Arbitrator
Awards Damages For Diocese's Breach of Settlement Agreement In
Clergy Sex Abuse Cases
Religion Clause July 2, 2014 http://religionclause.blogspot.com/2014/07/arbitrator-awards-damages-for-dioceses.html
In 2008, the Catholic Diocese of Kansas City- St. Joseph (MO)
entered a settlement agreement in a lawsuit brought by 47 clergy
sex abuse victims, paying them $10 million in damages and
agreeing to a number of terms to prevent future abuse and aid
past victims. The agreement included an arbitration
clause. Yesterday's Kansas
City Star reports that in 2011, 44 of the 47 settling
plaintiffs filed suit in a Missouri state court seeking to force
the Diocese to arbitration for violating the settlement
agreement. The charges focused on the Diocese's delay
in reporting to authorities their discovery of hundreds of
images of young girls on the computer of priest Shawn Ratigan.
(See prior
related posting.) In March of this year, an arbitrator issued a
report finding that the Diocese had breached five provisions of
the settlement agreement, and awarded damages of $650,000,
attorneys' fees of $450,000, $5,820 for unpaid counseling of
sex abuse victims. The award was to remain confidential
until one of the parties moved to have the court confirm or
vacate it. On June 20, the Diocese filed a motion to
vacate the award, and it then became public. The Diocese
argues that there is nothing in the settlement agreement that
authorizes the arbitrator to award additional damages. The
arbitrator had said, however, that plaintiffs could have used
the breaches as a basis for voiding the settlement agreement and
obtaining an even larger award.
|