Reasner v. State, Dept. of Health & Social Services, Office of Children's Services ( 2017 )


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    Readers are requested to bring errors to the attention of the Clerk of the Appellate Courts,
    303 K Street, Anchorage, Alaska 99501, phone (907) 264-0608, fax (907) 264-0878, email
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    THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA
    LISA REASNER,                       )
    )                  Supreme Court Nos. S-15900/15929
    Appellant/Cross-Appellee, )
    )                  Superior Court No. 4FA-12-02812 CI
    v.                             )
    )                  OPINION
    STATE OF ALASKA, DEPARTMENT )
    OF HEALTH & SOCIAL SERVICES,        )                  No. 7171 – May 19, 2017
    OFFICE OF CHILDREN’S SERVICES, )
    )
    Appellee/Cross-Appellant, )
    )
    and                            )
    )
    ROLIN N. ALLISON JR.                )
    )
    Appellee.                 )
    )
    Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska,
    Fourth Judicial District, Fairbanks, Bethany Harbison, Judge.
    Appearances: Susan Orlansky, Reeves Amodio, LLC,
    Anchorage, and Michael C. Kramer and Reilly Cosgrove,
    Kramer and Associates, Fairbanks, for Appellant/Cross-
    Appellee. Ruth Botstein, Assistant Attorney General,
    Anchorage, and Craig W. Richards, Attorney General,
    Juneau, for Appellee/Cross-Appellant State of Alaska,
    Department of Health & Social Services, Office of Children’s
    Services. No appearance by Appellee Rolin N. Allison, Jr.
    Before: Stowers, Chief Justice, Winfree, Maassen, Bolger,
    and Carney, Justices.
    BOLGER, Justice.
    I.    INTRODUCTION
    Lisa Reasner suffered years of sexual abuse while in foster care and after
    the Office of Children’s Services (OCS)1 approved her adoption. Years later Reasner
    sued OCS after discovering that OCS might have played a role in allowing her abuse.
    The superior court concluded that Reasner’s claims were untimely and granted summary
    judgment in favor of OCS. The superior court also concluded that even if Reasner’s
    claims had been timely, OCS would still be entitled to partial summary judgment on
    various other grounds, including that OCS was partially protected by discretionary
    function immunity and that Reasner failed to establish that her foster parents had not
    completed the proper training. For the reasons explained below, we vacate the superior
    court’s grant of summary judgment and remand for further proceedings.
    II.   FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS2
    Reasner was born in 1989. OCS assumed custody of her in 1993 after
    ongoing reports of child neglect. In January 1994 OCS placed Reasner in a foster care
    home with Rolin Allison Sr. and Myna Allison.
    In July 1998 OCS received a report alleging that one of the Allisons’ sons
    had sexually molested a neighbor’s granddaughter. During the ensuing investigation
    Reasner revealed that Rolin Allison Jr. (J.R.), a different son, had sexually abused her
    “a long time ago.” At the time of the investigation, however, J.R. was not living with the
    Allisons, and Reasner was allowed to remain in the Allison home. The Allisons adopted
    1
    OCS was known at the time as the Division of Family and Youth Services.
    2
    Because this case was decided on summary judgment, we present the facts
    in the light most favorable to Reasner’s claims. See Hagen v. Strobel, 
    353 P.3d 799
    ,
    802-03 (Alaska 2015).
    -2-                                      7171
    Reasner in April 1999. OCS received reports that J.R. was abusing Reasner after the
    adoption but OCS did not take steps to remove Reasner from the home.
    In November 2011 J.R. was arrested for sexually abusing Reasner and other
    children. (J.R. eventually pleaded guilty to five counts of felony sexual abuse of a
    minor.) Reasner attended his arraignment and spoke with her former OCS caseworker.
    The caseworker told Reasner that OCS had known that J.R. was dangerous and had
    ordered Myna Allison to keep him away from the home. According to Reasner this was
    the first time she learned that OCS may have failed to protect her from J.R.
    Reasner sued OCS on December 3, 2012. Relevant to this appeal, Reasner
    alleged that (1) OCS had negligently investigated reports of harm occurring while OCS
    had legal custody of Reasner; (2) OCS had negligently supervised/monitored the Allison
    home; and (3) OCS had negligently failed to investigate reports of harm after Reasner
    was adopted.
    The superior court granted OCS summary judgment on all of Reasner’s
    claims,3 concluding that they were untimely under Alaska’s two-year statute of
    limitations for tort suits.4 The superior court also determined that even if Reasner’s
    claims had been timely, OCS would still be entitled to partial summary judgment on
    Reasner’s claims because she failed to establish a genuine issue of material fact as to
    whether the Allisons had completed certain training requirements and because OCS was
    partially protected by discretionary function immunity. The superior court, however,
    3
    The court’s order addressed both OCS’s motion to dismiss and its motion
    for summary judgment. But because the order relied on evidence outside the pleadings,
    we simply treat it as a grant of summary judgment. See Alaska R. Civ. P. 12(c)
    (providing that a motion for judgment on the pleadings shall be treated as one for
    summary judgment if “matters outside the pleadings are presented to and not excluded
    by the court”).
    4
    AS 09.10.070.
    -3-                                     7171
    rejected OCS’s argument that Alaska’s statute of repose also barred Reasner’s claim
    concluding that the statute was unconstitutional as applied to Reasner, and the superior
    court also rejected OCS’s argument that Reasner had failed to establish a causal link
    between OCS’s alleged negligence and her harm.
    Reasner appeals and OCS cross-appeals.
    III.   DISCUSSION
    The parties appeal a grant of summary judgment. When ruling on a
    summary judgment motion, a court must construe all reasonable factual inferences in
    favor of the non-moving party.5 “[S]ummary judgment is appropriate only when no
    reasonable person could discern a genuine factual dispute on a material issue.”6 As we
    have consistently explained, “ours is a ‘lenient standard for withstanding summary
    judgment.’ ”7 Any admissible evidence in favor of the nonmoving party concerning a
    material fact is sufficient . . . .”8 We review questions of summary judgment de novo.9
    We divide our discussion into two categories: (1) whether the superior
    court erred in granting OCS summary judgment because Reasner’s claims were untimely
    and (2) whether Reasner’s claims otherwise withstand summary judgment.
    5
    Christensen v. Alaska Sales &Serv., Inc., 
    335 P.3d 514
    , 520 (Alaska 2014).
    6
    
    Id. 7 Id.
    (quoting Shaffer v. Bellows, 
    260 P.3d 1064
    , 1069 (Alaska 2011)).
    8
    Greywolf v. Carroll, 
    151 P.3d 1234
    , 1241 (Alaska 2007).
    9
    Cikan v. ARCO Alaska, Inc., 
    125 P.3d 335
    , 338-39 (Alaska 2005).
    -4-                                      7171
    A.	    Whether Reasner’s Claims Were Untimely
    1.	    It was error to grant summary judgment to OCS under
    AS 09.10.070 because a genuine issue of material fact exists as
    to when Reasner’s claims accrued.
    Alaska Statute 09.10.070 requires that tort claims be brought “within two
    years of [their] accrual.”10 A different statute, AS 09.10.140(a), tolls the limitations
    period for minors until they reach the age of 18. The superior court found that all of
    Reasner’s claims were untimely because she filed suit more than two years after her
    eighteenth birthday. Reasner argues that this was error because a genuine issue of
    material fact exists concerning when her claims “accru[ed]” as that term is used in
    AS 09.10.070 and that, at the very least, an evidentiary hearing was required to resolve
    this dispute. We agree with Reasner.
    In Alaska the statute of limitations begins to run on the date “when a
    reasonable person has enough information to alert that person that he or she has a
    potential cause of action or should begin an inquiry to protect his or her rights.”11 The
    test for inquiry notice focuses on when a plaintiff has sufficient information to prompt
    an inquiry, not on when she has specific information establishing each element of her
    cause of action.12 Determining that date requires a “fact-intensive” analysis.13 We have
    therefore cautioned that summary judgment should only be used to resolve the time at
    10
    AS 09.10.070(a).
    11
    Mine Safety Appliances Co. v. Stiles, 
    756 P.2d 288
    , 291 (Alaska 1988).
    This is referred to as the “discovery rule.” See Cameron v. State, 
    822 P.2d 1362
    , 1365-66
    (Alaska 1991) (explaining Alaska’s formulation of the discovery rule).
    12
    See 
    Cameron, 822 P.2d at 1366
    .
    13
    Ranes & Shine, LLC v. MacDonald Miller Alaska, Inc., 
    355 P.3d 503
    , 509
    (Alaska 2015).
    -5-	                                     7171
    which a statute of limitations commences when “there exist uncontroverted facts that
    determine when a reasonable person should have” begun an inquiry to protect her
    rights.14
    In order to succeed in her suit against OCS, Reasner must prove that OCS
    acted negligently.15 Reasner argues that a reasonable person in her circumstances would
    not have begun an inquiry until she discovered that OCS may have played some role in
    allowing her to be abused.16 The superior court appeared to accept this reasoning, but
    found that by the time Reasner turned 18, she did, in fact, have information suggesting
    that OCS may have played a role in allowing her to be abused. Specifically, the superior
    court found that when Reasner turned 18 she essentially knew what her social worker
    later told her — “that OCS knew that J.R. was dangerous and had told Myna Allison that
    he was forbidden to be around the home.” In reaching this conclusion the superior court
    14
    Palmer v. Borg-Warner Corp., 
    818 P.2d 632
    , 634 (Alaska 1990).
    15
    Generally, Reasner must show that (1) OCS owed her a duty of care,
    (2) OCS breached that duty, (3) she was injured, and (4) her injury was the factual and
    proximate result of OCS’s breach. See Regner v. N. Star Volunteer Fire Dep’t, Inc., 
    323 P.3d 16
    , 21 (Alaska 2014); Kelly v. Municipality of Anchorage, 
    270 P.3d 801
    , 803
    (Alaska 2012).
    16
    See Pedersen v. Zielski, 
    822 P.2d 903
    , 907 (Alaska 1991) (noting that while
    the need for the discovery rule is most apparent “where the plaintiff’s injury is
    undiscovered and reasonably undiscoverable,” Alaska’s formulation of the discovery
    rule “is broad enough to cover other undiscovered and reasonably undiscoverable
    elements such as whether the cause of the injury was tortious”). See also Sopko v.
    Dowell Schlumberger, Inc., 
    21 P.3d 1265
    , 1270 (Alaska 2001) (citing Pedersen and
    stating that discovery rule in tort suits “protects plaintiffs whose injury is known but the
    cause is not reasonably discoverable during the limitations period”). Cf. Mine Safety
    Appliances 
    Co., 756 P.2d at 291-92
    , (affirming summary judgment decision that under
    the discovery rule the statute of limitations for a product defect in a worker’s helmet
    began to run from the date of the accident involving head injuries and damage to the
    helmet, rather than date the plaintiff actually discovered the helmet was defective).
    -6-                                       7171
    relied on two events: (1) that Reasner reported her abuse to OCS but OCS allowed her
    to remain in the Allison home and (2) that Reasner told a counselor in 2007 that she had
    reviewed her OCS and adoption records.
    Summary judgment, however, “is appropriate only when no reasonable
    person could discern a genuine factual dispute on a material issue.”17 We conclude that
    a genuine factual dispute exists concerning when Reasner discovered information
    suggesting that OCS had played a role in allowing her to be abused. First, we note that
    when ruling on a summary judgment motion, a court must construe all reasonable factual
    inferences in favor of the non-moving party.18 Applying that standard, the events relied
    upon by the superior court do not justify the superior court’s ultimate conclusion that
    Reasner had information suggesting OCS’s role in her abuse as early as 2007. The fact
    that Reasner reported her abuse to OCS while in OCS custody only establishes that
    Reasner knew a report about J.R. had been made to OCS. It does not establish, at least
    for the sake of summary judgment, that Reasner knew that OCS previously had known
    J.R. was dangerous or that Reasner knew that OCS previously had told Myna that J.R.
    was not allowed to be around the home. The 2007 counselor’s report is similarly
    unhelpful. It stated only that “[a]t the age of 18 she looked up her OCS records and
    adoption records. She feels like her adoptive parents lied to her for 14 years.” The
    counselor’s report did not contain any details as to what documents Reasner actually
    reviewed or whether she understood their contents. In a second affidavit accompanying
    her motion to reconsider, Reasner stated that she had only reviewed some adoption
    17
    Christensen v. Alaska Sales &Serv., Inc., 
    335 P.3d 514
    , 520 (Alaska 2014).
    18
    
    Id. -7- 7171
    records in her mother’s closet, not her OCS records. Indeed, as Reasner points out on
    appeal, OCS was not permitted to disclose her records under 7 Alaska Administrative
    Code (AAC) 54.050(1).
    More importantly, the conclusion reached by the superior court was directly
    contradicted by Reasner’s own sworn affidavit. In that affidavit Reasner asserted “the
    first time that [she] had information that OCS was negligent in failing to protect [her]
    from [J.R.]” was on November 9, 2011, because that was the date her former OCS
    caseworker told her that “OCS knew that [J.R.] was dangerous, and [that OCS] had told
    Myna Allison that he was forbidden to be around the home or any of the foster children.”
    As we have stated, “[a]ny admissible evidence in favor of the nonmoving party
    concerning a material fact is sufficient” to withstand summary judgment.19 Reasner’s
    sworn affidavit constitutes admissible evidence and is relevant to determining when
    Reasner discovered sufficient information “to alert a reasonable person to begin an
    inquiry to protect [her] rights.”20 Rather than resolving this issue at the summary
    judgment stage, the superior court should have held an evidentiary hearing to resolve the
    preliminary question of fact concerning when the statute of limitations on Reasner’s
    claims began to run.21
    OCS also asks us to affirm the superior court’s ruling on a different basis:
    that “Reasner’s knowledge that she suffered sexual molestation while in OCS custody
    19
    Greywolf v. Carroll, 
    151 P.3d 1234
    , 1241 (Alaska 2007).
    20
    Cameron v. State, 
    822 P.2d 1362
    , 1366 (Alaska 1991).
    21
    Catholic Bishop of N. Alaska v. Does 1-6, 
    141 P.3d 719
    , 725 (Alaska 2006).
    -8-                                     7171
    triggered the duty to investigate OCS.”22 In other words, OCS asks us to hold that, as a
    matter of law, a child who suffers sexual abuse while in OCS custody is aware or should
    be aware that OCS may have played a role in allowing the child to be abused.
    We implicitly rejected a similar argument in Catholic Bishop of Northern
    Alaska v. Does 1-6.23 In that case the plaintiffs sued two institutional defendants, the
    Catholic Bishop of Northern Alaska and the Society of Jesus, Oregon Province, alleging
    sexual abuse by a priest many decades earlier.24 We allowed their case to proceed past
    the motion to dismiss stage, noting that “[u]nder the discovery rule, the date on which
    the statute of limitations begins to run is a question of fact” and that we could not “rule
    out the possibility that evidence may be introduced that will show that the statute of
    limitations has not run.”25 We therefore implicitly concluded that a child who has been
    sexually abused does not, as a matter of law, have sufficient information to prompt a
    reasonable person to inquire into potential claims against institutional defendants.26
    22
    We may affirm the superior court’s grant of summary judgment “on any
    basis supported by the record, even if that basis was not considered by the court below
    or advanced by any party.” Powercorp Alaska, LLC v. Alaska Energy Authority, 
    290 P.3d 1173
    , 1181 (Alaska 2012) (quoting Smith v. Stafford, 
    189 P.3d 1065
    , 1070 (Alaska
    2008)).
    23
    
    141 P.3d 719
    .
    24
    
    Id. at 720.
           25
    
    Id. at 725.
           26
    We have found in some cases that plaintiffs are on inquiry notice from the
    date of injury, even when they lack knowledge of specific facts indicating that a
    particular defendant had played a role in causing that injury. See, e.g., Palmer v. Borg-
    Warner Corp., 
    818 P.2d 632
    , 635 (Alaska 1990) (holding that the estate of passenger
    killed in an airplane crash was on inquiry notice of potential claims against an airplane
    engine component manufacturer when the estate discovered that the crash had occurred);
    (continued...)
    -9-                                      7171
    Applying that conclusion here, we decline to affirm the superior court on
    OCS’s proposed alternative basis, and we therefore reverse the superior court’s grant of
    summary judgment.27
    2.     Alaska Statute 09.10.065(a) does not apply to Reasner’s claims.
    Reasner argues that even if her claims are untimely under AS 09.10.070,
    they are timely as a matter of law under a different statute, AS 09.10.065(a). We
    disagree.
    Alaska Statute 09.10.065(a) allows a person to bring a suit “at any time for
    conduct that would have, at the time the conduct occurred, violated provisions of any of”
    26
    (...continued)
    Mine Safety Appliances Co. v. Stiles, 
    756 P.2d 288
    , 292 (Alaska 1988) (holding that
    plaintiff who suffered a head injury while wearing a protective helmet designed to
    prevent such injuries was on inquiry notice of potential product defect claims from the
    date of injury); As we indicated in those cases, however, the nature of the injury and
    identity of the potentially negligent parties is critical to this analysis. In Palmer, for
    example, we concluded that notice of an airplane crash put the plaintiff on notice of
    potential negligence claims against an airplane engine component manufacturer because
    “[t]he general safety record of air travel and the present state of air technology
    compel[led] us to conclude that air crashes do not normally occur absent negligence” by
    “the pilot, the carriers, or the manufacturers.” 
    Palmer, 818 P.3d at 634
    (quoting
    Widmyer v. Se. Skyways, Inc., 
    584 P.2d 1
    , 14 (Alaska 1978)). That same reasoning does
    not apply here: the obvious cause of child sexual abuse is the intentional action of the
    abuser, and there is no evidence at this juncture suggesting that such abuse does not
    normally occur in foster homes absent negligence by the supervisory agency.
    27
    Reasner also asserts other grounds for tolling the two-year statute of
    limitations in her case, including mental incompetency under AS 09.10.140(a) and that
    she did not connect her sexual abuse to her psychological injuries until she resumed
    counseling in 2011. OCS argues that these arguments were waived because Reasner
    failed to raise them in a timely fashion. But even if Reasner waived those alternative
    tolling grounds for the sake of the present appeal, she is still free to raise them on
    remand, and thus we do not need to reach those arguments.
    -10-                                      7171
    five listed felony offenses, including felony sexual abuse of a minor.28 The question we
    must resolve is whether Reasner’s suit against OCS is “for conduct” that amounted to
    felony sexual abuse of a minor.
    We review a superior court’s interpretation of a statute de novo.29 We
    interpret the statute “according to reason, practicality, and common sense, considering
    the meaning of the statute’s language, its legislative history, and its purpose.”30 We
    apply “a sliding scale approach, where ‘[t]he plainer the statutory language is, the more
    convincing the evidence of contrary legislative purpose or intent must be.’ ”31
    We conclude that Reasner’s suit against OCS is not subject to the extended
    limitations period provided in AS 09.10.065(a). First, Reasner’s suit falls outside the
    plain language of AS 09.10.065(a). Reasner argues that her suit against OCS is “for
    conduct” that amounted to “felony sexual abuse of a minor” and that she is therefore
    permitted under AS 09.10.065(a) to bring that suit “at any time.” But Reasner, of course,
    is not alleging that OCS committed felony sexual abuse of a minor; rather, she argues
    that J.R. committed the underlying crime and that OCS was negligent in failing to protect
    her from his conduct. Reasner’s suit against OCS can thus only be characterized as “for”
    the negligent conduct of OCS — conduct which Reasner admits did not constitute felony
    28
    AS 09.10.065(a) (emphasis added).
    29
    Girdwood Mining Co. v. Comsult LLC, 
    329 P.3d 194
    , 197 (Alaska 2014).
    30
    Parson v. State, Dep’t. of Revenue, Alaska Hous. Fin. Corp., 
    189 P.3d 1032
    , 1036 (Alaska 2008).
    31
    State, Commercial Fisheries Entry Comm’n v. Carlson, 
    270 P.3d 755
    , 762
    (Alaska 2012) (alteration in original) (quoting Gov’t Emps. Ins. Co. v. Graham-
    Gonzalez, 
    107 P.3d 279
    , 284 (Alaska 2005)).
    -11-                                      7171
    sexual abuse of a minor.32 Therefore Reasner’s negligence suit against OCS is not “for
    conduct” constituting felony sexual abuse of a minor, and we conclude that her suit falls
    outside the plain language of AS 09.10.065(a).
    Because Reasner asks us to interpret AS 09.10.065(a) in a manner
    inconsistent with the plain language of the statute, we will adopt her proposed
    construction only if we can find convincing evidence of contrary legislative purpose or
    intent to include suits like Reasner’s — i.e., negligence suits against non-perpetrators —
    within the scope of AS 09.10.065(a). Reasner points to a change in the statutory
    language from “against the perpetrator” to “for conduct . . . violat[ing]” as indicating an
    intent to include negligence suits against non-perpetrators within the scope of
    AS 09.10.065(a).33 According to Reasner this change indicates a legislative intent to
    permit “suits against third parties who are legally responsible for allowing [sexual] abuse
    to occur.” But as we have stated before, “the absence of greater discussion is a
    meaningful indication that the [legislature] was not charting a radical course,”34 and
    nothing in the legislative history suggests that by making this change the legislature
    intended to broaden the application of the statute to include negligence suits.35 Reasner
    also points to legislative committee minutes expressing a general policy of expanding
    32
    See AS 11.41.434, .436, and .438. In Catholic Bishop we left undecided
    the similar question whether AS 09.10.065(a) applies to vicarious liability claims against
    non-perpetrators. Catholic Bishop of N. Alaska v. Does 1-6, 
    141 P.3d 719
    , 722 (Alaska
    2006). That issue is not raised by this case because Reasner is suing OCS for its own
    negligent conduct, not under a theory of vicarious liability.
    33
    See former AS 09.10.060(c) (2000).
    34
    Glover v. State, Dep’t of Transp., Alaska Marine Highway Sys., 
    175 P.3d 1240
    , 1248-49 (Alaska 2008) (emphasis in original).
    35
    See Ch. 86, § 1, SLA 2001; Ch. 40, § 1, SLA 2003; see also Catholic
    
    Bishop, 141 P.3d at 722-23
    (discussing the legislative history of AS 09.10.065).
    -12-                                      7171
    victims’ access to courts.36 But such general statements do not indicate an intent to cover
    claims that are not “for conduct . . . violat[ing]” any of the listed felony offenses.
    Finally, we find that our approach is consistent with the approach taken by
    courts in other jurisdictions interpreting similar statutes.37 We therefore conclude that
    AS 09.10.065(a) does not apply to Reasner’s action against OCS.
    3.	    The superior court should first determine whether AS 09.10.055
    applies to Reasner’s claims before reaching her as-applied
    constitutional challenge.
    OCS argued below that even if Reasner’s claims were timely under the
    discovery rule or under AS 09.10.065(a), Alaska’s statute of repose would still bar them.
    Alaska’s statute of repose extinguishes all personal injury actions (subject to certain
    exceptions) unless commenced within ten years of “the last act alleged to have caused
    the personal injury.”38 The superior court rejected OCS’s argument, concluding that the
    statute of repose was unconstitutional as applied to “facts in which the child’s legal
    custodians are the alleged tortfeasors” because it would deny minors access to courts and
    36
    See Minutes, H. Jud. Comm. Hearing on H.B. 210, 22nd Leg., 1st Sess.
    (Apr. 9, 2001) (comments by Representative Ethan Berkowitz and the Executive
    Director of the Council on Domestic Violence and Sexual Assault).
    37
    See, e.g., Sandoval v. Archdiocese of Denver, 
    8 P.3d 598
    , 602 (Colo. App.
    2000) (holding that an analogous Colorado statute does not encompass actions for
    negligent hiring or supervision by an employer); Kelly v. Marcantonio, 
    678 A.2d 873
    ,
    875-76 (R.I. 1996) (holding that an analogous Rhode Island statute only applies to
    actions against the perpetrator).
    38
    AS 09.10.055(a)(2).
    -13-	                                         7171
    therefore violate due process.39        But the superior court never made an initial
    determination that the statute of repose actually would bar Reasner’s claims.
    For a statute to be unconstitutional as applied to a particular set of facts, the
    statute must actually apply to those facts. The United States Supreme Court has called
    it “an uncontroversial principle of constitutional adjudication . . . that a plaintiff generally
    cannot prevail on an as-applied challenge without showing that the law has in fact been
    (or is sufficiently likely to be) unconstitutionally applied to [her].”40
    Here, however, it is possible that the statute of repose does not bar
    Reasner’s claims or only bars some of them. First, the statute of repose requires claims
    to be filed within ten years of “the last act alleged to have caused the personal injury,
    death, or property damage.”41 Reasner brought her claim on December 3, 2012, and
    alleges that OCS received reports that she was being sexually abused in 2004 and 2006
    — less than ten years before she sued — and negligently failed to protect her. Second,
    the effective date of AS 09.10.055 is August 7, 1997.42 Reasner argues that even if OCS
    did not commit any negligent acts after December 2002, she would still be able to
    39
    We note that this conclusion goes beyond our previous holdings. See Sands
    ex rel. Sands v. Green, 
    156 P.3d 1130
    , 1133-36 (Alaska 2007) (striking down a statutory
    provision excluding children under the age of eight from the broad tolling provisions
    granted to other minors, but not addressing the constitutionality of the statute of repose);
    Evans ex rel. Kutch v. State, 
    56 P.3d 1046
    , 1067-68 (Alaska 2002) (plurality opinion)
    (holding Alaska’s statute of repose facially constitutional in response to equal protection
    and due process challenges).
    40
    McCullen v. Coakley, 
    134 S. Ct. 2518
    , 2534 n.4 (2014) (emphasis in
    original); cf. Kyle S. v. State, Dep’t of Health & Soc. Servs., Office of Children’s Servs.,
    
    309 P.3d 1262
    , 1268 (Alaska 2013) (“An as-applied challenge requires evaluation of the
    facts of the particular case in which the challenge arises.”).
    41
    AS 09.10.055(a)(2).
    42
    Ch. 26, § 55, SLA 1997.
    -14-                                         7171
    proceed with her claims based on multiple acts prior to AS 09.10.055’s effective date.
    Finally, AS 09.10.055(b)(1) provides that the statute of repose does not apply when the
    damages resulted from, among other things, gross negligence, misrepresentation, or
    breach of fiduciary duty. Reasner argues that those three exceptions are applicable to her
    case.
    Because the superior court decided that the statute of repose was
    unconstitutional as applied to Reasner’s claims without first deciding whether the statute
    actually applied to those claims, we reverse that portion of the superior court’s order.
    On remand, the superior court should determine whether the statute of repose applies to
    Reasner’s case before it considers Reasner’s as-applied constitutional challenge.
    B.	   Whether Reasner’s Claims Survive Summary Judgment On The
    Merits
    1.	   Discretionary function immunity
    The Alaska Tort Claims Act authorizes tort claims against the State,43 but
    the State is immune from claims “based upon the exercise or performance or the failure
    to exercise or perform a discretionary function or duty on the part of a state agency or
    an employee of the state, whether or not the discretion involved is abused.”44 As we
    have previously stated, “[t]wo varieties of agency action are not covered by discretionary
    43
    AS 09.50.250.
    44
    AS 09.50.250(1) (emphasis added).
    -15­                                      7171
    function immunity: those involving no discretion and those involving ‘only discretion
    free from policy considerations.’ ”45 “Whether a governmental act is entitled to
    discretionary function immunity is . . . a matter of law that is reviewed de novo.”46
    a.	    OCS is not generally immune from suit for negligent
    investigation.
    One of Reasner’s claims is that OCS negligently investigated the reports
    that she was being sexually abused. OCS argues that it is immune from suit for negligent
    investigation because social worker investigations involve the use of discretion and are
    therefore protected by discretionary function immunity. But as we have previously
    explained, “ ‘the allegedly negligent decisions in a particular case must be examined
    individually to determine if they are’ protected by discretionary function immunity.”47
    The superior court did that in this case, and OCS has not challenged its individual
    determinations. We therefore turn to Reasner’s argument on this point.
    b.	    OCS was not entitled to summary judgment on Reasner’s
    claims that OCS failed to maintain the requisite
    “minimum contacts” with her foster family.
    The superior court granted OCS summary judgment on Reasner’s claimthat
    OCS had failed to conduct the requisite number of home visits while she was in foster
    care, because it found that OCS’s policy governing such “minimum contacts” was
    protected by discretionary function immunity. Reasner argues that this conclusion was
    45
    State, Dep’t of Health & Soc. Servs. v. Mullins, 
    328 P.3d 1038
    , 1043
    (Alaska 2014) (quoting R.E. v. State, 
    878 P.2d 1341
    , 1349 (Alaska 1994)).
    46
    State, Dep’t of Corr. v. Cowles, 
    151 P.3d 353
    , 358 (Alaska 2006).
    47
    
    Mullins, 328 P.3d at 1044
    (emphasis added) (quoting 
    Cowles, 151 P.3d at 359
    ).
    -16-	                                     7171
    erroneous with respect to the OCS policy in place between January 1998 and April 1999.
    We agree with Reasner.
    OCS amended its policy governing minimum contacts with foster families
    in January 1998. Before that date OCS’s policy required OCS to conduct at least one
    face-to-face family contact every three months, and “in-home contacts to family [were]
    required in addition to placement contacts with the child.” But OCS’s policy also
    provided that “[a]ctual delivery of this minimum service level [was] dependent on
    workload size.” Given this “workload size” caveat, the superior court determined that
    OCS was protected by discretionary function immunity under the pre-1998 policy
    because “the actual number of contacts is discretionary rather than mandatory.”48
    When OCS amended the policy in January 1998 it retained the requirement
    of “in-home contacts to family . . . in addition to placement contacts with the child.” But
    it omitted the “workload size” caveat and allowed “[c]hanges in service level [to] be
    made only after a service level review.” Reasner argues that OCS is not protected by
    discretionary function immunity under the post-1998 policy and that, because this new
    policy was in effect for the last five quarters that she was in OCS’s legal custody, she
    should be allowed to proceed on her negligent investigation claim.
    We agree. The post-1998 policy language allows for either “no discretion”
    or “only discretion free from policy considerations,” at least until a “service level
    review” has been conducted.49 Because this new policy was in effect for a period of time
    during which OCS had legal custody of Reasner, she should have been allowed to
    proceed on her negligent investigation claim.
    48
    Reasner has not challenged the superior court’s conclusion and we do not
    address the court’s ruling on that point.
    49
    
    Mullins, 328 P.3d at 1043
    (quoting 
    R.E., 878 P.2d at 1349
    ).
    -17-                                      7171
    c.	      Reasner has not challenged the actual grounds of the
    superior court’s grant of summary judgment on her
    ICWA-related claims.
    Reasner also asserted below that OCS has policies and procedures adopting
    provisions of the Indian Child Welfare Act (ICWA) and that her OCS caseworkers failed
    to follow these policies. The superior court found that OCS’s “adoption of policies and
    procedures intended to implement ICWA requirements represent[s] its efforts to balance
    the requirements of federal law with state economic and political policy factors” and that
    a violation of those policies was therefore protected by discretionary function immunity.
    The superior court was careful to note that it was only ruling on Reasner’s specific
    claims and that “[i]t is possible that there are claims regarding violation of OCS
    procedures implementing ICWA that would not be protected by discretionary function
    immunity.”
    On appeal Reasner argues that this was error because she is merely alleging
    “a straightforward negligence claim against OCS and cit[ing] OCS’s violations of the law
    as evidence of OCS’s negligence.” She therefore argues that the superior court erred in
    granting summary judgment to OCS “on the ground that these authorities do not create
    a direct cause of action.”
    But as we have just explained, the superior court granted summary
    judgment to OCS on Reasner’s ICWA-related claims because it found that OCS is
    protected by discretionary function immunity, not because the claims do not create a
    direct cause of action. Absent a passing assertion in her reply brief that “OCS
    incorporated provisions of [ICWA] into mandatory policy,” Reasner has not challenged
    the actual basis for the superior court’s decision. We therefore affirm the superior
    court’s grant of summary judgment to OCS on Reasner’s ICWA-related claims, but we
    -18-	                                     7171
    express no opinion whether the superior court was substantively correct when it
    determined that OCS is protected from those claims by discretionary function immunity.
    2.	    There is a genuine dispute whether Reasner’s foster parents
    completed the required training.
    Reasner alleged that OCS negligently monitored the foster home in part
    because it did not require her foster parents to complete mandatory foster parent
    orientation or follow-up annual training.50 The superior court granted OCS partial
    summary judgment on this claim because it found that Reasner “ha[d] not provided any
    evidence that the required orientation and trainings did not occur.” We disagree.
    As we have explained above, a court must construe all reasonable factual
    inferences in favor of the non-moving party.51 “[S]ummary judgment is appropriate only
    when no reasonable person could discern a genuine factual dispute on a material issue.”52
    Here, Reasner presented the Allisons’ training record from Alaska Center for Resource
    Families, which indicated that the Allisons had not completed the necessary training at
    that facility. Reasner also presented evidence from a 1998 adoption home study
    indicating that the Allisons “ha[d] been slow to become comfortable with [support]
    services.” Finally, Reasner provided an internal OCS email from January 1998 stating
    “[o]ne of the items we are planning is to require that [the Allisons] go to our adoption
    preparation series. They have been invited a number [of] time[s] over the past years.
    When they have attended, they have only come for one session, so they have never
    completed the series.” OCS, on the other hand, presented no direct evidence showing
    that the Allisons had actually completed the training and admitted that the Allisons’
    50
    See former 7 AAC 50.433 (1990).
    51
    Christensen v. Alaska Sales &Serv., Inc., 
    335 P.3d 514
    , 520 (Alaska 2014).
    52
    
    Id. -19- 7171
    licensing file was no longer available because it had been purged three years before “as
    part of OCS’s routine file retention policy.”
    Under Alaska’s lenient standard for surviving summary judgment, there is
    a genuine dispute as to whether the Allisons had completed the required courses and
    training. Summary judgment on this issue was therefore inappropriate.
    3.	    The superior court correctly concluded that OCS was not
    entitled to summary judgment as to causation.
    On cross-appeal OCS argues that Reasner failed to demonstrate a causal
    nexus between OCS’s failure to require the Allisons to complete the required training
    and Reasner’s harm.       But reasonable inferences from the admissible evidence
    demonstrate a dispute as to this causal connection. For example, a reasonable person
    could infer that if the Allisons had completed the required training, they would have been
    able to identify warning signs of sexual abuse and taken steps to protect Reasner.
    Furthermore, if the Allisons did fail to complete the required training, then OCS might
    have been required to remove Reasner from their home because a foster home must be
    licensed every two years. Given these possible inferences, a reasonable person could
    discern a genuine factual dispute as to whether OCS’s failure to remove Reasner was
    also a proximate cause of her harm.53
    We also reject OCS’s argument that its failure to make quarterly in-person
    visits between January 1998 and April 1999 lacks a causal nexus with Reasner’s harm.
    The superior court found that “[r]easonable jurors could conclude that ‘but for’ the lack
    of contact, OCS would have become aware that Ms. Reasner was being abused and/or
    that it would have more fully investigated the reports that she was being sexually and/or
    physically abused, which could have resulted in OCS substantiating the reports and
    53
    See 
    id. -20- 7171
    taking action to protect her from harm.” Although the superior court’s analysis should
    have focused on whether a reasonable person could discern a factual dispute, and not on
    whether a reasonable juror could find for Reasner,54 we agree with the superior court’s
    ultimate conclusion that summary judgment on the issue of causation was inappropriate.
    IV.   CONCLUSION
    For the reasons stated above, we REVERSE the superior court’s summary
    judgment order in part and REMAND for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    54
    See 
    id. at 520-21.
    -21-                                     7171