Court Opinion

ID: 2651014
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2014-01-25 01:04:07.232795+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:36:59.887435
License: Public Domain

2014 IL App (2d) 130121
                                  No. 2-13-0121
                           Opinion filed January 24, 2014
______________________________________________________________________________

                                           IN THE

                             APPELLATE COURT OF ILLINOIS

                              SECOND DISTRICT
______________________________________________________________________________

JANE DOE, as Mother and Next Friend of ) Appeal from the Circuit Court
JOHN DOE, a Minor,                     ) of Winnebago County.
                                       )
       Plaintiff-Appellant,            )
                                       )
v.                                     ) No. 07-L-405
                                       )
BOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA and              )
BLACKHAWK AREA COUNCIL OF              )
BOY SCOUTS OF AMERICA,                 )
                                       )
       Defendants-Appellees            ) Honorable
                                       ) Eugene G. Doherty,
(Charles Bickerstaff, Defendant).      ) Judge, Presiding.
______________________________________________________________________________

       JUSTICE BIRKETT delivered the judgment of the court, with opinion.
       Justices Hudson and Spence concurred in the judgment and opinion.

                                          OPINION

¶1     Plaintiff, Jane Doe, as mother and next friend of John Doe (John), a minor, appeals from

the trial court’s granting summary judgment in favor of defendants, Boy Scouts of America (BSA)

and the Blackhawk Area Council of Boy Scouts of America (BAC), on plaintiff’s negligence

claims against them. (Plaintiff also brought negligence and battery claims against former BAC

employee Charles Bickerstaff, which are not involved in this appeal.) For the following reasons,

we affirm.

¶2                               I. BACKGROUND
2014 IL App (2d) 130121

¶3      BSA is a national youth organization whose vision is implemented through local councils

that it charters. The councils are divided into districts. BAC is one such council. There is no

dispute in this litigation that BSA and BAC are legally separate organizations with separate

employees. BAC, which is headquartered in Rockford, comprises several counties in northern

Illinois.

¶4      Plaintiff’s four-count amended complaint brought one negligence count each against BSA

and BAC. The injuries at the heart of the lawsuit were Bickerstaff’s sexual assaults of John in

July 2006 and the following months. (Criminal charges were brought against Bickerstaff in

connection with the assaults, and he is now serving an 80-year prison term.) Although the

complaint did not so indicate, Bickerstaff was retired from his position with BAC when the

assaults occurred.

¶5      Plaintiff’s complaint alleged as follows. John met Bickerstaff when John was a scout with

BAC and Bickerstaff was “a paid executive of [BAC]” and also an agent or apparent agent of BSA.

Bickerstaff was a “pedophile” who “posed a constant threat to boys.” Both BSA and BAC made

representations to potential scouts and their parents that scouting is a wholesome and safe activity.

Both entities, however, were aware that pedophiles had in the past infiltrated the leadership ranks

of scouting. There were “warnings signs” prior to the summer of 2006 that Bickerstaff was a

pedophile, but both entities ignored them. Exploiting his leadership roles in BSA and BAC,

Bickerstaff “sought and gained [John’s] trust, friendship, admiration, and obedience,” and,

consequently, John “was conditioned to comply with Bickerstaff’s direction and to look to him as

an authority figure.” Bickerstaff also

        “sought and gained the trust and confidence of [plaintiff] and gained [her] consent for

        [John] to attend a BSA memorabilia Trade-O-Ree in Lansing, Michigan, and thereafter on

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       several occasions, over the next 9 to 10 months, to spend time alone with Bickerstaff at

       Bickerstaff’s home and at other locations.

¶6     Bickerstaff, both using “the power, authority, and trust of his positions” and “availing

himself of [BSA’s and BAC’s] representations to parents and scouts that the BSA is a moral and

safe place for boys, *** enticed, induced, directed, coerced, and forced [John] to engage in deviant

sexual acts with [Bickerstaff] over a 9 to 10 month period.”

¶7     Plaintiff alleged that BSA and BAC were “negligent in the manner that [they] screened,

hired, retained, and supervised Bickerstaff when [they] knew or should have known that

Bickerstaff posed a threat of sexual abuse to children.” Plaintiff also made the broader allegation

that BSA and BAC “[f]ailed to conduct background checks on new or existing scouting leaders,

employees, agents, volunteers, agents and/or apparent agents or more carefully screen scout

leaders who did not then and never had sons in Scouting.”

¶8     BSA and BAC separately moved for summary judgment. Plaintiff filed a combined

response to their motions, and BSA and BAC filed replies in support of their motions. The parties

filed numerous attachments, including multiple depositions, from which we derive the following

statement of facts.

¶9     Over his decades of work in scouting, Bickerstaff held the position of district executive or

senior district executive at several local councils. A district executive is assigned to a particular

district within a local council. The role of the district executive is to recruit and work with

volunteers to raise funds, form scout units (or “packs”), and recruit scouts. A senior district

executive has similar responsibilities but also has oversight of other district executives. All

district executives within a council are responsible ultimately to the scout executive, the highest

position in the council. District executives do not report to BSA.

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¶ 10   In 1973, Bickerstaff became a district executive with the Twin Valley Council. In 1975,

he left that position and joined the United States Navy as an officer. According to Bickerstaff, he

underwent a background check by the Federal Bureau of Investigation as a condition of joining the

Navy. In 1978, Bickerstaff received an honorable discharge from the Navy. The record contains

an “Office Separation Questionnaire” completed by Bickerstaff, in which he indicated that he was

asked to resign on suspicion of “ ‘homosexual tendencies’ ” and possession and sale of drugs. In

1978, Bickerstaff became a district executive with the Heart of America Council. Bickerstaff

received a promotion in 1985 and was installed as senior district executive with the Coronado Area

Council.

¶ 11   In 1989, Bickerstaff accepted overseas work and became a district executive for the

Transatlantic Council (TC), where he was officed in Germany.              The process by which

Bickerstaff’s credentials were reviewed by TC was consistent with the councils’ hiring practices

with respect to experienced council executives.      According to the deposition testimony of

numerous council executives, a council with a need for an executive will advertise the position and

also notify BSA. BSA assists councils in finding candidates; one council executive described

BSA as a “clearinghouse” for information on candidates for council positions. Another council

executive described BSA as a “broker of human resources to other councils.” When a candidate

with no prior council-executive experience applies to a council and is turned down, the candidate’s

application information is forwarded to BSA, which will then distribute it as requested to other

councils. BSA also receives and distributes information on candidates who have prior experience

as council executives and are seeking reemployment in that position. When a council requests

names of such experienced candidates, BSA forwards candidates’ resumes, “career summar[ies]”

of past employment with councils, and performance reviews from those councils. Typically, the

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performance reviews will cover only the one or two most recent years of scouting employment.

An information packet forwarded by BSA does not purport to comprise the entirety of the

candidate’s employment file, but the scout executive of the hiring council can request the

remainder of the file. In conjunction with reviewing this partial employment information, the

hiring scout executive will ordinarily contact the scout executive(s) under whom the candidate had

worked. The hiring scout executive also has discretion to contact non-scout employers, but

typically does not. The hiring scout executive may also conduct a background check, but

ordinarily relies on the background check that would have been done by BSA when the candidate

was first hired as an executive. While it is clear from the record that candidates who are currently,

or were most recently, employed as council executives receive this streamlined review, it is

unclear whether the policy extends further to anyone previously employed by a council, no matter

how remotely in time.

¶ 12   The record shows that BSA maintains an “ineligible volunteer list” (IV list) consisting of

individuals deemed unfit for volunteer or paid positions within scouting.          When a council

approves an individual for a paid position, the paperwork is sent to BSA, which, in addition to

performing a background check, references the candidate’s name against the IV list. BSA has

authority to reject any candidate who appears on the IV list. The record is unclear whether BSA

has any further veto power over a council’s hiring decision.

¶ 13   When Bickerstaff applied to TC, the scout executive, Robert Zadina, did not request any

information on why Bickerstaff was discharged from the Navy. Zadina did not contact any

councils where Bickerstaff had previously worked. Rather, Zadina based his decision entirely on

his interview with Bickerstaff and Bickerstaff’s resume and performance reviews from other

councils. Zadina testified that this was usually the extent of his review of a candidate with

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council-executive experience. He explained: “I just know that they, the executives, are in good

standing.”

¶ 14   During his tenure with TC in Germany, Bickerstaff was involved in a car accident and was

charged with and convicted of driving while intoxicated (DWI). His passenger at the time of the

accident was an 18-year-old male German national. Zadina did not terminate Bickerstaff and did

not discipline him aside from having his driving privileges suspended as required under military

law. Zadina did not record the DWI in Bickerstaff’s employment file, because it occurred on his

own time and no scouting personnel were involved. Also, Zadina did not report Bickerstaff to

BSA for inclusion on the IV list.

¶ 15   In 1993, Bickerstaff’s position with TC was eliminated because of a reduction in military

personnel in Germany. Bickerstaff notified BSA of his interest in employment with other

councils, and BSA accordingly distributed his application packet to councils, including BAC.

While Bickerstaff was waiting for placement with another council, he obtained employment as a

substitute teacher and with a temporary employment agency. In 1995, George Stone, scout

executive for BAC, reviewed the materials on Bickerstaff that were provided by BSA. In his

deposition testimony, Stone described Bickerstaff as “in transition,” i.e., his scouting position was

eliminated and he was seeking reemployment. In keeping with custom, Stone received from BSA

only Bickerstaff’s resume, a summary of his employment history with councils, and his most

recent performance reviews. According to Stone, review of a candidate in transition “depends on

the circumstances, how long they’re in transition and where they came from.” The length of

in-transition status might impact whether “any of the people [the candidate] worked for were still

there.” Stone’s custom was to rely on the input of the scout executive(s) for whom the candidate

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had worked. Stone could not recall specifically with whom he spoke about Bickerstaff, but Stone

knew for certain that he did not make any calls to TC about Bickerstaff.

¶ 16   Stone testified that he saw no indication in the materials he received that Bickerstaff was

convicted of DWI in Germany. Stone would like to have known of the DWI in deciding whether

to hire Bickerstaff. Stone acknowledged that he could have asked BSA for Bickerstaff’s entire

employment file, but did not. Stone testified that he interviewed Bickerstaff in conjunction with

reviewing the materials from BSA. Also, after the interview, Stone asked fellow personnel at

BAC whether they believed that Bickerstaff was a match. Stone took this extra step because

Bickerstaff was being considered for the position of senior district executive. In 1995, Stone

hired Bickerstaff for that position. Bickerstaff was assigned to the White Eagle District and was

officed in Dixon.

¶ 17   Several months after Bickerstaff was hired, Stone was succeeded as scout executive by

Alan Anderson, who eventually demoted Bickerstaff from senior district executive to district

executive for failure to meet his fundraising and membership goals. According to Anderson, the

only complaint he received from volunteers or parents about Bickerstaff was that he could be “a

little cranky and flippant.” Anderson had no other concerns about Bickerstaff’s job performance.

¶ 18   Anderson was succeeded in 2003 by Donald Kinney, who was still scout executive in 2006

when Bickerstaff retired. Kinney testified that he never detected anything in Bickerstaff to

suggest that he was unfit for a scouting position. On January 2, 2006, Bickerstaff gave BAC

notice of his retirement. His final day of work was March 10, 2006.

¶ 19   Christian Long was the assistant scout executive at BAC, and Bickerstaff’s immediate

supervisor, during part of Bickerstaff’s tenure. After Bickerstaff was arrested for assaulting John,

Long “wracked his brain” for warning signs that he might have observed in Bickerstaff. Long

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2014 IL App (2d) 130121

could recall no reason to suspect that Bickerstaff was a danger to children. Long did recall that

Bickerstaff frequently took photographs at scout events.         Photography was not part of

Bickerstaff’s duties as district executive, and Long was unsure why Bickerstaff enjoyed taking the

photos.

¶ 20      Stephen Clark, a volunteer with BAC, testified to his suspicions about Bickerstaff.

According to Clark, he and Bickerstaff attended the same church, where Bickerstaff was involved

in the youth program. Clark became concerned that Bickerstaff was showing “an inordinate

amount of interest” in young boys at church. Clark observed that Bickerstaff would “hug the

kids, and pick them up, if they were small enough, and rub up against them.” Clark also testified

that Bickerstaff acted suspiciously at the YMCA where Clark’s sons Patrick and Christian (born

1989 and 1987, respectively) were part of a swim team.           Patrick reported to Clark that

Bickerstaff would position himself in the locker room so that he could “watch,” in one of the

mirrors, Patrick and the other boys change clothes. Clark believed, but was not sure, that Patrick

reported this in 2003 or 2004.      Clark surmised that it was because of the flexibility of

Bickerstaff’s job that he was able to be at the YMCA on afternoons when the boys’ swim team was

practicing. Subsequent to Patrick’s report, Clark noticed Bickerstaff watching Clark as he was

changing in the locker room.

¶ 21      According to Clark, Bickerstaff displayed all of the “warning signs” of which scout

volunteers are admonished as part of their training. According to Clark, who was himself a scout

trainer, volunteers are given “the name of the scout executive and his direct phone number so that

if you ever saw anything that was inappropriate that was going on, you were supposed to call

directly to him.” The scouting professionals who were deposed confirmed that BSA offers

“youth protection materials” for councils to use at their option. BAC requires its volunteers and

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2014 IL App (2d) 130121

employees to review these materials, which describe abusive and potentially abusive behaviors.

BAC requires its executives to be vigilant for warning signs and to immediately remove any

volunteer or employee who appears to pose a danger to children. Another aspect of youth

protection is “two-deep” leadership, which Anderson described as the “policy whereby all

scouting functions that involve kids, scouts, needs [sic] a minimum of two adult leaders.”

¶ 22   Clark testified that he did not contact the scout executive with his concerns about

Bickerstaff because he did not have a “smoking gun,” proof that Bickerstaff was molesting boys.

Clark observed that Bickerstaff was more discreet during scouting and did not behave in the

suspicious way Clark observed at church and the YMCA. Clark found it odd, however, that

Bickerstaff attended so many scout functions. Clark indicated that the “closest” he came to

sharing his suspicions about Bickerstaff with BAC personnel was telling Jon Geraghty, a paid

BAC employee who maintained Camp Lowden. Clark told Geraghty that Bickerstaff was “weird

around kids” and described to him Bickerstaff’s behavior at the YMCA. Clark also shared his

suspicions with several BAC volunteers, including Sharon Fannucci, a member of the district

committee. Clark hoped that Fannucci would mention Clark’s concerns to the paid district staff

with whom she regularly met.

¶ 23   Geraghty testified that he was the ranger for Camp Lowden from 1991 to 2000. Geraghty

estimated that he saw Bickerstaff at the camp about 10 times a year. Geraghty never noticed

anything suspicious or strange about Bickerstaff. Geraghty could not recall being told by Clark

that Bickerstaff had acted suspiciously around children.

¶ 24   Plaintiff and John testified to their contact with Bickerstaff.   John first met Bickerstaff at

a Boy Scout event in 2001 when John was 10 or 11 years old. Plaintiff understood that

Bickerstaff was the district executive “who would oversee these major events.” According to

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plaintiff, she and John saw Bickerstaff at all major scouting events over subsequent years and

conversed with him on several of these occasions. In 2006, Bickerstaff approached plaintiff and

John at one such event and suggested that John would be a good candidate for a foreign exchange

program through the Rotary Club. Bickerstaff offered to recommend John for the program.

Several times, Bickerstaff stopped by plaintiff’s home to speak with her and John about the

program and to introduce John to some foreign exchange students. John applied to the program,

but learned in January or February 2006 that his application was denied. Subsequently, plaintiff

asked Bickerstaff whether he would be willing to pay for modeling school for John. Bickerstaff

agreed, but ultimately plaintiff decided against the schooling.

¶ 25   In June or July 2006, Bickerstaff phoned plaintiff and suggested that John accompany him

to a convention in Lansing, Michigan, called a Trade-O-Ree.             Bickerstaff described the

Trade-O-Ree as a “flea market.”       Plaintiff understood that John and Bickerstaff would be

traveling alone together. Plaintiff assumed that the event was scout-sanctioned but admitted that,

if it were so sanctioned, Bickerstaff would be in violation of the two-deep leadership policy if he

traveled alone with John. (There is no dispute that the Trade-O-Ree was not, in fact, sanctioned

by BSA or any local council.)      Plaintiff testified that she gave Bickerstaff permission to take

John to the event, because Bickerstaff had been in scouting for several decades and she had known

him for several years. Plaintiff had no suspicions about Bickerstaff and trusted him. Plaintiff

noted that, before the Michigan trip, John had never been with Bickerstaff when other adults were

not present.

¶ 26   Regarding the Michigan trip, John understood that he and Bickerstaff would be sleeping

alone in a hotel room. John trusted Bickerstaff “because he was a scout leader.” John assumed

that Bickerstaff was still employed by BSA or BAC when they went to Michigan. During the trip,

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Bickerstaff sexually assaulted John. Bickerstaff also assaulted John on several later occasions,

including an occasion when John came to Bickerstaff’s house at his request to help him clean his

gutters.

¶ 27       In their motions for summary judgment, BSA and BAC each denied that it had any duty to

protect John when the sexual assaults occurred, as they began in July 2006. First, BSA asserted

that Bickerstaff was employed by BAC, not BSA, during his scouting contact with John and,

moreover, that Bickerstaff was no longer employed by any scouting organization when he sexually

assaulted John. Second, BAC acknowledged that Bickerstaff had been its employee, but noted

that Bickerstaff’s final day of work with BAC—March 10, 2006—preceded by several months the

initial sexual assault of John.

¶ 28       In her response, plaintiff argued that there was a material issue of fact on whether BSA and

BAC negligently hired and retained Bickerstaff. Plaintiff also proposed other sources for a duty

of care by BSA and BAC. First, plaintiff argued that a duty arose because BSA and BAC

voluntarily undertook to protect scouts from dangerous individuals such as pedophiles. Second,

plaintiff argued that BAC assumed a duty by taking custody of John and so depriving him of his

normal opportunities for protection.

¶ 29       The trial court determined that there was no material fact question on negligence and that

BSA and BAC were entitled to judgment as a matter of law. First, the court held that neither BSA

nor BAC could have committed the torts of negligent hiring and retention with respect to

Bickerstaff, because, first, BSA never had employed him and, second, BAC no longer employed

him when he inflicted the injuries for which plaintiff sought relief. Second, the court determined

that BSA and BAC adequately executed all voluntary protective measures that they undertook.

The court did not address plaintiff’s claim that BAC failed to protect John once it took custody of

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him. The court granted summary judgment in favor of BSA and BAC on the two negligence

counts against them.

¶ 30      The trial court also addressed a dispute between the parties as to the admissibility of

handwritten journals that plaintiff, claiming the journals were composed by Bickerstaff, submitted

during the summary judgment proceedings as evidence that Bickerstaff was a pedophile acting out

his urges by sexually assaulting children. The parties disagreed over whether the journals were

authenticated. The court found it necessary to resolve the authentication question because

evidence inadmissible at trial may not be considered in a summary judgment proceeding. See

Harris Bank Hinsdale, N.A. v. Caliendo, 235 Ill. App. 3d 1013, 1025 (1992) (“Although the court

at the summary judgment stage does not try the issues [citations], evidence that would be

inadmissible at trial may not be considered in support of or in opposition to a motion for summary

judgment.”). Applying Illinois Rule of Evidence 901 (eff. Jan. 1, 2011), the court held that the

journals were not authenticated and, hence, could not be considered for purposes of summary

judgment.

¶ 31      Plaintiff filed this timely appeal.

¶ 32                                            II. ANALYSIS

¶ 33                 A. Principles Governing Review of Summary Judgment Rulings

¶ 34      The purpose of summary judgment is to determine whether a genuine issue of material fact

exists.    Adams v. Northern Illinois Gas Co., 211 Ill. 2d 32, 42-43 (2004). Summary judgment is

appropriate where the pleadings, affidavits, depositions, admissions, and exhibits on file, when

viewed in the light most favorable to the nonmovant, reveal that there is no genuine issue of

material fact and that the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Id. at 43; 735 ILCS

5/2-1005(c) (West 2012). In determining whether a genuine issue of material fact exists, the

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court views the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmovant. Adams, 211 Ill. 2d at 43.

Since summary judgment is a drastic remedy, it should be granted only when the right of the

movant is clear and free from doubt. Id. Review of a trial court’s grant of summary judgment is

de novo. Id.

¶ 35                          B. Plaintiff’s Theories of Negligence

¶ 36    Plaintiff’s theories of liability all sound in negligence. “ ‘Unless a duty is owed, there is

no negligence.’ ” LaFever v. Kemlite Co., 185 Ill. 2d 380, 388 (1998) (quoting American

National Bank & Trust Co. of Chicago v. National Advertising Co., 149 Ill. 2d 14, 26 (1992)).

Plaintiff bears the burden of establishing that BSA and BAC owed John a duty of care. See Mt.

Zion State Bank & Trust v. Consolidated Communications, Inc., 169 Ill. 2d 110, 116 (1995).

Plaintiff does not contend that either BSA or BAC had an ongoing duty in July 2006 to protect

John from harm. Absent a special relationship, there is no duty to protect another from the

criminal act of a third party (Simmons v. Homatas, 236 Ill. 2d 459, 475 (2010)), and plaintiff

identifies no special relationship that existed between John and BSA or BAC at the time John was

injured. This by itself is fatal to plaintiff’s cause of action.

¶ 37    Nonetheless, we consider whether a duty that BSA or BAC might have owed to John prior

to July 2006 could have remained in force at the time of the injuries. We find no such ground for

liability in any of the three negligence theories that plaintiff proposes: negligent hiring and

retention, voluntary undertaking of protection, and voluntary assumption of custody.

¶ 38                        1. Negligent Hiring and Retention

¶ 39    “Illinois law recognizes a cause of action against an employer for negligently hiring, or

retaining in its employment, an employee it knew, or should have known, was unfit for the job so

as to create a danger of harm to third persons.” Van Horne v. Muller, 185 Ill. 2d 299, 310 (1998).

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“An action for negligent hiring or retention of an employee requires the plaintiff to plead and prove

(1) that the employer knew or should have known that the employee had a particular unfitness for

the position so as to create a danger of harm to third persons; (2) that such particular unfitness was

known or should have been known at the time of the employee’s hiring or retention; and (3) that

this particular unfitness proximately caused the plaintiff’s injury.” Id. at 311.

¶ 40   There is no indication in the record that any employment relationship existed between BSA

and Bickerstaff. In fact, the scouting professionals who were queried on the matter unequivocally

maintained that Bickerstaff was employed by BAC, not BSA. Plaintiff claims, however, that

BSA was “inextricably intertwined” with BAC in the process leading to Bickerstaff’s hiring, as

BSA acted as “the clearinghouse for local councils” and had the “final say over any hire.” Thus,

according to plaintiff, BSA “effectively hired Bickerstaff.” We disagree. We know of no

“effective” employment relationship under Illinois law except that which is determined by the

following factors: “ ‘the right to control the manner in which the work is performed; the right to

discharge; the method of payment; whether taxes are deducted from the payment; the level of skill

required to perform the work; and the furnishing of the necessary tools, materials, or equipment.’ ”

Doe v. Brouillette, 389 Ill. App. 3d 595, 606 (2009) (quoting Lang v. Silva, 306 Ill. App. 3d 960,

972 (1999)). “While no one single factor is considered determinative, the right to control the

work is considered to be the predominant factor.” Id. Plaintiff does not discuss these factors,

and it is apparent that the most significant factor, namely, the right to control the work, weighs

against finding an employment relationship between BSA and Bickerstaff. Bickerstaff reported

to BAC, not BSA. Therefore, we hold that, as a matter of law, BSA was not Bickerstaff’s

employer for purposes of the tort of negligent hiring and retention. 1

       1
           Plaintiff appeared to concede the issue at oral argument, but as the concession was not

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¶ 41    While BAC was indeed Bickerstaff’s employer, the injuries to John occurred after

Bickerstaff voluntarily terminated his employment with BAC. Plaintiff has cited no authority,

Illinois or otherwise, for holding an employer liable, under the tort of negligent hiring and

retention, for an employee’s posttermination acts. Our own research has disclosed no Illinois

decision where a negligent-hiring-and-retention claim was based on posttermination acts. Our

cursory research outside Illinois shows that the issue is controversial enough to have generated a

split of authority. Compare Abrams v. Worthington, 169 Ohio App. 3d 94, 2006-Ohio-5516, 861

N.E.2d 920, at ¶ 16 (no liability, because employment relationship had terminated before the

wrongful act occurred), with Marquay v. Eno, 662 A.2d 272, 280 (N.H. 1995) (“The requirement

of causal connection to employment does not mean, however, that the employee’s criminal

conduct must have been performed within the scope of employment, during working hours, or

even while the perpetrator was an employee.”). Without considering the issue deeply, we can

appreciate why courts would deem the termination of employment a logical and practical

boundary for employer liability. Plaintiff suggests that “public policy *** dictates” that “liability

should extend beyond the temporal bounds of the employment relationship.”                 We think it

unadvisable to weigh the wisdom of such a policy where plaintiff marshals not even one source of

authority to her cause and fails to recognize the controversy in other jurisdictions.

¶ 42    Though we decline to make a definitive statement today, we note that the law of negligent

hiring and retention in this state appears to afford little scope for liability for posttermination acts

of employees. We consider first the following representative statement of the tort: “Liability for

negligent hiring arises only when a particular unfitness of an applicant creates a danger of harm to

unequivocal we include this discussion.

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a third person which the employer knew, or should have known, when he hired and placed this

applicant in employment where he could injure others.” (Emphasis added.) Fallon v. Indian

Trail School, Addison Township School District No. 4, 148 Ill. App. 3d 931, 935 (1986). This

language suggests that the purpose of the tort is to prevent injuries that occur during the term of

employment and, consequently, suggests that the employer’s duty of care does not extend beyond

the cessation of employment.

¶ 43   Significant also is the rigorous standard of proximate causation applied in

negligent-hiring-and-retention cases.     Illinois courts require that the injury itself must have

“occurred by virtue of the servant’s employment (i.e., ‘because of the employment’).” (Internal

quotation marks omitted.) Carter v. Skokie Detective Agency, Ltd., 256 Ill. App. 3d 77, 80

(1993). Though Illinois courts are careful to maintain that an employer may be liable “even

though the employee commits the criminal or intentional act outside the scope of employment”

(internal quotation marks omitted) (id.), liability for out-of-the-scope acts will rest only where “the

employee is on the employer’s premises or using the chattel of the employer, and the employer has

reason to know of the need and opportunity for exercising control over the employee”

(MacDonald v. Hinton, 361 Ill. App. 3d 378, 387 (2005)). MacDonald relied on Escobar v.

Madsen Construction Co., 226 Ill. App. 3d 92, 95 (1992), which in turn relied on the Restatement

(Second) of Torts, section 317 (1965). Courts have applied this rule to find liability lacking as a

matter of law where, though the plaintiff came to know the employee only through the

employment, the injury neither occurred on the employer’s premises nor involved the

instrumentalities of employment. See MacDonald, 361 Ill. App. 3d at 388 (“Plaintiff alleged that

Maust killed James outside the scope of their employment at Trophies Are Us, but failed to allege

that Maust killed James on defendant’s premises or with the instrumentalities of the

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employment.”); Escobar, 226 Ill. App. 3d at 95 (when the employee shot his coworker, the shooter

“was not on [the employer’s] jobsite, not doing [the employer’s work], and not using [the

employer’s] gun.”). In such a case, the employment only “provided a condition for [the] attack”

(by introducing the employee to the victim) and did not “proximately cause[] it.” Escobar, 226

Ill. App. 3d at 95. We do not opine on the wisdom of this approach, but note only that the policy

exists and presents a formidable obstacle that plaintiff does not begin to address. Under this strict

concept of causation, if the injury occurs—as here—after the actor’s employment has ended, then

a fortiori the injury cannot be connected to that employment.

¶ 44   Even if we disregarded these authorities and assumed arguendo that Illinois law extends

the tort of negligent hiring and retention to postemployment actions, plaintiff has not persuaded us

that any material fact question exists. First, on the issue of the hiring of Bickerstaff, the only

information that plaintiff claims BAC would have uncovered had it fulfilled its duty to carefully

screen applicants was (1) Bickerstaff’s discharge from the Navy for suspected homosexuality and

drug activity and (2) his DWI in Germany. In her briefs, plaintiff does not articulate how such

facts would have made it reasonably foreseeable to BAC that Bickerstaff would sexually molest

young boys. Rather, plaintiff merely insinuates that the presence of a “young man” in the car with

Bickerstaff when he was arrested for DWI indicated some sexual impropriety. The “young man”

was, in fact, 18 years old. Plaintiff’s insinuation is simply unwarranted.

¶ 45   At oral argument, we pressed plaintiff to explain how these particular aspects of

Bickerstaff’s past made it reasonably foreseeable that he would molest young boys. Citing an

unpublished decision from this court, plaintiff contended that drug use or possession constitutes a

“crime of moral turpitude” that might well indicate a potential for physical assault as well.

Plaintiff rightly acknowledged, however, that unpublished decisions are not precedential. See Ill.

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2014 IL App (2d) 130121

S. Ct. R. 23(e) (eff. July 1, 2011). Plaintiff also conceded that neither homosexuality nor DWI is

a “crime of moral turpitude.” For these reasons, we hold that plaintiff has identified no issue of

material fact on whether BAC negligently hired Bickerstaff.

¶ 46   On the issue of retention, plaintiff contends that the negligence consisted of BAC’s

inaction after Clark informed Geraghty of how Bickerstaff behaved in the locker room at the

YMCA. For purposes of this issue, BAC does not dispute that notice to Geraghty, a paid

employee of BAC, was effectively notice to BAC. Plaintiff, noting that John met Bickerstaff in

2001, argues that if BAC had immediately terminated Bickerstaff’s employment when it learned

of Clark’s report through Geraghty—which, at the latest, would have been in 2000, the last year of

Geraghty’s employment with BAC—Bickerstaff would not have met John through scouting.

¶ 47   We cannot agree with plaintiff that Clark’s testimony about his report to Geraghty raises a

question of material fact that BAC negligently retained Bickerstaff.    We note first that plaintiff

was asked at oral argument to address what significance Clark’s allegations had under the Abused

and Neglected Child Reporting Act (Act) (325 ILCS 5/1 et seq. (West 2000)). Plaintiff agreed

that BAC personnel qualified as mandatory reporters under section 4 of the Act, and hence were

obligated to make an immediate report to the Department of Children and Family Services (DCFS)

whenever they had “reasonable cause to believe a child known to them in their professional or

official capacity may be an abused child or a neglected child ***” (325 ILCS 5/4 (West 2000)). 2

Plaintiff then conceded that BAC had no duty to report to DCFS what Clark told Geraghty about

Bickerstaff.    Plaintiff asserted, rather, that the Act was not the extent of BAC’s duty under the

law. Plaintiff claimed that BAC’s responsibility to protect the youth in its charge required that it

       2
           Abuse occurs, inter alia, when a sex offense is committed or allowed to be committed

against the child. 325 ILCS 5/3(c) (West 2000).

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take measures before its statutory duty to report was triggered by an actual incident of abuse or

neglect. According to plaintiff, Bickerstaff manifested in his behavior at the YMCA a “sexual

attraction to young boys and *** predatory tendencies.” Firing Bickerstaff immediately upon

receiving Clark’s report would have been, plaintiff contends, an appropriate and necessary

precautionary act.

¶ 48   We cannot agree. Understandably, BAC was deeply concerned with ferreting out the

potential for abuse before it manifested itself in harmful acts. At the same time, however, BAC

had to deal justly with its employees and not take lightly the decision to terminate. Even in view

of BAC’s appropriately heightened sensitivity to danger, Bickerstaff’s conduct at the YMCA was

not so clearly prurient, and did not signal such an immediate danger to scouts, as to warrant

depriving him of any opportunity to explain himself. Such an explanation might have reasonably

persuaded BAC that Bickerstaff’s actions were wrongly perceived.

¶ 49   Plaintiff likens this case to Doe v. Dimovski, 336 Ill. App. 3d 292 (2003), where this court

found the plaintiff’s complaint alleging negligent retention sufficient to survive a motion to

dismiss. The plaintiff alleged that the following conduct by the school district’s employee,

Steven Dimovski, placed the district on notice of Dimovski’s dangerous proclivities:

       “Dimovski engaged in a course of inappropriate sexual harassment and abuse and made

       inappropriate sexual advances and statements to a female student under the age of 18 at

       Westmont [High School], including expressing his desire to see the student naked,

       requesting that she perform a strip tease for him, and following her to her place of work and

       her residence, where the sexual harassment, advances, innuendo, and suggestion

       continued.” Id. at 294.

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2014 IL App (2d) 130121

¶ 50    The alleged conduct in Dimovski consisted of what appeared to be unequivocally salacious

overtures, far unlike the “watching” in this case (as it was described by Clark), which could have

had an innocent explanation.

¶ 51    To summarize, we affirm the summary judgment on alternative bases. First, plaintiff

alleges liability under the tort of negligent retention and hiring for the posttermination acts of an

employee, yet cites no authority, Illinois or otherwise, for imposing liability for acts beyond the

term of employment. Our brief research suggests that what plaintiff seeks is a broadening of

liability as currently recognized by Illinois law, and we note that foreign jurisdictions are split on

the issue of whether to extend liability beyond the termination of employment. Second, even if

we were to recognize such an extension of liability for negligent hiring and retention, plaintiff fails

to identify an issue of material fact that would preclude summary judgment in BAC’s favor.

¶ 52                                 2. Voluntary Undertaking

¶ 53    “Generally, pursuant to the voluntary undertaking theory of liability, ‘one who undertakes,

gratuitously or for consideration, to render services to another is subject to liability for bodily harm

caused to the other by one’s failure to exercise due care in the performance of the undertaking.’ ”

Wakulich v. Mraz, 203 Ill. 2d 223, 241 (2003) (quoting Rhodes v. Illinois Central Gulf Railroad,

172 Ill. 2d 213, 239 (1996)). “The theory is narrowly construed.” Bell v. Hutsell, 2011 IL

110724, ¶ 12. Moreover, “‘the duty of care to be imposed upon a defendant is limited to the

extent of the undertaking.” Id.

¶ 54    Plaintiff argues that BSA and BAC undertook to protect youth from sexual predators and

failed in that duty in two respects. First, Bickerstaff was hired by BAC despite dubious facts in

his background, specifically his discharge from the Navy for suspected homosexual tendencies

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2014 IL App (2d) 130121

and drug activity, and his DWI in Germany while district executive for TC. Second, Bickerstaff

was retained despite Clark’s report to Geraghty that defendant showed a prurient interest in boys.

¶ 55   Even if we agreed in general terms that BSA and BAC undertook to protect John against

the likes of Bickerstaff, we would still hold as a matter of law that neither defendant is liable for

John’s injuries. Plaintiff fails to recognize that “[a] person who has gratuitously assumed to

protect others against injury is under no obligation to continue that protection indefinitely.”

Sumner v. Hebenstreit, 167 Ill. App. 3d 881, 887 (1988). We see no indication in the record that

BSA and BAC intended to continue their protection of John after Bickerstaff’s employment was

terminated. We recognize that one who voluntarily undertakes to protect another must terminate

that undertaking without “ ‘put[ting] the other in a worse position than he was in before the actor

attempted to aid him.’ ” Bell, 2011 IL 110724, ¶ 24 (quoting Restatement (Second) of Torts §

323, cmt. c (1965)). But plaintiff identifies no way in which John was placed in a worse position

by the cessation of whatever voluntary protective measures BSA or BAC had undertaken. We

note that, even if John came to trust Bickerstaff by virtue of his long-standing leadership position

in scouting, BSA and BAC never condoned John, or any youth, taking a weekend trip alone with

an adult scout leader, and in fact the organizations’ two-deep leadership policy prohibited such an

arrangement.

¶ 56                                  3. Voluntary Custody

¶ 57   Finally, plaintiff claims that a duty of care arose when BAC took John into its custody.

(Plaintiff makes no such claim regarding BSA.) “[A] special relationship creating a duty to aid or

protect exists when one ‘voluntarily takes the custody of another under circumstances such as to

deprive the other of his normal opportunities for protection.’ ” Wells v. Endicott, 2013 IL App

(5th) 110570, ¶ 48 (quoting Restatement (Second) of Torts § 314A(4) (1965)). As with the other

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theories of negligence discussed above, the claim of voluntary custody fails as a matter of law

because there is no indication that the relationship that would have entailed a duty of care was still

in existence when the injuries occurred. Bickerstaff was no longer employed by BAC in July

2006 when the assaults began, and plaintiff alleges no other way in which John could have been in

the custody of BAC when the assaults occurred.

¶ 58    Our opinion would not change even if we were to recognize that BAC could, in theory, be

held responsible for certain antecedent acts occurring while Bickerstaff and John were both in

scouting—for instance, acts of “grooming” by Bickerstaff. Plaintiff points to no occasion during

John’s scouting career when he was placed in a situation depriving him of normal opportunities for

protection and leaving him vulnerable to Bickerstaff’s manipulation. In particular, the record

reveals no point during John’s scouting experiences when he was alone with Bickerstaff. The

two-deep leadership policy appears to have been honored in John’s scouting contact with

Bickerstaff. John was brought into contact with Bickerstaff through scouting, but BAC’s policies

never encouraged a youth to trust an adult scout leader to the extent of traveling alone with him.

¶ 59                             C. Admissibility of the Journals

¶ 60    Plaintiff argues that the trial court erred in finding that the handwritten journals were not

authenticated and, hence, could not be considered in the summary judgment proceedings. We do

not decide this issue, as plaintiff fails to articulate how the journals are relevant to the substance of

her lawsuit. First, while plaintiff claims that the journals document Bickerstaff’s sexual abuse of

children, she describes no specific content of the journals but simply provides a string of record

citations, on the apparent assumption that we will review those pages to determine what precisely

she has in view. We will not carry plaintiff’s burden of argumentation. We are entitled to a

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2013 IL App (2d) 130121

statement of facts “necessary to an understanding of the case” (Ill. S. Ct. R. 341(h)(5) (eff. Sept. 1,

2006)), which plaintiff has not provided on this particular issue.

¶ 61   Second, even if we overlooked this failure, plaintiff’s argument suffers from a further fatal

shortcoming, namely, she fails to demonstrate how the journals impact the overarching issue on

appeal, which is not whether Bickerstaff was a pedophile (neither BSA nor BAC disputes that he

was), but whether BSA or BAC had reason to know that he was. Plaintiff claims that the journals

boost Clark’s credibility, but in fact the journals would at best corroborate Clark’s opinion that

Bickerstaff was a potential danger to children, not his claim that he provided BSA and BAC notice

of that potential danger. 3 Thus, we find no error in the trial court’s ruling on the journals.

¶ 62                                   III. CONCLUSION

¶ 63   For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the circuit court of Winnebago

County granting summary judgment in favor of BSA and BAC.

¶ 64   Affirmed.

       3
           Plaintiff conceded at oral argument that the journals do not “matter as much” as Clark’s

report to Geraghty.

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