Myers v. Lashley

2002 OK 14, 44 P.3d 553, 2002 WL 265889
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 20, 2002
Docket96,102
StatusPublished
Cited by60 cases

This text of 2002 OK 14 (Myers v. Lashley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Myers v. Lashley, 2002 OK 14, 44 P.3d 553, 2002 WL 265889 (Okla. 2002).

Opinions

OPALA, J.

1 The sole issue presented by this appeal is whether the evidentiary materials demonstrate a nonactionable claim because the defendant-psychologist's conduct in contest is within the range of her qualified statutory privilege2 for good-faith reporting of child abuse? We answer in the affirmative.

I

THE ANATOMY OF LITIGATION

12 This is an appeal from summary judgment for the defendant Karen H. Lashley, Ph.D. [Dr. Lashley], in an action by Steve Myers [father] and his mother, Phyllis Myers [grandmother] [both plaintiffs named Myers will be referred to as plaintiffs or Myers (in the plural) ], to recover for harm occasioned by allegedly substandard evaluative techniques in the treatment of Steve Myers' children (M.D.M. and Melanie Myers, who are neither parties to this appeal nor to the litigation below), which resulted in Myers being wrongly identified as child abusers.

13 Steve Myers and Rhonda Thomason were married 7 May 1977. The three children born of the marriage are Melissa, Melanie and M.D.M. The parents divorced 11 December 1992 and the custody of their old[556]*556est daughter, Melissa (then 14 years), went to the father. The mother received custody of the two younger daughters, Melanie (11 years) and M.D.M. (6 years). During the ten-year period between the filing of the divorce petition and the prosecution of this lawsuit the father and mother have continued to do forensic battle over various domestic problems.3

14 In November 1993 the mother took Melanie and M.D.M. to the Gilbert Medical Center. There Dr. R. diagnosed Melanie as being depressed and fatigued. He referred her and M.D.M. to Dr. Karen Lashley [Lash-ley], a licensed clinical psychologist,4 who then practiced at the clinic. According to Dr. Lashley's notes, Dr. R based his referral of Melanie on concerns about "anxiety, depression and possible abuse." Dr. Lashley's clinical notes, taken during a 30 January 1994 therapy session, indicate that Melanie made allegations about her father's sexual abuse. M.D.M. also revealed sexual abuse by her paternal grandmother, Phyllis Myers. Dr. Lashley notified the Oklahoma Department of Human Services [DHS] in January 1994 about receiving information of Melanie's sexual abuse.5 Rhonda Thomason reported the same allegations to the police department.6 After an extensive investigation, the police declined to press charges against Myers.

15 On 4 January 1996 Myers brought two separate actions against Dr. Lashley, Rhonda Thomason and the Gilbert Medical Center, Inc. (consolidated as joint proceedings for discovery purposes). The plaintiffs initially pressed their claims on three theories of liability: (a) against Rhonda Thoma-son7 for slander per se and (b) against Rhondo Thomason, Dr. Lashley and the medical center for negligent infliction of emotional distress as well as (c) for reckless and/or intentional infliction of emotional distress. Myers amended petitions name Dr. Lashley as the sole defendant8 and allege only two theories of Hability 9-professional negligence and intentional infliction of emotional distress. Dr. Lashley's answer tenders several affirmative defenses.10 - A guardian ad litem was appointed to represent the interest of the children.

T6 Steve Myers sought damages for loss of income, loss of companionship, love and [557]*557affection of his daughters, mental anguish and emotional distress (suffered from being called a child molester); Phyllis Myers for harm to her reputation, for lost income from the day care business that she and her son owned, medical expense, mental anguish and emotional distress.

T7 The trial court initially denied Dr. Lashley's quest for summary relief, A year later it declared (by order entered 9 March 2001) Myers' claim not actionable. Summary judgment went to Dr. Lashley.11 Myers' joint appeal stands retained for disposition by this court. Today we affirm the nisi prius judgment on a theory different from that on which it was rested below (lack of duty to the plaintiffs). Although we let the judgment for Dr. Lashley stand, we need not examine it on the ground assigned by the trial court. When supported by the record, a legally correct nisi prius judgment must be affirmed although it was anchored to a theory different from that on which it comes to be tested on appellate review.12

The Mid-Trial Appellate Controversy

18 In launching her defense below Dr. Lashley had perceived herself impeded in the discovery of testimony and records relating to her treatment of the girls and in her access to certain medical information about the girls' mental health, which are now under control of other physicians. She sought a writ (of mandamus) to compel the trial judge to aid her in these efforts.13 By its January 16, 2001 order this court took original cognizance of the mandamus case and stayed all further proceedings here until the trial court had decided whether Myers had an actionable claim and if so, whether Dr. Lashley would be impeded by legal barriers in pressing her chosen defense theories.14 Because the reason for the writ stood removed by the summary judgment later entered below in Dr. Lashley's favor, the original proceeding was eventually terminated for mootness.

II

THEORIES AND CONTENTIONS OF THE PARTIES

A.

Theories of Myers' Claim Which Stood under Consideration in the Summary Process

T 9 Myers argue that a mental health care professional owes a duty to a parent (or [558]*558grandparent) not to misdiagnose negligently a child's condition, if that misdiagnosis should lead to a false accusation of sexual abuse. They urge that their claim is actionable on the theory that the defendant's negligent therapy and psychiatric eare brought about the implanting and reinforcing of false memories (of sexual abuse) in Steve Myerg daughters. By their other theory of liability, Dr. Lashley is alleged to have intentionally inflicted emotional distress upon them "by planting false memories in the minds of the children and making false reports of sexual abuse." Myers insist their claim is not rested on the defendant's submission of a report compelled by Oklahoma's child abuse reporting laws,15 but rather upon negligent misdiagnosis of Myers' children and the resultant harm to them from therapy-induced suggestions of sexual abuse.

B.

Dr. Lashley's Theories of Defense Under Nisi Prius Consideration in the Summary Process

10 Dr. Lashley argues that in third-party suits (those that are not brought by a patient) she is protected from liability by the shield afforded her through the statutory reporting privilege.16 According to her, when a psychologist is under compulsion to report the revealed (or discovered) information of child abuse, that professional's actions in the report's submission stand protected by the Act.

III

POST-REPORTING HARM TO THE PLAINTIFFS, WHICH WAS OCCASIONED BY DR. LASHLEY'S ALLEGEDLY IMPROPER - EVALUATIVE - TECHNIQUES, - FALLS WITHIN THE AMBIT OF THE REPORTING STATUTES QUALIFIED PRIVILEGE

Oklahoma's Child Abuse Reporting Laws

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2002 OK 14, 44 P.3d 553, 2002 WL 265889, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myers-v-lashley-okla-2002.