Moran v. State ex rel. Department of Health & Hospitals

715 So. 2d 523, 97 La.App. 3 Cir. 1464, 1998 La. App. LEXIS 1510, 1998 WL 283587
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 3, 1998
DocketNo. 97-1464
StatusPublished

This text of 715 So. 2d 523 (Moran v. State ex rel. Department of Health & Hospitals) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moran v. State ex rel. Department of Health & Hospitals, 715 So. 2d 523, 97 La.App. 3 Cir. 1464, 1998 La. App. LEXIS 1510, 1998 WL 283587 (La. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinions

liAMY, Judge.

The plaintiffs in this matter filed suit in order to recover for damages stemming from an August 1989 automobile accident. The plaintiffs allege that the various defendant state agencies are liable for these damages because the driver of the vehicle in which the plaintiffs were injured was a minor and, according to the plaintiffs’ argument, should have been in the State’s custody and, therefore, under the State’s control. The plaintiffs maintain that, but for the State’s inadequate control or supervision of the minor driver, the accident would not have occurred. The trial court found that the State was hable pursuant to a negligence theory of recovery. The State now appeals.

Facts and Procedural History

The record in this matter indicates that an automobile accident occurred on the night of August 18,1989 in St. Landry Parish, Louisiana. The driver of the single-car ^involved in the accident was Andrew Joseph Oubre (A.J.), who was sixteen years of age at the time of the accident. The evidence and testimony presented in the lower court reveals that A. J. had a troubled past and, previous to the accident, had been in the custody of the Office of Community Services (State). However, despite the State’s various placements of A.J. and repeated attempts at treatment, A.J. continued to run away from these State placements and did so for a final time in February 1989.

During this final period, at which time A. J. was on runaway status, the State petitioned the court for an order releasing A. J. from the State’s custody and care. The court exercising jurisdiction over the juvenile matter granted the requested release on March 16, 1989. As previously stated, the accident at issue occurred in August, several months after the court-ordered release. According to testimony given at the trial, A.J. was living [525]*525with Blaine Bertrand, a deputy with the St. Landry Sheriffs Department, at the time of the accident.

On the night of August 18, 1989, A.J. was driving Bertrand’s vehicle, and according to the record, picked up a friend, Scott Leger, so that the boys might spend the night driving around the area in the vehicle. Later that evening, they picked up Conrad Moran and Joey Leger and continued to ride around. At trial, Moran testified that A.J. began driving at a high rate of speed and that the accident occurred after A.J. lost control of the vehicle. The occupants were thrown from the vehicle and were injured.

Following the accident, Moran filed suit as did Becky Daigle, who filed individually and on behalf of her son, Scott Leger, in order to recover for the injuries ^received from the automobile accident. The plaintiffs filed suit against A.J. Oubre,1 Blaine Bertrand, Bertrand’s insurer,2 and the State of Louisiana (State) through the Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Community Services and Carol Sorich,3 a director with the Office of Community Services. In their petition, the plaintiffs alleged that the State was liable for A.J.’s negligence as he was an unemaneipated minor and, further, for their negligent supervision of A.J. In particular, the plaintiffs alleged as follows:

Upon information and belief it is alleged that when the defendants, State and Carol Sorich, sought a release of custody of defendant, Andrew Joseph Oubre, said defendants did not make provisions for the minor, Andrew Joseph Oubre, to be placed under the custody and control of anyone. Futhermore [sic], upon information and belief, it is alleged that the State and/or Carol Sorich did not have defendant A.J. Oubre emancipated and therefore said defendants are still legally responsible for the minor defendant, A.J. Oubre’s actions,
The defendants, State and Carol Sorich, through the above mentioned release of custody, turned the minor defendant, Andrew Joseph Oubre, loose to reap whatever havick [sic] he desired on innocent citizens of this State.
|4[I]t is alleged that the defendants, State and Carol Sorich, knew or should have known that the minor defendant, Andrew Joseph Oubre, suffered from such serious behavioral problems, that his release would surely result in his (Andrew Joseph Oubre) actions harming naive persons, such as your plaintiffs.

Following a two-day trial, at which time only the issue of liability was addressed, the trial judge ruled in favor of the plaintiffs finding that “the sole and proximate cause of the accident of August 18, 1989, was the careless operation of the Bertrand vehicle by AJ. Oubre.” Concluding that A.J.’s use of the vehicle was permissive, he found that “LIGA ... responsible for plaintiffs’ damages, if any, up to the limits of the policy issued by Liberty Lloyds Insurance Company.”4 Furthermore, the trial judge found that the State had negligently pursued the court-ordered release of A.J. from their care and custody and, accordingly, imposed liability pursuant to this finding of negligence.

The State appeals, assigning the following as error:

A. The trial court erred by finding that there is little or no jurisprudence available which addresses the State’s liability or lack of liability.
[526]*526B. The trial court erred by inferring that OCS owed a duty to the plaintiffs.
C. The trial court erred by inferring that the plaintiffs’ risk of harm was within the scope of protection afforded to the plaintiffs.
D. The trial court erred by inferring that the act of securing A.J.’s release (from OCS custody) was a cause-in-fact (substantial contributing factor) in precipitating the plaintiffs’ injuries.
IsE. The trial court erred by concluding that discretionary immunity is inapplicable in this case.
F. The trial court erred in admitting A.J.’s juvenile records into evidence.

Discussion

Confidentiality of the State’s Records

We first address the State’s assertion that the trial court erred in finding that A.J.’s juvenile records were admissible. They assert, as they did at trial, that La.R.S. 46:56 requires that juvenile records remain confidential and that their use is precluded for a purpose not connected with the administration of the Department of Social Services.

In concluding that the juvenile records relating to A. J. should remain under the court’s seal, but were otherwise admissible, the trial court stated the following in overruling the State’s objection:

In this connection, the Court is going to overrule the objection of the State and is going to allow plaintiffs counsel free access to the documents and to the utilization of same in the trial of this matter. I don’t know that I can necessarily, for the record, state all of my reasons’ at this time for that, but at least so the record will reflect what my thinking is, I do wish to make what I’m going to call a semi-ruling on this at this time. It’s obvious to me that the reasons for the statute is of a protective nature, that the idea is to protect the juvenile from perhaps his misdeeds of the past, so as to enable the juvenile to become a productive citizen within our society.

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Bluebook (online)
715 So. 2d 523, 97 La.App. 3 Cir. 1464, 1998 La. App. LEXIS 1510, 1998 WL 283587, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moran-v-state-ex-rel-department-of-health-hospitals-lactapp-1998.