Defendant appeals an order of the North Carolina Industrial Commission denying its Motion for Summary Judgment. We affirm the Commission’s order.
In February 2003, Kim Hemphill (“Ms. Hemphill”) was employed by defendant as a probation officer in McDowell County, North Carolina. As part of her duties, she was assigned to supervise James Oakes (“Mr. Oakes”), who was on probation for convictions of indecent exposure and two counts of simple assault. Mr. Oakes’s problems extended beyond his involvement with the North Carolina court system; not only was he diagnosed as bi-polar and schizophrenic, but he had also been identified as a sexual offender in the mid-1990’s by the staff at Foothills Mental Health. As a result, multiple McDowell County agencies were familiar with Mr. Oakes and were aware of his label as a sexual offender.
At a meeting with Mr. Oakes on 14 February 2003, Ms. Hemphill learned he was living in a motel with another probationer, which Ms. Hemphill’s supervisor determined was an inappropriate living arrangement. In order to correct the situation, Ms. Hemphill began making phone calls to assist Mr. Oakes in finding suitable living arrangements. After unsuccessfully calling Mr. Oakes’s mother and a homeless shelter, Mr. Oakes suggested that he might be able to stay with David Ledford (“Mr. Ledford”) and Sherri Blaylock (“Ms. Blaylock”), a married couple related to Mr. Oakes through marriage. Ms. Hemphill contacted Ms. Blaylock at work to ask if Mr. Oakes could stay with her family. Ms. Blaylock indicated that she would have to speak with Mr. Ledford before she would allow Mr. Oakes to move into their home.
With this information, Ms. Hemphill drove to the home of Ms. Blaylock and Mr. Ledford (“Blaylock/Ledford home”) to discuss the issue with Mr. Ledford. When she arrived at the home, Mr. Ledford was there with his four children, including H.L. and B.L. (“the minor children-plaintiffs”), and two other acquaintances. Ms. Hemphill informed Mr. Ledford of her conversation with Ms. *543 Blaylock and indicated that it was all right with Ms. Blaylock for Mr. Oakes to stay at their home if it was all. right with Mr. Ledford. Mr. Ledford agreed to the arrangement, and Ms. Hemphill left Mr. Oakes in his care. Before she left, Ms. Hemphill gave Mr. Ledford her business card and told him to give her a call if they had any problems. Shortly thereafter, on or about 16 February 2003, Mr. Oakes sexually assaulted the minor children-plaintiffs in their bedroom at the Blaylock/Ledford home.
Ms. Blaylock, on behalf of the minor children-plaintiffs, initiated this action before the North Carolina Industrial Commission on 30 December 2003 alleging that defendant’s agent, Ms. Hemphill, failed to exercise reasonable care in placing Mr. Oakes in the Blaylock/Ledford home, as she knew or should have known he posed a substantial risk of harm to the minor children-plaintiffs. Defendant moved for summary judgment on 8 January 2007 on the grounds that the public duty doctrine applied as a bar to the minor children-plaintiffs’ claim. The Deputy Commissioner granted defendant’s motion on 12 December 2007, holding that the public duty doctrine applied absent any evidence of an exception. The minor children-plaintiffs appealed to the Full Commission on 27 December 2007. On 10 September 2008, the Full Commission reversed the Deputy Commissioner’s order granting defendant’s summary judgment motion. In doing so, the Full Commission held that the public duty doctrine does not apply to the present case, or, in the alternative, a genuine issue of material fact exists as to whether the present facts fit within the special relationship exception to the public duty doctrine. Defendant appeals.
The sole issue on appeal is whether defendant is shielded from liability by the public duty doctrine. For the reasons stated below, we conclude that there is a genuine issue of material fact as to whether, upon the evidence before the Commission considered in the light most favorable to the minor children-plaintiffs, their claim is barred by the public duty doctrine, as the facts presented establish the existence of a special relationship.
As an initial matter, defendant’s appeal is interlocutory.
Veazey v. City of Durham,
“On appeal, an order [denying] summary judgment is reviewed
de novo." Tiber Holding Corp. v. DiLoreto,
The minor children-plaintiffs have based their claim against defendant in negligence. In a claim for negligence, there must exist a “legal duty owed by a defendant to a plaintiff.”
Hedrick v. Rains,
The public duty doctrine was officially recognized in this State in
Braswell v. Braswell
as a shield from liability for a municipality for its law enforcement officials’ failure to provide protection to individual citizens from the criminal acts of a third party.
(1) where there is a special relationship between the injured party and the police, for example, a state’s witness or informant who has aided law enforcement officers; and (2) when a municipality, through its police officers, creates a special duty by promising protection to an individual, the protection is not forthcoming, and the individual’s reliance on the promise of protection is causally related to the injury suffered.
Braswell,
In
Humphries v. North Carolina Department of Correction,
this Court extended the application of the public duty doctrine to probation officers for their failure to protect the public by appropriately supervising their probationers.
The present case involves a probation officer who, while exercising her duties to supervise Mr. Oakes, facilitated his placement in the Blaylock/Ledford home. This alleged negligent act resulted in Mr. Oakes sexually assaulting the minor children-plaintiffs. It is apparent from these facts that Ms. Hemphill’s actions constitute a “failure to [provide] police protection to specific individuals” from the criminal acts of a third party. Braswell,
The Full Commission below, in holding that the public duty doctrine was inapplicable to the present case, reasoned that “the affirmative actions of Defendant’s agent and employee, Ms. Hemphill, directly resulted in the harm caused to the minor Plaintiffs.” As such, it held that “[t]he facts of this case do not arise from Defendant’s failure to make a discretionary allocation of agency resources . . . .” Though we agree with the. Full Commission’s statement of the law, we do not agree with its application to the present case.
This Court has never applied the public duty doctrine when a police officer’s affirmative actions have directly caused harm to a plaintiff.
Moses v. Young,
This Court’s focus in finding the public duty doctrine inapplicable to the cases discussed above.has hinged on the fact that, in those
*547
cases, the police officers’ conduct
directly
caused harm, instead of merely being an
indirect
cause of the plaintiffs’ injuries.
Moses,
The present facts are distinguishable from the cases discussed above. Here, Ms. Hemphill’s actions did not directly cause harm to the minor children-plaintiffs. Instead, her actions with regards to Mr. Oakes only indirectly resulted in his sexual assault of the minor children-plaintiffs.' Accordingly, we depart from the Full Commission’s conclusion and hold that the public duty doctrine applies to the present case.
However, our discussion does not end here. The public duty doctrine, as stated above, is subject to two exceptions, the special duty exception and the special relationship exception, and a plaintiff’s claim will survive if he can establish the existence of either.
Watts, v. N.C. Dep’t of Env’t and Natural Res., 362
N.C. 497, 498,
*548
A special relationship exists when there are “representations or conduct by the police which cause the victim(s) to detrimentally rely on the police such that the risk of harm as the result of police negligence is something more than that to which the victim was already exposed.”
Vanasek v. Duke Power Co.,
In
Hobbs ex rel. Winner v. North Carolina Department of Human Resources,
Kemesha and Michael Hobbs (“the Hobbs family”) sued the Wake County Department of Social Services and various other agencies on behalf of their daughter for the negligent placement of a twelve-year-old boy in their foster home.
Hobbs
is instructive in our application of the special relationship exception to the present case. Viewing the facts alleged in the light most favorable to the minor children-plaintiffs, as we are required to do,
Bruce-Terminex Co.,
The Full Commission, in reaching its conclusion that a special relationship existed in the present case, relied on the mandatory reporting requirements set forth in N.C.G.S. § 7B-301. After careful review, we, however, conclude that reliance on this statute in the present case is inappropriate. N.C.G.S. § 7B-301 provides that “Any person or institution who has cause to suspect that any juvenile is abused, neglected, or dependent, as defined by G.S. 7B-101 . . . shall report the case of that juvenile to the director of the department of social services . . . .” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 7B-301 (2007). Although this Court held in
Smith
that N.C.G.S. § 7B-301 prevented the application of the public duty doctrine in that case, the facts in the present case require a different result.
Therefore, we hold that the public duty doctrine, though applicable to the present case, does not bar plaintiffs claim, as there is a genuine issue regarding the existence of a special relationship between defendant, through its agent Ms. Hemphill, and the minor children-plaintiffs. Accordingly, we affirm the Full Commissions denial of defendant’s summary judgment motion.
Affirmed.
