Scheman v. Hopkinton Basketball Ass'n

30 Mass. L. Rptr. 89
CourtMassachusetts Superior Court
DecidedJuly 18, 2012
DocketNo. MICV201104166
StatusPublished

This text of 30 Mass. L. Rptr. 89 (Scheman v. Hopkinton Basketball Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scheman v. Hopkinton Basketball Ass'n, 30 Mass. L. Rptr. 89 (Mass. Ct. App. 2012).

Opinion

Kirpalani, Maynard M., J.

INTRODUCTION

This action arises out of the selection and subsequent removal of the plaintiff, Jeffrey Scheman, as head coach of his son’s youth basketball team by the defendants, Hopkinton Basketball Association, Inc. (“HBA”) and its board members, Fritz Rudden, Steve Grosso, Dan Sullivan, Katie Yankosek, Mike Preite, Mary Korbey, and Jerrie Bernier-Chandler (“Board Members” or “Board”) (collectively, “Defendants”). Scheman filed suit against the Defendants on November 23, 2011. His First Amended Complaint, filed April 23, 2012, asserts claims for gross negligence, intentional and/or grossly negligent infliction of emotional distress, and defamation. The matter is before the court on the Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss. For the reasons that follow, the Defendants’ motion is ALLOWED in part and DENIED in part.

BACKGROUND

Scheman alleges the following facts in his First Amended Complaint.

The HBA is an incorporated association which operates youth basketball teams and programs in Hopkinton. For the last three seasons (2008-2009, 2009-2010, 2010-2011), Scheman has coached his son’s HBA travel basketball teams. After confirming that Scheman had no Criminal Offender Record Information (“CORI”) issues, the HBA selected Scheman as head coach of the 7th grade boys “A” team for 2011-2012. On October 7, 2011, the HBA notified Scheman of his team’s roster by email and directed him to contact the players and their parents on the night of October 10th. Scheman did as he was directed and began planning for the season.

On the same day as the HBA notified Scheman that he would be the head coach, Board Members Rudden, Grosso, and Preite received a coaching application from another parent, Don Wolfe. Within a matter of days and before a single team game or practice, six of the seven Board Members — Rudden, Grosso, Sullivan, Yancosek, Preite, and Korbey — held a meeting on October 18, 2011. At the meeting, the Board allegedly heard complaints about Scheman’s coaching style from two parents who did not have a child on Scheman’s team and received an email from a parent from another town. Although many, if not all, of the Board Members were aware of Scheman’s coaching style when they selected him, they decided to immediately remove Scheman from the league without either communicating with any of the parents whose children were actually on Scheman’s team or assessing whether those individuals who had made complaints had ulterior motives for doing so, which they did. The Board then appointed Don Wolfe as the new head coach.

On October 19th, five Members of the Board— Rudden, Sullivan, Yancosek, Preite, and Korbey — met with Scheman. They treated him with hostility and contempt, and as if he had done something wrong. After Rudden informed Scheman that he would no longer be the head coach, he told Scheman, and the rest of the Board agreed, that it would be best if Scheman told the team that he had resigned due to the demands of his business. Scheman refused. Rudden then told Scheman that he had wasted enough of the Board’s time and instructed him to leave the meeting.

The next morning, the Board apprised team parents of the coaching change in a one-line email, which contained no explanation as to why Scheman had been removed. Over the following days, a number of parents of past and current players contacted the Board Members pleading for a meeting and asking what Scheman had done wrong and whether their children were in danger. Scheman’s wife also emailed the Board Members, stating that because of [90]*90Scheman’s abrupt and unexplained termination, people in the community thought that Scheman had done something improper or wrong. She requested that an explanation be provided to the Scheman family and to team parents.

Rather than provide the parents who had inquired with the reasons for Scheman’s removal, the Board sent the following email:

Dear Parent,
The information reviewed by this board is both extensive and confidential and warranted the steps taken. The timing was unavoidable and our decision was given as quickly as the circumstances permitted. Two volunteers will be coaching this team and we expect the players to have a wonderful season.
Respectfully,
The HBA Board

On the night of October 22nd, after Don Wolfe sent an email demanding that parents confirm their children’s continued participation on the team, eight sets of parents sent a group email to all of the Board Members requesting a meeting to discuss Scheman’s removal. When the Board did not respond, several team parents emailed the Board Members out of concern that Scheman presented a threat to their children’s safely or had engaged in some type of illegal, unethical, or egregious behavior.

On the morning of October 23rd, the Board Members openly discussed via email how to respond to parents. They believed that the child safety concerns expressed by the parents were merely a ploy to obtain Scheman’s reinstatement as head coach. They ultimately sent a final email to the entire team as follows:

Dear Parents,
As referenced in previous correspondence . . . due to the nature of the situation ALL the information must remain confidential and we cannot discuss any specifics and/or any criteria related to our decision to make the coaching change. We have read all of your emails but the board’s decision is final and we will not be conducting any additional meetings to discuss the situation.
Respectfully,
The HBA Board

On the night of October 23rd, after receiving the Board’s email, one of the team parents responded: “Since you won’t tell the parents of the team what the reason was for your decision the community is concerned that you are aware of something that would endanger our children.” The email requested that the Board Members simply inform parents whether they should be concerned for the safety of their children. The Board Members refused to respond.

The next day, October 24th, the Board became aware that children at school were teasing Scheman’s son and calling his father a “child molester.” The Board Members continued to stay silent, however, believing that Scheman had brought the situation upon himself because he had not told the team that he had resigned.

Within days of these communications, national news was dominated by the Penn State football scandal in which team and school officials allegedly covered up horrific child sex crimes committed by a member of the coaching staff. Still, the Board Members refused to address parental concerns over whether Scheman posed a threat to child safety or had done something unethical, illegal, or egregious.

As a result of the Board Members’ acts and omissions, Scheman has suffered, among other things: public embarrassment, humiliation and shame, damage to his reputation and standing in the community, severe depression and anxiety, inability to eat, sleep, or perform his job effectively, and other pain and suffering.

DISCUSSION

A motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim permits “prompt resolution of a case where the allegations in the complaint clearly demonstrate that the plaintiffs claim is legally insufficient.” Harvard Crimson, Inc. v. President & Fellows of Harvard Coll., 445 Mass. 745, 748 (2006).

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Bluebook (online)
30 Mass. L. Rptr. 89, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scheman-v-hopkinton-basketball-assn-masssuperct-2012.