Stephens v. West Virginia College of Graduate Studies

506 S.E.2d 336, 203 W. Va. 81, 1998 W. Va. LEXIS 105
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 10, 1998
DocketNo. 24678
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 506 S.E.2d 336 (Stephens v. West Virginia College of Graduate Studies) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stephens v. West Virginia College of Graduate Studies, 506 S.E.2d 336, 203 W. Va. 81, 1998 W. Va. LEXIS 105 (W. Va. 1998).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:1

The plaintiffs below and appellants herein, Nancy and Timothy Stephens, appeal the August 28,1997, order of the Circuit Court of Kanawha County that granted summary judgment to the defendants below and appel-lees herein, Associates in Counseling and Training, Inc.; Linda Geronilla; and Elizabeth Conrad [hereinafter collectively referred to as ACT or the defendants].2 On [83]*83appeal to this Court, the Stephenses raise three challenges to the circuit court’s ruling: (1) the circuit court improperly-determined that the applicable statute of limitations barred their claims when their complaint was timely filed pursuant to the discovery rule, as explained in Gaither v. City Hospital, Inc., 199 W.Va. 706, 487 S.E.2d 901 (1997), and the continuing tort doctrine; (2) the circuit court incorrectly dismissed their claim of vicarious liability; and (3) the circuit court erroneously granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment when there existed genuine issues of material fact. Following a review of the parties’ arguments, the record of the proceedings below, and the pertinent authorities, we affirm the decision of the Circuit Court of Kanawha County.

I.

FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The forecast of the evidence suggests the following facts. Nancy and Timothy Stephens were married in 1980. In or about January, 1991, they began attending weekly worship services and Bible study meetings at Humphreys Memorial United Methodist Church. Kenneth Jarrett also participated in Humphreys church activities. As a result of their church involvement, the Stephenses became acquainted with Kenneth Jarrett.

Kenneth Jarrett allegedly was a student at the West Virginia College of Graduate Studies in 1991. He worked, either as an actual employee or as an independent contractor, for Associates in Counseling and Training, Inc. [hereinafter ACT], from December, 1990, through June, 1991.3

ACT, located in Charleston, West Virginia, “provides counseling and employee assistance services.” Linda Geronilla is the owner and director of ACT, and Elizabeth Conrad and Peggy Dent were counselors employed by ACT.

The events surrounding the underlying appeal appear to have begun in March, 1991, when Jarrett began providing counseling services to Mr. Stephens. The plaintiffs state that at some point during these sessions, Jarrett informed Mr. Stephens that he also would like to provide similar counseling to Mrs. Stephens. Mrs. Stephens went to ACT in early April, 1991, where she had numerous counseling sessions during which both Jarrett and Elizabeth Conrad were present. Mrs. Stephens states that she believed Conrad was Jarrett’s supervisor. Contrariwise, ACT represents that it was not uncommon for friends and relatives to accompany clients of ACT’s counselors to their counseling sessions and to remain present during these meetings. In this regard, ACT suggests that Jarrett was not a counselor employed by ACT, but rather accompanied Mrs. Stephens to her counseling sessions in the capacity of a supportive friend.

In late April, 1991, a counseling session for Mrs. Stephens was scheduled during which both Conrad and Jarrett were supposed to be present. Conrad recalls that she had an emergency situation to attend to and, after informing Mrs. Stephens and Jarrett of her conflicting commitment, excused herself from the room. Thereafter, Jarrett conducted a counseling session with Mrs. Stephens, during which he patted Mrs. Stephens’ leg and kissed her before she left. Mrs. Stephens testified at her deposition that Jarrett assured her that this intimacy would be helpful in better understanding her husband’s behaviors, but told her that “it was inappropriate for a counselor and a client to have that kind of relationship.” Following this incident, Mrs. Stephens again met with both Conrad and Jarrett on several occasions, but Mrs. Stephens did not discuss the personal contacts between her and Jarrett.

After the intimate session between Jarrett and Mrs. Stephens, Jarrett began counseling Mrs. Stephens privately both at the ACT [84]*84offices and at other locations, including a motel, the Stephenses’ home, Jarrett’s home, Mrs. Stephens’ workplace, church Bible study meetings, and the city park. Eventually, in May, 1991, Mrs. Stephens stopped going to ACT to receive counseling from Conrad and turned exclusively to Jarrett for such therapy. Mrs. Stephens indicated that, at Jarrett’s suggestion, they began meeting at the above-described locations as these sites were closer to their residences than the ACT offices, which were located in Charleston. The parties do not dispute that during these private sessions Jarrett and Mrs. Stephens became increasingly more intimate and twice engaged in sexual relations. Respecting the increasingly personal nature of their relationship, though, it seems that Jarrett requested Mrs. Stephens not to reveal the true nature of their relationship in order to protect his professional reputation.

In early May, 1991, Mrs. Stephens was briefly hospitalized for suicidal ideation. Following her discharge, she spoke with Peggy Dent, another counselor employed by ACT, regarding her growing relationship with Jarrett, but without divulging his identity. Dent presumably understood of whom Mrs. Stephens spoke, but the parties do not indicate whether Dent commented upon the impropriety of such a relationship at that time. In June, 1991, during Jarrett’s individual counseling of Mrs. Stephens, his business relationship with ACT terminated due to his voluntary change of employment.

Jarrett continued counseling Mrs. Stephens for approximately two years. In February, 1992, Mr. Stephens began counseling at ACT with Peggy Dent as a result of his suspicions that Jarrett and Mrs. Stephens were having an affair. Dent subsequently met with both Mr. and Mrs. Stephens and with each of them separately. During the individual sessions between Dent and Mrs. Stephens, in April, 1992, Mrs. Stephens confided that she was, in fact, having an affair. It is unclear whether Mrs. Stephens disclosed Jarrett’s name to Dent, but Dent apparently knew that Mrs. Stephens’ partner was a counselor as Dent informed Mrs. Stephens that she should report her therapist because his actions were “completely unacceptable.” It seems that Dent also informed Mrs. Stephens that she would sustain long-term injury from this inappropriate relationship. Mrs. Stephens contends that she was afraid to report Jarrett because she had become quite dependent upon him and did not want the relationship to end. She further was concerned that Jarrett would have difficulties with his employment if she reported his conduct.

Dent then informed Geronilla of the inappropriate relationship between Mrs. Stephens and her therapist. Geronilla told Dent to urge Mrs. Stephens to report her therapist to the Board of Examiners in Counseling, but Mrs. Stephens refused to do so, citing the above-stated reasons. The defendants represent, though, that Mrs. Stephens expressed a desire to end her relationship with her therapist in order to ameliorate the negative effects it was having on her relationship with her husband and family. Counseling between Dent and the Stephenses ended in late April, 1992.

In November, 1992, Mrs: Stephens again sought counseling from Conrad. During these sessions, which continued until December, 1992, Mrs. Stephens discussed her affair, and Conrad acknowledged that she knew of whom Mrs. Stephens spoke.

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Bluebook (online)
506 S.E.2d 336, 203 W. Va. 81, 1998 W. Va. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stephens-v-west-virginia-college-of-graduate-studies-wva-1998.