Westminster Presbyterian Church of Muncie, an Indiana Non-Profit Corporation v. Yonghong Cheng and Hongjun Niu, Husband and Wife, as parents of Matthew Cheng

CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 7, 2013
Docket18A02-1210-CT-791
StatusPublished

This text of Westminster Presbyterian Church of Muncie, an Indiana Non-Profit Corporation v. Yonghong Cheng and Hongjun Niu, Husband and Wife, as parents of Matthew Cheng (Westminster Presbyterian Church of Muncie, an Indiana Non-Profit Corporation v. Yonghong Cheng and Hongjun Niu, Husband and Wife, as parents of Matthew Cheng) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Westminster Presbyterian Church of Muncie, an Indiana Non-Profit Corporation v. Yonghong Cheng and Hongjun Niu, Husband and Wife, as parents of Matthew Cheng, (Ind. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

Aug 07 2013, 5:39 am FOR PUBLICATION

ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE:

ANDREW M. SUMERFORD JAMES R. WILLIAMS Meils Thompson Dietz & Berish SCOTT E. SHOCKLEY Indianapolis, Indiana MATTHEW L. KELSEY DeFur Voran LLP Muncie, Indiana

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF INDIANA

WESTMINSTER PRESBYTERIAN ) CHURCH OF MUNCIE, an Indiana ) Non-Profit Corporation, ) ) Appellant-Defendant, ) ) vs. ) No. 18A02-1210-CT-791 ) YONGHONG CHENG and ) HONGJUN NIU, Husband and Wife, ) as parents of ) MATTHEW CHENG, deceased, ) ) Appellees-Plaintiffs. ) )

INTERLOCUTORY APPEAL FROM THE DELAWARE CIRCUIT COURT The Honorable John Feick, Judge Cause No. 18C04-1003-CT-02

August 7, 2013

OPINION - FOR PUBLICATION

VAIDIK, Judge Case Summary

After the death of their four-month-old son while under the care of a babysitter

recommended by a pastor at their church, Yonghong Cheng and Hongjun Niu (“June”)

(collectively, “the Chengs”) brought suit against Westminster Presbyterian Church

(“Westminster”) for wrongful death, invasion of privacy, and intentional infliction of

emotional distress. Westminster moved for summary judgment on all counts; the trial

court denied the motion in regards to the wrongful death and invasion of privacy claims,

but it granted the motion in regard to the intentional infliction of emotional distress claim.

Westminster appeals, and the Chengs cross-appeal.

Under a Webb v. Jarvis analysis, we find that there was no duty of care as a matter

of law in this case, when a pastor recommended a babysitter to a parishioner and the child

died while in the babysitter’s care. We also find that when the church issued a press

release about the death that included the family and child’s names, there was no invasion

of privacy because the church did not intrude upon the family’s physical seclusion or

profit off of the family’s name, and no intentional infliction of emotional distress because

the conduct did not rise to the level of outrageous. We therefore affirm in part, reverse in

part, and remand with instructions for the trial court to enter summary judgment in favor

of Westminster on all counts.

Facts and Procedural History

Westminster, located in Muncie, Indiana, has approximately 425 members. Dr.

Gary Cox is the Pastor, and Kristofer Holroyd is the Associate Pastor. There is also a

2 Chinese Christian fellowship at Westminster that uses the facility, but it has its own

pastor, worship service, and fellowship time.

The Chengs began attending Westminster in 2005. They attended Westminster’s

regular Sunday services and June sang in the choir; they were not members of the

Chinese Christian fellowship. Their son, Matthew, was born in September 2009, and due

to their fears Matthew would contract the flu, Matthew and Yonghong would usually stay

home from services on Sundays.

Around January 1, 2010, June got a job with Love’s Tax Service and was expected

to start on January 4, resulting in a search for a babysitter for Matthew. June contacted

Joy Wegener, a woman she knew through Bible study at Westminster, and asked if she

would babysit. Wegener initially agreed, but she later changed her mind and called June

to decline. Wegener mentioned Tina Byrd as a possible alternative, telling June that Byrd

was also from Westminster. Wegener gave Byrd’s phone number to June, and June

called and left a message for her that day. However, June was still hoping that Wegener

would change her mind, so she went over to Wegener’s house to talk to her. Wegener

still declined; she then called another woman from Westminster who also declined. At

this point, according to June, Wegener called Holroyd and told him that “June is here

trying to find child care for Matthew.” Appellee’s App. p. 691. However, according to

Holroyd, Wegener told him that her “Chinese friend” was looking for someone to babysit

her baby and asked him if he knew anyone to recommend. Appellant’s App. p. 110.

Holroyd said “Tina is taking babies.” Id. at 122. Wegener then asked Holroyd if any

college students from Westminster could babysit, and Holroyd said he would send out an

3 email to check. Holroyd testified he did not know that June was with Wegener at the

time of the call, and he did not mention that a baby had died while in Byrd’s care just two

months before. Id. at 110. Holroyd also did not think that he was making a

recommendation to anyone to use Byrd as a babysitter, nor did he consider the phone call

to be one seeking pastoral advice. Id. at 112-13.

Before June left Wegener’s house, Byrd called back and indicated that she could

babysit Matthew. Byrd asked June how old Matthew was and whether he was on

formula, and she told June that if she decided to hire her, Byrd would email her a list of

things to bring. Byrd also told June that she could start the next day, January 4. June did

not hire Byrd at this time; she discussed the matter with Yonghong and called Byrd later

to let her know that they were going to hire her. June said that they would be able to pay

Byrd $80 per week, and Byrd agreed to the amount. June did not do any other research

on Byrd, and Byrd gave June no more information.

About two months before, however, in mid-October 2009, Byrd started babysitting

the baby of another family from Westminster. On November 3, 2009, Byrd put him

down for a nap and the baby died. When the baby was discovered, he was unresponsive

in his crib, so Byrd and her daughter called 911 and Byrd performed CPR. The baby’s

death was ruled by the coroner to be “a case of Sudden Unexpected Infant Death

(SUID),” with the official manner of death being “undetermined.” Id. at 260. Byrd was

questioned by the police and the Indiana Department of Child Services, but she was never

charged. The baby’s death was well known within the Westminster community.

4 After the baby’s death, Byrd did not think she would babysit again. However,

Byrd’s father had helped her financially after she got divorced, and he passed away

shortly after the baby’s death. Byrd’s ex-husband was also behind on child-support

payments, so Byrd returned to babysitting in order to start earning money again.

Byrd began babysitting Matthew on January 4, 2010. The first day, June took

Matthew to Byrd’s house, staying for thirty to forty minutes to feed him before going to

work. Around 12:30 or 1:00 p.m., Byrd called June, telling her she “couldn’t do it,” so

June called Yonghong to pick Matthew up from Byrd’s house. Id. at 132. Byrd said that

Matthew “kept on crying” and that she could not handle it and did not want to babysit

anymore. Id. at 133. When Yonghong picked Matthew up, Byrd suggested that they try

bottle feeding him, and that when Matthew was ready, they could try having her babysit

him again. The Chengs worked on weaning Matthew off of breast feeding, and the next

week they dropped him back off at Byrd’s house without issue.

On January 19, 2010, June dropped Matthew off at Byrd’s house. At 2:15 that

afternoon, when Matthew was sleeping, Byrd left the house to pick up her daughter from

school and make another stop, leaving Matthew alone in the house. She had checked on

Matthew about ten minutes before she left, and he seemed to be asleep on his side. Id. at

142. Byrd’s nineteen-year-old daughter, Kassey, worked at a preschool about five

minutes from the house, and she was expected home soon after the school let out around

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