Muthukumarana v. Montgomery County

805 A.2d 372, 370 Md. 447, 2002 Md. LEXIS 561
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedAugust 26, 2002
Docket83, 84, Sept. Term, 2001
StatusPublished
Cited by102 cases

This text of 805 A.2d 372 (Muthukumarana v. Montgomery County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Muthukumarana v. Montgomery County, 805 A.2d 372, 370 Md. 447, 2002 Md. LEXIS 561 (Md. 2002).

Opinions

HARRELL, Judge.

These two cases, Fried v. Archer, No. 84, September Term, 2001, and Muthukumarana v. Montgomery County, No. 83, September Term, 2001, share a common issue: whether local government emergency telephone system employees (specifically operators, dispatchers, and managers) owe an individual tort duty to persons in need of their services, and, if so, under what circumstances the employees may be held liable for the negligent performance of that duty.1 These cases also present [457]*457other issues which we shall address, but at the core of both is this shared issue.

Following our examination of the separate factual and pro-, cedural backgrounds in both cases, we shall rephrase and consolidate the questions presented for our review. We will consider separately, however, the issues unique to each case. Our general review of the law applicable to 911 employees will then be applied specifically to both cases at hand.

I.

A. Fried,

On 11 November 1995, Tiffany Fouts, the daughter of Petitioner, Ms. Sarah Fried, arranged to spend the night at [458]*458the home of her friend, Melanie Meadowcroft. That evening, Tiffany and Melanie visited the home of one of Melanie’s acquaintances, Eric F., located at 1443 Charleston Drive, K Court, in Edgewood, Maryland. Three other boys also were present that evening at Eric’s home, Donte W., Ricky W., and Louis D., along with Eric’s mother, Ms. Tresa F.2

Shortly after Tiffany and Melanie arrived, “alcoholic beverages were made available and consumed by all of’ the minors at the home. Within one hour, Tiffany began to vomit and “became semiconscious.” At that time, “certain guests engaged in non consensual sexual acts with Tiffany,” dropped “heavy objects” on her head, and “urinated upon her.” In an effort to conceal Tiffany’s condition, Eric F. and Donte W. dragged her outside of the home through the basement. They “left Tiffany, wearing only a tee shirt, skirt, socks, and shoes, in an area of woods located directly behind the townhome.” Fried v. Archer, 139 Md.App. 229, 238, 775 A.2d 430, 435, cert. granted, 366 Md. 246, 783 A.2d 221 (2001). The weather at that time “was cold and wet” with a “forecast[ed] winter storm, including snow, approaching the area.” Id.

Subsequently, Donte W., in the presence of Eric F. and Ricky W., called the Harford County Sheriffs Office (“the HCSO”) ostensibly to inform them of the location of Tiffany.3 Ms. Kim Archer, Respondent, a police communications officer, received the call. The conversation unfolded as follows:

[459]*459[Archer:] Harford County Sheriffs Office, PCO Archer.
[DonteW.:] Hello.
[Archer:] Yes.
[Donte W.:] Um, there’s a girl in the back of the woods like.
[Archer:] Back of what woods.
[Donte W.:] Um, Harford Square.
[Archer:] Okay. What’s the exact address?
[Donte W.:] There ain’t no exact address where she’s at.
[Archer:] Okay. What’s the residence where she is? Can you give me the residence in front of where she’s to the rear of?
[Donte W.:] What’s the address to those people over there? Cause she’s further that way. 1436? (Inaudible.) 1436.4
[Archer:] Okay. Harford Square.
[DonteW.:] Yes, K Court.
[Archer:] Okay. And what’s she doing, sir?
[Donte W.:] Just laying there.
[Archer:] Okay. She’s just laying to the rear of the house?
[Donte W.:] Yes, she was. She was over a — . She was over here drinking and she was laying there.
[Archer:] Okay. Is she a white female? Black female?
[DonteW.:] Yeah.
[Archer:] Which one?
[Donte W.:] White female.
[Archer:] Okay. White female. Okay. And your last name, sir?
[Donte W.:] I’d just say anonymous.
[Archer:] Okay. We’ll send someone out.
[460]*460[Donte W.:] Thanks.

Following the call, Archer dispatched Deputy Sheriff Kevin Thomas (“Deputy Thomas”) to investigate. In a transmission to Deputy Thomas, which occurred at approximately 10 p.m., Archer erroneously reported that Tiffany was lying to the rear of a residence on J Court, not K Court.5 The content of the transmission was as follows:

10-25 to the rear of 1436 Harford Square Drive — 1-4-3-6 — Harford Square. It will be J — John—Court. Cross street is Charleston. Anonymous male’s requesting a check on well being of a number 2 female. She is lying to the rear of this residence. He believes she’s 10-56. Unable to give us any further in reference to description.

Upon Deputy Thomas’s arrival at 1436 J Court, “ ‘it was raining pretty hard’ and was ‘[v]ery cold.’ ” Fried, 139 Md.App. at 242, 775 A.2d at 437 (alteration in original). Deputy Thomas exited his car and walked around the rear of the J Court townhomes, but was unable to locate Tiffany. He returned to his car and called Archer to request a recontact. He asked, “Mould the complainant come out to the back and point out where this young lady might be?” Archer replied that there was no reconnect information, stating, “[i]t’s an anonymous male. He didn’t want to give his information.” Deputy Thomas then “ ‘walked th[e] whole line of houses on that side of the court and then back around to the front.’ ” Id. He “encountered a Maryland State trooper who had also responded to the call, but had searched behind J1 Court, another separate court next to J Court.” Id. A few minutes later, after finding no one, Deputy Thomas radioed Archer and stated, “10-8,10-12.” According to Deputy Thomas’s testimo[461]*461ny, “Code 12” indicated his determination that the call was an “unfounded complaint.”

Although the precise time frame is unclear, Eric F. testified that after making their report to Archer, the boys went “out back” once and checked on Tiffany. Some time later, Eric F. testified that he and Ricky W. attempted To go outside again, but were prevented by his mother, who “came downstairs [and] told [him that he] had to stay in the house.” Neither Eric F. or Ricky W. attempted to go outside again that evening. Unfortunately, in the early hours of 12 November 1995, Tiffany died from hypothermia in the location where Eric F. and Donte W. had left her.

Petitioner Fried, Tiffany’s mother, filed a wrongful death and survival action in the Circuit Court for Harford County against Respondent Archer, Mr. James Terrell (the chief of Harford County’s Emergency Management and Operations Division), Harford County, Maryland, John/Jane Doe (“unidentified dispatch or emergency service employees of Harford County’s Emergency Management and Operations Division”), the HCSO, Deputy Thomas, Ms.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
805 A.2d 372, 370 Md. 447, 2002 Md. LEXIS 561, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/muthukumarana-v-montgomery-county-md-2002.