Lambert v. Doe

453 So. 2d 844
CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJune 26, 1984
DocketAS-152
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 453 So. 2d 844 (Lambert v. Doe) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lambert v. Doe, 453 So. 2d 844 (Fla. Ct. App. 1984).

Opinion

453 So.2d 844 (1984)

E.W. LAMBERT, E.W. Lambert, Jr., and Robert C. Seaver, Appellants,
v.
Brenda DOE, As Next Friend of Steven Doe, a Minor, Appellee.

No. AS-152.

District Court of Appeal of Florida, First District.

June 26, 1984.
Rehearing Denied August 1, 1984.

*845 Joe J. Harrell and Robert C. Palmer, III, Pensacola, for appellants.

Robert J. Mayes and Richard E. Scherling, Pensacola, for appellee.

NIMMONS, Judge.

This is an appeal by the owners of a Gulf Breeze apartment complex, Shoreline Apartments, from a verdict in favor of a 9-year-old male resident, Steven Doe[*] ("Steven"), who was sexually molested by another tenant, 12-year-old Sean Roe[*] ("Sean"). Steven, through his mother, Brenda Doe,[*] alleged that the appellants, as landlords of the apartment complex, negligently failed to take adequate precautions to prevent the reasonably foreseeable conduct of Sean. We affirm the judgment for compensatory damages but reverse the award of punitive damages.

In August and September, 1980, Sean sexually molested Steven on two occasions at the apartment complex. A third incident occurred off the premises at a school grounds. One of the two incidents occurring at the complex took place at the Does' apartment while Steven's parents were in another part of the apartment. The second incident occurred at Sean's apartment while Seans' parents were situated in another area of the apartment.

The Does moved into the Shoreline Apartments in March, 1980. The Roes had lived there for some time prior thereto. Sean was large for his age, approximately 5'4" tall and weighed 150-155 pounds whereas Steven was about 4'6" tall and weighed only 75 pounds. After the Does moved to the Shoreline Apartments, Steven's several encounters with Sean caused Steven to develop a fear of Sean. Sean threatened to beat him up, threatened to falsely accuse Steven of vandalism, threatened to shoot him with a gun, and Sean actually beat him up on one occasion. On other occasions, Sean twisted his arm and displayed a gun. Because of his fear of Sean and the various threats made by Sean, Steven was afraid to tell his parents what Sean had done.

Steven's mother observed a marked change in his previously outgoing personality. He became more withdrawn and stayed indoors more than was usual for him. Eventually, on September 24, 1980, *846 he told his mother of the incidents. Mrs. Doe reported these incidents to the management of Shoreline. The resident manager then notified Sean's parents that they must vacate their apartment within three days. The manager's letter stated, in part:

Several months ago we asked you to vacate your apartment because of your son's behavior. Due to the hardship this would place on your family at that time, you were granted an extension.

Sean and his family moved out several days later.

There was substantial evidence presented to show that the management of Shoreline had received, several months prior to the subject incidents, reports of assaultive and bizarre conduct by Sean. We summarize the evidence. Sometime prior to June 1, 1979, according to Vicki Mann, the then resident manager of Shoreline, Sean made two little boys take down their pants and jump up and down in front of the window in his apartment. After that incident, Mrs. Mann told her own child to stay away from Sean. In August, 1979, a tenant, Mrs. Smith[*], reported to Judy Wilburn, Shoreline's project manager, that her three-year-old son had been sexually molested by Sean and that the tenant's sister had been a witness to the incident. This tenant moved away from the Shoreline the following month because the Shoreline management did not require Sean's family to move.

John Schmidt, a maintenance employee at Shoreline, testified that he heard Mr. Smith tell the resident manager, Vicki Mann, that Sean had molested his son and another young boy.

Judy Wilburn advised the owners of Shoreline (the appellants) of the report of the Smith molestation. The owners, who gave Wilburn wide latitude in handling problems since the owners resided in Tennessee, told her to consult with their attorney. She did and the attorney advised her there was not enough evidence to evict Sean's family.

Approximately two months after the Smith incident, Wilburn employed Terry Hardy, a deputy sheriff with the Santa Rosa County Sheriff's Office as a part-time security guard. He was a tenant at Shoreline. In November, 1979, Wilburn asked him to investigate reports that Sean had sexually molested younger boys in the complex. She did not specifically mention to him the Smith incident or give him the name of the witness to the Smith molestation. Hardy contacted the parents of several children and asked for permission to talk to the children. Although he was permitted to speak with only one child, he also requested the parents to speak with their children in an effort to determine what Sean had been doing. Hardy did not uncover any concrete information. He did file a report with the Sheriff's Office, but he said the report did not reveal any facts showing misconduct on the part of Sean. He further testified, however, that he realized that some of the children were hesitant to talk to him because they were afraid of Sean and that Judy Wilburn was aware of this.

John Schmidt, the maintenance employee at Shoreline, testified that he had several problems with Sean beginning in 1979. He described an incident wherein Sean threw eggs at people from his apartment doorway and then slammed the door on Schmidt's hand. He testified that on another occasion, Sean kicked in some air conditioners. Schmidt said that another time he found Sean's pet hamster burned to death under Sean's apartment window. When he asked Sean where his hamster was, Sean told him that the hamster had run away. Schmidt said that he had also seen Sean torturing his own cat. Schmidt also testified that he was aware of the fact that Sean had access to firearms. He described an incident in which Sean pointed a gun at a babysitter. On another occasion, a nine-year-old girl informed Schmidt that she had seen Sean and another boy in the woods engaged in sexual acts.[1] Schmidt said that Sean was *847 always hanging around younger children and instigating them to do things they should not. Schmidt testified that he informed Judy Wilburn and Connie Calhoun (the resident manager who succeeded Vicki Mann in September, 1979) that Sean posed a threat to small children at the Shoreline.

Connie Calhoun testified that Sean told her one day, several months before the incidents involving Steven, that Sean had killed his cat and asked for a shovel to dig it up. She also said that one of the maintenance employees told her that Sean liked little boys rather than little girls which Mrs. Calhoun took to mean that Sean was prone to make sexual advances towards small children.

Judy Wilburn and Connie Calhoun discussed evicting the Roes because of Sean's conduct but took no such action because they felt there was not sufficient evidence. Schmidt testified that Wilburn and Calhoun went to see the Roes and informed them that they would have to vacate but Mrs. Roe cried and Wilburn relented. Wilburn said that she saw Sean pester children in the complex and that she considered him a nuisance. Apparently, the only warning which Mrs. Doe received from the Shoreline management regarding Sean was Wilburn's comment to Mrs. Doe one day that Sean was a "bully." Mrs. Doe testified that after the revelation of Sean's molestation of Steven, Wilburn told Mrs.

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Bluebook (online)
453 So. 2d 844, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lambert-v-doe-fladistctapp-1984.