 bench trial, the circuit court directed a verdict for the School District and DSS. May timely appealed.

Analysis

"To obtain an injunction, a party must demonstrate irreparable harm, a likelihood of success on the merits, and the absence of an adequate remedy at law." Richland County v. S.C. Dep't of Revenue, 422 S.C. 292, 310, 811 S.E.2d 758, 767 (2018) (quoting Denman v. City of Columbia, 387 S.C. 131, 140, 691 S.E.2d 465, 470 (2010)).

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Bluebook (online)
Kaci May v. Dorchester School District Two, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kaci-may-v-dorchester-school-district-two-scctapp-2024.