B.R. v. Suzanne Horsley ( 2015 )


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  •                                                                                                FILED
    COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION 11
    201511AR    0          8: 31
    STAI      r AM 3 t.      O?1
    BY
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON
    DIVISION II
    B.R.,t                                                                   No. 44874 -2 -II
    Appellant,
    v.
    SUZANNE HORSLEY, FREDERICK                                           PUBLISHED OPINION
    HORSLEY, KEITH TIMMER, and CHURCH
    OF THE LIVING WAY,
    Respondents.
    JOHANSON, C. J. —      The issue in this appeal is the application of the statute of limitations
    to    a   claim    of childhood sexual   abuse.     B.R. appeals from the trial court' s grant of summary
    judgment in favor of Suzanne and Frederick Horsley, Keith Timmer, and the Church of the Living
    Way (Horsley) finding that her claim for damages against Horsley for childhood sexual abuse was
    time barred under RCW 4. 16. 340( 1). 1 Although B.R. had counseling for the sexual abuse when
    she was a teenager, the record demonstrates a genuine factual dispute regarding when she
    t We refer to the appellant by her initials in order to protect her privacy.
    1
    We    refer   to the   defendants collectively   as "   Horsley" except where necessary to name each
    individually.
    No. 44874 -2 -II
    discovered the        extent     and   cause     of   her   claimed     injuries.   Accordingly, we reverse the order
    dismissing her claims and remand for trial.
    FACTS
    Between June 2002 and late 2004, B.R. was sexually abused by Suzanne Horsley, an adult
    youth group leader at the Church of the Living Way. B.R. was 13 years old when the abuse began,
    and she   turned 18        in September 2006.          Suzanne Horsley pleaded guilty to several counts of child
    molestation.
    Kelly Peck, a mental health therapist, treated B.R. while she was still a minor from October
    2005   until   July   2006 for      symptoms related           to her    abuse   including " stress, anxiety, depression,
    anger,   feelings     of   betrayal,   guilt,    worry, [ and]    problems with      memory."     Clerk' s Papers ( CP) at
    103.   During the time Peck treated B.R., B.R. was not married, was not sexually active, and had
    never been employed. In July 2006, a few months before her 18th birthday, B.R. discontinued her
    treatment with Peck.
    In 2008, B.R. married a man who had been her first boyfriend. Over the next several years,
    B. R: and her husband struggled in their marriage. B. R. experienced sexual dysfunction and a lack
    of   intimacy,   and she and        her husband         argued about whether         to have   children.   Her symptoms,
    including      flashbacks,       guilt,    and    other     emotional    problems,     were worse than she had ever
    experienced,      and      the   marital   problems         continued until      their divorce in 2011.    B. R. was also
    confused about her sexuality. She engaged in a sexual relationship with a woman that also caused
    significant confusion in her life.
    2
    No. 44874 -2 -II
    B. R. also experienced problems at work. These problems began in 2009, when she became
    a   high   school volleyball coach and attempted                   to become        a   firefighter.    B. R. also struggled to
    reconnect with her religion, but the church was no longer a comforting influence in her life.
    By   November 2011, B. R.           was    in   therapy      with   Mary     Dietzen, Ph.D., in Spokane.         It was
    then that B. R. realized the serious effect of the abuse on her adult relationships, sexuality, work,
    and   spirituality.        Dr. Dietzen helped B.R. to understand how Horsley' s sexual abuse triggered
    symptoms based on the different, new life events that B.R. was experiencing.
    On January 3, 2012, after several months of treatment with Dr. Dietzen, B.R. sued Horsley.
    Horsley moved for summary judgment, arguing that the statute of limitations barred B.R.' s suit.
    In opposition to Horsley' s motion, B.R. presented portions of Dr. Dietzen' s deposition, during
    which the following exchange, relevant to the statute of limitations, occurred:
    Q. ' Did you ask her how long she had felt this way, that the abuse by Horsley
    had taken from her certain things that she felt were important, such as intimacy,
    sexuality, and those kinds of things?
    A. I   got   the impression that it'     s   been in the last,        you   know, two -- two -plus
    years,     because   she' s   holder [   sic]   now, she' s --      she takes classes, she' s out in the
    world, she' s      away from that         environment,         she' s   in   a   relationship --   got in this
    relationship with Jody.
    So   more of    it has   come   to her --    you know, to the forefront in the last year
    or two, I would say, she' s developed a lot more of an understanding of kind of the
    impact.
    CP    at   159 -60.    The trial court granted Horsley' s motion for summary judgment,concluding that
    B.R.' s suit was time barred by the three -year statute of limitations.2 B.R. appeals that order.
    2 RCW 4. 16. 340( 1).
    3
    No. 44874 -2 -II
    ANALYSIS
    The issue here is whether reasonable persons could only conclude that B.R. realized that
    her injuries were connected to the childhood sexual abuse more than three years before she filed
    suit.     We hold that there are genuine issues of material fact that preclude summary judgment
    regarding when B.R. connected her injuries to the childhood sexual abuse.
    I. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    We review a summary judgment order de novo. Camicia v. Howard S. Wright Constr. Co.,
    
    179 Wash. 2d 684
    , 693, 
    317 P.3d 987
    ( 2014).            Summary judgment based on the statute of limitations
    is appropriate only where the pleadings, depositions, interrogatories, admissions, and affidavits in
    the record establish that no genuine issue of material fact exists regarding when the statutory period
    began.     Young Soo    Kim   v.   Choong -Hyun   Lee, 174 Wn.   App.   319, 323, 
    300 P.3d 431
    ( 2013); CR
    56( c).    Therefore, the trial court could only grant summary judgment finding that the statute of
    limitations barred B.R.' s claims as a matter of law if no genuine issue of fact exists as to when
    B. R.   realized   the cause and extent of     her injuries. Goodman v. Goodman, 
    128 Wash. 2d 366
    , 373,
    
    907 P.2d 290
    ( 1995).       The statute of limitations is an affirmative defense and the defendant bears
    the burden of      proof.    Korst   v.   McMahon, 136 Wn.    App.   202, 208, 
    148 P.3d 1081
    ( 2006).      We
    perform the same inquiry as the trial court, review the evidence in the light most favorable to the
    nonmoving party,       and   draw    all reasonable   inferences in the nonmoving party'   s   favor.   Lakey v.
    Puget Sound Energy, Inc., 
    176 Wash. 2d 909
    , 922, 
    296 P.3d 860
    ( 2013).
    4
    No. 44874 -2 -II
    II. THE CHILDHOOD SEXUAL ABUSE STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS
    The parties agree that RCW 4. 16. 340( 1)( c) is the controlling provision. The statute states,
    in relevant part,
    All claims or causes of action based on intentional conduct brought by any person
    for recovery of damages for injury suffered as a result of childhood sexual abuse
    shall be commenced within the later of the following periods:
    c) Within three years of the time the victim discovered that the act caused
    the injury for which the claim is brought:
    PROVIDED, That the time limit for commencement of an action under this
    section is tolled for a child until the child reaches the age of eighteen years.
    RCW 4. 16. 340( 1).
    The legislature' s intent in enacting this statute of limitations was to provide
    a broad and generous application of the discovery rule to civil actions for injuries
    caused by childhood sexual abuse.... [ I]ts primary concern was to provide a broad
    avenue of redress for victims of childhood sexual abuse who too often were left
    without a remedy under previous statutes of limitation.
    C.J.C. v. Corp. ofthe Catholic Bishop of Yakima, 
    138 Wash. 2d 699
    , 712, 
    985 P.2d 262
    ( 1999).
    T] his special statute of limitations is unique in that it does not begin running when the
    victim    discovers      an   injury. Instead, it specifically focuses on when a victim of sexual abuse
    discovers the   causal        link between the   abuse and   the   injury   for   which   the   suit   is brought." Korst,
    136 Wn.     App.    at   208 ( citing RCW 4. 16. 340( 1)(   c)).   This is because "[      t] he legislature specifically
    anticipated that victims may know they are suffering emotional harm or damage but not be able to
    understand    the   connection     between those    symptoms and       the abuse."        
    Korst, 136 Wash. App. at 208
    .
    Application of the statute of limitations allowed the plaintiffs in Korst to go forward, while
    it precluded the plaintiff' s claims in Carollo v. Dahl, 
    157 Wash. App. 796
    , 803, 
    240 P.3d 1172
    2010).    B.R. contends that in Carollo, Division Three of this court misapplied Korst' s holding,
    5
    No. 44874 -2 -II
    while Horsley contends that B.R.' s claims are even more clearly barred by the statute of limitations
    than Carollo' s claims.
    In Korst, the plaintiff sued her parents for damages caused by her father' s sexual 
    abuse. 136 Wash. App. at 204
    -05. The abuse started when she was 8 years old and continued until she was
    14.    Korst, 136 Wn.            App.   at   204.   In 1995, Korst wrote her father a letter acknowledging his
    mistreatment of           her.   Korst, 136 Wn.         App.       at   204.      Seven years later, in 2002, Korst entered
    counseling for       problems      that      she was   having      with     her   son.   Korst, 136 Wn.         App.    at   204.   During
    those sessions, she learned that her father' s abuse was the likely cause of those problems. Korst,
    136 Wn.      App.    at   204 -05. Korst sued her parents, and the trial. court granted a directed verdict in
    her parents' favor reasoning that the 1995 letter showed that she had connected the abuse with her
    injuries    at   the time that she wrote         it. Korst, 136 Wn.               App.   at   205.   We reversed, concluding that
    although the letter showed that Korst resented her father for sexually abusing her, it did not show
    that Korst understood the effects of his abuse. 
    Korst, 136 Wash. App. at 209
    .
    In Carollo, the       plaintiff was molested as a               teenager     by    a   camp    
    counselor. 157 Wash. App. at 798
    .   He sought counseling for emotional difficulties in 1988 and was told at that time that the
    abuse was the likely source of these difficulties. 
    Carollo, 157 Wash. App. at 798
    . In 1995, he " was
    diagnosed        with various       posttraumatic        stress     disorder ( PTSD)               symptoms"      such as depression,
    flashbacks,       and nightmares.            
    Carollo, 157 Wash. App. at 798
    -99. In 2008, Carollo filed suit after
    his   symptoms       became       much worse and         he   was unable           to function       at   this job.   Carollo, 157 Wn.
    App. at 799. His new symptoms included panic disorder, major anxiety, major depressive disorder,
    and agoraphobia.            Carollo, 157 Wn.           App.   at   799.     Carollo left his job and entered therapy where
    6
    No. 44874 -2 -II
    his counselor related the new symptoms to the childhood sexual abuse. 
    Carollo, 157 Wash. App. at 799
    .
    The trial court dismissed the suit as time barred. 
    Carollo, 157 Wash. App. at 802
    . Division
    Three affirmed, holding that, unlike in Korst, the plaintiff could not claim that he had only recently
    connected    his   emotional    harm to   childhood sex abuse.          Carollo , 157 Wn.    App. at   802 -03. " Rather,
    Carollo is claiming that the severity of his most recent symptoms should entitle him to the more
    lenient   provisions of       the   discovery   of   harm   provision   in the   statue."   
    Carollo, 157 Wash. App. at 802
    .
    This   case   is   more   like Korst than Carollo.       Like Korst, B.R. did not understand the full
    effect of the childhood sexual abuse until she entered counseling as an adult. Although B.R. had
    dealt with serious symptoms of her abuse for many years, she presented evidence that, until
    recently, she was not aware that her new, adult difficulties with her marriage, her work, and
    connecting with religion were caused by the childhood abuse.
    III. GENUINE ISSUES OF MATERIAL FACT
    In light of the statute of limitations and the case law interpreting it, we review the record
    de novo and determine whether the trial court erred when it found that, based on the record, no
    genuine dispute of material fact exists as to when B.R. realized the cause and extent of the injuries
    she alleges.     There are three sources of evidence that support B. R.' s claim that within the three -
    year statute of limitations she discovered new or more serious injuries that were caused by the
    abuse: B.R.' s declaration, and Dr. Dietzen' s and Peck' s deposition testimony. We recount below
    some of the evidence presented by both parties that demonstrates the existence of a genuine dispute
    of material fact regarding when B.R. connected the sexual abuse to her claimed injuries.
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    No. 44874 -2 -II
    B. R. declared that ( 1) her injuries began in 2008 with the problems that she experienced
    throughout her     marriage until    it   ended   in 2011, (   2) she suffered additional injury in 2009 due to
    her problems at work as a volleyball coach and in training to be a firefighter, and ( 3) the final new
    or more serious injury that she alleged occurred in 2010 when she attempted to reconnect with and
    seek comfort in her religion. B.R. further declared that after she began therapy with Dr. Dietzen
    in 2011,   she   began " to   realize   how seriously     affected"   she was   by   the   abuse "   in relationships,
    sexuality,   work[,]   and spirituality" and established the causal connection. CP at 178.
    A. PROBLEMS WITH INTIMACY AND IN HER MARRIAGE
    Because she was not sexually active in 2006 when she was a young teen prior to meeting
    and marrying her husband, B. R.' s sexual dysfunction and problems with intimacy are new injuries
    that occurred at the earliest when she was married in 2008 and continued until her divorce in 2011.
    B.R.' s intimate relationship with her husband caused " worse flashbacks and emotions than [ she]
    had ever had before" and this was, at least, a more serious injury. CP at 176. Her sexual confusion
    was   further    complicated   by   her intimate relationship       with a woman.      B. R.' s fear about having
    children is also a new injury because she had never considered starting a family before her •
    marriage.
    B.R.' s declaration explaining the genesis of her problems with sexual dysfunction and Dr.
    Dietzen' s deposition testimony where she stated that she thought B.R. had not experienced these
    problems     before the last " two -plus     years,"    demonstrate that a triable question exists regarding
    whether she experienced a new injury relating to intimate relationships during the three -year
    statute of limitations. CP at 159. Peck' s deposition testimony also lends support to this conclusion
    8
    No. 44874 -2 -II
    because     she   testified that   during    the time that           she treated B. R., B. R. was not married or
    romantically involved with anyone and did not have any children.
    These injuries are precisely the type of injuries for which the legislature intended to provide
    a   remedy    when   it   considered     the 1991   amendment          to RCW 4. 16. 340.            In enacting the 1991
    amendment to the statute of limitations for actions based on childhood sexual abuse, the legislature
    recognized that these are the types of injuries that a victim may not fully understand until later in
    life: "   Even though victims may be aware of injuries related to the childhood sexual abuse, more
    serious    injuries may be discovered many           years       later."   LAWS   OF 1991,         ch.   212, § 1( 5).   In fact,
    when considering the 1991 amendment, the House Judiciary Committee specifically identified
    marital problems and sexual dysfunction as examples of more serious injuries that victims of
    childhood sexual abuse will,        necessarily,     not experience or understand until                  later in life. HOUSE
    COMM. ON JUDICIARY, H.B. REP: ON ENGROSSED SUBSTITUTE HB 2058, 52d LEG., REG. SESS.
    Wash. 1991).
    Horsley points to B.R.' s deposition testimony as evidence that her injuries are not new or
    more serious. As an example:
    Q.     Next   page,   62, that   visit   is   on   March 8     of [ 20]   06.     It says ` B[.R.]
    continues to have some interpersonal struggles with her relationships with boys and
    mixed feelings she has towards sex and how she feels her ` abuse ruined it all for
    her.
    Did I read that accurately?
    A. That could be an accurate statement.
    Q. Did you feel that what Suzanne Horsley had done to you had ruined
    many aspects of your life?
    A. I feel that, yes.
    Q. Including but not limited to having healthy relationships with boys and
    being able to engage in sex in a healthy way?
    A. Yes.
    Q. You still have those problems today?
    A. Yes.
    9
    No. 44874 -2 -II
    CPat96.
    We reject the conclusion that " problems with boys" as a young teen is, as a matter of law,
    the same injury as marital problems, lack of marital intimacy, confusion and trepidation about
    childbearing, and sexual dysfunction. B.R.' s deposition testimony simply confirms that a triable
    issue of fact exists as to what type of injuries she suffered and when she connected them with her
    abuse.    These excerpts from B.R.' s deposition testimony do not address B.R.' s evidence that she
    experienced new and more serious injuries due to new life experiences as an adult and that she
    realized only after counseling with Dr. Dietzen in 2011 that these injuries were related to Horsley' s
    abuse.
    B. PROBLEMS WITH EMPLOYMENT
    B.R. also identifies work -related problems as a new injury that she connected to the
    childhood sexual abuse after counseling with Dr. Dietzen. Beginning in 2009, B.R. had difficulties
    and experienced panic at work as she was              training   to be   a   firefighter, " knowing   [ as a firefighter
    that   she] might   have to   help   a   known   child molester,"   and she was afraid to fall asleep at the fire
    station   because   she   thought that her frequent,     nocturnal   yelling     would   hurt her job   prospects.   CP
    at   177. Dr. Dietzen declared that "[ m] any        child sexual abuse survivors struggle in the work place
    with   accepting authority,"    that B.R. was struggling because she felt " controlled" at work, and that
    these symptoms can impede workplace success and development. CP at 207. B.R. also struggled
    to control her emotions as a high school volleyball coach because she experienced anger that
    someone in a similar position of authority exploited her vulnerability when she was younger and
    sadness when faced with the happiness that she never enjoyed as a teenager. B.R. was unaffected
    by any of these work -related problems in 2006 and did not experience them until 2009.
    10
    No. 44874 -2 -II
    Horsley argues that these injuries are not different from the injuries that B.R. reported to
    Peck. Horsley again points to B.R.' s deposition testimony:
    Q. What other ways, if at all, have the symptoms or the residues of the
    abuse affected your ability to do your job?
    A. There'    s sometimes when      I just don' t feel like   doing   anything.   My job
    is   a   very   social    job. We deal a lot with the public and there' s sometimes where
    even with my job at the Red Lion where I just don' t feel that I want to be around
    people.
    Q. That' s something that you had years ago as well --
    A. Yes.
    Q. --   when you Saw Peck?
    A. Yes.
    CP   at   98.       This deposition testimony may conflict with B.R.' s declaration where she stated that
    she experienced different injuries when she worked as a volleyball coach and tried to become a
    firefighter.3 And this deposition testimony does not address Dr. Dietzen' s observations about
    B.R.' s difficulties with authority. These arguable conflicts in the evidence demonstrate that triable
    issues of fact exist regarding whether she suffered new work -related injuries within the three -year
    statute of limitations.
    3 We also conclude that B.R. did not file her declaration merely to create a conflict with her
    deposition testimony. It is generally impermissible to file an affidavit or declaration after giving
    clear answers to unambiguous [ deposition] questions which negate the existence of any genuine
    issue     of material       fact."    Marshall   v.   AC & S Inc.,   
    56 Wash. App. 181
    , 185, 
    782 P.2d 1107
    ( 1989)
    alteration         in   original).     A contradictory declaration "       without     explanation"      is insufficient.
    
    Marshall, 56 Wash. App. at 185
    . Here, however, B. R.' s deposition testimony was not unambiguous
    and the declaration explains, with additional details, the specific new injuries that she suffered —
    marital problems, work problems, sexual dysfunction, and problems with her religion. Moreover,
    Dr. Dietzen' s deposition testimony and declaration provide additional support for B.R.' s argument
    that these injuries are different in kind.
    11
    No. 44874 -2 -II
    C. PROBLEMS CONNECTING WITH RELIGION
    Finally, B.R. identifies her inability to reconnect with and seek comfort from her religion
    as an   injury   that   she   did   not connect    to her   abuse until   her counseling        with    Dr. Dietzen.   B.R.
    realized that " when [ she] tried to return to church in 2007 and again in 2010 that religion is not
    comforting because        of [her] abuse."     CP at 177. She also discussed this problem with Dr. Dietzen.
    Dr. Dietzen declared that "[           i]t is increasingly recognized that spirituality can have a major
    buffering   effect on     traumas     such as sexual assault....          Because B[. R.]       was abused by a church
    leader,   and    because      she   was   blamed for her       abuse   by    church       leaders, she has experienced
    spirituality    as a negative rather      than a   positive experience."       CP    at   207 -08.   Horsley advanced no
    contrary argument.
    Viewing the evidence and all reasonable inferences in B. R.' s favor, and having no
    argument from Horsley against it, it is reasonable to infer that B.R. did not causally connect her
    discomfort with religion to her abuse until she discussed it with Dr. Dietzen beginning in 2011.
    Thus, summary judgment based on the statute of limitations is inappropriate on this claim.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    In summary, B.R. argues that she experienced new or more serious injuries from her sexual
    abuse when she was married, became sexually active, discussed having children with her husband,
    got a job, and tried to reconnect with the church. B.R. presented evidence that these injuries are
    new or more serious because she did not understand how her sexual abuse would affect these parts
    of her life until she actually had these experiences and entered into sexual abuse counseling with
    Dr. Dietzen in 2011.          This evidence, together with Horsley' s contrary evidence and viewed in a
    light   most   favorable to B. R., demonstrates that           material     facts   are   in dispute.    Thus, a jury must
    12
    No. 44874 -2 -II
    resolve   the factual issues   and   determine   whether   the   statute of   limitations bars her   claim.   Oostra
    v.   Holstine, 
    86 Wash. App. 53
    .6, 543, 
    937 P.2d 195
    ( 1997), review denied, 
    133 Wash. 2d 1034
    ( 1998).
    Accordingly, we reverse the trial court' s summary judgment order and remand for trial.
    We concur:
    MAXA J.
    SUTTON, J.
    13