W.L.O. v. Smith
W.L.O. v. Smith
Opinion
The plaintiff, W.L.O., as the mother and next friend of A.O., a minor,1 appeals from a summary judgment entered in favor of the City of Bessemer Board of Education ("the Board"); members of the Board; Hazel Smith, the principal of A.O.'s school; and Mary Blankenship, A.O.'s kindergarten teacher.2 She also appeals from the dismissal of one of the claims in the complaint. The plaintiff's claims against each of the defendants arose out of a sexual assault that she alleges occurred on the school grounds.
On January 11, 1985, the child was a kindergarten student at Abrams Primary School in Bessemer. That morning she followed her routine in preparing for school and was given a ride to school by a neighbor. Upon arriving at school, the child ate breakfast at the cafeteria with her older sister. The sister then walked with the child to her classroom.
At approximately 10:00 that morning, the child used a restroom that was located inside the classroom. According to Blankenship's deposition, a teacher's aide entered the restroom after the child left and found splotches of blood on the floor and bloodstained tissue in the toilet. The aide reported her findings to the teacher, who asked the students if anyone had been hurt. Again according to Blankenship's deposition, the child raised her hand and said that she had a nosebleed. Blankenship was unable to find any evidence of a nosebleed and notified the principal, Smith. Smith took the child into the restroom and lowered the child's pants, whereupon she discovered blood on her underpants. She asked the child how she had been hurt, and, according to Smith's deposition, the child said she had fallen against a table.
The school notified the child's mother, who came to pick up the child. She then took the child home where, according to her deposition, she and the child's grandmother examined the child and discovered that her vaginal opening had been lacerated. Smith was called to the house. She also examined the child and then called the school janitor to come and drive the child and her mother to Children's Hospital in Birmingham. At the hospital, according to the mother's deposition, the child said she had been attacked on the school grounds during "play" by a white man and a black man whom she called "Salt" and "Pepper."
The child denied having any recollection of being assaulted. Therefore, the mother's deposition provides the only account of what the plaintiffs allege to be their version of how and when the assault against the child occurred. According to that testimony, the child told her mother that as she was going from the playground to a restroom, "Salt" and "Pepper" grabbed her, threw her to the ground, and assaulted her. After the attack, the child said, she ran to the school door where a janitor named David opened the locked door for her and let her into the school.3
The child's grandmother, who at the time was her legal guardian, filed an action in her individual capacity and on the child's behalf against the City of Bessemer, the Board, its members, Blankenship, and Smith. Count one of that complaint alleged *Page 24
that the defendants had negligently or wantonly left the child unattended on the playground, thus allowing her to be assaulted. Count two of the complaint alleged that the defendants had breached an implied contract to provide the child with a safe place to attend school. In count three of the complaint, the plaintiff alleged that Smith and Blankenship were aware, or should have been aware, that "Salt" and "Pepper" were in the vicinity of the school and had been harassing children. She also alleged that the defendants' failure to protect the child from the assault deprived her of due process of law in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment and subjected the defendants to damages pursuant to
After the complaint was filed, the child's grandmother died and the child's mother was substituted as the plaintiff.4 The trial court later dismissed the breach of implied contract claim on the authority of this Court's decisions in Brown v.Calhoun County Board of Education,
The plaintiff seeks to overcome her failure of proof by arguing that negligence can be shown in this case by circumstantial evidence. However, as the trial court noted in its summary judgment, such a finding would necessarily be based on multiple inferences. Assuming that from the evidence one could draw an inference that the child was assaulted on school grounds, could one draw an additional inference that the attack occurred as a result of a faculty member's negligence? If so, would that second inference provide the evidence of negligence necessary to defeat the motion for summary judgment?
As to the first query, in Stevens v. Chesteen,
Notwithstanding the plaintiff's failure of proof, there are a number of policy reasons that argue against exposing the defendants to potential liability. In Stevens, supra, this Court recognized the impracticality of exposing teachers to liability for alleged negligent supervision: "[I]t must always be remembered that the reality of school life is such that a teacher cannot possibly be expected to personally supervise each student in his charge at every moment of the school day."
For the reasons set out above, the summary judgment on the claim of negligence was appropriate.
The trial court entered summary judgment on the § 1983 claim pursuant to the United States Supreme Court's decision inDeShaney v. Winnebago County Department of Social Services,
Finally, the plaintiff argues that the court erred by refusing to strike the depositions of Mitzi Green, a social worker for *Page 26 the Department of Human Resources, and Leigh Turner Noel, the head of the rape response division at a private counseling center. Both Ms. Green and Ms. Noel investigated the assault and interviewed the child at the request of the Bessemer police department. They testified that, based on their interviews with the child, they had concluded that she had been assaulted at her home rather than at her school.
The plaintiffs argue that Ms. Green and Ms. Noel were not competent to give the testimony contained in their depositions, and that their conclusions invaded the province of the jury. However, determinations regarding the competency of witnesses to testify are within the discretion of the trial court,Pugh v. State Farm Fire Casualty Ins. Co.,
For the reasons set out above, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
MOTION TO DISMISS PORTION OF APPEAL DENIED.
AFFIRMED.
HORNSBY, C.J., and MADDOX, ADAMS, HOUSTON, STEAGALL and INGRAM, JJ., concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- W.L.O., as the Mother and Next Friend of A.O., a Minor v. Hazel Smith
- Cited By
- 11 cases
- Status
- Published