L.S.B. v. Howard
L.S.B. v. Howard
Opinion
L.S.B., a student at Banks Middle School, was allegedly raped on the Banks Middle School premises.1 L.S.B., by and through her parents Mr. and Mrs. B., sued Nancy Howard, the principal of Banks Middle School, alleging that Howard, either negligently, wantonly, or in bad faith, had failed to properly supervise L.S.B. and by that failure had caused the alleged rape. The trial court granted Howard's motion for a summary judgment. L.S.B. appeals from this judgment in favor of Howard.
On April 4, 1990, the date of the incident, L.S.B. was 13 years old and was in the 7th grade at Banks Middle School. Because her emotional stability and memory are affected by an illness she sustained in early childhood, she was enrolled in the "emotionally conflicted" ("E.C.") special education class at the school, taught by Cheryl Colvin. Eulen Couch, as Colvin's assistant, was supposed to take L.S.B. and two other female E.C. students to a regular physical education class in the gym and then take the four male E.C. students to a regular physical education class *Page 44 on the softball field. One of the girls attended the regular physical education class as scheduled. However, because L.S.B. and the other female E.C. student asked Couch to let them go outside, he allowed them to accompany him and the male E.C. students to a practice field across the street from the field where the regular physical education class was being held.
According to L.S.B., she had planned to have sex at school that day with her boyfriend, who was also a member of the E.C. class. While Couch was talking with the other female student on the field's bleachers, L.S.B., her boyfriend, and two other E.C. students broke into a field house located near the practice field. According to L.S.B., she had sex with her boyfriend in the field house, but, she said, a fourth E.C. student charged in, frightened the others away, and raped her. At a student disciplinary hearing regarding the incident, however, L.S.B.'s boyfriend stated that, upon the group's breaking into the field house, L.S.B. asked one of the other boys to have sex, but that boy refused. According to the boyfriend, he and L.S.B. then had sex, and afterwards L.S.B. told the boys to ask the boy later accused of rape to come into the field house. The boyfriend stated that the boys tried to watch L.S.B. with that boy, but left after he told them to do so.
Article I, § 14, Alabama Constitution 1901, provides that the State of Alabama shall not be made a defendant "in any court of law or equity"; this is the constitutional basis for the doctrine of sovereign immunity. This immunity may attach to an individual who, while acting as an agent of the State, is engaged in the exercise of a discretionary function; in other words, the individual may be entitled to qualified immunity.Nance v. Matthews,
Municipal and county boards of education are local agencies of the State and partake of the State's sovereign immunity.Enterprise City Board of Educ. v. Miller,
We hold that Howard is entitled to immunity as to L.S.B.'s claims alleging negligent and wanton supervision; therefore, the trial court correctly entered the summary judgment for Howard on those claims. The exercise of supervisory functions is usually discretionary, because it requires "constant decision making and judgment" by the person in the supervisory role. Phillips, 555 So.2d at 85; see also Coyle v. Harper,
As stated above, if L.S.B. were able to show that Howard acted in bad faith, Howard would not be protected by qualified immunity from liability. Nance, supra. However, L.S.B. clearly failed to produce any evidence of bad faith on Howard's part. Therefore, the trial court correctly entered the summary judgment in favor of Howard on this claim as well.
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
ALMON, SHORES, HOUSTON and BUTTS, JJ., concur.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- L. S. B. v. Nancy Howard.
- Cited By
- 26 cases
- Status
- Published