Pg v. Dfys

4 P.3d 326
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 2000
DocketS-8062, S-8142
StatusPublished

This text of 4 P.3d 326 (Pg v. Dfys) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pg v. Dfys, 4 P.3d 326 (Ala. 2000).

Opinion

4 P.3d 326 (2000)

P.G. and R.G., Appellants and Cross-Appellees,
v.
STATE of Alaska, DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES, DIVISION OF FAMILY AND YOUTH SERVICES, Appellee and Cross-Appellant.

Nos. S-8062, S-8142.

Supreme Court of Alaska.

June 30, 2000.

*328 John S. Hedland, and Amy L. Vaudreuil, Hedland, Brennan, Heideman & Cooke, Anchorage, for Appellants/Cross-Appellees.

William F. Morse, Assistant Attorney General, Anchorage, and Bruce M. Botelho, Attorney General, Juneau, for Appellee/Cross-Appellant.

Before MATTHEWS, Chief Justice, FABE, BRYNER, and CARPENETI, Justices.

OPINION

BRYNER, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Penny and Richard Green[1] sued the Division of Family and Youth Services (DFYS) after their foster child, Billy, physically and sexually assaulted their two children. The Greens alleged that DFYS negligently failed to disclose information that would have alerted them to the risks of accepting Billy into their home. The superior court assumed that DFYS had a duty to give the Greens relevant information about Billy. But it granted summary judgment to DFYS, finding part of their claim barred by AS 09.50.250(3)—which immunizes the state from claims of misrepresentation—and the balance barred because Billy's actions were unforeseeable. We reverse, concluding that DFYS owed the Greens a duty of disclosure, that a reasonable jury could find Billy's actions a foreseeable result of breaching this duty, and that AS 09.50.250(3) only bars suits for financial or commercial misrepresentations.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS[2]

In November 1991 Penny and Richard Green became the foster parents of Billy, a child in need of aid who was then thirteen years old. Although they had a daughter and son of their own, aged eight and ten, the Greens were first-time foster parents.

Before moving to Alaska in 1990, Billy and his brother lived in Washington state with their mother. Washington school officials described Billy as "a troubled boy with much anger." In September 1990, after Billy displayed behavioral problems in school, Billy's mother sent the two boys to live with their father in Soldotna.

Once Billy arrived in Alaska, his father alerted Billy's new school to potential problems and worked with the school to provide an appropriate placement. On September 20 Billy's father took Billy to see Dr. Kathleen Dinius, a Soldotna psychologist. Dr. Dinius reported that Billy's mother had described him as "exhibiting serious behavior problems." Dr. Dinius stated that she "anticipated... that [Billy] would develop behavior problems, probably of a serious nature ... that would require professional help."

Edward Harrison, a school psychologist, also interviewed and tested Billy to determine an appropriate grade placement. In a report dated September 27, 1990, Harrison noted that Billy's teacher had described him as "street wise." Harrison found Billy to be "evasive and guarded in his responses." Testing showed signs that the boy was anxious over self-disclosure and depressed, and also suggested "themes of anger, feelings of abandonment and being without control in an untrustworthy adult world." Harrison warned that Billy's "defenses appear taxed to a point where withdrawal may be necessary for coping with adults.... The future may appear chaotic and out of control to [Billy] with little hope for adequacy in meeting normal social role expectations as a person, as student or as a son."

According to Harrison, Billy would "become easily upset when given constructive criticism. His outlook is pessimistic...." Harrison concluded that "[f]or educational purposes [Billy] should be considered severely emotionally disturbed and in need for special education intervention for him to benefit *329 from his educational program.... His difficulties have persisted over a long period of time and to a marked degree they have adversely affected his educational performance." One of the tests that Harrison gave Billy consisted of a display of ambiguous pictures. Billy's responses focused on murder, death, anger, suicide, guns, blood, sex and sexuality, disease, and strangulation.

Billy encountered difficulty at school throughout the ensuing year. In April 1991 a special services teacher wrote that Billy "has psychological needs that are not being met at this time," was not making satisfactory progress in school despite the school's attempts to meet his needs, and would benefit from outside counseling.

DFYS first became involved with Billy in April, after he and his older brother contacted the agency and asked to be placed in a foster home. The boys told a DFYS social worker that their father "has kicked [and] hit [Billy] in the past," "smokes pot all day" and "is moody [and] unpredictable when high," and offered marijuana to them. The boys went to the home of an aunt—their father's sister—who confirmed that Billy's father abused his children; she indicated that she did not want them to return to his home.

A few days later, DFYS caseworker Pam McDermott interviewed Billy's father, who denied any abuse. Billy's father told McDermott that Billy was "street wise" and had come to Alaska with a cigarette addiction. Billy's father also informed McDermott that a school psychologist had evaluated Billy and that Billy had seen Dr. Dinius. Afraid that Billy would be defiant and would not cooperate, his father initially told McDermott that he did not want Billy back. McDermott also interviewed Billy that day and found him "very uncooperative, defiant, negative, sneering." After concluding that Billy would be safe with his father and securing his father's agreement to take him back, McDermott allowed Billy to return home.

Billy subsequently became involved in two school-related fighting incidents with girls in which he pulled down the pants of—or "pantsed"—his opponents. On each occasion, Billy was suspended from school for his behavior. The second incident occurred on October 31, 1991. While being questioned in the school office about the pantsing, Billy told school officials that he did not want to return home because, according to the caseworker's report, "he won[']t live in that kind of place anymore." The school contacted DFYS, which took emergency custody and placed Billy in a temporary foster home. His temporary foster father, Tom Musgrove, evidently knew that Billy had psychological and behavioral problems and was aware that the school psychologist, Harrison, had evaluated Billy;[3] on November 8, 1991, Musgrove talked to McDermott about these issues, recommending that DFYS speak with Harrison about Billy's progress.

Several days later, DFYS gave custody of Billy to the Greens. Their involvement resulted from a telephone call by Penny's mother to a DFYS office to inquire about becoming a foster parent. DFYS caseworker Lela McNutt told Penny's mother about Billy's situation. According to Penny's mother, McNutt "played on my heartstrings," offering her custody of Billy and saying that he was being abused by his father, had recently been placed in a temporary foster home, and urgently needed a more permanent placement. Penny's mother demurred, telling McNutt that her current living quarters were too small to accommodate a foster child and that she was planning to buy a larger home. But that night, at dinner, Penny's mother told Penny and Richard about her conversation with McNutt and described Billy's plight. The Greens decided that they might be able to take Billy.

Penny and her mother went to the DFYS office on November 11, 1991, for what Penny expected would be an initial consultation.

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4 P.3d 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pg-v-dfys-alaska-2000.