Milton I. Shadur, Senior United States District Judge.
Many years after suffering the child abuse that forms the gravamen of his claims, Christopher Hicks ("Hicks") filed a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 ("Section 1983") action charging violations of due process, failure to intervene and supervisory liability, as well as several related state law tort claims, against a number of defendants, including Elmira Wright ("Wright"), Brodie Westbrooks and UCAN (formerly known as Child and Family Services).
Both sides agree on several facts. Hicks was placed in the care of the Department of Children and Family Services ("DCFS") upon his birth in 1973 (M. St. ¶¶ 6-8). Soon after that he was placed with Jemison (
In other filings, primarily in their dispute (Dkt. Nos. 253-255, 261) over whether or not Dr. Ronald Davidson should be excluded, the two sides disagree on what transpired in connection with the entry of the court order to return Hicks to the Jemison home. For their part Movants assert that Wright strongly opposed returning Hicks in light of the possibility of future abuse. Hicks counters with a citation to Jemison's deposition to the contrary, as well as to the specific words "by agreement" in the court order to argue that there was no resistance from Wright. In a summary judgment motion such as this one, this Court reads all evidentiary-supported disputed facts in a light most favorable to nonmovant Hicks. Here there is clearly enough evidence to call for the acceptance of Hicks' version as true for the purposes of this opinion.
Hicks alleges, and Movants have proffered no evidence to the contrary, that abuse continued when Hicks was returned to the home — and Movants make no claim of their noncompliance with their statutory (and court-ordered) responsibility to monitor Hicks' treatment there. Yet despite the deplorable history of continuing abuse by Jemison, Wright makes no claim of doing anything to prevent DCFS from closing the file in August 1979 (
Every Rule 56 movant bears the burden of establishing the absence of any genuine issue of material fact (
Movants present a consistent (though misguided) argument in their attempted — but unsuccessful — support of the claimed need to grant summary judgment in their favor on the statute of limitations defense. There is no dispute as to how long the statute of limitations is for this type of case (two years) — instead the crux of the matter comes down to when that two year clock began to tick. As Movants would have it, the time began to run for Hicks when he reached 18 years of age.
To that end Movants cite several cases stating that the limitations period starts to run when a plaintiff has discovered both the injuries and the cause of those injuries. They also point to evidence to suggest that Hicks knew of both his injuries and as to Jemison being the direct cause of his injuries by the time he turned 18, well over two years before he brought this case. That evidence includes his knowledge of defendant Wright's existence and of DCFS's presence when he was a child, as well as statements regarding memories of his abuse, dating back more than two years before he filed this action. Movants reject the ideas that Hicks can legally bring suit within the statute of limitations under a theory of delayed knowledge of their inaction or of the extent of his injuries
But all of those arguments miss the mark entirely, because they fail to focus on the time that Hicks acquired the knowledge that is critical to the claim that he advances here. For even if this Court were to take all of the facts advanced by Movants as true, Hicks' present claims would still be timely.
In identifying when the statute of limitations begins to run, a key distinction must be made between a victim's knowledge that an injury has been wrongfully caused and the victim's first learning that the targeted defendants caused the injury sued upon in a sense expressly made actionable under Section 1983. For that purpose it is vital to note that Section 1983 itself imposes liability on any person who under color of law either "subjects, or
At this point in the narrative any rational presentation must shift focus to the highly relevant subjects on which Movants' presentation offers only silence: the mandate and goals of the statute that Movants were charged with carrying out and the role that Movants played — or tragically did
In that respect defense counsel prefers to ignore why the Illinois General Assembly enacted the statute that created the DCFS to begin with: Ill. Rev. Stat. ch. 23 § 5005 (1977) (emphasis added) mandated that DCFS provide direct child welfare services by "(1)
Here Hicks' patchwork memories of abuse at the hands of Jemison (the one who directly subjected Hicks to that abuse) did not start the relevant two year clock ticking — that knowledge would of course bar a belated lawsuit against Jemison or her estate, but the critical fact for this action is that Hicks' long suppressed memory had left him unaware that DCFS and its cohorts (the ones who caused Hicks to be so subjected by their culpability in connection with his return to Jemison's home and the further abuse that he then continued to suffer for another 3 years) did so with full knowledge that it was a seriously abusive place, thus betraying their fiduciary obligation to spare him from such abuse. Only the actions of DCFS and FCI in knowingly implementing his replacement and retention in harm's way at the hands of known child abuser Jemison are the relevant cause of his injuries for the purposes of this lawsuit. Movants' duty to protect Hicks against the further physical abuse that he then suffered arises out of the ongoing special relationship between FCI and Hicks, so that Movants' actions constituted an actionable cause in the express manner prescribed by the earlier-underscored language ("
As stated earlier, Movants argue that the order returning Hicks to the abusive home was a judicial decision, not an action of DCFS or FCI. But in doing so Movants themselves abuse
Once again, in no part of either side's filings is there any evidence at all to suggest that Hicks knew of the role that DCFS and its people played in subjecting him to the grievous abuse for which he has sued after learning of that role. For Movants to argue that Hicks should have investigated DCFS earlier because of his experience as a day care owner is mere second guessing with a vengeance.
What Movants and their counsel have failed to recognize (or perhaps more accurately have refused to acknowledge) is that this case is conceptually parallel to a case such as
In the same way,
Just so with Hicks. And that analysis demonstrates why none of the cases cited by the Movants in purported support of their motion to dismiss is relevant here. Not one of them treats with a limitations question commensurate with the one that has been posed for resolution by this Court. Although it is unnecessary to lengthen this opinion unduly by referring to and distinguishing the set of cases sought to be called upon by Movants, for all of them have the common flaw of being out of point on the ground explained here, a few of Movants' references may be illustrative on that score.
Thus in terms of state law,
Statutes of limitations are in place to spare potential defendants from the peril of being sued in perpetuity. But that purpose is not at risk where defendants such as Movants are held to answer for the consequences of risks for which they themselves bear responsibility. For the reasons stated in this opinion, Movants' Dkt. No. 264 on the statute of limitations issue is denied.