MCFADYEN et al v. DUKE UNIVERSITY et al
Filing
361
Joint Supporting BRIEF re #360 Joint MOTION to Strike #351 Amended Document, by Defendants DUKE UNIVERSITY, DUKE UNIVERSITY HEALTH SYSTEMS, TARA LEVICY, R.N., GARY N. SMITH filed by DUKE UNIVERSITY, DUKE UNIVERSITY HEALTH SYSTEMS, TARA LEVICY, R.N., GARY N. SMITH. (Attachments: #1 Exhibit A- Redline Comparison of Plaintiffs Two Filings, #2 Exhibit B- Reply Br. Supp. Pet. Writ Cert., #3 Exhibit C- Resp. in Oppn to Pet. Writ Cert.)(SUN, PAUL)
EXHIBIT A
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF NORTH CAROLINA
RYAN MCFADYEN, ET AL.,
Plaintiffs,
v.
1:07-CV-953-JAB-JEP
DUKE UNIVERSITY, ET AL.,
Defendants.
PLAINTIFFS' BRIEF IN OPPOSITION TO DEFENDANTS'
MOTION FOR JUDGMENT ON THE PLEADINGS
- CORRECTED Plaintiffs, Ryan McFadyen, Matthew Wilson, and, Breck Archer, respond to
the motion for judgment on the pleadings as to Counts 1, 2, 5, 18, and 32 (“the
Motion”) (ECF 335) filed by Defendants Tara Levicy (“Levicy”), Gary Smith
(“Smith”), Duke University (“Duke”), and Duke University Health System, Inc.
(“DUHS”), and joined by Defendant Linwood Wilson (“Wilson”), (collectively
“Defendants”).
BACKGROUND
Defendants previously filed Rule 12 motions to dismiss as to the same causes
of action at issue in their present motion, and this Court denied their motions in
its consolidated ruling on the motions to dismiss filed by all defendants in this
case. (Mem. Op. at 45-71, 77-88, 143-150, and 195-198, No. 1:07CV953
(M.D.N.C. Mar. 31, 2011) (ECF 186)). Here, Defendants move again under Rule
12, for dismissal of certain claims based on the Fourth Circuit’s decision on the
City Defendants’ interlocutory appeal of this Court’s denial of their immunity defenses (ECF 322).
Plaintiffs are preparing to file a petition for a writ of certiorari to the Fourth
Circuit on or before June 13, 2013, asking the Supreme Court to reverse the circuit court’s decision (Dkt. No. 12A964). If the petition is granted, the rulings on
which this Motion are based may be reversed, remanded, or modified, rendering
the Motion moot. Thus, Plaintiffs request that the Court decide this Motion after
the outcome of Plaintiffs’ petition for a writ of certiorari is ruled upon and any
subsequent appellate proceedings are concluded. Of course, if Plaintiffs’ petition
is not granted or the Fourth Circuit’s decision otherwise remains unmodified,
Counts 1 2 and 21 5 must be dismissed because this Court is bound by the Fourth
Circuit’s conclusion that those counts do not allege a constitutional violation.
However, the Fourth Circuit’s decision does not require dismissal of Plaintiffs’
obstruction of justice claim against Levicy or Wilson, irrespective of further appellate proceedings, because the Fourth Circuit’s ruling as to Count 18, by its own
terms, applies only to “a common-law obstruction of justice claim against police
officers based on how the officers conducted a criminal investigation.” Evans v.
Chalmers, 703 F. 3d 636, 658 (4th Cir. 2012) (emphasis added); nor does it
require dismissal of Count 1 against Levicy because it did not reach the
constitutional question, holding that the police defendants were entitled to
qualified immunity, which Levicy does not share, id. 650 n.6. Furthermore,
because the Fourth Circuit’s decision does not require dismissal of Count 18
against Levicy, it does not require dismissal of Count 32, Plaintiffs’ negligent
supervision claim against Duke and DUHS.
FACTS RELEVANT TO THE MOTION
The Complaint details the facts giving rise to Plaintiffs’ obstruction of justice
claim against Tara Levicy. (ECF 136 ¶¶ 779-99 at 257-66; ¶ 913 at 302; and ¶¶
1189-1202 at 390-94). Generally, Plaintiffs allege that Levicy obstructed and attempted to obstruct justice by manufacturing forensic medical records and re-
ports of Mangum’s sexual assault examination at DUHS. (Id. ¶¶ 785-99 at 26166; ¶ 913 at 302; and ¶ 1193 at 391). The Complaint goes on to document
Levicy’s misconduct in detail:
From about March 16th, 2006 through January 11, 2007, Levicy agreed to
back up and cover-up the false claims and material omissions in the affidavit
Gottlieb and Himan submitted to obtain the non-testimonial identification order
(“NTO”) that authorized the seizure and search of Plaintiffs and their teammates,
compelling them to disrobe and submit to close examination and photographing
of their bodies and collection of their DNA for use as evidence in a criminal investigation. (Id. ¶¶ 785-99 at 261-66; ¶ 913 at 302; and ¶ 1193 at 391).
The fabricated, sensational claims made in the NTO affidavit immediately became national news, including the false claim of corroborating medical evidence;
namely, that “the victim had signs, symptoms, and injuries consistent with being
raped and sexually assaulted vaginally and anally.” (Id. ¶ 781 at 258). In fact,
sexual assault examination (“SAE”) produced no evidence consistent with the
violent rape described in Himan and Gottlieb’s affidavit. (Id. ¶ 308 at 114 and ¶
324 at 120). Yet Levicy agreed to manufacture such evidence, and did so, to back
up Himan and Gottlieb’s sensational claims.
That agreement became even more important when, on March 28, 2006, the
SBI Lab verbally reported to Levicy’s co-defendants that Plaintiffs and their
teammates were excluded as possible contributors of the DNA evidence in
Mangum’s rape kit and clothing and there was no evidence to corroborate the
violent rape Gottlieb and Himan described in their affidavit. (Id. ¶ 623 at 210
and ¶ 782 at 258). Without any DNA evidence to establish the fact that a crime
occurred or that Plaintiffs or their teammates committed it, Nifong, Gottlieb, and
Himan “collud[ed] with Tara Levicy to fabricate medical evidence of ‘blunt force
trauma’ where none, in fact, existed.” (ECF 136 ¶ 779 at 257-58). That same day,
consistent with that agreement, Nifong began a sequence of public statements
asserting that his certainty that a rape occurred was based on medical evidence
that Tara Levicy and DUMC produced. (Id. ¶ 782 at 258-60). For example:
On March 28, 2006, Nifong told Dan Abrams of MSNBC
that he was convinced there was a rape because “[t]here is
evidence of trauma in the victim’s vaginal area that was
noted when she was examined by a nurse at the hospital.
And her general demeanor was suggestive of the fact that
she had been through a traumatic situation.” (Id. ¶ 782(A)
at 259).
On March 28, 2006, Nifong told Rita Cosby of MSNBC
that he believed “that rape did occur... [because] the victim’s demeanor and the fact that when she was examined
by a nurse who was trained in sexual assault, there was
swelling, and pain in the area that would have been affected by the rape. The victim gave signs of having been
through a traumatic situation. She seemed to be absolutely
honest about what had occurred.” (Id. ¶ 782(B) at 259; id.
Attachment 21).
On March 29, 2006, Nifong told a reporter for the Charlotte Observer reporter that Levicy produced evidence of
“bruises that were consistent with a sexual assault.... [and]
behavior that was consistent with having gone through a
traumatic experience.” (Id. ¶ 782(C) at 260).
On March 30, 2006, Nifong told a reporter for CBS’s nationally televised The Early Show that he was convinced a
rape occurred because of the medical evidence in the case.
(Id. ¶ 782(D) at 260; id. Attachment 22).
On April 4, 2006, a reporter for the Charlotte Observer,
Mark Johnson, was interviewed about the case by Greta
Van Susteren. Based on Nifong’s statements to him, Johnson told the national audience “[Mangum] was examined at
Duke University Medical Center, which as you know is a
top flight hospital. This was a nurse who was trained in
dealing with these types of cases and that examination is
largely what the district attorney is basing his opinion on
when he says that he believes an attack did occur.” (ECF
136 ¶ 782(E) at 260).
Thus, after the results of the DNA tests failed to provide any evidence that
Plaintiffs or their teammates had any contact with Mangum, much less violently
raped her, only Levicy’s manufactured medical evidence remained to back up
Himan and Gottlieb’s fabricated affidavits and Nifong’s public claims that he was
“certain” Mangum had been violently raped. (Id. ¶ 783 at 261).
As Nifong publicly pointed to Levicy’s manufactured medical evidence, Theresa Arico, Duke’s SANE program coordinator, also made false public statements
backing up the false claims of corroborating medical evidence that Himan,
Gottlieb, Levicy, and Nifong had made. Arico told media representatives, “[y]ou
can say with a high degree of certainty” that Levicy’s examination of Mangum
revealed “injuries” caused by “blunt force trauma” and “consistent with the story
[Manugm] told.” (Id. ¶ 784 at 261). Arico made such statements knowing that
Mangum’s examination revealed no such injuries. (Id. ¶ 308 at 114 and ¶ 324 at
120).
At the same time, Levicy falsified the medical records of Mangum’s SAE to
corroborate Mangum’s claim and to back up the public statements made by
Nifong, Himan, Gottlieb, and Arico. (Id. ¶¶ 785-86 at 261-63). It was not until
April 5, 2006—weeks after Levicy first produced the medical records responsive
to Gottlieb and Himan’s March 21 Subpoena—that Levicy produced a revised,
fabricated version of Mangum’s Sexual Assault Examination Report (“SAER”),
which now included a fabricated transcription of an interview of Mangum and
several pages containing strike-outs, additions, and revisions designed to conform
the SAER to Himan and Gottlieb’s affidavit, Nifong’s public statements, and
what had been seized in the search of 610 N. Buchanan. (Id. ¶¶ 785-86 at 26163).
By way of illustration, Levicy falsified the medical record of Mangum’s
SAE by fabricating a transcript of an interview of Mangum to override Mangum’s
multiple prior inconsistent statements, to conform Mangum’s account to the
incendiary facts Gottlieb and Himan fabricated in their NTO affidavit, and to tie
her statement to items seized in the search of 610 N. Buchanan. (ECF 136 ¶
785(A) at 261-62).
Similarly, Levicy changed Mangum’s contemporaneous responses to the
standard questions on the SAER form, again, to conform Mangum’s answers to
evidence seized in the search of 610 N. Buchanan. For example, the SAER form
asks whether any efforts were made to conceal evidence. Mangum’s original response, “no,” was struck through, the “yes” blank was checked, and a notation,
“wiped her off with a rag,” was added. (Id. ¶ 785(B) at 262). These alterations
were designed to conform Mangum’s responses with a towel containing semen
that police seized from a bathroom in 610 N. Buchanan. However, after Levicy
produced the fabricated SAER, DNA tests showed that Mangum’s DNA was not
on the towel. (Id.).
Levicy gave Himan the fabricated SAER and narrative on April 5th, and they
were used the next day, April 6th, to guide Mangum’s first (and only) written
statement in the case. Mangum’s statement incorporated Levicy’s fabrications.
For example, Mangum’s statement includes an addendum designed to match up
her account with evidence of semen on a bathroom floor; the addendum states,
“I would like to add that Adam ejaculated in my mouth and I spit it out onto the
floor, part of it fell onto the floor [scratch out] after he pulled his penis out.” (Id.
¶ 785(C) at 262-63). But, here too, DNA testing later showed that Mangum’s
DNA could not be found the material police thought to be semen on the bathroom
floor. Like the others, this fabrication was also designed to conceal the fact that
Mangum had never reported any of the sensational details that Gottlieb and Himan
included in their NTO affidavit and Nifong’s repeated false claims of “certainty”
that Mangum had been raped by Plaintiffs or their teammates. (Id. ¶ 786 at 263.)
The Complaint goes on to document Levicy’s continuing offers to manufacture medical evidence to bolster Mangum’s false allegations, to cover-up the false
claims and material omissions in Himan and Gottlieb’s NTO affidavit, and to
back up Nifong’s unsupportable public claims of certainty, and that she did so
from March 16, 2006 until January 11, 2007. (Id. ¶¶ 786-98 at 263-66.) For example, in meetings with Nifong, Gottlieb, Himan and Wilson, Levicy agreed to testify to corroborating medical evidence that did not exist and medical findings that
were never made, such as objective signs of pain and evidence of penetrating
blunt force trauma on the cervix in Mangum’s pelvic exam (ECF 136 at ¶¶ 78889; 791 at 263-264), yet there was no pelvic exam, in part because Mangum refused the use of a speculum, and blunt force trauma on Mangum’s cervix could
not be seen without using a speculum. (Id.). But that is not all. To explain the
absence of a pelvic exam, Levicy later claimed that Mangum was in “too much
pain” to permit the use of a speculum, but the contemporaneous medical records
reveal no evidence of an effort to diagnose or treat any such pain; to the contrary,
the medical records document evidence that Mangum was faking symptoms of
pain and that she had a history of doing so to obtain prescription narcotics. (Id.
136 ¶ 792 at 264; see also id. ¶¶ 315-16 at 115-116).
Even after Levicy could no longer falsify the medical records of Mangum’s
examination further (because they had been produced in the criminal discovery
process), Levicy continued to offer false and fabricated evidence to contradict
facts that appear in those records. For example, Mangum’s report that no condoms were used by her assailants appears in three different places on the SAER.
(Id. ¶ 793 at 264-65). Yet, when Nifong made false public statements that
Mangum’s attackers used condoms to explain why no DNA from Plaintiffs or
their teammates could be found in Mangum’s rape kid, Levicy offered to contradict her own SAER and testify that Mangum did not and could not have known
whether condoms were used or not. (Id. ¶ 794 at 265). Then, to avoid those contradictions with her own SAER, Levicy offered that Mangum could not have
been sure no condoms were used (id. ¶ 795 at 265), even though Levicy did not
check the option labeled “not sure” in memorializing Mangum’s response to the
question whether condoms were used. (ECF 136 ¶ 793 at 264-65). Similarly,
where the SAER form calls for a “[b]rief account of the assault us[ing] the patient’s own words,” Levicy wrote “No condoms used.” Levicy also offered to explain that she “wasn’t surprised” that no DNA matching plaintiffs or their teammates was found in Mangum’s rape kit “because rape is not about passion or
ejaculation but about power.” (Id. ¶ 796 at 265). Of course, the Y-STR testing
used to examine Mangum’s rape kit does not depend upon an ejaculatory event,
as Levicy assumed; it can detect male-sourced human tissue of all kinds,
including a skin cell. (Id. 136 ¶ 796 at 265-56).
Levicy’s participation in the conspiracy continued to the very end, as late as
the evening of January 10, 2007, when she offered to provide fraudulent testimony that the absence of DNA could be explained by the use of condoms (id. ¶ 793
at 265), and also manufactured claims to save Mangum’s identifications from
suppression at an upcoming hearing on the issue (id. ¶ 798 at 266). In that regard,
there was evidence that Mangum was suffering from a “break from reality” and
suffering from delusions in the early morning hours of March 14th. (Id. ¶ 797 at
266). Thus Mangum’s ability to identify her “attacker” was subject to challenge
based on her inability to attend to or accurately recall events occurring around the
time in question. (ECF 136 ¶ 797 at 266) To rebut that evidence, Levicy offered
the false claim that Mangum “could always speak articulately” and that she was
“very alert,” and that she “knew what she was missing (meaning her money, her
bag and her phone.).” (Id. ¶ 797 at 266).
Two days after Levicy’s last acts in furtherance of the conspiracy, Nifong
turned the case over to the Attorney General. (Id. ¶ 798 at 266). And when the
Attorney General directed his Special Prosecutors to “re-investigate” the entire
matter, Levicy called Nifong’s office “to clarify”—for the first time—that all of
the evidence contradicting Mangum’s claims, including the lack of any DNA
matching Plaintiffs or their teammates, could be explained by the fact that the
rape “didn’t happen.” (Id. ¶ 799 at 266). Of course, the Attorney General’s Special Prosecutors thoroughly re-investigated the matter and concluded that there
was “no credible evidence” that Mangum was raped.
ARGUMENT
I. Plaintiffs’ Obstruction of Justice Claim Against Levicy Should Not Be
Dismissed
Defendant Tara Levicy seeks dismissal from Count 18, which asserts a claim
for common law obstruction of justice against her and several co-defendants, including Gottlieb, Himan, Wilson, Lamb, and against Duke and/or DUHS based
on Levicy’s misconduct, pursuant to respondeat superior. (ECF 136 ¶¶ 1189-1202
at 390-394). Count 18 alleges that Levicy obstructed justice by conspiring to manufacture and by manufacturing false and misleading forensic medical records and
reports. (Id. ¶¶ 779-99 at 257-66 and ¶¶ 1189-1202 at 390-94). In rejecting
Levicy’s first attempt to dismiss this claimall claims against her, this Court
concluded that,
as to Levicy, “Plaintiffs have alleged significant misconduct in the creation of
false and misleading evidence and destruction or alteration of potential evidence.”
(Mem. Op. at 147, No. 1:07CV953 (M.D.N.C. Mar. 31, 2011) (ECF 186)). For
the reasons explained below, the Fourth Circuit’s decision in Evans v. Chalmers
does not alter the analysis of Plaintiffs’ common law obstruction of justice claim
againstTara Levicy, and the admissions of Duke, DUHS, and Levicy in their
pleadings only underscores that conclusion.
A. The Fourth Circuit’s holding does not apply to Levicy because Levicy
is not “a police officer” and DUHS and Levicy “specifically deny” that
Levicy acted “under color of law” when she engaged in the misconduct alleged in the Complaint.
Levicy contends that the Fourth Circuit’s decision in Evans v. Chalmers requires dismissal of her for the same reason the Fourth Circuit ruled that Plaintiffs
could not proceed against the three police officers named in that claim. (Defs.’
Br. at 15-17 (ECF 336)). But the Fourth Circuit panel ruled that the claim could
not be maintained against the three police officers because they were police
officers. Specifically, the Evans decision acknowledges the breadth of common
law obstruction of justice under North Carolina law, which has been held to
include, inter alia, a sitting judge’s attempt to interfere with grand jury
proceedings, In re Kivett, 309 S.E.2d 442 (N.C. 1983), a medical provider’s
fabrication of medical evidence, Henry v. Deen, 310 S.E.2d 326, 334 (N.C. 1984),
and the destruction of evidence, Grant v. High Point Reg’l Health Sys., 645 S.E.2d
851, 855 (N.C. Ct. App. 2007). Evans, 703 F.3d at 658. However, because the
panel could not find “any case from any jurisdiction recognizing a common-law
obstruction of justice claim against a police officer for his actions relating to a
criminal proceeding,” it declined to forecast that “North Carolina would recognize
such an action.” Evans, 703 F.3d at 658 (emphasis added) (citing Wilson v. Ford
Motor Co., 656 F.2d 960, 960 (4th Cir. 1981).)
Tara Levicy, a registered nurse, now seeks to avail herself of that holding by
claiming to be a de facto police officer. (Defs.’ Br. at 15-17 (ECF 336)). There are
several defects in this new claim. First, Levicy is not a police officer; she is a registered nurse. In fact, Levicy was not even a SANE at the time she allegedly conducted Mangum’s sexual assault examination (she was a “SANE-in-Training”).
(ECF 136 ¶ 38 at 31). Second, the pleadings show that Levicy, Duke, and DUHS
all admit that Levicy was acting as a private person and they all “specifically deny
that Levicy was a person acting under color of law” at the time Levicy engaged in
the misconduct alleged in the Complaint. (Answer ¶ 38 at 23 (ECF 195)). Third,
Plaintiffs’ claim against Levicy is not “a common-law obstruction of justice claim
against police officers based on how the officers conducted a criminal investigation.” Evans, 703 F. 3d at 658. Fourth, Duke, DUHS, and Levicy do not point to
any case in any jurisdiction that recognizes a common law obstruction of justice
claim but bars such an action against a SANE, his or her employer, or any other a
private actor who manufactures medical evidence and doctors’ medical records
for purposes of bolstering a false claim of rape, causing criminal process to issue
based on that false claim, and impeding the victims of that misconduct from obtaining legal remedies from the private actor and her employer for the harm
caused by such misconduct. Fifth, as explained below, common law obstruction
of justice has been interpreted broadly enough by North Carolina’s Courts to include a right of action against Levicy based on the misconduct Plaintiffs allege as
well as a right of action against Levicy’s employer (Duke or DUHS) based on respondeat superior and negligent supervision.
B. North Carolina courts have defined common law obstruction of justice to include the misconduct Plaintiffs allege.
“Obstruction of justice” is a criminal offense under North Carolina General
Statutes § 14-221 through §14-227, and it is also a tort under North Carolina’s
common law that is actionable upon “any act which prevents, obstructs, impedes
or hinders public or legal justice.” Jones v. City of Durham, 183 N.C. App. 57,
59, 643 S.E.2d 631, 633 (N.C. Ct. App. 2007) (quoting Broughton v. McClatchy
Newspapers, Inc., 161 N.C. App. 20, 33, 588 S.E.2d 20, 30 (N.C. Ct. App.
2003)); see 67 C.J.S. Obstructing Justice § 1 (“obstructing justice” means
“impeding or obstructing those who seek justice in a court or those who have duties
or powers of administering justice in courts”). Thus, the tort is exceptionally broad
and includes, for example, claims that “[d]efendants attempted to impede the
legal justice system through [a] false affidavit,” Jackson v. Blue Dolphin
Commc’ns of N.C., L.L.C., 226 F. Supp. 2d 785, 794 (W.D.N.C. 2002), and
claims that defendants “conspired to impede [the] investigation of this case by
destroying ... records and by falsifying and fabricating records.” Henry v. Deen,
310 N.C. 75, 86, 310 S.E.2d 326, 333 (N.C. 1984); see also Reed v. Buckeye Fire
Equip., 241 Fed. Appx. 917, 928 (4th Cir. 2007) (collecting cases); Henry, 310
N.C. at 86, 310 S.E.2d at 333 (recognizing a potential claim for obstruction of
justice where the plaintiff alleged that the defendant had destroyed and falsified
medical records and thus impeded plaintiff’s claims in that action). The North
Carolina Court of Appeals recently held that “any action intentionally
undertaken by the defendant for the purpose of obstructing, impeding, or
hindering the plaintiff’s ability to seek and obtain a legal remedy will suffice to
support a claim for common law obstruction of justice.” Blackburn v. Carbone,
703 S.E.2d 788, 796 (N.C. Ct. App. 2010) (noting that falsification of evidence
could be a proper basis for liability for common law obstruction of justice), rev.
den., appeal dismissed, 710 S.E.2d 52 (N.C. 2011).
Levicy previously argued that a claim for obstruction of justice may be based
only on conduct in connection with a civil lawsuit, not criminal investigations or
proceedings. This Court rejected that contention, noting that the North Carolina
Supreme Court resolved that question in In re Kivett by holding that a sitting
judge’s “attempt to prevent the convening of the grand jury would support a
charge of common law obstruction of justice.” In re Kivett, 309 N.C. 635, 670, 309
S.E.2d 442, 462 (N.C 1983); see also State v. Wright, 696 S.E.2d 832, 835 (N.C.
Ct. App. 2010) (noting that “common law obstruction of justice extends beyond
interference with criminal proceedings”) (emphasis added)); Henry, 310 N.C.
at 87, 310 S.E.2d at 334 (recognizing that an obstruction of justice claim could arise
even if conduct occurred while no legal proceedings were pending or even
threatened). Since the Court’s Order, the North Carolina Court of Appeals has
held that common law obstruction of justice applies to acts in connection with a
criminal investigation. State v. Taylor, 713 S.E.2d 82, 88 (N.C. Ct. App. 2011),
rev. den. 2011 N.C. LEXIS 707 (N.C., Aug. 25, 2011) (holding that common law
obstruction of justice includes interfering with the arrest and collection of evidence
from a person suspected of driving while impaired). And, in State v. Wright, the
North Carolina court held that common law obstruction of justice included a
candidate’s filing of “incomplete and false disclosure forms with the State Board
of Elections ... for the purpose of obstructing or hindering the proper
enforcement of the campaign finance reporting laws of this state.” Wright, 696
S.E.2d 832, 838 (finding no error in jury instructions containing quoted language,
affirming that common law obstruction of justice can occur in connection with no
civil or criminal proceedings at all).
C. Even If Obstruction of Justice Were Limited to Conduct Interfering
with Civil Proceedings, Plaintiffs Allege that Levicy’s Conduct Was Intended to Interfere with Plaintiffs’ Civil Remedies
This Court not only rejected Levicy’s arguments for dismissal because they
were wrong on the law but also because they were wrong on the facts. The Court
explained that even if her arguments did not require the Court to view the tort
more narrowly than North Carolina courts have, even if the conduct occurred as
part of a criminal investigation, it would still be was actionable under North
Carolina law because Plaintiffs allege that Levicy’s conduct was intended to interfere with Plaintiffs’ ability to obtain remedies in a civil action against her and her
employer. (Mem. Op. at 143-48, No. 1:07CV953 (M.D.N.C. Mar. 31, 2011)
(ECF 186)(“even if the state courts would ultimately require that the alleged obstruction of justice occur in connection with a civil proceeding, Plaintiffs assert
that the obstruction of justice alleged in this case included destruction and fabrication of evidence to prevent its use in future lawsuits or to “cover-up” misconduct and hinder Plaintiffs’ ability to bring a future claim.”)).
II. Plaintiffs’ Negligent Supervision Claim Should Not Be Dismissed Unless
the Court Deems it Redundant Because Levicy, Duke, and DUHS
Admit Plaintiffs’ RespondeatSuperior Allegations in Their Answer.
Duke seeks dismissal of Plaintiffs’ negligent supervision claim because, they
contend, this claim “may proceed against Duke and DUHS only to the extent
that an underlying tort claim remains against Levicy.” (Defs.’ Br. at 19 (ECF
336)). This argument fails for two reasons and is moot for still another reason.
First, a negligent supervision claim does not require, as Duke asserts, that “an
underlying tort claim remain[]” pending against an employee; rather, all that is
required is allegations of “underlying tortious conduct” of an employee, which
Plaintiffs allege in detail. Second, even if North Carolina courts required plaintiffs
to maintain a separate claim against an employee in order to assert a negligent supervision claim (and they do not), the argument would still come to nothing because active claims against Levicy remain, including Plaintiffs’ claim for obstruction of justice, and neither Duke nor DUHS seek dismissal from that claim,
which is based upon their respondeat superior liability for Levicy’s conduct.
Third, the argument will be moot if the Court concludes, as it should, that Duke,
DUHS, and Levicy have admitted in their pleadings that Levicy was acting in the
course and scope of her employment when she engaged in the tortious conduct
giving rise to Plaintiffs’ obstruction of justice claim against them.
A. Plaintiffs’ Negligent Supervision Claim Against Duke And DUHS is
Based on the Tortious Conduct of Tara Levicy, Among Others
Duke and DUHS ask to be dismissed from Count 32 of Plaintiffs’ Complaint
(ECF 136 ¶¶ 1318-1325 at 425-27). Count 32 asserts a claim for negligent supervision against Duke and DUMC, as employers of Tara Levicy, who was a
“SANE-in-training” when Duke assigned her to conduct a Sexual Assault Examination of Mangum, as well as other employees “involved in the preservation of
the records relating to Mangum’s SAER.” (Id. ¶¶ 1318-1325 at 425-27). In Count
32, Plaintiffs bring a state law claim for negligence against Duke and DUHS, alleging negligent hiring, retention, supervision, training and discipline of their employee, Tara Levicy. (Id.). Plaintiffs allege that Duke and DUHS owed them a
duty of care with respect to the hiring, training, supervision, discipline, and retention of sexual assault examiners and other personnel involved in the records reporting evidence relating to Mangum’s claims and the preservation of those records. (Id.). Plaintiffs further allege that DUHS or Duke negligently supervised
Levicy by failing to monitor her conduct or performance, failing to provide her
with proper training, and ignoring evidence of Arico and Levicy’s misconduct in
making false statements to the public, to representatives of the media and to law
enforcement. (Id.).
B. The Argument Is Moot Because Duke, DUHS, and Levicy Admit
Plaintiffs’ Respondeat Superior Allegations.
As a general matter, Plaintiffs assert their negligent supervision claim as a
means of holding Levicy’s employer (Duke and/or DUHS) liable for Levicy’s
conduct as an alternative to their respondeat superior theory of imposing liability on
Duke and DUHS for the harms caused by Levicy’s tortious conduct, in the event
that Levicy’s misconduct is deemed not to be within the scope of her employment. “North Carolina recognizes the existence of a claim against an employer
for negligence in employing or retaining an employee whose wrongful conduct
injures another” outside of the scope of the employee’s employment. Hogan v.
Forsyth Country Club Co., 79 N.C. App. 483, 494, 340 S.E.2d 116, 123 (N.C.
Ct. App. 1986). This type of claim “becomes important in cases where the act of the
employee either was not, or may not have been, within the scope of his employment.” Id. 495, 340 S.E.2d at 124. In that context, to hold the employer liable, a
“plaintiff must prove that the incompetent employee committed a tortious act
resulting in injury to plaintiff and that prior to the act, the employer knew or had
reason to know of the employee’s incompetency.” Id. Thus, under North Carolina law, an employer may be held liable for the tortious acts of its employees,
based on either a theory of (1) respondeat superior if the employee was acting in
the scope of his or her employment, or (2) negligent supervision if, “prior to the
[tortious] act, the employer knew or had reason to know of the employee’s incompetency” even if “the act of the employee either was not, or may not have been,
within the scope of his employment” Id. 495, 340 S.E.2d at 124.
Here, Plaintiffs allege that Levicy was a registered nurse employed as “a
member of the DUHS and Duke University nursing staff and the DUHS SANE
program as a SANE-in-Training,” (ECF 136 ¶ 38 at 31) and, “at all times relevant
to this action” was acting “in the course and scope of [her] agency or employment with Duke University, and in furtherance of the University’s business interests.” (Id. ¶ 10 at 19) In its Answer, Duke affirmatively admits that “on March 14,
2006,” Duke employed Levicy “as a registered nurse who was working as a staff
nurse in the Emergency Department at DUHS.” (Answer ¶ 38 at 23 (ECF 195)).
Further, Levicy, Duke, and DUHS all deny the allegation that Levicy was “acting
in the course and scope of [her] agency or employment with Duke University and
in furtherance of the University’s business interests,” but only because, they contend, the allegation “calls for a legal conclusion.” (Id. ¶ 10 at 6). But whether
Levicy was acting in the course and scope of her employment or agency relationship with Duke when engaging in the misconduct alleged in the Complaint is a
factual question, and, to the extent that there is a legal issue involved in resolving
that question, Duke, DUHS, and Levicy waived any right to assert it by failing to
raise it in their prior Rule 12 motions and briefings. (See, generally, ECF Nos.
47, 48, 49, 50, 175, 176, and 177) (Duke Defendants’ briefs supporting their
motion to dismiss).
Therefore, the Court may rule that Duke, DUHS, and Levicy have admitted in
their Answer that Levicy was acting in the course and scope of her employment or
agency relationship with Duke when she engaged in the conduct alleged in the
Complaint. In that event, Duke and DUHS’s admission that Levicy was acting in
the scope of her employment when she engaged in the misconduct alleged in the
Complaint would render the liability of Duke and DUHS for Levicy’s misconduct
under Count 32 redundant to their respondeat superior liability for Levicy’s
misconduct in Count 18. See Hogan, 340 S.E.2d at 124. On the other hand,
should the Court decline to treat DUHS, Duke, and Levicy’s response to the
allegations in ¶ 10 as an admission of that fact, then Count 32 should not be
dismissed because it would not yet be certain that the liability it seeks to impose is
redundant to Plaintiffs’ respondeat superior theory of liability for Levicy’s misconduct. In sum, should the Court rule that Duke, DUHS, and Levicy’s Answer
admits that Levicy was acting in the course and scope of her employment with
Duke or DUHS when she engaged in the misconduct alleged in the Complaint,
Count 32 may be dismissed as redundant to their liability for Levicy’s conduct
based on respondeat superior. Otherwise, Count 32 should not be dismissed because
it remains a means of holding Duke and/or DUHS liable for Levicy’s misconduct
in the event that it was not within the scope of her employment. See id.
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, Plaintiffs respectfully request that the Court decide
this Motion as to Plaintiffs constitutional claims after Plaintiffs’ petition for a writ
of certiorari is ruled upon and any subsequent appellate proceedings are concluded. If the petition is not granted or the Fourth Circuit’s decision otherwise remains unmodified, Counts 1 2 and 21 5 must be dismissed because this Court is
bound by the Fourth Circuit’s conclusion that those counts do not allege a constitutional violation. However, irrespective of further appellate proceedings, the
Fourth Circuit’s decision does not require dismissal of Plaintiffs’ obstruction of
justice claim against Levicy or Wilson, because the Fourth Circuit’s ruling, by its
own terms, applies only to “a common-law obstruction of justice claim against
police officers based on how the officers conducted a criminal investigation,”
Evans v. Chalmers, 703 F. 3d 636, 658 (4th Cir. 2012) (emphasis added); nor
does it require dismissal of Count 1 against Levicy because it did not reach the
constitutional question, holding that the police defendants were entitled to
qualified immunity, which Levicy does not share, id. 650 n.6. Furthermore,
because the Fourth Circuit’s decision does not require dismissal of that claim
against Levicy, it does not require dismissal of Count 32, Plaintiffs’ negligent
supervision claim against Duke and DUHS. Finally, to the extent that the Court
agrees that Duke and DUHS have admitted Plaintiffs’ respondeat superior
allegations, their liability under Count 32 would be duplicative of their admitted
vicarious liability for Levicy’s misconduct in Count 18.
May 30, 2013
Respectfully submitted by:
/s/ Robert Ekstrand
Robert Ekstrand
North Carolina Bar No. 26673
110 Swift Avenue, 2nd Floor
Durham, North Carolina 27705
RCE@ninthstreetlaw.com
Telephone (919) 416-4590
Facsimile: (919) 416-4591
/s/ Stefanie Smith
Stefanie Smith
North Carolina Bar No. 42345
110 Swift Avenue, 2nd Floor
Durham, North Carolina 27705
SAS@ninthstreetlaw.com
Telephone (919) 416-4590
Facsimile: (919) 416-4591
Attorneys for Plaintiffs
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF NORTH CAROLINA
RYAN MCFADYEN, ET AL.,
Plaintiffs,
v.
1:07-CV-953-JAB-JEP
DUKE UNIVERSITY, ET AL.,
Defendants.
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE
Plaintiffs' Corrected Response was served on all parties to this action via the
Court’s CM/ECF System, which will send a notice to counsel of record for all
parties to this action, and undersigned counsel certifies that all parties are represented by counsel registered to receive such notices from the Court’s CM./ECF
System, including Defendant Linwood Wilson, who appears pro se in this action.
/s/ Robert Ekstrand
Robert Ekstrand
Counsel for Plaintiffs
Disclaimer: Justia Dockets & Filings provides public litigation records from the federal appellate and district courts. These filings and docket sheets should not be considered findings of fact or liability, nor do they necessarily reflect the view of Justia.
Why Is My Information Online?