Hinson v. Holt
Hinson v. Holt
Opinion
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Jacqueline Hinson appeals from a judgment of the Elmore County Circuit Court awarding damages and costs to Dwaine Holt, as father and next friend of his minor son Dustin Holt, on his claims arising from Hinson's corporal punishment of Dustin at Southside Middle School in Tallassee. We affirm.
Holt originally sued Hinson in her individual capacity and in her official capacity as an employee of "Tallassee City Schools";1 he also named "Tallassee City Schools" and Superintendent Glen Baggett as defendants. In his complaint, Holt asserted claims of assault and battery, intentional infliction of emotional distress, and negligence. Hinson, Baggett, and "Tallassee City Schools" answered the complaint, pleading, among other things, the "schoolmaster's defense" and discretionary-function immunity. After discovery had taken place, and the case had been set for a nonjury trial, the defendants filed a motion for a summary judgment, supported by excerpts from deposition transcripts. Holt responded by filing a response in opposition, supported by deposition excerpts and the affidavits of Dustin and his aunt, Melanie Garner. The trial court entered a summary judgment in favor of "Tallassee City Schools" and Superintendent Baggett, and directed the entry of a final judgment as to those defendants; that judgment was not appealed. However, the trial court denied the summary judgment motion as to Hinson, concluding that there were genuine issues of material fact concerning whether Hinson's conduct had violated the corporal punishment policy of the Tallassee city school system and whether she had acted willfully, maliciously, or in bad faith so as to bar a claim of discretionary- function immunity.
The case proceeded to trial as to the claims against Hinson alone. During a two-day ore tenus proceeding, the trial court denied Hinson's motions, purportedly *Page 808 made pursuant to Rule 50, Ala.R.Civ.P.,2 for a judgment as a matter of law at the close of Holt's evidence and at the close of all the evidence. At the close of proceedings, the trial court entered a judgment in favor of Holt for $5,000 plus costs of court. On Holt's motion, the trial court subsequently taxed the costs of several depositions to Hinson.
Our standard of review of the trial court's judgment, entered after an ore tenus proceeding, is settled:
"[W]here evidence has been presented orally, a presumption of correctness attends the trial court's conclusion on issues of fact, if these conclusions were based totally or in part on oral testimony. This Court will not disturb the trial court's conclusions unless they are clearly erroneous and against the great weight of the evidence."
First Alabama Bank of Montgomery, N.A. v. Martin,
"Reasonable corporal punishment may be administered after consultation with the principal, and only in the presence of another professional staff member. Reasonable corporal punishment shall be administered only as a last resort in the most unusual circumstances and after reasonable corrective measures have been used without success. "A staff member may, however, use reasonable force against a pupil without advance notice to the principal when it is essential for self-defense, the preservation of order, or for the protection of other persons or the property of the Board."
In addition to this policy, the Tallassee City Board of Education's Code of Conduct, applicable during the 1995-96 school year, placed various student acts into four classes of offenses for disciplinary purposes. Class I offenses included "Use of profane or obscene language not directed toward another person"; Class II offenses included "Threats" and "Use of profane or obscene language or gestures." For Class I offenses, the Code of Conduct listed the following "minimum consequences": for a first offense, a teacher conference with student; for a second offense, a parental contact by the teacher; and for a third offense, office referral, parental contact and student counseling, as well as possible corporal punishment. "Minimum consequences" for Class II offenses included an office referral, a parental conference, a suspension from school, or an in-school suspension of one to three days.
On Friday, September 1, 1995, the fifth day of the 1995-96 school term at Southside Middle School, 13-year-old Dustin reported to his first period eighth-grade physical education class, which was under the direction of a substitute teacher that day. After playing football outdoors during the period, the boys' physical education *Page 809 class returned to the gymnasium, along with the girls' class (which was under Hinson's direction), to change clothes for their next instructional period. As the students walked towards the gym, one student behind Dustin said to another "I will kick your ass." Immediately after that remark was made, Dustin turned around and saw the students behind him laughing. When another student asked Dustin what had been said, Dustin repeated the remark he had overheard; he did not do so in a threatening manner.
Hinson turned around as Dustin uttered the remark, and upon hearing it directed him to "see her at the top of the hill." She then instructed Dustin to dress and to come to a stage inside the gymnasium. Dustin dressed and reported to the stage, and Hinson sent for Coach Bruce Wayne Dean; she informed Coach Dean that she was inflicting corporal punishment on Dustin because he had used profanity. Hinson did not send for, or otherwise consult, the principal of Southside, Ron McDaniel. Moreover, Dustin's disciplinary records show that he had committed no offenses under the Code of Conduct before September 1, 1995.
When Dustin reported to the stage, Hinson directed him to hold onto the top of a chair. Hinson then picked up a wooden paddle that contained holes on that portion of the paddle designed to make contact with a punishee's buttocks, and struck Dustin three times. Three is considered by Tallassee school personnel to be the normal maximum number of blows a student should receive. The force of the third blow was sufficiently strong to cause the chair Dustin was grasping to slide several inches across the stage.
After receiving Hinson's blows, Dustin was in such pain that he was unable to sit through his remaining classes. On the next day, a Saturday, Dustin lay on his stomach, and there is testimony that he could not engage in normal activities. When Dustin's aunt examined his buttocks, she was so shocked by the deep, eggplant-sized black bruises Dustin had received that she and Dustin drove to the home of her employer, a circuit judge from an adjacent county, who examined the bruises with his wife and contacted McDaniel. Dustin was then taken to Tallassee Community Hospital's emergency room for medical treatment,3 and Dustin's aunt completed a child-abuse incident report. Even on the next school day, which was four days after Hinson's punishment of Dustin, Dustin was still in pain, and his father wrote a note to his teachers asking that they excuse him from being seated in class.
On appeal, Hinson asserts that the judgment is flawed because it is general in nature; she also asserts the applicability of various common-law and statutory immunities from liability, and she contends that the trial court erred in taxing the costs of various depositions to her after she filed her notice of appeal.
Hinson contends that the judgment is flawed because, she says, she was entitled to a judgment as a matter of law as to all claims in her "official capacity," i.e., in her capacity as an employee of the "Tallassee City Schools," and the judgment, she says, does not indicate whether it was entered on the official-capacity *Page 810
claims or on the individual-capacity claims. However, in making this argument Hinson neglects to consider the effect of the trial court's summary judgment in favor of "Tallassee City Schools," i.e., the Tallassee City Board of Education,4 Hinson's employer. "Claims against officers in their official capacity are `functionally equivalent' to claims against the entity they represent." Godby v. Montgomery County Bd. of Educ.,
Hinson further argues that the judgment is flawed because, she contends, she was entitled to a judgment as a matter of law on Holt's claims of intentional infliction of emotional distress. However, the transcribed remarks of the trial court made when it entered its judgment refer to caselaw discussing assault and battery, and it is apparent that its judgment is based upon Holt's assault-and-battery claim and not upon his other claims. Even assuming, however, that the intentional-infliction-of- emotional-distress count was not viable, or was a "bad count," the presence of another, viable claim in the case would be sufficient to render harmless any error in failing to enter a judgment on the intentional-infliction claim:
"Although we conclude that the trial judge erred in not entering an involuntary dismissal of [a] claim pursuant to Rule 41(b), Ala.R.Civ.P.,5 we conclude that that error was harmless, inasmuch as other theories in the plaintiffs' case were viable. The principles of Aspinwall v. Gowens,
405 So.2d 134 (Ala. 1981), do not apply in a non-jury setting."
Mississippi Valley Title Ins. Co. v. Malkove,
"A schoolmaster is regarded as standing in loco parentis and has the authority to administer moderate correction to pupils under his care. To be guilty of an assault and battery, the teacher must not only inflict on the child immoderate chastisement, but he must do so with legal malice or wicked motives or he must inflict some permanent injury. In *Page 811 determining the reasonableness of the punishment or the extent of malice, proper matters for consideration are the instrument used and the nature of the offense committed by the child, the age and physical condition of the child, and the other attendant circumstances."
Seizing upon the court's use, in Suits, of the term in loco parentis (that is, "in the place of a parent"), Hinson contends that she is entitled to blanket parental immunity. Under Alabama law, "[t]he parental immunity doctrine prohibits all civil suits brought by unemancipated minor children against their parents for the torts of their parents." Mitchell v. Davis,
However, even assuming that an educator can claim some form of parental immunity, we note that the Alabama Supreme Court has never held the parental-immunity doctrine to be applicable in its pure form to nonparents. For example, Suits imposes a higher quantum of proof upon a student who seeks to hold a teacher liable on an assault-and-battery claim arising from corporal punishment, because teachers stand in loco parentis; but it does not equate the status of teachers to that of parents under the parental-liability doctrine. More recently, in Mitchell, foster parents (who, like the schoolmaster in Suits, are not legal parents, but act in loco parentis) were held to be entitled only to a "qualified form" of parental immunity from actions by their foster children, that is, immunity "against claims of simple negligence brought by foster children in their care." Mitchell, 592 So.2d at 806 (emphasis added). Thus, if Hinson were entitled to parental immunity at all, it would be limited to claims based upon simple negligence; she would have no immunity from liability with respect to claims based upon alleged intentional torts such as assault and battery. Hinson's claim of parental immunity is therefore no more and no less availing than her reliance upon the educator's privilege enunciated in Suits.
Neither are we persuaded that Hinson is immune from liability for assault and battery under the doctrine of discretionary-function immunity applicable to state employees, although that doctrine has been held to apply to employees of city boards of education. See L.S.B. v. Howard,
More importantly, however, even if Hinson acted within her discretion in deciding to use a paddle to punish Dustin, the manner of her punishment is not necessarily immunized, because "a state officer or employee is not protected under the doctrine of discretionary function immunity if he acts willfully, maliciously, fraudulently, or in bad faith." Wright v. Wynn,
Legal malice may be defined as "the intentional doing of a wrongful act without just cause or excuse, either with an intent to injure the other party or under such circumstances that the law will imply an evil intent." Empiregas, Inc. v. Feely,
There was sufficient evidence from which the trial court could have concluded that Hinson acted maliciously in corporally punishing Dustin. First, according to the policy of the Tallassee City Board of Education, corporal punishment is not to be administered except "as a last resort in the most unusual circumstances and after reasonable corrective measures have been used without success" (emphasis added). In this case, Dustin was immediately subjected to the maximum corporal punishment for uttering the word "ass" on the fifth day of school. There is no evidence that Dustin had a previous record of such offenses; further, Hinson made no attempt to consult with the principal before inflicting the punishment, and Hinson made no other attempt to correct Dustin before resorting to corporal punishment. Thus, the trial court could have concluded from the evidence that Hinson's infliction of corporal punishment was in direct contravention of the policies of the Tallassee City Board of Education.6
Also, in determining the reasonableness of the punishment and the extent of malice, the trier of fact may consider the nature of the offense committed by the student, the age and physical condition of the student, and other attendant circumstances. Suits,
Under the applicable standard of review, we must view this evidence, and the evidence of the Tallassee City Board of Education's policy of reserving the use of corporal punishment as a last resort under unusual circumstances, in a light most favorable to Holt. Driver v. Hice, 618 So.2d at 131. Applying this principle, we conclude that the evidence in this case was sufficient to support the trial court's finding that Hinson acted with legal malice in punishing Dustin. Under Suits and the other authorities cited above, such malice will support a finding of liability with respect to an assault-and-battery claim against an state-employed educator. Thus, we conclude that the trial court's judgment in favor of Holt is neither clearly *Page 813 erroneous nor against the great weight of the evidence.
In reaching this conclusion, we are aware of Hinson's contention that student discipline is a constant concern in modern society, and we note her citation to current opinion-polling data tending to indicate that corporal punishment is deemed by many Alabama citizens to be a proper means of correcting errant behavior of students in the schools of this state. However, the framers of Alabama's Constitution envisioned that the government of this state would be "a government of laws and not of men." Ala. Const. 1901, §
"[T]axation of costs under Rule 54(d), Ala.R.Civ.P., rests in the discretion of the trial judge, whose decision will not be reversed unless a clear abuse of discretion is shown." Garrett v. Whatley,
AFFIRMED.
Yates and Monroe, JJ., concur.
Crawley and Thompson, JJ., concur in the result.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Jacqueline Hinson v. Dwaine Holt, as Father and Next Friend of Dustin Holt, a Minor.
- Cited By
- 21 cases
- Status
- Published