Lesa Primeaux v. United States

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedJuly 27, 1998
Docket97-2691
StatusPublished

This text of Lesa Primeaux v. United States (Lesa Primeaux v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lesa Primeaux v. United States, (8th Cir. 1998).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT ___________

No. 97-2691 ___________

Lesa M. Primeaux, formerly known as * Lesa M. Lamont, formerly known as * Lisa M. Bad Wound, * * Plaintiff-Appellant, * * Appeal from the United States v. * District Court for the District * of South Dakota. United States of America, * * Defendant-Appellee. * ___________

Submitted: April 15, 1998 Filed: July 27, 1998 ___________

Before LOKEN and LAY, Circuit Judges, and PRATT,1 District Judge. ___________

LAY, Circuit Judge.

This matter arises out of a suit against the United States under the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA) seeking damages for sexual assault by a Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) police officer. This is the second time the case has been before this court. See Primeaux v. United States, 102 F.3d 1458 (8th Cir. 1996) (Wollman J., dissenting).

1 The Honorable Robert W. Pratt, United States District Judge for the Southern District of Iowa, sitting by designation. At the time of the assault in November 1991, Lesa Primeaux, the victim, was a 21-year-old Native American whose car had become stuck in a snowbank on a rural South Dakota highway.2 The district court initially found Primeaux was walking toward the town of Martin on a cold night when Kenneth Scott, a BIA officer from the Rosebud Reservation, approached her in his police car. Scott was driving a white government vehicle with a police light bar on top under BIA authority outside the reservation. He was returning from a police training session in New Mexico. Scott offered to give Primeaux a ride, which she accepted. He subsequently drove off a side road, assaulted and raped her. This suit followed.

The district court originally denied vicarious liability on the ground that the police officer was not acting within the scope of his actual authority since he was outside his jurisdiction. App. at 259. The district court concluded that because the officer was not acting within his actual authority, there was not a sufficient nexus under state law to demonstrate the foreseeability of the assault. On appeal, this court found the district court had failed to consider the government’s liability under the doctrine of apparent or ostensible authority.3 Primeaux, 102 F.3d at 1462. We reversed and remanded to the district court. Id. at 1463.

On remand, the district court expressly considered the law of apparent authority, but once again found there was an insufficient nexus between the assault and the scope of the officer’s either actual or apparent authority. Primeaux v. United States, No. 94- 5048, slip op. at 9-10 (D. S.D. June 4, 1997). Primeaux once again appealed. She now

2 The detailed facts of this case are set forth in our previous opinion, Primeaux, 102 F.3d at 1460. 3 The South Dakota Supreme Court points out that “[a]pparent authority is analogous to ‘ostensible’ authority which is defined in SDCL 59-3-3 as authority ‘such as a principal intentionally, or by want of ordinary care, causes or allows or allows a third person to believe the agent to possess.’” Leafgreen v. American Family Mut. Ins. Co., 393 N.W.2d 275, 277 n.4 (S.D. 1986).

-2- argues that the findings of the district court are mixed questions of fact and law and that this court must review the district court’s second decision de novo. The government on the other hand urges this court to apply the clearly erroneous standard. We find that although the district court discussed the doctrine of apparent authority, it nevertheless failed to properly apply this doctrine as set forth under South Dakota law.4 In doing so, we find that the trial court erred as a matter of law.

I. Apparent Authority

Restatement (Second) of Agency (“Restatement”) as adopted by the South Dakota Supreme Court requires that, in applying the rule of apparent authority, a court must view the agent’s conduct through the eyes of the victim rather than from the agent’s point of view. See Leafgreen, 393 N.W.2d at 280 (“Under section 261 and the theory of apparent authority, however, the agent’s conduct is seen through the eyes of the third party.”); see also American Soc. of Mechanical Engineers, Inc. v. Hydrolevel Corp., 456 U.S. 556, 566 (1982) (quoting Restatement (Second) of Agency § 261, comment a, p. 571); Grease Monkey Int’l, Inc. v. Montoya, 904 P.2d 468, 475 (Colo. 1995) (same); Freeman v. Royal Shield Entertainment, Inc., 411 So.2d 559, 561 (La. Ct. App. 1982) (“One must look from the viewpoint of a third person to determine if apparent agency has been created.”). Therefore, in this case, the inquiry should have been whether, from Primeaux’s viewpoint, being approached by an officer whose police car lights are flashing would make a reasonable person believe that the officer was acting within the scope of his employment as a police officer.

The district court concluded that the officer had not exercised apparent authority partly because the court was not convinced the “police vehicle had anything to do with

4 We deem it noteworthy and relevant to the factual circumstances of this case that S.D. Codified Laws § 59-6-3 (Michie 1993) reads: “A principal is bound by acts of his agent under ostensible authority, to those persons only who have in good faith, and without negligence, incurred a liability or parted with value upon the faith thereof.”

-3- the assault which later takes place.” Primeaux, No. 94-5048, slip op. at 10. The district court’s analysis on this point slights the South Dakota law that requires ostensible authority to be viewed through the eyes of the third person. The undisputed facts show that, after the officer stopped his police car in the lane across from the victim, he turned on the red flashing police light bar on the top of his vehicle. Id. at 3. Furthermore, the victim stated it appeared to her that the officer was wearing a police jacket when he approached her. App. at p. 28. The victim’s reliance on Officer Scott’s display of his badge of authority, i.e., the red flashing lights, is rejected in part by the district court because the officer testified that he stopped to offer a ride as an individual and not as an officer. Id. at p. 134. The district court specifically found “that the officer was not purporting to act on behalf of the government by stopping, detaining or arresting plaintiff for any violation of law.” Primeaux, No. 94-5048, slip op. at 8.

The difficulty we have with this analysis is that it ignores the objective, undisputed fact that the police lights were turned on when the officer approached the victim. The district court erroneously accepted, contrary to South Dakota law, the officer’s stated intentions without consideration of the victim’s reliance on the fact that the officer had turned on the flashing red lights of the police car. Viewing this evidence through the eyes of the victim, we deem it obvious that any ordinary citizen would believe under similar circumstances that an officer of the law had stopped to render assistance.

The fact that the victim was not arrested, involuntarily stopped or detained is barely relevant under these circumstances.

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