Patty Long, by and through her Co-Guardians, Sarah Long and Dennis Long, and Matt Long, by and Through His Attorney-In-Fact Dennis Long v. Family Support Services of North Florida, Inc.

CourtDistrict Court of Appeal of Florida
DecidedJune 28, 2024
Docket2023-1217
StatusPublished

This text of Patty Long, by and through her Co-Guardians, Sarah Long and Dennis Long, and Matt Long, by and Through His Attorney-In-Fact Dennis Long v. Family Support Services of North Florida, Inc. (Patty Long, by and through her Co-Guardians, Sarah Long and Dennis Long, and Matt Long, by and Through His Attorney-In-Fact Dennis Long v. Family Support Services of North Florida, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patty Long, by and through her Co-Guardians, Sarah Long and Dennis Long, and Matt Long, by and Through His Attorney-In-Fact Dennis Long v. Family Support Services of North Florida, Inc., (Fla. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

FIFTH DISTRICT COURT OF APPEAL STATE OF FLORIDA _____________________________

Case No. 5D2023-1217 LT Case No. 2020-CA-002431 _____________________________

PATTY LONG, by and through her CO-GUARDIANS, SARAH LONG and DENNIS LONG, and MATT LONG, by and through his ATTORNEY-IN-FACT DENNIS LONG,

Appellants,

v.

FAMILY SUPPORT SERVICES of NORTH FLORIDA, INC.,

Appellee. _____________________________

On appeal from the Circuit Court for Duval County. Katie L. Dearing, Judge.

Bryan S. Gowdy and Nicholas P. McNamara, of Creed & Gowdy, P.A., Jacksonville, and Karen Gievers, Tallahassee, and Howard M. Talenfeld and Lisa M. Elliott, of Justice for Kids, Kelley Kronenberg, P.A., Fort Lauderdale, for Appellants.

Megan G. Colter and Dorothy Venable DiFiore, of Quintairos, Prieto, Wood & Boyer, P.A, Tampa, for Appellee.

June 28, 2024 EDWARDS, C.J.

Appellants, Patty Long and Matt Long, 1 are biological sister and brother who were in Florida’s foster care system for some time; they are now adults. 2 While children, Brother repeatedly sexually molested and physically abused Sister, and the two engaged in child-on-child sexual activities/abuse with each other. Despite knowing those disturbing facts, the agencies responsible for foster child placement repeatedly placed Brother and Sister together in foster home settings where the molestation, abuse, and inappropriate sexual behaviors continued.

Appellants sued those agencies, Appellee, Family Support Services of North Florida, Inc. (“FSS”) and its subcontracting agency, Daniel Memorial, Inc., (“the Daniel agency”) alleging they were negligent in their placements. At trial, Appellants asserted that the agencies violated Florida Administrative Code Rule 65C- 28.004 (2006) and Florida Administrative Code Rule 65C-28.004 (2016) by making these inappropriate placements, which negligence resulted in great emotional and psychological harm to both Appellants. 3 The regulation was jointly admitted into evidence during the jury trial. Following a defense verdict and denial of their new trial motion, Appellants timely appealed. Appellants argue that the trial court reversibly erred by refusing to give their requested standard jury instruction that violation of a regulation is evidence of negligence. We agree that refusal to

1 This opinion uses the same pseudonyms for the brother and

sister that were used in the briefs. For clarity and brevity, they are sometimes referred to as Brother and Sister and elsewhere as Appellants in the opinion. 2 Although both were adults when suit was filed, Sister sued

by and through her Co-Guardians, her adoptive parents, while Brother sued by and through his Attorney-in-Fact, their adoptive father. 3 It was unclear why the siblings’ cases were tried together,

other than perhaps for efficiency.

2 provide the requested instruction was an abuse of discretion and reverse for a new trial on all issues. 4

Background Facts: Sexual and Physical Abuse

Appellants were deemed dependent and placed in the care of Florida’s Department of Children and Families (“DCF”). Foster care and related services for dependent children are provided by DCF through private community-based “lead agencies” who have entered into contracts with DCF. Appellee, FSS, “entered into a written contract with [DCF] as the lead community-based care agency responsible for coordinating, integrating, and managing a local system of support and services for abused, abandoned and neglected children and their families in Duval and Nassau Counties,” where Brother and Sister were placed. FSS in turn entered into a sub-contract with the Daniel agency whereby Daniel would perform certain tasks related to foster care and child placement.

After staying at a Salvation Army shelter and then with relatives, Sister and Brother were placed in what the parties refer to as the youth ranch. During their placement at the youth ranch, FSS and the Daniel agency received reports that Brother had repeatedly attempted to, and actually had, sexually molested and physically abused Sister; that the two engaged in sexual activities with each other; that Brother had repeatedly sexually molested his younger male cousin; and that Brother had attempted to have sex with his mother. A “safety plan” was created that prohibited Brother and Sister from sharing a room and forbade them from being left alone together. Brother received therapy while at the youth ranch. Safety plans, such as just mentioned, were created by appropriate staff at the Daniel agency. Members of FSS’s placement unit would review and track each safety plan “to ensure the safety and appropriateness of the placement in the home, to

4 Appellants assert that the trial court departed from its neutral role and became an advocate for FSS, an issue we address but find does not merit reversal. Appellants also argue about the exclusion of a handwritten note written by Brother, an issue we need not reach, given that the case will be retried.

3 make sure we weren’t putting any child in a situation that might lead to them being part of a sexual abuse incident.”

Evidence presented at trial revealed that when Sister’s condition deteriorated after reporting the sexual conduct and physical abuse, a licensed mental health counselor recommended that Sister be placed into a higher level of care in a “therapeutic” foster home. 5 The Daniel agency removed Sister from the youth ranch and in 2015 placed her in a regular, not a therapeutic, foster home where there was but a single parent, who worked. The same mental health counselor testified at trial that she reported that Brother was making some progress and recommended against removing him from the youth ranch placement, lest his condition deteriorate and he take out his frustrations and anger on Sister.

During the Christmas season of 2015, Brother had a temporary stay at the single parent foster home with Sister. In connection with that holiday stay, neither FSS nor the Daniel agency advised that foster parent of the safety plan that had been in place at the youth ranch, nor did they advise her of the sexual misconduct or physical abuse issues. In furtherance of a preference for keeping biological siblings together, in January 2016 the Daniel agency placed Brother in the same single parent, regular foster home where Sister was residing. 6 Neither FSS nor the Daniel agency asked the mental health counselor her opinion about the proposed placements of Sister and Brother, although FSS’s former placement manager testified that such recommendations were always taken into consideration. Either the night before or the day he was dropped off at this foster home, the Daniel agency finally provided that single foster parent with Brother’s “abuse history,” disclosing facts about him being sexually aggressive, that he had molested Sister in the past, and so forth.

5 Sister was Baker-acted several times as a result of displaying severe behavioral and emotional disturbances, including attempting suicide. 6 See, e.g., § 39.4024, Fla. Stat. (2021), which discusses the desirability of keeping siblings together when making out-of-home placements when it is in the children’s best interest.

4 That foster parent was understandably upset by getting that kind of information with no advance notice.

While with the single, working foster parent, the children were enrolled in FSS’s mentoring program. Sarah Long mentored Sister, while Dennis Long mentored Brother. 7 The Longs were a married couple going through training and screening to become foster parents. In May 2016, the children’s safety plan was allegedly modified to permit the siblings to be left alone. This single foster parent was never aware of any abuse occurring while the children were with her.

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Patty Long, by and through her Co-Guardians, Sarah Long and Dennis Long, and Matt Long, by and Through His Attorney-In-Fact Dennis Long v. Family Support Services of North Florida, Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patty-long-by-and-through-her-co-guardians-sarah-long-and-dennis-long-fladistctapp-2024.