Saturday, November 28, 2009

Jury Says Religious Order Not Liable For Molestation By Teacher

In 2007, the Delaware legislature passed the Child Victim Act . It created a 2-year window for filing of child sexual abuse claims previously barred by the statute of limitations. (See prior related posting.) The statute provides that if the suit is against an institution or other legal entity that employed the abuser and which owed a duty of care to the child, plaintiff must show gross negligence in order to recover. Earlier this week, in the first case to come to trial under the new statute, a jury refused to award damages against the Oblates of St. Francis de Sales. Tuesday's Wilmington News Journal reports that while the jury concluded that a now-deceased teacher, Rev. Francis Norris, molested plaintiff in 1962, the jury could not conclude that the Oblates were grossly negligent. Salesianum School knew the teacher suffered from alcoholism and depression, but, according to the jury, it could not have foreseen that this would lead to sexual abuse of a student. Plaintiff's attorney claimed that memos about Norris' alcoholism and depression contained "code words" used in the 1960's to indicate that a priest had problems with pedophilia.