Alleged
Abuser: Recovered Memory
by James P. Reape
James, the adoptive
father of Kathleen, filed a lawsuit against Kathleen's therapist,
alleging that he was wrongfully accused of sexually abusing his
daughter because the therapist implanted the idea in her mind. Father's
lawsuit for malpractice against the therapist was dismissed by the
Court. An Appellate Court reviewing the case agreed. Trear v. Stills
(1999) CA 4th; 1999 Daily Journal DAR 1478.
In 1992, the daughter
sued father alleging that she had been raped and sexually assaulted
by father commencing at age 6 months. Daughter was born in 1945and
stated in her lawsuit that she had no memory of the abuse until
1991, when the Defendant therapist diagnosed her as having suffered
from this childhood sexual abuse. Father further alleged that the
therapist encouraged daughter to file a lawsuit against her father.
In 1994, father sued the therapist, alleging that harm to him was
foreseeable from the diagnosis rendered as a result of malpractice.
In upholding the dismissal
of the lawsuit, the Appellate Court notes that the therapist had
no duty to the parent of an adult patient. The idea that childhood
sexual abuse may result in suppression of the memory is a matter
of great controversy within the psychotherapeutic community. California,
reacting to recovered memory issue, enacted in 1986 a statute of
limitations for childhood sexual abuse, requiring that a lawsuit
be filed within three years from the date the Plaintiff discovered
or reasonably should have discovered a psychological injury or illness
occurring after reaching adulthood was caused by sexual abuse. Code
of Civil Procedure, Section 340.1(a). The recovered memory theory
has been criticized severely. The False Memory Syndrome Foundation
formed in 1992 by a group of families damaged by false accusations
of child abuse, continues to combat repressed memory theory. The
theory itself may not be well enough accepted to even be admissible
in Court any longer.
The harm caused by
a false allegation of child abuse is obviously substantial. Certainly
the therapist was aware that a false allegation of sexual abuse
would be crushing to father. However, the legal duty to protect
against such harm is not based simply on the issue of how foreseeable
the harm is. Father suing the therapist is not the same as the patient
suing the therapist. It is also not the same as a case where a therapist
would expand the relationship to include treatment of the parents.
The therapist should
not be required to serve two masters. The debate concerning repressed
memory of childhood sexual abuse goes back 100 years to Freud. As
the argument reappeared in the late 1970's and 1980's, many states,
including California, reacted by modifying their statues of limitations
to accommodate such claims. The therapist did have the right to
at least explore in good faith the possibility of abuse by a parent.
If abuse is discovered, obviously there will be implications to
it. Should the therapist be placed in a position of not diagnosing
childhood sexual abuse and thereby protecting an alleged abuser
above the need of the patient to advance? THerapy is not an exact
science. It would be unworkable for a therapist acting in good faith
to have to choose between a patient and a possible abuser if the
therapist became liable to the alleged abuse for a false report.
These inherent conflicting pressures on the therapist act to the
detriment of the patient. Often times these claims of sexual abuse,
unless reported immediately, will lack objective verification and
must be settled based upon the testimony of the parties.
The California Court
noted that other states have reached a different conclusion in considering
this issue. The Appellate Court distinguished an earlier California
Supreme Court case allowing a lawsuit against a university hospital
where the therapist released a mental patient after the patient
confided to a psychologist employed by the hospital an intention
to kill a particular person. The murder did occur, and a lawsuit
was brought. The Court allowing the suit made that decision based
upon accepting the truth of the patient's stated intention to do
harm. The foreseeability of harm to a particular person. However,
in the recovered memory of sexual abuse cases, the therapist making
a diagnosis certainly will cause harm to the accused parent. However,
in failing to make the diagnosis, the harm is to the patient.
It is important to
note in looking at the case, the Court is not prohibiting a claim
being made by the patient against the therapist. In fact, if daughter
loses her lawsuit against father and father counter-sues daughter
for malicious prosecution, daughter will likely sue the therapist
for advising her to sue her father.
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