K.N.B. v. M.D., Aplt.

CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 22, 2021
Docket20 WAP 2020
StatusPublished

This text of K.N.B. v. M.D., Aplt. (K.N.B. v. M.D., Aplt.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
K.N.B. v. M.D., Aplt., (Pa. 2021).

Opinion

[J-13-2021] IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA WESTERN DISTRICT

BAER, C.J., SAYLOR, TODD, DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, MUNDY, JJ.

K.N.B., : No. 20 WAP 2020 : Appellee : Appeal from the Order of the : Superior Court entered January 30, : 2020 at No. 1003 WDA 2018 v. : affirming the Order of the Court of : Common Pleas of Clarion County : entered June 15, 2018 at No. 155 M.D., : CD 2018. : Appellant : SUBMITTED: January 25, 2021

OPINION

JUSTICE WECHT DECIDED: SEPTEMBER 22, 2021 The main question in this appeal is whether a petition seeking a protective order

under the Protection of Victims of Sexual Violence or Intimidation Act (“PVSVIA”)1 is

subject to the two-year statute of limitations governing certain enumerated civil actions or

the six-year catch-all statute of limitations that applies to non-enumerated actions.

Because we conclude that the six-year limitations period applies, we affirm.

The Appellee in this case, K.N.B., was a freshman at Clarion University in 2015.

K.N.B. claims that a fellow Clarion student, M.D., sexually assaulted her in September

2015. K.N.B. initially did not report the assault to the police. Only after seeing M.D. at a

Walmart in early 2018 did K.N.B. report the assault to the Clarion University Police

Department. By this time, K.N.B. was no longer a student at the University.

1 See 42 Pa.C.S. §§ 62A01-62A20. Along with reporting the incident to the police, K.N.B. also petitioned the Clarion

County Court of Common Pleas for a Sexual Violence Protective Order (“SVPO”) under

the PVSVIA. The General Assembly enacted the PVSVIA in 2014 to give victims of

sexual violence “safety and protection from further interactions with their offender,

regardless of whether they seek criminal prosecution.” 42 Pa.C.S. § 62A02(5). The law

allows victims of sexual violence who would not be able to obtain a Protection From Abuse

Order2 to seek a SVPO prohibiting their abusers from contacting them, under penalty of

arrest. Id. §§ 62A07(b)(1), 62A12. To establish a right to relief under the PVSVIA, a

plaintiff must:

(1) assert that the plaintiff or another individual, as appropriate, is a victim of sexual violence or intimidation committed by the defendant; and

(2) prove by preponderance of the evidence that the plaintiff or another individual, as appropriate, is at a continued risk of harm from the defendant. Id. § 62A06(a).

After K.N.B. filed her petition, the court entered a temporary SVPO and scheduled

a hearing to consider whether a final order should issue.3 Prior to that hearing, M.D.

petitioned the trial court to vacate the temporary SVPO and dismiss K.N.B.’s petition with

prejudice, claiming that the petition was barred by the statute of limitations. The trial court

rejected M.D.’s argument. Noting that the PVSVIA itself does not include a statute of

limitations, the trial court held that claims under the Act are subject to the six-year catch-

all statute of limitations under the Judicial Code. 42 Pa.C.S. § 5527(b) (imposing a six-

2 See 23 Pa.C.S. §§ 6101-6122. Under the Protection From Abuse Act, the definition of “abuse” is limited to specified acts occurring “between family or household members, sexual or intimate partners[,] or persons who share biological parenthood[.]” Id. § 6102. 3 The PVSVIA authorizes trial courts to conduct ex parte proceedings and enter temporary SVPOs when necessary to protect the plaintiff, or another individual, from “an immediate and present danger.” 42 Pa.C.S. § 62A06(b). A full hearing must then be held within ten days of the filing of the petition. Id. § 62A06(a).

[J-13-2021] - 2 year statute of limitations for “[a]ny civil action or proceeding which is neither subject to

another limitation specified in this subchapter nor excluded from the application of a

period of limitation by section 5531 (relating to no limitation)”). Consequently, the court

concluded that K.N.B.’s petition was filed within the applicable statute of limitations.

At the final hearing on her petition, K.N.B. testified regarding the details of the 2015

assault. K.N.B. also testified that, on the day after the assault, she and M.D. agreed to

see each other again. According to K.N.B., she “felt like [she] did something wrong by

not wanting to have sex with [M.D.] again” and “[she] felt like [she] owed him to have sex

with him again.” Notes of Testimony (“N.T.”), 6/15/2018, at 17. During this second

encounter, she started to have sex with M.D., but then she “just lost it, and . . . was like

I’m done.” Id. at 18.

K.N.B. also testified that, in May 2016, M.D. sent her a Facebook message stating,

“Okay, so I just want to say I’m sorry for being a douche. I know it was a dick thing, and I

am sorry.” Id. at 22. In addition to this virtual interaction, K.N.B. stated that she and M.D.

occasionally would attend the same parties, including one in November 2016 where M.D.

approached her, “cracked a joke,” and tried to fist bump her. Id. at 25. When this

happened, K.N.B. “[went] into [an] episode of traumatic stress, and . . . the whole world

[stopped], and [she could not] think . . . of anything else but . . . him being there.” Id. at

24.

K.N.B. also testified that she would see M.D. on campus sometimes, and she once

saw him walking his dog by her house. K.N.B. explained that these encounters triggered

panic attacks, and that she was diagnosed with post-traumatic stress disorder. Id.

Indeed, K.N.B. testified that she suffered a panic attack after seeing M.D. in Walmart in

2018, which led her to seek the SVPO. K.N.B. explained that her reason for seeking a

[J-13-2021] - 3 protective order was to no longer “worry about [M.D.] coming up to [her] . . . in public.” Id.

at 32.

For his part, M.D. testified that the initial sexual encounter with K.N.B. in 2015 was

consensual. With regard to the second encounter, M.D. testified that he and K.N.B. again

had consensual sex, but he ejaculated quickly and, rather than admitting this to K.N.B.,

told her that he “was just not feeling it.” Id. at 75. According to M.D., his May 2016

Facebook message to K.N.B. was meant to be an apology for saying that he was “not

feeling it.” Id. at 75-76.

After the hearing, the court entered a final SVPO prohibiting M.D. from contacting

K.N.B. for one year. In its Rule 1925 opinion, the court found K.N.B.’s testimony to be

credible in all respects and determined that M.D. was less credible than K.N.B. As for the

“continued risk of harm” element, the court concluded that K.N.B. proved by a

preponderance of the evidence that she risked ongoing harm from M.D. The court

underscored that, even though M.D. did not make sexual advances toward K.N.B. after

September 2015, K.N.B. experienced mental and emotional harm (including panic

attacks) and feared that M.D. would approach her in public again. Given this risk of

additional emotional trauma, the court found that K.N.B. met her burden under the

PVSVIA of demonstrating a continued risk of harm.

On appeal to the Superior Court, M.D. again argued that actions brought under the

PVSVIA are subject to a two-year statute of limitations. Specifically, he emphasized that

the Judicial Code provides that the following civil actions and proceedings must be

commenced within two years:

(1) An action for assault, battery, false imprisonment, false arrest, malicious prosecution or malicious abuse of process.

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K.N.B. v. M.D., Aplt., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knb-v-md-aplt-pa-2021.