Plaintiff brought this action against her pastor (Christenson), the church that employed him (Luther Memorial) and the American Lutheran Church, North Pacific District (ALC-NPD), 1 alleging four claims for injuries sustained after Christenson allegedly manipulated her and seduced her through a counseling relationship. The trial court granted defendants’ motions under ORCP 21A to dismiss for failure to state ultimate facts sufficient to state claims, and plaintiff appeals. We reverse and remand.
In reviewing a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, we are limited to the facts stated in the complaint.
Richards v. Dahl,
Plaintiffs claims against Christenson are for “breach of fiduciary duty” (which we treat as a claim for breach of a confidential relationship) and intentional infliction of severe emotional distress. 2 Her allegations may be summarized: (1) In 1970, when plaintiff was age 13, Christenson established a confidential relationship with her, acting as her pastor, counselor, confessor, advisor, friend, teacher and surrogate father. (2) Christenson abused that relationship by “mentally manipulating” her to become dependent upon him and by “coercing and manipulating” her to have close contact and sexual relations with him for his own purposes; he continued to exercise dominion and control over plaintiff until the fall or winter of 1986, and attempted to manipulate the relationship until *107 May, 1987. (3) Defendants’ failure to advise plaintiff of the improper relationship prevented her from obtaining professional help. (4) As a result of Christenson’s misuse of his position, plaintiff suffered sexual abuse, extreme emotional distress, physical illness, loss of sleep and memory, clinical depression and loss in her “ability to trust other adults, to trust authority, and * * * in her ability to deal with religion and her faith in God.”
Christenson argues that those allegations actually state a claim for seduction, a cause of action that was abolished in 1973. Or Laws 1973, ch 640. We disagree. In
Spiess v. Johnson,
The tort of seduction provided recovery for damage to character and reputation, as well as for mental anguish and pecuniary losses.
See Breon v. Henkle,
In her second claim against Christenson, plaintiff has claimed losses due to intentionally inflicted severe emotional distress, as opposed to losses related to character or reputation. The mere fact that sexual intimacy was the means of inflicting that distress does not convert her claim into one for seduction.
See Spiess v. Johnson, supra,
Christenson argues that plaintiffs claims are barred by the First Amendment. According to him, her claim for “breach of a fiduciary duty” actually is a claim for clerical malpractice, a cause of action that requires developing a community standard of care. Because imposing such a standard would involve examining the validity of religious beliefs and could interfere with access to clerical counseling, he argues, it violates both the Free Exercise and Establishment Clauses of the First Amendment. Similarly, he contends, because plaintiffs seduction could not be considered “outrageous” were it not for the fact that he is a pastor, plaintiffs claim of intentional infliction of emotional distress penalizes him for exercising his religion.
Christenson’s arguments misconstrue the nature of plaintiffs claims. First, regardless of how plaintiff designated her claims, a claim for breach of a confidential relationship is different from a claim for clerical malpractice. Plaintiffs complaint alleged the existence and breach of a confidential relationship; it did not allege the elements of malpractice. Moreover, plaintiff’s claim for outrageous conduct is not premised on the mere fact that Christenson is a pastor, but on the fact that, because he was plaintiff’s pastor and counselor, a special relationship of trust and confidence developed.
Plaintiffs claims against Luther Memorial are that it is vicariously liable for the torts allegedly committed by Christenson and that it was negligent in supervising him. “Under the doctrine of
respondeat superior,
an employer is liable for an employee’s torts when the employee acts within the scope of employment.”
Chesterman v. Barmon,
With respect to her claim for negligence in supervision, Luther Memorial argues that plaintiff has failed to allege facts showing that its “conduct unreasonably created a foreseeable risk to a protected interest of the kind of harm that befell the plaintiff,” as required by
Fazzolari v. Portland School Dist. No. 1J,
Plaintiff repeated her claim of negligent supervision against ALC-NPD, alleging the same facts and adding that ALC-NPD supervised Luther Memorial and that the agents and employes of ALC-NPD supervised Christenson. ALC-NPD responds that, because it is merely an administrative department of ALC, it lacks the capacity to be sued, that plaintiff s claim is barred by the two-year Statute of Limitations in ORS 12.110(1) and that, because it was not Christen-son’s employer, but simply an unincorporated division of ALC with only a tenuous connection to Luther Memorial and Christenson, it could neither have created nor foreseen the risk of harm to plaintiff.
ALC-NPD’s contentions are premature. Nothing on the face of the complaint permits a determination that ALC-NPD is not a proper party or that, as a matter of law, plaintiffs alleged injuries occurred more than two years before the commencement of her action. See ORCP 21A(9). Plaintiff has alleged sufficient facts to withstand a motion to dismiss.
Plaintiffs last claim is that ALC-NPD was negligent in its performance of pastoral duties. In essence, she alleges that, after she initiated a church complaint against Christen-son, ALC-NPD undertook the role of her advocate and counselor; that, in that role, it required her to “proceed through a confrontational process * * * in order to have Bryan Christen-son removed from his pastor position”; and that, despite Christenson’s voluntary admission to a sexual dependency unit, it continued to require her to “confront and oppose the church congregation,” causing her extreme emotional distress. Those allegations, taken as true, would permit a trier of fact to make the inference that ALC-NPD’s conduct unreasonably created a foreseeable risk of harm to plaintiff. Under *111 Fazzolari v. Portland School Dist. No. 1J, supra, plaintiffs allegations are sufficient to state a claim for negligence. 5
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
Pursuant to the stipulation of plaintiff and American Lutheran Church (ALC), the trial court entered an order dismissing claims against ALC without prejudice. The court incorporated that order into its judgment dismissing plaintiffs claims against all defendants.
Although plaintiff has characterized her claim as one for “outrageous conduct,” it is actually for intentional infliction of severe emotional distress.
Patton v. J. C. Penney Co.,
Luther Memorial argues that it cannot be held liable under a theory of respondeat superior, because Christenson’s seduction of plaintiff is neither the kind of act that he was hired to perform nor motivated by a desire to serve the employer. As previously noted, however, the gravamen of plaintiffs complaint is not simply that Christenson seduced her but that he abused his position as her pastor to do so. Because the alleged wrongful act was improper performance of pastoral counseling duties, whether it occurred within the scope of employment is a factual issue.
Relying on
Norwest v. Presbyterian Intercommunity Hosp.,
Characterizing plaintiffs claim as one for “clerical malpractice,” ALC-NPD argues that recognizing such a cause of action would require the court to develop a standard of care for pastoral counseling, an undertaking which inevitably would violate the First Amendment and Article I, sections 2,3 and 5 of the Oregon Constitution. However, plaintiff’s complaint alleges simple neglience. Although the First Amendment or Oregon Constitution may provide ALC-NPD with an affirmative defense at some later stage of the proceeding, which we need not and do not decide here, it does not provide a basis for dismissal at this stage.
