Shippen v. Parrot

1996 SD 105
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 28, 1996
DocketNone
StatusPublished

This text of 1996 SD 105 (Shippen v. Parrot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shippen v. Parrot, 1996 SD 105 (S.D. 1996).

Opinion

Unified Judicial System

Formatting provided courtesy of State Bar of South Dakota
and South Dakota Continuing Legal Education, Inc.
222 East Capitol Ave.
Pierre, SD 57501-2596


DANIEL SHIPPEN,

Plaintiff and Appellee,

v.

SHERMAN V. PARROTT,

Defendant and Appellant.

South Dakota Supreme Court
Appeal from the Seventh Judicial Circuit, Rapid City, SD
Hon. Roland E. Grosshans, Judge
#19136 -- Affirmed in part; Reversed in part

Robert W. Van Norman, Rapid City, SD
Charles J. Mickel, Rapid City, SD
Attorneys for Plaintiff and Appellee.

Charles Poches, Jr., Poches & Lee, Fort Pierre, SD
Attorneys for Defendant and Appellant.

Considered On Briefs Nov 29, 1995; Opinion Filed Aug 28, 1996

ZINTER, Circuit Judge.

[¶1] Defendant, Sherman Parrott (Parrott), appeals from the trial court's apportionment of damages between actionable and non-actionable events. We affirm in part, reverse in part and remand.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

[¶2] Plaintiff, Daniel Shippen (Shippen), is an adult survivor of childhood sexual abuse inflicted by Parrott. The trial court found that Shippen suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder as a result of that abuse. The childhood sexual abuse commenced in 1975, when Shippen was eleven. It continued until 1984 when Shippen was twenty. Parrott also sexually assaulted Shippen on two occasions in 1987 when Shippen was twenty-three. In Shippen v. Parrott, 506 NW2d 82 (SD 1993) (Shippen I), Parrott's course of conduct was summarized as follows:

During infancy, Shippen's parents divorced. By age five, his mother had remarried a banker, who died approximately one year later.

Enter Parrott, a man who had worked at the bank with Shippen's stepfather. Parrott and Shippen's mother developed a relationship which lasted for a considerable length of time and eventually became sexual. Parrott's interest quickly spread to Shippen and his siblings. Mother further encouraged Shippen and his twin brother, David, to associate with Parrott, believing him to provide a healthy male adult role model for the boys.

Parrott resided in the basement of the house he shared with his mother, an elderly woman who was bedridden and hard of hearing. His basement living quarters included a pool table, pizza oven, popcorn popper, clown collection and waterbed. In 1975, when Shippen was eleven years old, he began spending the night at Parrott's home, at Parrott's request. Young Shippen, intrigued by the waterbed, asked to sleep in it. This necessitated that he and Parrott, nearly 33 years his senior, sleep together. On one such sleepover, Parrott fondled Shippen's penis. As these visits continued, the sexual conduct escalated to Parrott performing oral sex upon him. Shippen did, however, successfully resist Parrott's attempts at anal intercourse. Similar sexual encounters occurred when Shippen's twin stayed overnight with Parrott.

As Parrott continued his relationship with the mother, and the boys, he provided the boys with money, clothes and gifts, including securing the return of a repossessed car and replenishing their checking accounts when the balance was low. At one point, he gave Shippen a car, with Parrott remaining on the title as lienholder.

Conversely, Shippen's high school academic performance was sub-par. His aggressive behavior not only led to fights, but on one occasion at age 16, he took a loaded pistol to Parrott's home with the intent of killing him. Shippen was by no means monogamous, engaging in sexual relationships with a male classmate and his future wife, Juli, yet continuing his encounters with Parrott. In 1984, when Juli became pregnant, Shippen married her, in part, to escape Parrott's advances. Although no sexual relations between the men occurred during the marriage, they frequently communicated with one another. Occasionally, Parrott sent gifts and money to the couple.

In 1986, following marital problems and Shippen's increased involvement with the gay [community] in Minneapolis and other homosexual relationships, he and Juli separated. They divorced two years later. Despite six months of individual and group counseling during his separation, Shippen was unable to reconcile his conflicting homosexual and heterosexual [feelings].

One night in May 1987, Shippen permitted Parrott to stay at his home. Shippen awoke during the night to find Parrott fondling his genitals. Parrott also attempted to perform oral sex on him, but Shippen repulsed the attempt. Parrott again visited Shippen [in June, 1987]. Upon entering the home, Parrott pushed Shippen to the couch, attempted to kiss him and place his hand inside Shippen's pants and tried to force oral sex on Shippen. Once more, Shippen successfully fought off Parrott's advances.

Since 1986, Shippen has continued therapy for mental disorders arising from his sexual conflicts. [At the time of trial he was involved in] a homosexual lifestyle in Colorado.

Shippen I, 506 NW2d at 84-85.

[¶3] In 1989, Shippen commenced this action for damages. Following a trial to the court, Shippen received a judgment for $75,846.88 in compensatory damages and $113,000.00 in punitive damages. The damages were based on two causes of action: sexual assault and battery, and intentional infliction of emotional distress. The damages were awarded for Parrott's acts from 1975 through the two assaults in 1987.

[¶4] Parrott appealed that judgment contending that two statutes of limitation barred the suit. In Shippen I, we considered that defense in light of the time and nature of each act. We held that Shippen could not avoid the statute of limitation defense under a continuing tort theory because the sexual contact stopped in 1984 and did not resume until 1987. We also held that any "continued ill effects" of the barred actions were not actionable as a continuing tort. We concluded, however, that "[the two] assaults and batteries occurring two years prior to [the] filing [of the suit were] actionable." Shippen I, 506 NW2d at 86. "[N]o claims occurring prior to January 3, 1986 under an [intentional infliction of emotional distress] theory -- January 3, 1987 for assault and battery -- are actionable, i.e., only those sexual contacts occurring during May and June of 1987 fall inside the [statute of limitations]." Id.

[¶5] Because the trial court's original judgment included damages for Parrott's non-actionable conduct dating back sixteen years to 1975, we reversed the damage award. Id. at 87. We remanded the matter to the trial court "for a reassessment of compensatory damages for those torts suffered during the statutory period ..., particularly those two acts in 1987 ... and punitive damages for those causes of action occurring subsequent to January 3, 1986." Id.

[¶6] On remand, there was a substantial disagreement between the parties concerning the right to present new evidence and the scope of further discovery. Parrott objected to the introduction of any additional evidence. On the other hand, Shippen did not respond to Parrott's discovery requests regarding new evidence. After almost one year of procedural disputes, including an intermediate appeal to this Court, the trial court decided not to receive additional evidence. The trial court determined that it would apportion damages between the actionable and non-actionable events on the original trial record. {fn1} 

[¶7] On remand, the trial court heard oral argument concerning the apportionment of damages.

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1996 SD 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shippen-v-parrot-sd-1996.