Raymond Dapo v. State of Alaska, Department of Health and Social Services, Office of Children's Services and Taun Lucas

509 P.3d 376
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 13, 2022
DocketS17878
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 509 P.3d 376 (Raymond Dapo v. State of Alaska, Department of Health and Social Services, Office of Children's Services and Taun Lucas) 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
Raymond Dapo v. State of Alaska, Department of Health and Social Services, Office of Children's Services and Taun Lucas, 509 P.3d 376 (Ala. 2022).

Opinion

Notice: This opinion is subject to correction before publication in the PACIFIC REPORTER. Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts, 303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email corrections@akcourts.gov.

THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA

RAYMOND DAPO, ) ) Supreme Court No. S-17878 Appellant, ) ) Superior Court No. 4FA-15-01892 CI v. ) ) OPINION STATE OF ALASKA, DEPARTMENT ) OF HEALTH & SOCIAL SERVICES, ) No. 7593 – May 13, 2022 OFFICE OF CHILDREN’S SERVICES ) and TAUN LUCAS, ) ) Appellees. ) )

Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, Fourth Judicial District, Fairbanks, Michael P. McConahy, Judge.

Appearances: Michael C. Kramer and Robert John, Kramer and Associates, Fairbanks, for Appellant. Aisha Tinker Bray, Assistant Attorney General, Fairbanks, and Treg R. Taylor, Attorney General, Juneau, for Appellee State of Alaska. No appearance by Appellee Taun Lucas.

Before: Winfree, Chief Justice, Maassen and Henderson, Justices. [Carney and Borghesan, Justices, not participating.]

HENDERSON, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION A man filed suit against his adoptive mother for sexual abuse that allegedly occurred 13 years earlier. He then agreed to release the adoptive mother from liability in exchange for her filing a third-party equitable apportionment claim against the Office of Children’s Services (OCS) and assigning the claim to him. OCS challenged the validity of this assignment. The superior court agreed with OCS that the assignment of the adoptive mother’s apportionment claim was void; it invalidated the assignment, dismissed the claim with prejudice, and awarded OCS attorney’s fees. The man appeals. Because a defendant prosecuting a third-party equitable apportionment claim possesses nothing in the claim itself that may be assigned, we hold that such claims are not assignable, and we affirm the superior court’s invalidation of the assignment in this case. But we also conclude that it was error to dismiss the apportionment claim with prejudice; we thus vacate the order of dismissal and remand for the court to provide the adoptive mother a reasonable time to decide whether to pursue the claim herself. II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS A. Facts Raymond Dapo was born in 1990. OCS1 assumed custody of him ten years later and placed him with Taun Lucas, a foster parent who later adopted him. Dapo claimed that Lucas then began sexually abusing him. Lucas denied that claim and alleged that Dapo sexually assaulted her. B. Proceedings In May 2015, when Dapo was 24 years old, he filed a complaint against Lucas alleging that she had sexually abused him as a minor. During the subsequent

1 The responsible agency at the time was the Division of Family and Youth Services, OCS’s predecessor agency. We use the acronym OCS for consistency and ease of reference.

-2- 7593 months, Dapo and Lucas negotiated an agreement. Dapo agreed to release Lucas from liability for his sexual abuse claims in exchange for Lucas filing a third-party claim against OCS for equitable apportionment and assigning the claim to Dapo.2 In September 2015 Lucas followed through on the agreement and filed a third-party apportionment claim against OCS.3 OCS moved to dismiss Lucas’s apportionment claim on multiple grounds, including that it was barred by the statute of repose4 and that it was non-assignable. The superior court denied the dismissal motion, reasoning that the statute of repose was unconstitutional as applied, but did not address OCS’s assignability argument. In State, Office of Children’s Services v. Dapo (Dapo I)5 we granted OCS’s petition for review on the statute of repose issue, vacated the superior court’s order, and “instructed the

2 An equitable apportionment claim permits “a defendant, as a third-party plaintiff, . . . to add as a third-party defendant any person whose fault may have been a cause of the damages claimed by the plaintiff.” Alaska R. Civ. P. 14(c). “Judgment may [then] be entered against [the] third-party defendant in favor of the plaintiff in accordance with the third-party defendant’s respective percentage [apportioned] of fault . . . .” Id. 3 Given the time elapsed since the underlying events transpired, Dapo would likely have been barred from bringing his own claims against OCS by the two-year statute of limitations in AS 09.10.070, even allowing for tolling under AS 09.10.140(a). See Reasner v. State, Dep’t of Health &Soc. Servs., Off. of Child.’s Servs., 394 P.3d 610, 614-18 (Alaska 2017) (discussing statute of limitations and holding that legislature did not remove limitations period for “negligence suits against non-perpetrators” when it allowed suits against alleged perpetrators of specified sexual offenses to be brought “at any time”). Lucas’s equitable apportionment claim against OCS, however, was not subject to the statute of limitations in AS 09.10.070. See Alaska Gen. Alarm, Inc. v. Grinnell, 1 P.3d 98, 106 (Alaska 2000). 4 AS 09.10.055. 5 No. S-16339 (Alaska Supreme Court Order, July 18, 2017).

-3- 7593 superior court to first determine whether the statute of repose applied to Dapo’s claims before considering its constitutionality.”6 On remand, the superior court invited the parties to file additional briefing to address the statute of repose. Both parties did so. OCS also renewed its argument that apportionment claims are not assignable. The superior court again declined to address OCS’s assignability argument; instead, the court held that the statute of repose barred Lucas’s apportionment claim and dismissed it with prejudice. Dapo appealed, and we reversed in Dapo v. State, Office of Children’s Services (Dapo II).7 We concluded that the statute of repose applied to Lucas’s apportionment claim, but potentially applicable exceptions precluded dismissal of the claim at that time.8 We thus remanded “to the superior court for further proceedings consistent with [our] opinion.”9 We did not address whether the apportionment claim was assignable.10 OCS filed a motion for summary judgment on remand, contending that the superior court should dismiss the apportionment claim with prejudice because no exception to the statute of repose applied. OCS simultaneously filed a separate motion to invalidate the assignment of the apportionment claim. OCS again renewed its argument that apportionment claims are not assignable and also argued that the assignment in this case was void on various public policy grounds. The court granted OCS’s motion to declare the assignment void on public policy grounds, holding that

6 Dapo v. State, Off. of Child.’s Servs. (Dapo II), 454 P.3d 171, 174 (Alaska 2019) (referring to Dapo I). 7 Id. 8 Id. at 177-80. 9 Id. at 182. 10 See id. at 171-82.

-4- 7593 “[t]he assignment of rights by a tortfeasor to her victim in order to pursue a time-barred claim against a third party is invalid and void as against public policy.” The court did not address the assignability of apportionment claims more generally and did not rule on OCS’s summary judgment motion related to the statute of repose, instead determining that motion to be moot. Despite its lack of ruling on that summary judgment motion, the court dismissed Lucas’s apportionment claim with prejudice. OCS then moved for attorney’s fees against Dapo. Dapo responded that Lucas should bear the liability for attorney’s fees because the assignment of her claim was void, so it was her third-party complaint, not Dapo’s, that was dismissed. The superior court awarded attorney’s fees against Dapo, explaining that Dapo was “the source of this continued litigation.” Dapo appeals. III.

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