Dеbra St. John, Appellant, v. United States of America, acting through the Bureau of Indian Affairs, Appellee.
No. 99-4305
United States Court of Appeals FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
Submitted: October 16, 2000; Filed: February 7, 2001
Before McMILLIAN, HEANEY and BOWMAN, Circuit Judges.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of South Dakota
Debra St. John appeals from a final order entered following a bench trial in the United States District Court1 for the District of South Dakota concerning claims brought against the government pursuant to the Federal Torts Claims Act (FTCA),
Jurisdiction
Jurisdiction in the district court was proper based upon
Background
The following summary is based upon the findings of the district court. Debra St. John and Richard Coleman were married in 1984 and had thrеe children. In 1989, Coleman began working as a police officer for the BIA. The couple divorced in 1990, but continued to have contact with each other for child visitation purposes. After the divorce, they continued to have consensual sex, but they disagree regarding the frequency. In 1993, St. John alleged that Coleman tried to rape her in her home. She acquired a twelve-month protection order against him. The parties dispute the occurrence of consensual sex after that time; St. John contends that it did not occur, while Coleman argues that they had an ongoing sexual relationship.
Later that evening, St. John drove to Coleman‘s workplace to pick up the children. She arrived at approximately 11:00 p.m. with her uncle, William Gravatt, who had accompanied her the entire evening. The parties disagree about the exact time of St. John‘s arrival and her actions beforehand. Both St. John and Gravatt testified that they did not drink any alcohol that evening. Gravatt further asserted that St. John did not appear to be intoxicated in any way.
Within minutes of her arrival, St. John exited the police station, followed by Coleman. On the stairs outside the station, St. John and Coleman argued, and Coleman grabbed St. John by the shoulder, pulled her arms behind her back, told her that she was under arrest, pushed her through the door of the police station, made her empty her pockets, and thеn placed her in the “drunk tank.” Coleman did not tell St. John why she was arrested. Rio Owen, the radio dispatcher at the police station that night, did not observe that St. John was drunk or dangerous to herself and did not agree with Coleman‘s decision to arrest her. Another officer disagreed with St. John‘s arrest, voiced his objection to Coleman, and left the station. On the activity log, the property list, and the prisoner roster, Colemаn noted the reason for St. John‘s arrest as “disorderly conduct.” After finishing his shift at 2:30 a.m. and sleeping for one and a half hours, Coleman changed the charge to “protective custody” and released St. John following approximately five and a half hours in jail.
According to St. John, Coleman was standing next to his truck in the parking lot and told her to get into it, which she refused to do because she was upset that he had arrested and jailed her. St. John claims that Coleman then approached her and she ran around the truck, trying to get away from him and continuing to refuse until Coleman threatened to put her back in jail if she did not get into the truck. At that point she got into the vehicle. St. John alleges that Coleman then drove to a deserted park area 35 miles away, where it was freezing cold, with nowhere for her to go, and raped her. According to Coleman, St. John willingly got into the truck, and the two engaged in consensual sex.
After the sexual еncounter, Coleman drove St. John to her home. St. John contends that Coleman forced her to take a shower. Then the two went to pick up the children at Gerilyn Livermont‘s home, which St. John entered alone. Livermont testified that St. John was visibly shaken and told her that Coleman had thrown her in jail and then raped her, but the conversation ended when the children appeared. St. John v. United States, No. CIV 97-3051 at 25. St. John also told a family member and her еmployer about the rape, but did not immediately notify the Tribal police department. She explains her silence as the result of fear and the department‘s history of neglecting her complaints about Coleman. Eventually St. John spoke to Ken Ross, the criminal investigator for the Crow Creek Sioux Tribe (of which she is a member).
St. John filed this civil action in federal district court, seeking damages for false arrest, false imprisonment, and sexual assault under the FTCA,
Discussion
FTCA Scope of Employment
St. John argues that Coleman, acting within the scope of his employment, abused his authority as a BIA police officer to sexually assault her. She contends that she was the victim of a continuing tort because Coleman never completely relinquished his power to arrest and detain her, and used that power to force her to enter his truck so that he could rape her. The government claims that Coleman was not holding St. John in custody or performing law enforcement functions at the time of the alleged rape, so that the connection between Coleman‘s employment and the sexual incident was too remote and tenuous to be foreseeable, and thus attributable, to the employer. The government also asserts that Coleman‘s alleged sexual assault could not have been within the scope оf his employment as a BIA police officer because such conduct clearly violates public policy and conflicts with the job Coleman was expected to
The FTCA is a limited waiver of sovereign immunity, allowing the federal government to be sued for the actions of “any employee of the Government while acting within the scope of his office or employment” under circumstances where the United States would be liable if it were a private employer.
The applicable law in this case is the lаw of South Dakota. See Brown, 949 F.2d at 1012 n.7 (“[u]nder the FTCA, the law of the place of the alleged tort governs the
This court has applied the South Dakota foreseeability test in Red Elk v. United States, 62 F.3d 1102 (8th Cir. 1999) (Red Elk) (citing Leafgreen), and in Primeaux II. In Red Elk, an armed, uniformed Tribal police officer in a patrol car, accompanied by another officer, stopped to pick up a thirteen-year-old girl walking alone at night for curfew violation and then rapеd her in the back seat of the car. Applying the Leafgreen test, this court found that the officer‘s conduct was foreseeable because there was an
In Primeaux II, a Tribal officer returning from a work-related seminar, driving a recognizable police vehicle, stopped to offer a ride to a young woman whose car was stuck in a snowbank and then raped the woman. We found that, although “it is sufficiently foreseeable to a government employer that on-duty police officers will оccasionally misuse their authority to sexually assault detainees,” the officer‘s conduct in that case was not foreseeable because the officer was acting in the capacity of an individual citizen, not a police officer. Primeaux II, 181 F.3d at 882. As a result, we held that his conduct was too remote and tenuous to be foreseeable to his employer, therefore falling outside the scope оf his employment.
In the present case, the government urges us to read Primeaux II as limiting the scope of employer liability for FTCA claims to include only employee conduct explicitly condoned by the employer. We think the government‘s interpretation is inconsistent with the text and purpose of the FTCA. See
The district court neglected to find whether Coleman did in fact threaten St. John with re-arrest to compel her to enter his truck. Without knowing whether Coleman threatened St. John with arrest, it is impossible to determine whether he was acting within the scope of his employment. Under Primeaux II, we must focus on whether the conduct “is based upon the employment relationship.” 181 F.3d at 881. Coleman‘s misconduct may have been related to his employment if Coleman did force St. John to enter his truck under threat of arrest. The existence of Coleman‘s threats would weigh heavily in a Leafgreen evaluation of whether a sufficient nexus existed between Coleman‘s employment and the activity that caused the injury. Because the duty to arrest is a police officer‘s normal employment responsibility, the activity causing the injury would be related to Coleman‘s employment as a BIA police officer. Only a police officer would have the ability to utilize the threat of arrest to coerce a civilian into unwillingly accompanying him. Unlike the officer in Primeaux II, Coleman could not have been acting within an individual civilian capacity by making such a threat. No ordinary citizen possesses the ability to carry out a threat to arrest. On the contrary, the effectiveness of Coleman‘s threat to arrest St. John depended entirely upon his ability to fulfill it -- an ability within the foreseeable scope of his employment.
The BIA‘s disapproval of Coleman‘s misconduct does not preclude FTCA liability. Sеe Deuchar, 410 N.W.2d at 180 (“‘The fact that the servant‘s act is expressly forbidden by the master, or is done in a manner which he has prohibited . . . is usually not conclusive, and does not in itself prevent the act from being within the scope of employment.‘” (quoting Prosser and Keeton on the Law of Torts § 70 at 502 (5th ed. W. Keeton 1984))). Rather, the record suggests that Coleman‘s co-workers not only could foresee, but were actually aware of, Coleman‘s misconduct regarding St. John‘s initial false arrest. Rio Owen, the dispatcher on duty, testified that Coleman remained
Because the district court failed to complete the scope of employment analysis, we reverse in part and remand the case to the district court for further findings and proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Sufficiency of the Damage Award
St. John argues that thе district court abused its discretion in granting her an award of $3,000 for false arrest and false imprisonment because it relied on outdated and inconsistent assessments of similar tort damage awards. The district court based its decision on three cases: Thurman v. Cundiff, 580 P.2d 893 (Kan. 1978) (awarding the plaintiff $15,000 for false arrest and a two-hour detention in jail); City of Evansville v. Cook, 319 N.E.2d 874 (Ind. 1974) (awarding the plaintiff $4,250 for a two-hour detention in a store); and Nelson v. R.H. Massey & Co., 434 S.W.2d 767 (Mo. 1968) (awarding the plaintiff $2,500 for a three-hour detеntion). The government contends that the district court properly exercised its discretion in considering prior case law and the specific details of the case.
Furthermore, the district court correctly noted that its authority to award damages was limited by the FTCA, which only allows compensatory damages. St. John v. United States, No. CIV 97-3051 at 34 (citing
For these reasons, we hold that the district court did not abuse its discretion and affirm the district court‘s damage award for the false arrest and false imprisonment claims.
Conclusion
For the reasоns we have stated, we affirm in part and reverse in part and remand the case to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
A true copy.
Attest:
CLERK, U.S. COURT OF APPEALS, EIGHTH CIRCUIT.
