The Estate of Jane Doe 202 v. City of North Charleston

CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedMay 5, 2021
Docket2017-002392
StatusPublished

This text of The Estate of Jane Doe 202 v. City of North Charleston (The Estate of Jane Doe 202 v. City of North Charleston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Estate of Jane Doe 202 v. City of North Charleston, (S.C. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA In The Court of Appeals

The Estate of Jane Doe 202, by John Doe MM and John Doe HS, each of whom holds power of attorney for Jane Doe, Appellant,

v.

City of North Charleston; Leigh Anne McGowan, individually, Charles Francis Wholleb, individually, and Anthony M. Doxey, individually, Respondents.

Appellate Case No. 2017-002392

Appeal from Charleston County Deadra L. Jefferson, Circuit Court Judge

Opinion No. 5821 Submitted May 15, 2020 – Filed May 19, 2021

AFFIRMED

Gregg E. Meyers, of Mt. Pleasant, for Appellant.

Sandra J. Senn and Christopher Thomas Dorsel, both of Senn Legal, LLC, of Charleston, for Respondents.

HEWITT, J.: This is an appeal from a defense verdict in a case about whether police officers violated the civil rights of "Jane Doe," a vulnerable adult. The first issue is whether the trial court erred in directing a verdict on Jane Doe's claim that the officers created the risk Jane Doe would be harmed when they arrested Jane Doe's adult daughter and left Jane Doe unattended in her home. The other issue is whether the trial court abused its discretion in handling the jury's second question about the charges for liability under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (2018).

We affirm. We hold the trial court's grant of a directed verdict was correct, as the evidence did not rise to the level necessary for a claim that the police violated the constitution when they left Jane Doe at her house. On the jury charges, the trial court did not abuse its discretion when it repeated its earlier jury charges on liability and declined to repeat its instructions on damages.

FACTS

Daughter moved into Jane Doe's home in 2012 after it became clear Jane Doe was struggling to live alone. In 2013, Jane Doe was diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease and dementia.

The City of North Charleston Police Department dispatched police officers to Jane Doe's home one night in March 2014 after one of Jane Doe's neighbors reported a potential domestic disturbance. The neighbor reported seeing Daughter banging on the door and yelling for Jane Doe. The scene supposedly "seemed like a mess."

The first officer to arrive said no one was in Jane Doe's yard and no one answered knocks on the front and back doors. Other things were out of sorts as well: there was a pair of high heel shoes on the ground beside the driver's side door of the vehicle parked in the driveway, the vehicle's interior dome light was on, there were wine bottles in the back of the car, and a purse was on the ground in the backyard. The officer could not recall whether the vehicle's driver's side door was open, but the officer said the purse appeared to have fresh blood on it.

Other officers arrived, and they eventually determined an exigent entrance was necessary to check on the welfare of the woman who had reportedly been yelling outside the house. The officers did not have a warrant.

The officers met Jane Doe when they entered the house. They asked Jane Doe if she needed medical attention. All three officers reported that Jane Doe gave no indication in her response that she was suffering from dementia, was incapable of caring for herself, or could not be left alone. Jane Doe told the officers that Daughter was upstairs and led them to Daughter's room.

The parties disagree about what happened next. The officers said they found Daughter asleep in her bed but on top of her covers, fully dressed, and with a large red wine stain down the front of her shirt. They also said Daughter woke up and spoke with the officers, who observed that she was unsteady on her feet and that she declined medical assistance. They claimed that when the two male officers left the bedroom to help gather Daughter's belongings, she began screaming at her mother and flailing her arms, and she struck the remaining female officer. For her part, Daughter claimed that a large figure woke her up in the middle of the night and flipped her out of the bed. Daughter stated she believed she was about to be raped and that she yelled for her mother to "stay out of it" while struggling with the figure.

Daughter was arrested for assaulting a police officer. Daughter claimed the officers refused her request that she be allowed to call someone to look after Jane Doe. The officers disputed this and said they did not recall Daughter ever telling them Jane Doe had dementia, could not be left alone, or could not care for herself. Daughter remained in jail overnight.

Jane Doe stayed in the home by herself until her brother came to check on her around lunchtime the next day, shortly after learning about the situation. He said that Jane Doe was "a wreck" but he was able to calm her down after fifteen or thirty minutes. After that, he left Jane Doe at the house so he could get Daughter out of jail. When Daughter returned home she discovered Jane Doe had been wearing a soiled diaper for some time.

The police came to the residence again two days later, after an unattended Jane Doe had a neighbor call police to report a suspicious vehicle in Jane Doe's driveway. The responding officer determined the vehicle was actually Daughter's vehicle. Once Jane Doe's family returned to the home, EMS was called and Jane Doe was transported to the hospital.

Jane Doe was initially taken to the hospital because she had increasing levels of confusion from being left alone on multiple occasions over a forty-eight hour period. While at the hospital, Jane Doe was also diagnosed with a urinary tract infection, and she stayed in the hospital for approximately two weeks.

Litigation, Trial, and Directed Verdict

Jane Doe brought this lawsuit against the City of North Charleston and the three officers involved in Daughter's arrest. Her complaint alleged eleven different causes of action. Three claims went to trial: deprivation of civil rights by North Charleston; invasion of privacy against North Charleston; and deprivation of civil rights by the responding officers. The civil rights claims were brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983.

A key dispute at trial was whether the officers knew or should have known Jane Doe had diminished mental abilities and was unable to care for herself. Jane Doe's doctor testified the officers likely would not have recognized that Jane Doe had dementia unless they had been told. There was conflicting evidence on the point: as already noted, the officers disputed Daughter's testimony that she insisted she be allowed to contact someone to look after Jane Doe. A recording of the police dispatcher's conversation captured the dispatcher mentioning over the radio that Jane Doe had dementia. Still, the officer testified she did not hear the dispatcher mention dementia, explaining she may have been focused on assessing the scene at that moment rather than the radio.

At the close of all the evidence, the trial court directed a verdict on Jane Doe's "state-created danger" theory of liability. The court gave several reasons for its ruling, including that the officers could not be responsible for a danger (Jane Doe's dementia) that already existed. Jane Doe's claims against North Charleston proceeded to the jury, as did Jane Doe's claims that the individual officers violated her civil rights by making a warrantless entry into her home.

Jury Charges

The trial court gave the following charge on nominal damages during the lengthy jury instructions:

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The Estate of Jane Doe 202 v. City of North Charleston, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-estate-of-jane-doe-202-v-city-of-north-charleston-scctapp-2021.