Washa v. Oregon Department of Corrections

979 P.2d 273, 159 Or. App. 207, 1999 Ore. App. LEXIS 395
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedMarch 17, 1999
Docket94C-10004, CA A93626 (Control); 94C-10005, CA A93627
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 979 P.2d 273 (Washa v. Oregon Department of Corrections) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Washa v. Oregon Department of Corrections, 979 P.2d 273, 159 Or. App. 207, 1999 Ore. App. LEXIS 395 (Or. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinions

[210]*210HASELTON, J.

Defendant, Oregon Department of Corrections (DOC), appeals from a judgment for damages resulting from violent crimes that a parolee committed while under DOC’s supervision. We agree with defendant that it had not “taken charge” of the parolee within the meaning of section 319 of the Restatement (Second) of Torts (1965). However, we also conclude that the harm plaintiffs suffered was a reasonably foreseeable consequence of defendant’s inadequate supervision of the parolee, and that, in the circumstances presented here, the parolee’s actions were not the sort of supervening criminal conduct that would otherwise preclude liability. Accordingly, we affirm.

The record, viewed in the light most favorable to plaintiffs, as the prevailing parties,1 disclosed the following material facts: In 1984, Cal Brown was sentenced as a dangerous offender under ORS 161.725 for his attempted assault on a woman in Corvallis. At that time, Brown already had an extensive criminal record, including a 1977 conviction in California that involved a knife assault on a woman in a shopping center. Brown served the minimum seven-and-a-half-year sentence for the Oregon attempted assault conviction and was released on parole from the Oregon State Penitentiary on March 25, 1991, after receiving a favorable psychiatric evaluation.

Upon Brown’s release, DOC placed him under the supervision of Parole Officer Larry Wibbenmeyer, a DOC employee. Wibbenmeyer, who specialized in the supervision of sex offenders, was assigned to Brown because Brown’s prior criminal conduct involved “potentially sexually predatory behavior.” Wibbenmeyer was given a copy of a letter to the Parole Board from District Attorney Peter Sandrock, the prosecuting attorney on the 1984 conviction. In that letter, Sandrock stated that not only did he consider Brown to be one of the most dangerous criminals whom he had ever prosecuted, but also that “unless [Brown] has undergone a [211]*211remarkable transformation in prison, he will remain a potential mutilator and killer of women.” Other sources of information available to Wibbenmeyer included a 1984 psychological report and presentence investigation report documenting Brown’s history of sexually predatory and physically assaultive conduct towards women and his sexual fantasies regarding female bondage and violence towards women. Wibbenmeyer was aware that Brown historically had not responded well to community supervision, had avoided the responsibilities surrounding probation and legal proceedings, and had absconded from the jurisdiction of various courts.2

DOC classified Brown as requiring the highest level of supervision. Wibbenmeyer was required to make a minimum of one unscheduled successful home visit each month, in addition to meeting with Brown at least twice a month for scheduled office visits. Brown was required to comply with all conditions of his parole, which, according to Wibbenmeyer’s testimony, included a requirement that Brown notify Wibbenmeyer if he would be away from his residence for more than 24 hours.

Brown rented an apartment in Eugene and enrolled in classes at the University of Oregon.3 During the month of April, Wibbenmeyer had five contacts with Brown, including an unscheduled home visit on April 30,1991.4 Wibbenmeyer next saw Brown for a scheduled office visit on May 10,1991, at which time they scheduled the next office visit for May 24, 1991. Up to that point, to the best of Wibbenmeyer’s knowledge, Brown had complied with every condition and requirement of his parole.

[212]*212On both May 14 and May 16, 1991, Wibbenmeyer attempted to make unscheduled home visits but did not find Brown at home on either occasion. On May 16, Wibbenmeyer noticed a pizza coupon taped to Brown’s door. When he returned the next morning, Friday, May 17, he observed that the coupon was still there. Wibbenmeyer testified that he then left his business card on Brown’s door and that, although his concern that Brown had absconded “increased” at that point, he did not feel that he had proof certain.

On Monday, May 20,1991, Wibbenmeyer received a phone call from a Eugene resident relating that he had sold a car to Brown and that Brown’s check had been returned for insufficient funds. Wibbenmeyer immediately contacted the Eugene Police Department to check for active cases involving Brown but learned that there were none. Later that same morning, Wibbenmeyer went to Brown’s home and found that the card he had left on Friday was still there. Wibbenmeyer then attended Brown’s 11:30 a.m. class at the University of Oregon, but Brown did not show up. Wibbenmeyer testified that at that point he was “motivated” to request a warrant for Brown from the Board of Parole and Post-Prison Supervision, but that his supervisor felt that there was not sufficient evidence that Brown had absconded.5 On Monday afternoon, Wibbenmeyer returned to Brown’s apartment and left a note asking Brown to call him immediately. On either Tuesday, May 21, or Wednesday, May 22, Wibbenmeyer left a message on Brown’s answering machine warning him that if he did not contact Wibbenmeyer within 24 hours, a warrant would be issued. Brown did not contact Wibbenmeyer.

On May 23, 1991, with his supervisor’s permission, Wibbenmeyer asked the Board to issue a warrant for Brown’s arrest. The Board approved Wibbenmeyer’s request and issued an Oregon-only warrant.6 The warrant authorized any police officer to arrest and detain Brown without opportunity for bail.

[213]*213On the same morning that the Board issued a warrant for his arrest, Brown kidnapped Holly Washa near Seattle, Washington, by forcing his way into her car and holding her at knife point. Brown then took her to a hotel room near the Sea-Tac airport, where, over the course of 36 hours, he held her hostage, raped her, sodomized her, tortured her, and stabbed her in the neck and body. He tied her up and left her to die in the trunk of a rental car in a parking lot near the airport.

Brown then boarded a plane and flew to Ontario, California, where he met plaintiff Susan Schnell. Brown had met Schnell a week earlier on a flight from Los Angeles to Seattle, and they had made arrangements to spend Memorial Day weekend together in nearby Palm Springs. On the night of May 26, 1991, in a hotel room in Palm Springs, Brown attacked Schnell by slashing her throat in three places, cutting her finger, tying her up, raping her and torturing her. In the early morning horns of May 27, 1991, when Brown left the hotel temporarily, Schnell was able to contact the front desk. The police arrived and arrested Brown upon his return to the hotel.

Brown pleaded guilty to charges in California and was then extradited to Kang County, Washington, where he was convicted of Washa’s murder and sentenced to death. Brown is currently awaiting execution in Washington, pending appeal.

On April 5,1993, plaintiff John Washa, Jr., the personal representative of Holly Washa’s estate, and plaintiff Susan Schnell filed these actions against DOC and Dr. Donald Crane. In their complaints, plaintiffs alleged that (1) DOC and Crane were negligent in conducting the dangerous offender evaluation that was before the Board at the time it rendered its parole decision;7

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Washa v. Oregon Department of Corrections
979 P.2d 273 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1999)

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Bluebook (online)
979 P.2d 273, 159 Or. App. 207, 1999 Ore. App. LEXIS 395, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washa-v-oregon-department-of-corrections-orctapp-1999.