11/07/2023
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
AT JACKSON
September 12, 2023 Session
JOHN DOE ET AL. v. BELLEVUE BAPTIST CHURCH
Appeal from the Circuit Court for Shelby County
No. CT-1556-20 Jerry Stokes, Judge
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No. W2022-01350-COA-R3-CV
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The parents of a child brought suit to personally recover for negligent infliction of
emotional distress in relation to sexual abuse of their child that had been perpetrated by the
defendant church’s former paid volunteer coordinator. The church filed a motion to
dismiss the parents’ claims and argued that the parents’ attempt to recover for negligent
infliction of emotional distress was not legally cognizable because the parents did not
perceive any injury-producing event. The trial court countenanced this position and
entered an order dismissing the parents’ claims. The parents then filed a motion seeking
relief from the dismissal order and, alternatively, to amend their complaint. The trial court
ultimately denied the parents’ motion, following which the present appeal ensued. For the
reasons stated herein, we affirm the trial court’s judgment.
Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court
Affirmed and Remanded
ARNOLD B. GOLDIN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which THOMAS R. FRIERSON,
II, and CARMA DENNIS MCGEE, JJ., joined.
Gary K. Smith and Karen M. Campbell, Memphis, Tennessee, for the appellants, John Doe
and Jane Doe.
William R. Johnson, Brentwood, Tennessee, for the appellee, Bellevue Baptist Church.
OPINION
BACKGROUND AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
The Appellants in this appeal, hereinafter referred to as “the Parents,” commenced
litigation in the trial court alleging that James Hook (“Mr. Hook”), a former paid volunteer
coordinator at Bellevue Baptist Church (“Bellevue”), had perpetrated “extended horrific
acts of sexual abuse” on their minor daughter (“the Child”). In addition to asserting several
claims against Bellevue on behalf of the Child concerning this abuse, the Parents brought
their own individual claims against Bellevue for negligent infliction of emotional distress
(“NIED”). According to the complaint, Bellevue “knew or should have known that Hook
was spending too much time with certain minors” and “failed to investigate and prevent
Hook from creating opportunities for Hook to be alone with [the Child].” The claims
asserted on behalf of the Child, which have now been resolved, are not at issue in this
appeal.
The complaint details how Mr. Hook encouraged the Child, then fifteen years old,
to volunteer at Bellevue on Sundays and Wednesdays and how he began showing her
particular attention during her volunteer sessions. Concerning the later abuse committed
by Mr. Hook against the Child on Wednesday nights, the complaint alleges as follows:
38. James Hook took his older children to Bellevue Baptist on Wednesday
nights and dropped them off in another part of the children’s area. Hook
would then go to the room where [the Child] was working to stop by to say
“hi.” After talking with her for a short time, he would convince [the Child]
to leave with him. No adult there ever questioned this or prevented him from
taking [the Child] from the area.
39. After leaving the child care area, Hook, then 43 years old, took [the
Child], 15, to other areas on the Bellevue campus including the Pavilion and
outdoor bathrooms where he kissed her and had other physical contact with
her. Hook would return [the Child] to the child care area before the
Wednesday night program was ended.
Although the complaint notes that the Child stopped volunteering at the Wednesday
night program in approximately April 2019, it avers that the abuse by Mr. Hook continued,
stating as follows:
Hook convinced [the Child] to repeatedly sneak out of her home in the
middle of the night and he began picking her up and taking her to a park
where he continued to assault her. This occurred numerous times. After
these encounters, Hook would drop [the Child] off a mile away from her
home where she would have to walk back early in the morning.
According to the complaint, however, law enforcement discovered Mr. Hook and the Child
at a park in the back of Mr. Hook’s vehicle on May 5, 2019, allegedly involved in acts of
intimacy. Mr. Hook was arrested and eventually pled guilty to “sexual battery by an
authority figure.”
Notably, in outlining these various instances of abuse, the complaint does not assert
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any facts pointing to the Parents’ direct observation of Mr. Hook’s abuse, nor does the
complaint allege any facts depicting the Parents’ arrival at any of the scenes of abuse in the
aftermath before the scenes were materially altered.1 As discussed below, the absence of
such allegations has proven to be a significant point of contention among the parties in this
case.
Subsequent to the filing of the lawsuit against it, Bellevue moved to dismiss the
Parents’ NIED claims, specifically arguing in a contemporaneously-filed supporting
memorandum that the Parents “failed to allege any facts to support a claim for NIED.” In
pertinent part, Bellevue noted that “[the Parents] did not witness Mr. Hook sexually
abusing their daughter” and “did not perceive any injury producing event.” A hearing was
later held on Bellevue’s motion to dismiss, and the trial court ultimately agreed that the
Parents’ lack of perception was fatal to their NIED claims, stating as follows in its oral
ruling:
[I]n terms of being able to perceive what this child has gone through having
witnessed any parts of it, I don’t see anything in the Complaint that suggests
that the parents did. . . . I have to look at the Complaint, and based on what’s
been alleged I don’t see that the parents have witnessed anything, observed
anything, suspected anything. So they have no sensory perception of what
may have been going on to lead them to have a claim for NIED.
So I’m going to grant the motion to dismiss as to the parents’ claim[.]
A written order dismissing the Parents’ claims was later entered on November 10, 2020.
At the time, the Child’s claims remained outstanding, and the trial court denied a
subsequent request by Bellevue that the dismissal order concerning the Parents’ claims be
certified as a final judgment.
Litigation in the case continued, and on April 19, 2022, a Rule 31 mediator filed a
report regarding mediation that had taken place the prior month and stated that all matters
concerning the Child were resolved “pending approval” by the trial court. Subsequently,
on June 15, 2022, the Parents filed a motion seeking relief from the November 10, 2020,
dismissal order pursuant to Rules 54.02 and 60.02 of the Tennessee Rules of Civil
Procedure and, alternatively, to amend their complaint pursuant to Rule 15 of the
Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure. As a basis for their motion, the Parents asserted that
new evidence from depositions taken in January 2022 revealed that Bellevue had been on
notice of suspicious behavior of Mr. Hook in February 2019 but nonetheless had failed to
warn them.
1
The Parents’ principal brief itself acknowledges that “[the Parents] were totally unaware of what
was occurring until Hook was caught on May 5, 2019 and arrested.”
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Bellevue opposed the Parents’ motion, arguing in pertinent part that there were no
valid grounds for the court to reconsider its order, that there was no evidence that the
Parents had any sensory perception of any alleged injury to the Child, and that there was
no basis for the Parents to “allege another negligence claim, purportedly not NIED,”
multiple months after discovery of the new evidence. In an ensuing hearing on the motion,
the trial court signaled its agreement with Bellevue’s position, stating as follows: “[A]fter
looking at everything that’s been submitted and looking at the existing case law, I see no
basis for reopening the same claims but naming it failure to warn in this instance.” Later,
in an order entered on August 29, 2022, the trial court denied the Parents’ motion to amend,
denied relief from the order of dismissal regarding their NIED claims, and formally
dismissed the case as to all Plaintiffs, specifically noting in connection therewith that the
case as to the Child was resolved. This appeal followed.
ISSUES PRESENTED
In their appellate brief, the Parents initially raise the issue of whether the trial court
erred in dismissing their claims for NIED “based upon learning that their daughter had
been sexually assaulted by a former employee of [Bellevue].” They also raise the issue of
whether the trial court erred in “denying [their] Motion to reconsider the Motion to Dismiss
. . . under Tenn. R. Civ. P. 54.02 and 60.02(5) or in the alternative to allow [them] to amend
the complaint under Tenn. R. Civ. P. 15.”
For its part, Bellevue does not seek any relief from the trial court’s judgment and
requests that we affirm the trial court’s orders in light of existing precedent.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
As noted above, the Parents challenge the propriety of the trial court’s dismissal of
their NIED claims upon Bellevue’s motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, while also
raising the question of whether the trial court erred in denying their motion seeking relief
from the dismissal order and, alternatively, to amend their complaint. Whereas we review
the first of these issues de novo, with no presumption of correctness, we review the latter
matters for an abuse of discretion. See Khan v. Regions Bank, 572 S.W.3d 189, 194 (Tenn.
Ct. App. 2018) (“A trial court’s decision to grant a Rule 12.02(6) motion to dismiss is a
question of law that we review de novo with no presumption of correctness.”); Discover
Bank v. Morgan, 363 S.W.3d 479, 487 (Tenn. 2012) (noting that motions to revise under
Rule 54.02 and motions for relief under Rule 60.02 are both reviewed for an abuse of
discretion); Pratcher v. Methodist Healthcare Memphis Hosps., 407 S.W.3d 727, 741
(Tenn. 2013) (“Trial courts have broad authority to decide motions to amend pleadings and
will not be reversed absent an abuse of discretion.”). Regarding Bellevue’s motion to
dismiss, we note that “[a] Rule 12.02(6) motion challenges only the legal sufficiency of the
complaint, not the strength of the plaintiff’s proof or evidence.” Webb v. Nashville Area
Habitat for Humanity, Inc., 346 S.W.3d 422, 426 (Tenn. 2011). The resolution of the
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motion is determined by an examination of the pleadings alone. Id. When a trial court
decides whether to grant leave to amend a complaint, pertinent factors to consider include
whether there has been an undue delay in filing and whether there is futility of amendment.
Kincaid v. SouthTrust Bank, 221 S.W.3d 32, 42 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2006).
DISCUSSION
This Court has noted that a claim for NIED is simply “an avenue for a plaintiff to
recover for emotional injuries that result from another’s negligence.” Henderson v.
Vanderbilt Univ., 534 S.W.3d 426, 432 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2017). Indeed, the elements of a
NIED claim “include the elements of a general negligence claim, which are duty, breach
of duty, injury or loss, causation in fact, and proximate causation.” Rogers v. Louisville
Land Co., 367 S.W.3d 196, 206 (Tenn. 2012). Nonetheless, the law surrounding NIED
claims has been described as “murky and difficult,” Henderson, 534 S.W.3d at 432, and it
has been subject to various developments over the years. One of the recognized types of
NIED claims addresses situations where “the plaintiff suffers emotional injury because the
negligence of another caused an injury or death to a third person and that in turn caused
emotional injury to the plaintiff.” Id. at 438 (quoting John A. Day, NIED Claims After
Flax and Eskin, 45 Tenn. B.J. 33 (Jan. 2009)). Such “bystander” claims may be further
divided into additional categories, including a category of claims in which one “witnesses
the aftermath of the scene within a very short period of time after the injury-producing
event had already occurred.” Id.
As is relevant here, the Tennessee Supreme Court has instructed that a claim for
NIED requires proof of the following elements “[w]hen a plaintiff did not witness the
injury-producing event”:
(1) the actual or apparent death or serious physical injury of another caused
by the defendant’s negligence, (2) the existence of a close and intimate
personal relationship between the plaintiff and the deceased or injured
person, (3) the plaintiff’s observation of the actual or apparent death or
serious physical injury at the scene of the accident before the scene has
been materially altered, and (4) the resulting serious or severe emotional
injury to the plaintiff caused by the observation of the death or injury.
Eskin v. Bartee, 262 S.W.3d 727, 739 (Tenn. 2008) (emphasis added). As should be
evident from our initial exposition in this Opinion, it is the bolded element above that is at
issue here. Moreover, as reflected in the trial court’s disposition and as we now confirm
from our own review of the complaint, it is clear that allegations for legally cognizable
NIED claims for the Parents are absent. Indeed, the complaint does not even allege any
sensory perception by the Parents of the abuse of the Child or of any of the aftermath of
the scenes of abuse before they were materially altered. Under the precedent established
by the Tennessee Supreme Court, we are therefore compelled to conclude that the Parents’
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NIED claims were properly dismissed by the trial court.2
At certain places in their principal appellate brief, the Parents appear to
acknowledge that the existing case law could serve as a barrier to recovery on their NIED
claims, variously arguing that the law “should certainly apply to such claims to provide
relief” and also that, to the extent there is a requirement that they have some type of sensory
perception of the injury-producing event, there is “a good faith argument for the reversal
or modification of existing law.” (emphasis added) In support of their efforts to secure a
reversal of the trial court’s judgment, they point to case law in other jurisdictions. Among
other cases, the Parents cite prominently to the Indiana Supreme Court’s decision in K.G.
by Next Friend Ruch v. Smith, 178 N.E.3d 300 (Ind. 2021), a case in which the Indiana
Supreme Court carved out an exception to the proximity requirement governing bystander
NIED claims in the state. In pertinent part, the majority opinion in the K.G. case held that
“when a caretaker assumes responsibility for a child, and when that caretaker owes a duty
of care to the child’s parent or guardian, a claim against the caretaker for the negligent
infliction of emotional distress may proceed when the parent or guardian later discovers,
with irrefutable certainty, that the caretaker sexually abused that child and when that abuse
severely impacted the parent or guardian’s emotional health.” Id. at 308. Although the
majority opinion stated that it was not the first state to eliminate a proximity requirement
when a case involved the sexual abuse of a child, it also transparently observed that the
“tide of precedent tends to flow in the opposite direction,” id. at 310, adding as follows:
“At the end of the day, we acknowledge that most states have refrained from disposing of
a proximity requirement.” Id. at 311.
In a dissenting opinion in the K.G. case, in which another justice joined, it was
pointed out that the majority opinion not only represented the minority view, but also that
it created unequal results. In relevant part, the dissenting opinion noted as follows:
Though our emotional-distress doctrine has evolved over the past 125 years,
as the Court recounts, a core principle had remained unchanged throughout
2
The Tennessee Supreme Court’s decision in Doe 1 ex rel. Doe 1 v. Roman Catholic Diocese of
Nashville, 154 S.W.3d 22 (Tenn. 2005), which was cited in the Parents’ brief and was invoked by their
counsel at the oral argument of this matter, does not in any way direct a contrary conclusion. Although the
Supreme Court held in that case that conduct does not need to be directed at a specific person or to have
occurred in the presence of the plaintiff to be actionable, such a holding was in specific relation to the
sufficiency of a claim for reckless infliction of emotional distress, the elements of which the Supreme Court
noted already placed significant limitations on recovery and “perform[ed] an important gatekeeping
function . . . of preventing liability from extending unreasonably.” Id. at 38-39. Within a footnote, the
Supreme Court expressly noted that “[c]auses of action in Tennessee for intentional, reckless and negligent
infliction of emotional distress retain respectively distinct and logically appropriate requirements and
burdens.” Id. at 40 n.31. Moreover, it should be noted that Eskin, the aforecited Supreme Court opinion
requiring “the plaintiff’s observation of the actual or apparent death or serious physical injury at the scene
of the accident before the scene has been materially altered,” see Eskin, 262 S.W.3d at 739, was issued in
2008, after the Doe 1 ex rel. Doe 1 v. Roman Catholic Diocese of Nashville decision.
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that time—until today. That principle required a claimant seeking emotional-
distress damages to have witnessed the tortious conduct and resulting injury
directly as they occurred or in their immediate aftermath. But this
requirement of temporal and physical proximity is missing here. The mother
did not observe her daughter’s sexual abuse or even learn of it until years
later. Thus, the Court must fashion a new rule to revive her claim, but this
new rule creates an unequal result. It permits recovery for a mother who did
not witness her child’s sexual abuse, but denies recovery to a father, whose
emotional distress was equally sincere, when his son died in a car accident.
See Clifton v. McCammack, 43 N.E.3d 213 (Ind. 2015).[3] Because “every
person could be expected at some point to learn of the death or serious injury
of a loved one through indirect means”, Smith v. Toney, 862 N.E.2d 656, 663
(Ind. 2007), “[t]here must be a point at which a defendant’s exposure to
liability for negligent infliction of emotional distress ends”, Clifton, 43
N.E.3d at 223.
Id. at 314-15 (Slaughter, J., dissenting). The dissenting opinion also questioned “what
principle justifies drawing the line here and not elsewhere?” and pondered whether the
majority’s change in the law was the “proverbial camel’s nose under the tent, with the rest
of the camel soon to follow.” Id. at 315 (Slaughter, J., dissenting).
Although the Parents, no doubt, find the general approach taken by the majority
opinion in K.G. to be supportive of their claims and submit that this case is a “prime
opportunity” to authorize recovery in their favor, respectfully, we are bound by the
contours of NIED law as defined by our own state’s highest court. To that end, we note
again that the Tennessee Supreme Court has announced that, “[w]hen a plaintiff did not
witness the injury-producing event,” one of the essential elements of a NIED claim is “the
plaintiff’s observation of the actual or apparent death or serious physical injury at the scene
of the accident before the scene has been materially altered.” Eskin, 262 S.W.3d at 739.
We recognized this element of the law as recently as last year. See Cothran v. Durham
Sch. Servs., L.P., 666 S.W.3d 369, 376 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2022) (quoting from Eskin). While
we, like the court in Clifton, do not intend to trivialize the Parents’ claims of distress in this
case, we must follow the existing established precedent in this state governing NIED
claims. In doing so, and because NIED claims satisfying all of the requisite elements
required by the precedents in this jurisdiction have not been asserted by the Parents here,
we affirm the trial court’s dismissal.
Moreover, in affirming the trial court’s judgment of dismissal in this case, we
3
In the referenced Clifton decision, the Indiana Supreme Court, although denying NIED recovery
to a father in that case, hastened to add that it recognized that genuine emotional distress can certainly occur
even after an accident, that it was not trivializing the emotional trauma that occurs, and that it had previously
been “well aware that emotional trauma would still befall an immediate family member who arrived to an
accident scene after the victim or scene had materially changed.” Clifton, 43 N.E.3d at 222.
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discern no abuse of discretion in the trial court’s denial of the Parents’ motion that sought
relief under Rule 54.02 or Rule 60.02,4 or in the court’s denial of that motion’s additional
request to amend the complaint. Although the Parents have argued that evidence from
January 2022 depositions justified relief from the trial court’s dismissal order, as well as
an amendment to their complaint, Bellevue has noted that “even with the new allegations
[concerning Bellevue’s notice of suspicious behavior of Mr. Hook in February 2019] . . .
there is no allegation of contemporaneous awareness, or presence at the scene.” Indeed,
although the Parents attempt to recover for emotional harm as a result of learning that the
Child was abused, there still remains an absence of any assertions sufficient to establish
any form of sensory observation at the scenes of abuse, whether in the aftermath of the
abuse or otherwise.
CONCLUSION
Although the facts outlined in this case pertaining to Mr. Hook’s abuse of the Child
are deplorable, we are compelled to conclude that existing precedent does not support
recovery for the Parents in their pursuit of damages for their own emotional distress. If
there is to be a change in the law to accommodate the claims at issue here under these types
of circumstances, we respectfully submit that such a decision is the province of the
Tennessee Supreme Court. For these reasons, and in light of the foregoing discussion, we
affirm the judgment of the trial court.
s/ Arnold B. Goldin
ARNOLD B. GOLDIN, JUDGE
4
Inasmuch as the order that the Parents sought relief from was not final when their motion seeking
relief was filed, analytically the Parents’ motion is technically properly analyzed as a Rule 54.02 motion to
revise as opposed to a Rule 60.02 motion. Compare Harris v. Chern, 33 S.W.3d 741, 744 (Tenn. 2000)
(noting that Rule 54.02 addresses interlocutory orders), with DeLong v. Vanderbilt Univ., 186 S.W.3d 506,
511 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2005) (“Tenn. R. Civ. P. 60.02 provides an exceptional remedy that enables parties to
obtain relief from a final judgment.”).
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