Sanchez v. Archdiocese of San Antonio

873 S.W.2d 87, 1994 Tex. App. LEXIS 941, 1994 WL 52843
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 23, 1994
Docket04-93-00366-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 873 S.W.2d 87 (Sanchez v. Archdiocese of San Antonio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sanchez v. Archdiocese of San Antonio, 873 S.W.2d 87, 1994 Tex. App. LEXIS 941, 1994 WL 52843 (Tex. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

OPINION

STEPHENS, Justice (Retired).

This appeal stems from a trial court’s summary judgment denying appellant, Ophelia Sanchez, recovery on her claim of sexual abuse while she was a student at an elementary school in San Antonio, known as Immaculate Heart of Mary.

CASE HISTORY

Summary judgment was granted by the Honorable Raul Rivera on February 10, 1993. On February 11, 1993, motions for reconsideration and for recusal were filed by Sanchez. Judge Rivera recused himself from further service in the case and referred the motion for reconsideration to the Honorable Martha Tanner who subsequently heard the motion and denied reconsideration, entering her order on March 3, 1993. Sanchez then filed a motion for new trial to have Judge Rivera’s judgment of February 10th set aside. Appellees moved the court to vacate Judge Rivera’s judgment of February 10, 1993 and to let Judge Tanner’s judgment of March 3, 1993 stand as the final judgment. These motions were heard, and on April 7, 1993, Judge Tanner entered a modified order of final summary judgment and order denying plaintiffs motion for reconsideration of final summary judgment, which in effect vacated Judge Rivera’s summary judgment and let the judgment of March 3, 1993 stand as final judgment in the case.

On appeal, Sanchez presents four points of error:

1. The Trial Court erred in granting Defendants’ Motion to Vacate Judgment entered February 10, 1993 and For Judgment entered March 3,1993 to be a final judgment because the hearing on March 2, 1993 was not a summary judgment hearing with its required formalities.
2. The Trial Court erred in granting Defendants’ Motion to Vacate Judgment entered February 10,1993 and for Judgment entered March 3,1993 to be a final judgment because when the Trial Court vacated the February 10,1993 order, the March 3, 1993 order (being an order denying reconsideration of the February 10, 1993 order) was of no consequence, and therefore, moot.
3. The Trial Court erred in granting Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment and entering judgment for Defen *89 dants because the Trial Court refused to apply the discovery rule.
4. The Trial Court erred in granting Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment and entering judgment that Appellant take nothing because there remained an issue of fact as to when Plaintiff knew or should have known about the abuse.

FACTS

Ophelia Sanchez was a fifty-seven year old woman at the time of filing this suit. She alleges that as a child she attended Immaculate Heart of Mary School in San Antonio from pre-school through approximately the seventh grade. During her years as a student at the school, she alleges that she was sexually, physically, and emotionally abused by someone she referred to as Sister Agnes, a member of the Benedictine Sisters, who taught at the school. Twice, during her school years, Sanchez claims that she reported the abuse to a priest during confession— once to Father Leonard Cuellar and once to Father Ramon Sunye, both of whom were members of the Order of Claretian Missionaries and assigned to the Immaculate Heart of Mary Church, which is adjacent to and affiliated with the school.

Sanchez contends that all appellees as well as the Archdiocese of San Antonio were aware or should have been aware of the abuse and were responsible for failing to stop the abuse or protect Sanchez.

Sanchez contends that no other reports of the abuse were made because she repressed her memory until therapy began in 1991. Sanchez was injured in the spring of 1990 and her physicians required a CAT scan that caused her to react with fear and hysteria, resulting in her eventual referral to a psychiatrist. After several months of psychotherapy, she began to remember the abuse she suffered as a child at the hands of Sister Agnes. Suit was filed within two years of the CAT scan.

POINTS OF ERROR NUMBER ONE AND NUMBER TWO

In her first two points of error, Sanchez contends that the trial court erred in granting defendants’ motion to vacate judgment entered February 10, 1993 and for judgment entered March 3,1993 to be a final judgment because: (1) the hearing on March 2,1993 was not a summary judgment hearing with its required formalities, and (2) when the trial court vacated the February 10, 1993 order, the March 3, 1993 order (being an order denying reconsideration of the February 10, 1993 order) was of no consequence and therefore moot.

Although appellant argues that procedural irregularities accompanied the hearing conducted by Judge Tanner, she offers no law to support her argument. The record reflects that the day after Judge Rivera entered summary judgment, Sanchez filed a motion for reconsideration of the judgment. This motion was transferred to Judge Tanner who heard the motion and ruled, as Judge Rivera had previously ruled, that summary judgment was proper in the case. On motion of appellees, Judge Tanner modified her order by vacating the summary judgment entered by Judge Rivera on February 10,1993, which left the modified order as the final judgment in the case. We do not see any irregularity in the procedures utilized. It should be noted that appellant took part in the proceedings before Judge Tanner, offering no objection.

Points of error number one and number two are overruled.

POINTS OF ERROR NUMBER THREE AND NUMBER FOUR

In her third and fourth points of error, Sanchez argues that the trial court committed reversible error because: (3) the trial court refused to apply the discovery rule; and (4) that summary judgment was precluded because there was a fact issue as to when she knew or should have known about the abuse.

This court is called upon to decide whether or not the discovery rule should be applied in this case. The appellant was fifty-seven years of age when the suit was filed. At the time of the sexual abuse she was between five and fourteen years of age. She contends that she was aware of the abuse *90 when it occurred and during her minority-reported it to two priests. She alleges that the severity of the abuse caused a repression of her memory of the abuse, which persisted after majority until she underwent psychotherapy required by an injury she received in the spring of 1990. She claims that after several months of psychotherapy, she remembered the abuse and filed suit within two years of regaining her memory. The perpetrator of the alleged abuse, a Catholic nun, is dead. The two Catholic priests alleged to have been told of the abuse at the time of its occurrence are also dead. Having reported the abuse to no one else, there is an absence of corroboration of the facts. The only evidence of abuse must of necessity come from the litigant in this case. Thus, the question becomes, should Texas law permit such time to lapse so that corroborative evidence becomes an impossibility and still apply the discovery rule to toll the statute of limitations? Two factors must be weighed. If, in fact, the mental capacity of the appellant has been impaired since her minority until the filing of the suit, then the appellant is being denied a basic right to have redress for the harm occasioned by the acts of the appellees.

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Bluebook (online)
873 S.W.2d 87, 1994 Tex. App. LEXIS 941, 1994 WL 52843, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanchez-v-archdiocese-of-san-antonio-texapp-1994.