Loudin v. Mills, Unpublished Decision (5-12-2000)
Loudin v. Mills, Unpublished Decision (5-12-2000)
Opinion of the Court
OPINION
In the summer of 1981 and throughout 1982, the son of plaintiffs-appellants Frances and Robert Loudin was sexually assaulted by Dennis Mills, who had been a long-time family friend. As a result of these assaults, the Loudins' son suffered severe emotional injuries, rebelled against his parents, became a chronic runaway, and abused alcohol and drugs. Unaware of the reason for their son's behavior, the Loudins endured a loss of filial companionship with their son, which included separations from their son while he was a runaway and while he was treated for his emotional injuries. Until February 1997, the Loudins' son concealed from his parents the sexual assaults committed by Mills.In 1999, the Loudins filed a lawsuit against Mills, seeking damages for the expenses they had incurred in the 1980s for the treatment rendered to their son, and for the loss of consortium they had experienced during those years. Additionally, the Loudins sought damages for the intentional infliction of emotional distress and the negligent infliction of emotional distress they experienced upon learning that Mills had committed sexual assaults on their son. In his answer, Mills admitted the allegations in the complaint, but he later asserted in a summary-judgment motion that any action taken against him as a result of the Loudins' claims was barred by the applicable statute of limitations.
The trial court agreed with Mills's argument that the lawsuit brought against him was based upon claims derived from the sexual assaults committed against the Loudins' son. The court determined that the one-year statute of limitations applicable to any claims that could have been brought by the Loudins' son was also applicable to the Loudins' claims, but that the limitations period was tolled until the date the Loudins first learned of the sexual assaults. Thus, the Loudins had only one year after they discovered the sexual assaults, or until 1998, to commence an action against Mills. Since the Loudins failed to commence their action within one year, the trial court granted summary judgment in favor of Mills.
On appeal, the Loudins claim, in a single assignment of error, that the trial court erred in applying the one-year statute of limitations to the commencement of their action. The Loudins argue that their claims are not derivative of the sexual assaults committed against their son, that their claims are independent of the harm caused to their son, and that they had at least two years after they first discovered the sexual assaults on their son within which to commence their action.
A court may grant summary judgment only when the moving party demonstrates that the record is devoid of genuine issues of material fact and that reasonable minds can come to but one conclusion, which is adverse to the nonmoving party. See Civ.R. 56(B); see, e.g., Mitseff v. Wheeler (1988),
Were this case brought by the Loudins' son, the trial court's decision could be affirmed without much analysis. In Doev. First United Methodist Church (1994),
Although it would be easy for this court to simply apply the Loudins' son's limitations period to the Loudins' claims, we cannot do so. We begin our analysis with the parents' derivative claims.
The Loudins' claims of loss of consortium and reimbursement for incurred losses related to their son's behavior and treatment after the sexual assaults were derived directly from those assaults. See Gallimore v. Children's Hosp. Med. Ctr. (1993),
Unlike the derivative claims, the claims for negligent and intentional infliction of emotional distress were separate claims brought by the Loudins for the emotional distress they directly suffered upon the discovery that their son had been sexually assaulted by Mills. These claims were not brought by the victim of the sexual assaults, so we need not restrict the limitations periods for these claims to the essential character of the underlying tort. Cf. Love, supra; Ault, supra; Doe, supra. Consequently, the applicable statute of limitations for the Loudins' intentional-infliction-of-emotional-distress claim is four years. See R.C.
Despite our holding that the Loudins' claims for negligent and intentional infliction of emotional distress were not subject to their son's one-year limitations period, we must address when these two claims accrued and if the limitations period was tolled by the Loudins' son's concealment of the sexual assaults for almost thirteen years after he reached the age of majority. In its decision, the trial court extended the discovery rule to all of the claims asserted by the Loudins, so that the limitations period was tolled until 1997. The discovery rule assumes that a tort has been completed, yet has gone undiscovered until a later date. See Biro v. Hartman Funeral Home (1995),
It appears that no case in Ohio has addressed the accrual of or limitations periods for negligence claims brought by parents as a result of a sexual assault committed upon a child when that child conceals from his parents the sexual assault until many years after reaching the age of majority. After an exhaustive search of case law throughout the United States, we have found one case, from the state of Wisconsin, that is very much on point and quite helpful in analyzing the issues in this case.
In Joseph W. v. Catholic Diocese of Madison (1997),
In April 1994, Joseph's parents filed suit against the Diocese and St. Thomas Church, where Father Trainor had been a priest. Id. The suit contained claims for negligent infliction of emotional distress, loss of consortium, and reimbursement for medical expenses for Joseph's treatment as a result of the sexual assaults. Id. Joseph's parents claimed that their causes of action did not accrue until 1994, when they first learned of the sexual assault on Joseph; however, the defendants won summary judgment for the reason that the parents' claims were time-barred. Id.
On appeal, the Wisconsin Court of Appeals held that the parents' negligence claims accrued at the time of the last sexual assault on Joseph, even though Joseph did not tell his parents of the abuse until ten years after the last assault. Id. The Wisconsin court held that the tolling provision for Joseph's minority applied to his parents' claims, such that the statute of limitations for those claims began to run on the same date that Joseph could have brought his own claims. Id. The Wisconsin court stated that "parents may not have control over when their child tells them of an assault," and that Joseph's parents made a strong case for extending the discovery rule to toll the limitations period for their claims until the date Joseph told them of the sexual assault; however, the court held that it would be unfair for potential defendants to be exposed indefinitely to such claims, because of "the difficulty of defending against [the claims] and the risk of fraudulent claims." Id. at 942-945,
We agree with the reasoning set forth in Joseph W.,supra. We hold that a cause of action by parents related to a sexual assault on their minor child, which arises out of the sexual assault as a separate cause of action, accrues at the time of the last assault. Although the cause of action accrues on the date of the last assault, we hold that the statute of limitations does not begin to run until the child reaches the age of majority. The discovery rule, therefore, does not toll the limitations period until the parents first learn of the sexual assault. Thus, if a child chooses not to inform the parents of the sexual assault until sometime after the limitations period for bringing the parents' claims expires, the parents' claims are time-barred. We further limit our holding to cases where the child does not have a repressed memory.
We summarize our decision today as follows: The Loudins' claims for their loss of consortium and for treatment expenses were derivative claims subject to a four-year limitations period. Although they arose out of the sexual assaults committed against the son, the Loudins' claims for negligent and intentional infliction of emotional distress were separate claims subject to two- and four-year limitations periods, respectively. All of the Loudins' claims accrued on the date of the last sexual assault committed against their son, but the commencement of the applicable limitations periods was tolled until 1984, when the Loudins' son turned eighteen. Because Mills successfully demonstrated, in his motion for summary judgment, that the Loudins' claims were barred by the statute of limitations, we overrule the Loudins' assignment of error.
Our reasoning differs to some degree from the reasoning of the trial court, but the result is the same. Therefore, we affirm the entry of summary judgment for Mills, but modify that entry so that all language referring to the tolling of the claims until the date of discovery of the sexual assaults and to the application of a one-year limitations period to all of the Loudins' claims is deleted.
Judgment affirmed as modified.
GORMAN, P.J., and SUNDERMANN, J., concur.__________________________ WINKLER, Judge.
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