Olivia Aldridge, Natural Mother and Guardian of Matthew T. Brown, a Minor v. South Tippah County School District

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedAugust 20, 2024
Docket2023-CA-00418-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Olivia Aldridge, Natural Mother and Guardian of Matthew T. Brown, a Minor v. South Tippah County School District (Olivia Aldridge, Natural Mother and Guardian of Matthew T. Brown, a Minor v. South Tippah County School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Olivia Aldridge, Natural Mother and Guardian of Matthew T. Brown, a Minor v. South Tippah County School District, (Mich. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2023-CA-00418-COA

OLIVIA ALDRIDGE, NATURAL MOTHER AND APPELLANT GUARDIAN OF MATTHEW T. BROWN, A MINOR

v.

SOUTH TIPPAH COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICT APPELLEE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 02/27/2023 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. GRADY FRANKLIN TOLLISON III COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: TIPPAH COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT: PHILIP CAREY HEARN CHARLES CASSIDY COLE ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: DANIEL JUDSON GRIFFITH MARY McKAY GRIFFITH ARNULFO URSUA LUCIANO McKENZIE W. PRICE NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - PERSONAL INJURY DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 08/20/2024 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:

BEFORE WILSON, P.J., McCARTY AND EMFINGER, JJ.

EMFINGER, J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. On June 17, 2021, Olivia Aldridge filed a lawsuit against South Tippah County School

District (School District) as the natural mother and guardian of her son Matthew Brown, who

was a minor at the time of the lawsuit.1 Aldridge’s lawsuit asserted multiple acts of alleged

negligence resulting in certain injuries Brown sustained while he was on the campus of Blue

Mountain High School. On October 3, 2022, the school district filed a motion for summary

1 Matthew and the other students mentioned here are now over the age of eighteen, and their full names will be used rather than initials as they appear in portions of the record. judgment claiming there was no evidence that any alleged breach of duty by the school

district was the proximate cause of Matthew’s injuries. After a hearing on February 21,

2023, the circuit court entered an order on February 27, 2023, granting the school district’s

motion for summary judgment. Aggrieved by the circuit court’s ruling, Aldridge appealed.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶2. On May 6, 2020, Brown and a few other boys, including David Peterson, were

transported by bus from a vocational school (vo-tech) campus to Blue Mountain High

School’s gymnasium for 4th block basketball practice. Brown was also on the baseball team

and planned to attend the high school baseball game immediately following basketball

practice. On that particular day, the vo-tech bus ran late, and those boys on the bus arrived

at the gym for practice later than usual. By the time Brown, Peterson, and the other vo-tech

students arrived at the gym,2 Coach Joseph Roberts3 had already allowed the other eight

members of the basketball team to enter the gym. Roberts had been in the locker room while

those players changed clothes. Those eight students had all left the locker room and were in

various locations on and around the basketball court for the beginning of practice at the time

of the incident. It was undisputed that on a normal day, all fifteen members of the basketball

team would arrive at the gym together, and Roberts would unlock the gym for all the students

to enter at the same time. Roberts would then check and lock all the exterior doors leading

2 According to Brown’s deposition, there were seven members of the team on the vo- tech bus, including himself, who were in the locker room at the time of the incident. 3 Joseph Roberts was a teacher, basketball coach, and the athletic director at Blue Mountain High School.

2 into the gym and escort the boys as a group to the locker room to change. It was also

undisputed that Roberts’ normal practice was to stay in the locker room with the boys while

they changed; however, due to the late arrival of the vo-tech bus, he did not personally escort

the second group of boys into the locker room on that day or stay in the locker room while

they changed for practice. Instead, while Roberts was going through the procedure of

checking and locking the exterior doors after the second group of boys arrived, the late-

arriving boys proceeded to the locker room to get changed. It is further undisputed that while

Roberts did not go to the locker room with the second group of boys, he never left the gym

after they arrived. Brown headed directly to the locker room with the others; however,

Peterson first stopped by Roberts’ office, which was located near the front entrance to the

gym.

¶3. In his deposition, Brown testified that when he entered the locker room on the day in

question, he began laying out his baseball uniform in preparation for the game later that

night. Brown claimed that all of a sudden, the lights went off, and “that’s just when it all

started. . . .”4 According to Brown,

the door slammed, and then the lights went off. . . . And when the door opened, I thought [John Dickerson5] had grabbed the door to open it. And so I got

4 Incident reports and witness statements from the boys in the locker room on the day of the incident indicate that they were intending to play a prank on Peterson. The statements describe a scheme where Peterson would enter into the dark locker room and Brown would jump out and scare him. While these statements were used by both parties in the trial court proceedings and in their briefs on appeal, they were not in proper “summary judgment” form pursuant to Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 56(e). 5 Dickerson was one of the other students present in the locker room at the time of the incident.

3 down off the locker. And when I s[aw] somebody standing at the door, I jumped backwards because it kind of scared me. And then all I see is this figure lunging forward at me attacking me.

While the lights in the locker room were turned off, Brown was stabbed with a knife.

According to Brown, when the lights came on, he realized that Peterson had inflicted the

injury and that he was bleeding badly. Brown testified in his deposition that he was unaware

that Peterson had a knife in the gym that day, and to his knowledge the other students and

Roberts were also unaware. Dickerson proceeded to help Brown to the school’s main office,

and as they were walking through the gym, they met Roberts walking out of his office near

the front of the gym. Shortly after Brown made it to the main office, an ambulance arrived

to assess his injuries. It was determined that Brown needed to be airlifted to a hospital in

Tupelo. Once Brown arrived at the hospital, he first underwent an exploratory surgery to

determine the extent of his injuries. Immediately thereafter, Brown was rushed into

emergency surgery to repair damage to his rib cage and diaphragm. According to Brown, a

tube was placed in his chest “[b]ecause there was so much blood and fluid building up

around my lung from my spleen bleeding, and my diaphragm being cut that it was going to

end up collapsing the lung if they didn’t do something to get the pressure off of it.” The

surgery was successful, and Brown recovered from his injuries.

¶4. In his deposition, Roberts testified as to his recollection of the events that took place

on May 6, 2020. According to Roberts, Brown and Peterson were the last students to enter

the gym through the front double doors. Roberts then pulled the doors closed behind the

boys. Roberts stated that he “spoke to them, greeted them, [and] sent them on their way.”

4 Roberts testified in his deposition that the boys had been friends for years, and there was

nothing unusual about their behavior that day. According to Roberts, after checking the other

doors to the gym, he made his way back to the basketball court area, and that is when he saw

Brown and Dickerson leaving the locker room after Brown had been injured. Roberts

testified in his deposition that he was the only coach or faculty member in the gym at the time

of the incident.

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Bluebook (online)
Olivia Aldridge, Natural Mother and Guardian of Matthew T. Brown, a Minor v. South Tippah County School District, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olivia-aldridge-natural-mother-and-guardian-of-matthew-t-brown-a-minor-missctapp-2024.