Sheppard v. United States

587 F. Supp. 1525, 1984 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15426
CourtDistrict Court, D. Arizona
DecidedJune 28, 1984
DocketCiv. 81-1128 PCT EHC
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 587 F. Supp. 1525 (Sheppard v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Arizona primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sheppard v. United States, 587 F. Supp. 1525, 1984 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15426 (D. Ariz. 1984).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

CARROLL, District Judge.

This action has been brought under the provisions of the Federal Tort Claims Act, 28 UsS.C. §§ 1346 and 2671, ef seq:, (FTCA). Plaintiff Marie Sheppard (Mrs. Sheppard) seeks to establish that her daughter Laura Sheppard (Laura) is dead, and that claimed negligent actions of Bureau of Indian Affairs personnel proximately caused the death. Damages totaling $217,500 are sought under the Arizona Wrongful Death statute, A.R.S., § 12-613:

Loss of Probability of Inheritance $ 20,000
Loss of Future Earnings 40,000
Loss of love, affection, companionship and service $ 50,000
Mental anguish, sorrow, pain and suffering 100,000
$ 210,000

Approximately $3,500 is sought to cover monies or the value of property given to Navajo medicine men in connection with Laura’s disappearance. $1,500 is requested for investigative expenses and $2,500 for expected funeral expenses.

The circumstances underlying this claim are unusual and tragic.

The Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) maintains facilities at Flagstaff, Arizona to house Indian students attending public schools in Flagstaff. These facilities include an administration building which houses a small gym and cafeteria, and separate buildings for boys and girls dormitories.

*1526 The students living in the dorms normally walk to and from school. Activities at the BIA complex are supervised and students are required to check-out when going in to town.

Overnight absences from the facility are subject to specific check-out requirements. Any student under 18 years of age can only check out for overnight (weekends) in the company of a person designated for that purpose by a parent.

Laura, a member of the Navajo Tribe, was born January 29, 1961. She resided in the BIA dorm for the years 1976-77 (8th grade) and 1977-78 (9th grade).

Laura returned to the BIA facility in late August, 1978 to attend Flagstaff High School for the 1978-79 school year. Although parents are encouraged to be with a child when registering at the BIA dorm, Mrs. Sheppard, a widow, did not accompany Laura for this purpose. Laura was dropped off by a sister, who did not remain to assist in registering Laura into the dorm.

Laura’s registration card for her enrollment on August 23, 1976, properly reflected her date of birth and age as 15. The registration card for the next school year had the right birth date, but incorrectly showed her age as 17. This error was carried forward when she enrolled at the dormitory on August 27, 1978, i.e., her age was noted as 18. 1

Mrs. Sheppard never designated anyone to sign Laura out overnight during the time she resided at the dorm.

Now, to the events leading up to Laura’s checking herself out of the dorm at approximately 5 p.m., Friday, October 13, 1978, and her subsequent disappearance.

Several girls in the dorm were interested in home visits the weekend of October 6. Laura wanted to go home and she asked whether she could go with the group. She talked with James Kimery, a Guidance Supervisor, who told her there were no aides available to take students to their homes on the reservation.

An Education Aide at the dormitory, Avis Cassidy, nee Hudson, testified that Kimery asked Laura her age and she said she was 17; that Kimery then looked at the enrollment card and said, no, you are 18; Laura then replied, yeah, I’m 18. The aide said she didn’t correct Kimery, although she knew Laura was only 17. Ms. Cassidy went on to testify that Kimery told Laura and the dorm aides that Laura could check herself out the next weekend.

Kimery testified he recalled some discussion with Laura the weekend prior to her disappearance, but he denies saying Laura was 18, or giving permission for her to check herself out the next weekend. Resolution of this conflict between the testimony of Cassidy and Kimery is not determinative in this case. However, I find that Ms. Cassidy was a hostile witness to the BIA. She tended to forget matters ostensibly adverse to plaintiff, while trying to put the BIA in the worst light whenever possible.

It is undisputed that Laura was allowed to check herself out for what was stated to be a weekend home visitation on October 13, 1978, and that Ms. Cassidy, if no other, allowed her to do so knowing that she was not 18 years of age.

The record clearly shows that Laura did not intend to go home when she left the BIA dorm late in the afternoon of October 13. She had spoken to her sister Lori on October 10 and she told her she wanted to attend the Navajo Tribal Fair in Tuba City that weekend and asked her sister for assistance in getting there. Laura had written a letter to her sister Lou Ann, who lived in Tuba City, about the Fair. Although this letter, which was not mailed, is dated Sept. 8th, I find that it was written October 8:

Dear Lou Ann,
Howdy there, how’s everything coming alone for you in T.C.? Me everything is all screw up for me, so All I’m trying to *1527 do is getting away from it. So their’s Tuba Fair coming up next week, and I want to go. And I’ll be over there Fri, at the boarding school, because now I can check myself out, and have fun a little. But sure don’t know where to spent the nite, but I’ll think of something good And I’m not planning to go home or anything. That’s all I wanted to tell you. Bye, Bye have fun and don’t get in trouble.
A sis, and a friend,
Laura

On October 14, Kimery asked Ms. Cassidy to advise him when Laura returned, inasmuch as he wanted to discuss an incident with her where she had been written up by Ms. Cassidy on October 9 for alleged intoxication the evening of October 8, 1978. Laura had been away from the dorm that afternoon with her brother Jonathan and two of his friends.

Laura’s absence was noted at the dormitory when she failed to return on Sunday, October 15. She continued to be considered on home leave, rather than A.W. O.L., until her family came to visit her on October 28, and discovered that she had not been at the dormitory since October 13.

Laura’s family went to the Navajo Police Station in Tuba City on October 29 to report her missing. Laura’s clothing and wallet were given to the family at that time.

IS LAURA SHEPPARD DEAD?

Laura has not contacted her family after she left the BIA Dormitory the afternoon of October 13, 1978. This lack of contact is inconsistent with Laura’s prior conduct and supports the plaintiff’s claim that Laura is dead.

Although there have been a few occasions where someone claimed to see a person believed to be Laura in Flagstaff, Phoenix, Los Angeles, etc., subsequent investigations failed to disclose her presence there.

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Related

Carlston v. United States
671 F. Supp. 1324 (D. New Mexico, 1987)

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Bluebook (online)
587 F. Supp. 1525, 1984 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15426, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sheppard-v-united-states-azd-1984.