Safsten v. LDS Social Services, Inc.

942 P.2d 949, 321 Utah Adv. Rep. 10, 1997 Utah App. LEXIS 79, 1997 WL 377860
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJuly 10, 1997
DocketNo. 960544-CA
StatusPublished

This text of 942 P.2d 949 (Safsten v. LDS Social Services, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Safsten v. LDS Social Services, Inc., 942 P.2d 949, 321 Utah Adv. Rep. 10, 1997 Utah App. LEXIS 79, 1997 WL 377860 (Utah Ct. App. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

BILLINGS, Judge:

Appellant Nancy Safsten appeals the trial court’s order granting summary judgment in favor of LDS Social Services, Inc., the Corporation of the Presiding Bishop of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, and Does 1-30 (collectively the defendants). Specifically, appellant claims the trial court erred in concluding that the discovery rule did not apply, and therefore, that two separate statutes of limitations barred her claims. We affirm.

FACTS

Because this is a review of an order granting summary judgment, we state the facts in a light most favorable to appellant. See Beltran v. Allan, 926 P.2d 892, 895 (Utah.Ct.App.1996). In 1966, appellant, who was then a twenty-three-year-old college student and a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, became pregnant and contacted the predecessor of LDS Social Services (the Agency). During counseling sessions with the Agency, the Agency advised appellant to give the child up for adoption, because if she did not, she would ruin the child’s life. The Agency assigned Gladys Carling to be the ease worker in charge of appellant’s case. Carling met with appellant several times between November 1966 and December 1967 to discuss placing the child for adoption. When the time for delivery arrived, appellant was admitted under an alias into St. Benedict’s Hospital in Ogden, Utah, and the Agency was designated to pay her expenses. Appellant gave birth to a son on January 14,1967.

After the delivery, appellant’s physician placed her on the drug Thorazine, a sedative. Appellant asserts that while she was on the drug she was physically, mentally, and emotionally incapacitated. Two days after the birth, and while appellant was on the drug, Carling came to the hospital seeking a signature on a release in which appellant relinquished custody of her child to the Agency and consented to the child’s adoption. Appellant signed the release and Carling placed the baby in the Agency’s foster care.1 Car-ling noted that at this time appellant appeared to be passive and indifferent and appeared to be on a sedative. Despite this, Carling believed appellant had the mental capacity to understand that she was giving up custody of her child and that she knowingly and voluntarily signed the release. [952]*952Soon thereafter, appellant visited the Agency to express her confusion and remorse from the loss of her child. The Agency told her there was nothing it could do for her. She contacted the Agency about thirty more times about the adoption in the following months. The Agency never gave her any information about the adoption or her condition at the time she signed the release. However, appellant does not claim she asked how the Agency got her consent to the adoption when she did not remember giving it.

Approximately two years later, in July 1969, appellant sent a letter to the hospital where the birth had occurred asking for records of the medical expenses she had incurred during her hospital stay so she could repay the Agency. The hospital responded with a letter stating: “Since the records of our no information maternity patients are destroyed, I can only send you an estimated amount.” Appellant never asked for her medical records, only for a bill of the costs she incurred, although from her understanding of the letter she believed her medical records had been destroyed.

In 1990, appellant and the son she had given up for adoption were reunited. Then, on approximately May 29, 1990, appellant requested her son’s medical records from the hospital. In response, the hospital mistakenly sent appellant her own medical records. After reading these records, appellant discovered that while she was in the hospital she had been administered the drug Thorazine. After learning this, appellant visited the Agency “to determine what documentation, if any, [the Agency] had of the authority it claimed in placing appellant’s son for adoption.” The Agency provided her the release she signed in the hospital. At this point appellant learned, after comparing the date of her signature to the dates in her medical records, that she was on the drug Thorazine when she signed the release.

For the next couple of years, appellant sought redress with the Agency and within the LDS Church, sending letters to numerous members of the Church’s leadership. After not receiving satisfactory responses, she filed this action alleging negligence, constructive fraud, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and breach of contract for obtaining her adoption consent while she was sedated by medication.

The defendants filed a motion for summary judgment asserting that appellant’s claims were barred by applicable statutes of limitations and arguing that the discovery rule had no application in the case because appellant should have known of any cause of action many years before commencing the action. The trial court granted the summary judgment dismissing appellant’s lawsuit, reasoning that the cause of action accrued in 1967 when appellant knew her child had been taken. The court further determined that “[t]he administration of Thorazine was reasonably discoverable by plaintiff within the limitations period following her release from the hospital, but plaintiff failed to take reasonable steps to discover the cause of her alleged incapacity.” This appeal followed.

ANALYSIS

Appellant argues the trial court erred in dismissing her claims as barred by the applicable statutes of limitations. Specifically, she asserts her cause of action did not accrue until May 1990, when she obtained her medical records and discovered she was under the influence of medication when she signed her consent to the adoption. “Generally, a cause of action accrues ‘upon the happening of the last event necessary to complete the cause of action.’ However, in certain instances, the discovery rule ‘may operate to toll the period of limitations “until the discovery of facts forming the basis for the cause of action.”’” Berenda v. Langford, 914 P.2d 45, 50-51 (Utah 1996) (citations omitted). The discovery rule applies in three narrow situations: “when mandated by statute, when a defendant has concealed a plaintiffs cause of action, or when exceptional circumstances exist.” Id. at 51. In this case, appellant contends the discovery rule applies because defendants concealed appellant’s cause of action and because exceptional circumstances exist. We examine both arguments.

[953]*953I. Concealment

When a plaintiff alleges “defendant took affirmative steps to conceal the plaintiffs cause of action,” the discovery rule will apply to toll the statute of limitations period if the plaintiff “mak[es] a prima facie showing of fraudulent concealment and then demonstrates] that given the defendant’s actions, a reasonable plaintiff would not have discovered the claim earlier.” Id.

Thus, the fraudulent concealment version of the discovery rule aims to navigate a balance between two competing policies: (i) that which underlies all statutes of limitations, namely “‘to promote justice by preventing surprises through the revival of claims that have been allowed to slumber until evidence has been lost, memories have faded, and witnesses have disappeared,’ ” and (ii) that of not allowing a defendant who has concealed his wrongdoing to profit from his concealment.

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Related

Berenda v. Langford
914 P.2d 45 (Utah Supreme Court, 1996)
Warren v. Provo City Corp.
838 P.2d 1125 (Utah Supreme Court, 1992)
Beltran v. Allan
926 P.2d 892 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 1996)
De Baritault Ex Rel. De Baritault v. Salt Lake City Corp.
913 P.2d 743 (Utah Supreme Court, 1996)
Myers v. McDonald
635 P.2d 84 (Utah Supreme Court, 1981)
Anderson v. Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc.
920 P.2d 575 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 1996)
State v. Leonard
707 P.2d 650 (Utah Supreme Court, 1985)
Roark v. Crabtree
893 P.2d 1058 (Utah Supreme Court, 1995)

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Bluebook (online)
942 P.2d 949, 321 Utah Adv. Rep. 10, 1997 Utah App. LEXIS 79, 1997 WL 377860, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/safsten-v-lds-social-services-inc-utahctapp-1997.