Levine v. Boyd

CourtCourt of Appeals of Iowa
DecidedAugust 7, 2024
Docket23-1081
StatusPublished

This text of Levine v. Boyd (Levine v. Boyd) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Levine v. Boyd, (iowactapp 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF IOWA

No. 23-1081 Filed August 7, 2024

JEFFERY A. LEVINE, II and KENDRA LEVINE, individually and as next of friends to K.L., a minor, Plaintiffs-Appellants,

vs.

MICHAEL BOYD, HEIDI BOYD and R.B., Defendants-Appellees. ________________________________________________________________

Appeal from the Iowa District Court for Madison County, Michael Jacobsen,

Judge.

The plaintiffs appeal the district court’s grant of summary judgment on their

claims against a teenager and his parents. AFFIRMED.

Michael E. Altes (until withdrawal) and Matthew Boles (until withdrawal) and

Christopher Stewart (until withdrawal) of Gribble, Boles, Stewart & Witosky Law,

Des Moines, and Heidi Miller of The Law Office of Heidi Miller, Pleasantville, for

appellants.

Scott L. Bandstra of Bandstra Law Firm, Des Moines, for appellees.

Heard by Schumacher, P.J., and Badding and Langholz, JJ. 2

BADDING, Judge.

“For never was a story of more woe [t]han this of Juliet and her Romeo.”

William Shakespeare, Romeo and Juliet, act 5, sc. 3, l. 309–10.

The star-crossed teenagers in this story of legal woe are fifteen-year-old

K.L. and her sixteen-year-old boyfriend, R.B. After a fight with her parents, Jeffrey

and Kendra Levine, K.L. ran away from home. She called R.B. for a ride, and he

took her to the home of his parents, Michael and Heidi Boyd. K.L. hid in their

basement for three days, until law enforcement traced her location there.

The Levines, individually and as next friends of K.L., sued the Boyds and

their son for intentional infliction of emotional distress, intentional interference with

the parent-child relationship, false imprisonment, negligence, negligent

supervision, and parental responsibility for the actions of their minor child. The

district court granted the Boyds’ summary judgment motion, dismissing all claims

against them. The Levines appeal. Because we conclude the undisputed facts

establish that the Boyds are entitled to judgment as a matter of law, we affirm the

court’s ruling.

I. Background Facts and Proceedings

The night that K.L. ran away was not the first time she left home without her

parents knowing. In early May 2022, shortly after she and R.B. started dating, K.L.

snuck out of the house and went to a campground with R.B. He drove K.L. home

around 2:30 or 3:30 a.m. K.L.’s mother, Kendra, was waiting for them. The next

week, R.B. snuck into K.L.’s room through her bedroom window. K.L.’s father,

Jeffrey, found him there and called R.B.’s parents, Michael and Heidi, to come get 3

him. After that, K.L.’s parents put an alarm on her windows and took away her cell

phone. But toward the end of May, they found her with a “burner phone.”

K.L. testified in a deposition that when Jeffrey caught her with the phone,

he came across the dining room, and he like grabbed me by the face . . . and then, like, shaking me by my head and hitting my head on the window, and then like threw me to the ground and then yelled at me, and then picked me up by my head . . . and did it again and walked away.

K.L. had bruises under her eyes from Jeffrey grabbing her by the face.1 She went

to school the next day, but her parents pulled her out during fourth period. Before

she left, one of her friends noticed the bruises and reported it to R.B.’s mother

Heidi, who was one of their teachers. Heidi then made a report to the Iowa

Department of Health and Human Services. K.L. testified that she thought about

running away right after this incident, but R.B. told his parents what she was

thinking and Heidi relayed that to either the department or law enforcement.

Things between the Levines and Boyds were quiet for about a month. But

shortly after R.B. got back from a family vacation, K.L. moved forward with her plan

to run away because she was still upset and unhappy after the incident with Jeffrey

in May. Between midnight and 1:00 a.m. on June 27, K.L. disengaged the alarm

attached to her bedroom window. Before crawling out of the window, K.L. left a

note on her dresser saying that she was “safe and out of the state with people from

my old high school.” Instead, R.B. picked K.L. up and drove her to the Boyds’

house. R.B. snuck K.L. into his bedroom in the basement, which is accessible

without going through the front of the house or its garage. The basement has two

1 Kendra and Jeffrey denied this fight took place. 4

bedrooms—one for R.B. and one for his older brother—a living room, and a

bathroom. For the three days that she was at the Boyds’ house, K.L. mostly stayed

in R.B.’s bedroom, hiding from his parents and siblings.

The Levines immediately contacted the sheriff’s department when they

discovered K.L. was missing in the morning. An officer went to the Boyds’ house

the next day and spoke to Michael. He asked the officer if he wanted to speak to

R.B., but the officer declined and left. During this time, Kendra was also calling

and texting Heidi, asking her to talk to R.B. about where K.L. might be. Heidi asked

R.B. if he knew anything, but he told her that “he didn’t know, she probably ran off

with friends from another school.” Heidi and Michael testified in their depositions

that they had no reason to believe K.L. was in their house. Michael explained that

R.B. had told him about K.L.’s note that “she went off with some friends,” so he

“didn’t have any reason to believe that she was anywhere.” Heidi similarly testified:

“There was no sign of [K.L.] There was no indication she was near my home.” If

there had been, Heidi said that she “would have called the police immediately or,

at the very least, her parents.”

But on June 29, law enforcement traced K.L.’s location to the Boyds’

residence after K.L. logged into her Snapchat account from a device linked to the

household. Officers went to the Boyds’ home around 9:00 p.m., where they found

K.L. hiding in the basement.

Heidi and Michael were charged with harboring a runaway in violation of

Iowa Code section 710.8(3) (2022). The State dismissed the charges a few days

after K.L.’s deposition, where she insisted that neither Heidi nor Michael knew that

she was hiding in their home. K.L. told her parents the same thing. Yet the Levines 5

pursued their lawsuit against Heidi, Michael, and R.B., seeking damages for the

emotional distress they experienced while their daughter was missing. The Boyds

moved for summary judgment on all claims against them and their son, which the

district court granted. The court reasoned that none of the Levines’ claims could

succeed because the undisputed facts established that “Michael and Heidi Boyd

were unaware that K.L. was hiding in their residence.” The Levines appeal,

challenging the court’s dismissal of each of their claims.

II. Standard of Review

We review a district court’s order granting summary judgment for correction

of errors at law. Morris v. Legends Fieldhouse Bar & Grill, LLC, 958

N.W.2d 817, 821 (Iowa 2021). In reviewing a summary judgment motion, “the

court must: (1) view the facts in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party,

and (2) consider on behalf of the nonmoving party every legitimate inference

reasonably deduced from the record.” Id. (citation omitted). Summary judgment

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