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No. 10650558
United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
W.S. v. Cassandra Daniels
No. 10650558 · Decided August 7, 2025
No. 10650558·Fourth Circuit · 2025·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
Decided
August 7, 2025
Citation
No. 10650558
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
USCA4 Appeal: 23-1038 Doc: 83 Filed: 08/07/2025 Pg: 1 of 14
UNPUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
No. 23-1033
W. S.,
Plaintiff – Appellant,
v.
CASSANDRA DANIELS; URSULA BEST; SOUTH CAROLINA
DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES,
Defendants – Appellees.
No. 23-1038
W. S.,
Plaintiff – Appellant,
v.
CASSANDRA DANIELS; URSULA BEST; SOUTH CAROLINA
DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES,
Defendants – Appellees,
and
BOYS HOME OF THE SOUTH INC; VERNON HAYES; KATHY COOK, Ph.D.;
PETER HARRIS; NICOLE WHITE; NICOLE LINDSEY; CYNTHIA BROCK;
RICHELLE OWENS; JOEL STOUDENMIRE; BRYSON THOMASON; F.
JORDAN EARLE; DR CLARK JERNIGAN; JON MCCLURE; CLIFF BROWN;
USCA4 Appeal: 23-1038 Doc: 83 Filed: 08/07/2025 Pg: 2 of 14
DR BETTY MCCONAGHY; GRANT BURNS; MALINDA L. ROBINSON; DON
KISER; STEVE ROACH; ELLIOT BOTZIA; KATHERINE SYMONETTE,
Defendants.
Appeals from the United States District Court for the District of South Carolina, at
Anderson. Donald C. Coggins Jr., District Judge. (8:16-cv-01280-DCC; 8:16-cv-01032-
DCC)
Argued: September 24, 2024 Decided: August 7, 2025
Before KING and RICHARDSON, Circuit Judges, and William L. OSTEEN, Jr., United
States District Judge for the Middle District of North Carolina, sitting by designation.
Affirmed by unpublished opinion. Judge King wrote the opinion, in which Judge
Richardson and Judge Osteen joined.
ARGUED: Heather Hite Stone, HITE & STONE, Abbeville, South Carolina, for
Appellant. Andrew Lindemann, LINDEMANN LAW FIRM, P.A., Columbia, South
Carolina, for Appellees. ON BRIEF: Robert J. Butcher, FOSTER CARE ABUSE LAW
FIRM, PA, Camden, South Carolina; Thomas E. Hite, III, Thomas E. Hite, Jr., HITE &
STONE, Abbeville, South Carolina, for Appellant. James W. Logan, Jr., LOGAN &
JOLLY, LLP, Anderson, South Carolina, for Appellees.
Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.
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KING, Circuit Judge:
When this matter was previously before us on the parties’ cross-appeals, we
remanded for further proceedings with respect to a single issue: Whether the defendant
South Carolina Department of Social Services (“SCDSS”) is entitled to a setoff with
respect to the jury’s compensatory damages award to plaintiff W.S. on his successful state
law claims against SCDSS. See W.S. v. Daniels, No. 19-2348 (4th Cir. Mar. 3, 2022), ECF
No. 62 (the “Remand Opinion”). In the decision reviewed in those cross-appeals, the
district court had ruled that SCDSS is entitled to a setoff reducing W.S.’s award from
$400,000 to $0. See W.S. v. Daniels, No. 8:16-cv-01032 (D.S.C. Oct. 24, 2019), ECF No.
283 (the “Original Setoff Order”). On remand, the district court adhered to the ruling in
its Original Setoff Order. See W.S. v. Daniels, No. 8:16-cv-01032 (D.S.C. Dec. 13, 2022),
ECF No. 325 (the “New Setoff Order”). W.S. now appeals from the New Setoff Order,
which we are constrained to affirm.
I.
A.
1.
As we summarized at the outset of our Remand Opinion of March 2022, see Remand
Opinion 4-5, the prior cross-appeals followed a March 2019 jury trial in the District of
South Carolina on plaintiff W.S.’s claims against defendants SCDSS and its employees
Cassandra Daniels and Ursula Best (collectively, the “SCDSS defendants”). W.S.’s claims
— of gross negligence (under state law) against SCDSS and substantive due process
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violations (under 42 U.S.C. § 1983) against Daniels and Best — are predicated on four
incidents of sexual abuse that W.S. allegedly suffered as a minor over a nearly three-year
period while in the custody of SCDSS at the Boys Home of the South (“BHOTS”). Prior
to the trial, the district court denied W.S.’s requests for further discovery and for leave to
file an amended complaint alleging 17 additional incidents of sexual abuse. By that time,
W.S. had agreed to settle his claims against various other defendants, including BHOTS
and individuals related thereto (collectively, the “BHOTS defendants”), for the sum of
$825,000.
At the conclusion of the five-day trial, the jury found three of the four alleged
incidents of sexual abuse and awarded W.S. $400,000 in compensatory damages on the
state law claims against SCDSS. The jury also awarded W.S. $67,000 in compensatory
damages plus $67,000 in punitive damages on the § 1983 claims against Daniels and Best.
In the post-trial proceedings, invoking South Carolina’s setoff rule, the SCDSS defendants
sought to reduce the jury’s damages awards by the full amount of W.S.’s $825,000 pretrial
settlement with the BHOTS defendants. By its Original Setoff Order of October 2019, the
court denied Daniels and Best a setoff with respect to the $134,000 award on the § 1983
claims, but the court granted SCDSS a setoff that reduced the award on the state law claims
from $400,000 to $0.
In the cross-appeals from the final judgment, W.S.’s contentions included that the
district court abused its discretion in its pretrial rulings denying further discovery and leave
to amend the complaint, and that the court wrongly granted SCDSS the setoff that
eliminated the jury’s damages award on the state law claims. For their part, the SCDSS
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defendants asserted, inter alia, that the court erred by denying Daniels and Best a setoff
with respect to the damages award on those claims.
Immediately following the foregoing summary, we announced in the Remand
Opinion that we were affirming the district court’s judgment as to all challenged rulings
except the Original Setoff Order’s grant of the setoff to SCDSS. See Remand Opinion 5.
We further articulated that — for reasons that would be explained in the balance of the
Remand Opinion — we were vacating the judgment as to the SCDSS setoff ruling and
remanding for further proceedings. Id.
2.
The Remand Opinion’s ensuing discussion of the Original Setoff Order’s grant of
the setoff to SCDSS began by identifying relevant principles of South Carolina law. We
recited that
“South Carolina’s setoff rule rests on the ‘almost universally held [principle]
that there can be only one satisfaction for an injury or wrong.’” See Atlas
Food Sys. & Servs., Inc. v. Crane Nat’l Vendors, Inc., 99 F.3d 587, 596 (4th
Cir. 1996) (alteration in original) (quoting Truesdale v. S.C. Highway Dep’t,
213 S.E.2d 740, 746 (S.C. 1975)). Under the setoff rule, “[a] non-settling
defendant is entitled to credit for the amount paid by another defendant who
settles for the same cause of action.” See Rutland v. S.C. Dep’t of Transp.,
734 S.E.2d 142, 145 (S.C. 2012). As such, “before entering judgment on a
jury verdict, the [trial] court must reduce the amount of the verdict to account
for any funds previously paid by a settling defendant, so long as the
settlement funds were paid to compensate the same plaintiff on a claim for
the same injury.” See Smith v. Widener, 724 S.E.2d 188, 190 (S.C. Ct. App.
2012).
See Remand Opinion 6 (alterations in original). We further observed that, in cases
involving governmental entities such as SCDSS, “a ‘trial court’s jurisdiction to set off one
judgment against another is equitable in nature and should be exercised when necessary to
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provide justice between the parties.’” Id. at 6 n.1 (quoting Smalls v. S.C. Dep’t of Educ.,
528 S.E.2d 682, 688 (S.C. Ct. App. 2000)).
The Remand Opinion then focused on the Smith v. Widener decision, deeming it to
be of especial significance. Specifically, we recognized that
the Smith decision explains that there is a clear right to a setoff “when a prior
settlement involves compensation for the same injury for which the jury
awarded damages,” and there is no right to a setoff “when the prior settlement
involves compensation for a different injury from the one tried to verdict.”
See 724 S.E.2d at 191. But what if “a settlement is argued to involve two
claims, one of which involves the same injury as the claim tried to verdict
and one of which does not”? See id. In such a situation, Smith requires the
trial court to “make the factual determination of how to allocate the
settlement between the two claims.” See id.; accord Jolly v. Gen. Elec. Co.,
869 S.E.2d 819 (S.C. Ct. App. 2021).
See Remand Opinion 7 (cleaned up). We refer herein to the foregoing allocation
requirement as the “Smith allocation principle.”
Next, the Remand Opinion provided a description of the settlement agreement
between W.S. and the BHOTS defendants, as follows:
The settlement agreement between W.S. and the BHOTS defendants,
which was executed in February 2017, releases the BHOTS defendants from
claims beyond those predicated on the four alleged incidents of sexual abuse
presented at the March 2019 trial. Indeed, the agreement specifies that the
“release includes, but is not limited to, all claims that were asserted, could
have been asserted, or should have been asserted against the [BHOTS
defendants] in the [District of South Carolina action].” See J.A. 2379
(sealed). The agreement provides for the payment to W.S. of “the total sum
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of Eight Hundred Twenty-five Thousand Dollars ($825,000.00),” without
assigning any particular amount to any particular claim. Id.
See Remand Opinion 7-8 (alterations in original). *
From there, the Remand Opinion recounted that — among a variety of grounds that
W.S. had advanced in the district court in opposition to SCDSS’s setoff request — was the
theory that the court should wholly deny a setoff or at least conduct a Smith-type allocation
analysis because “his settlement with the BHOTS defendants ‘covers many more harms
than the jury verdict addresses,’” including “the 17 additional incidents of sexual abuse
that he unsuccessfully sought to assert in an amended complaint.” See Remand Opinion 8
(quoting J.A. 2138-39). We elaborated:
Because “the BHOTS settlement [is] much broader in scope than the
narrow issues that were presented to the jury,” W.S. urged the district court
to deny a setoff altogether. See J.A. 2137. He characterized SCDSS’s setoff
request as “asking the Court to compare apples and oranges,” in that “the
settlement with [the BHOTS defendants] is an apple while the verdict with
[SCDSS] is an orange.” Id. at 2138-39.
In the alternative, W.S. argued that the district court should limit any
setoff by giving SCDSS credit for only the portion of the $825,000 settlement
attributable to the claims that the jury resolved in his favor. That is, albeit
without explicitly invoking the Smith decision, W.S. contended that the court
should “make the factual determination of how to allocate the settlement
between [those claims and all other claims released].” See Smith, 724 S.E.2d
at 191. As W.S. put it, the court should “make an equitable determination as
to what damages should be assigned to BHOTS for the harms in the claims
in this matter and each additional harm suffered by W.S. that was not
addressed in this lawsuit.” See J.A. 2140. In conjunction with that argument,
W.S. pointed to specific evidence that the court could consider “to apportion
and assign damages.” Id.
*
Citations herein to “J.A. __” refer to the contents of the Joint Appendix filed by
the parties in the prior cross-appeals.
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See Remand Opinion 8-9 (alterations in original). As the Remand Opinion noted, SCDSS’s
subsequent reply to W.S.’s opposition to its setoff request “did not address the foregoing
argument made by W.S. concerning allocation.” Id. at 9.
Addressing the district court’s Original Setoff Order, the Remand Opinion
recounted that the district court “acknowledged that the settlement agreement with the
BHOTS defendants encompasses the entire period of nearly three years that W.S. was in
SCDSS’s custody at BHOTS and that the agreement’s language is ‘very broad.’” See
Remand Opinion 9 (quoting Original Setoff Order 7). “Nevertheless,” we observed, the
Original Setoff Order “contained no mention of W.S.’s arguments that the district court
should therefore wholly deny a setoff or at least give SCDSS credit for only the portion of
the $825,000 settlement attributable to the claims that the jury resolved in his favor.” Id.
Nor did the Original Setoff Order acknowledge the Smith allocation principle. Id. at 9-10.
Instead, “the district court summarily ruled that because the three sexual abuse incidents
found by the jury fell with ‘the same time period covered by the BHOTS settlement,’
SCDSS is entitled to credit for the settlement’s full amount.” Id. at 10 (quoting Original
Setoff Order 7-8).
3.
Finally, upon de novo review of the relevant principles of South Carolina law, we
concluded in the Remand Opinion that the district court erred by disregarding the Smith
allocation principle. See Remand Opinion 11; see also id. at 6 (explaining that the Original
Setoff Order “presents a question of South Carolina law,” i.e., the potential applicability of
the Smith allocation principle, “that we review de novo” (citing Ward v. Allied Van Lines,
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Inc., 231 F.3d 135, 138 (4th Cir. 2000))). In so concluding, we emphasized that SCDSS
did “not dispute” the existence of the Smith allocation principle. Id. at 11. But SCDSS did
introduce a theory on appeal, “not raised below, that — notwithstanding the settlement
agreement’s broad language releasing the BHOTS defendants from ‘all claims that were
asserted, could have been asserted, or should have been asserted against [them] in the
[District of South Carolina action],’ — the agreement is actually limited to solely the claims
asserted.” Id. at 10 (alterations in original) (quoting J.A. 2379). In other words, SCDSS
asserted that the agreement released the BHOTS defendants solely from the same claims
that went to trial against the SCDSS defendants. Under that theory, which we now call the
“narrow release theory,” the Smith allocation principle is therefore inapplicable.
The narrow release theory having been raised for the first time on appeal, the
Remand Opinion did not address or decide the merits of it. Rather, we vacated the
judgment as to the SCDSS setoff ruling and remanded for further proceedings,
“express[ing] no opinion on how the setoff issue should be decided and leaving it to the
district court to consider the parties’ related arguments in the first instance.” See Remand
Opinion 11.
B.
On remand, the parties briefed their respective positions and the district court
conducted a non-evidentiary hearing in November 2022. SCDSS’s primary position was
a previously unasserted theory that we refer to as the “collective injury theory.” The
premise of that theory is that the jury’s compensatory damages award against SCDSS was
for a single injury — a collective injury — resulting from all sexual abuse suffered by W.S.
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during his nearly three years at BHOTS, and not from just the three incidents of sexual
abuse found by the jury. In support of the collective injury theory, SCDSS asserted that
W.S.’s trial counsel made no effort to identify a discrete injury resulting from any particular
incident, nor did the jury instructions or verdict form direct the jury to limit damages to the
specific incidents it found. Instead, counsel sought — and the jury apparently awarded —
damages for the collective injury premised on, e.g., W.S.’s detailed testimony regarding
more than 100 incidents of sexual abuse perpetrated by at least 12 other BHOTS residents
starting soon after his arrival at BHOTS, a direct plea from W.S. to the jury for money
damages to correct that injustice, and the testimony of W.S.’s damages expert that W.S.
was afflicted with post-traumatic stress disorder that would require lifelong treatment as a
result of the repeated abuse he suffered. Pursuant to the collective injury theory, because
the BHOTS settlement could not have compensated W.S. for more than the collective
injury compensated by the jury’s damages award, the Smith allocation principle is
inapplicable.
Alternatively, SCDSS reiterated the narrow release theory that it had first raised in
the prior cross-appeals, i.e., that W.S.’s settlement agreement with the BHOTS defendants
released them solely from the same claims that went to trial against the SCDSS defendants.
As articulated by SCDSS, the narrow release theory rests on the proposition that the broad
release language quoted in our Court’s Remand Opinion was narrowed by other language
in the settlement agreement’s recitals stating, inter alia, that W.S. “agreed to resolve the
claims asserted against the BHOTS Defendants in this Lawsuit pursuant to the terms and
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conditions set forth below.” See J.A. 2378. Similar to the collective injury theory, the
narrow release theory thereby renders the Smith allocation principle irrelevant.
For his part, W.S. retreated from his prior assertion that the trial evidence is
sufficient for a Smith-type allocation analysis and conceded that such an assessment would
actually be impossible. W.S. argued, however, that the burden was on SCDSS to develop
the relevant evidence and thus SCDSS should not be awarded any setoff. Otherwise, in
response to SCDSS’s collective injury theory, W.S. disputed that his counsel’s presentation
of the damages evidence and the jury instructions and verdict form established that the
jury’s damages award was for a collective injury resulting from all sexual abuse suffered
by W.S. during his nearly three years at BHOTS. And in response to SCDSS’s narrow
release theory, W.S. contended that such theory lacks merit under contract law and in any
event is foreclosed by our Court’s Remand Decision, in that our discussion of the
settlement agreement’s broad release language established the law of the case.
C.
By its New Setoff Order of December 2022, the district court concluded that the
Smith allocation principle is inapplicable for two reasons. First, the court adopted SCDSS’s
collective injury theory, explaining:
As discussed at length by both parties at the hearing, the types of injuries
sustained by [W.S.] during his time at BHOTS are cumulative and cannot be
easily reduced to a simple mathematical equation. Due to the nature of this
collective harm, there is an insufficient factual basis for this Court to make a
judgment as to any monetary allocation as to each of the three occurrences
found by the jury at trial with respect to SCDSS.
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See New Setoff Order 3-4. In that regard, the New Setoff Order highlighted that “just as
he failed to make any allocation of claims or damages in [his settlement agreement with
the BHOTS defendants, W.S.] failed to make any distinct identification of specific injuries
per occurrence at trial.” Id. at 4 n.3.
Second, the New Setoff Order adopted SCDSS’s narrow release theory, agreeing
that the broad release language quoted in our Court’s Remand Opinion was narrowed by
the statement in the settlement agreement’s recitals that W.S. “agreed to resolve the claims
asserted against the BHOTS Defendants in this Lawsuit pursuant to the terms and
conditions set forth below.” See New Setoff Order 4 (citing J.A. 2378). Deeming the
recitals statement to be specific and the release language to be “more general,” the New
Setoff Order explained that “it is well settled that ‘when there is a conflict between general
and specific provisions of a contract, the specific clause controls its meaning.’” Id.
(quoting Seery v. DePuy Orthopaedics, Inc., No. 2:14-cv-04262, 2014 WL 12609706, at
*2 (D.S.C. Dec. 31, 2014)).
The New Setoff Order rejected W.S.’s contention that the discussion of the broad
release language in our Court’s Remand Opinion established the law of the case and
thereby foreclosed the district court’s adoption of the narrow release theory. See New
Setoff Order 5 n.4. Specifically, the New Setoff Order rejected W.S.’s law-of-the-case
contention because the Remand Opinion “‘express[ed] no opinion on how the setoff issue
should be decided’ and left it to this Court to decide ‘in the first instance.’” Id. (alteration
in original) (quoting Remand Opinion 11).
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Consequently, the district court adhered in its New Setoff Order to the ruling in its
Original Setoff Order that SCDSS is entitled to a setoff reducing W.S.’s award from
$400,000 to $0. See New Setoff Order 5. W.S. timely noted this appeal from the New
Setoff Order, and we possess jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
II.
On appeal, the parties reiterate the arguments they presented to the district court in
the remand proceedings. Moreover, W.S. interprets the New Setoff Order to conclude that
a Smith-type allocation analysis is impossible, rather than to adopt SCDSS’s collective
injury theory and thus rule that the Smith allocation principle is inapplicable. Based on that
reading of the New Setoff Order, W.S. asserts that the district court erred by failing to place
the burden on SCDSS to develop the evidence necessary for an allocation analysis and thus
by awarding SCDSS any setoff at all.
We disagree with W.S.’s interpretation of the New Setoff Order and conclude, as
heretofore stated, that the district court adopted the collective injury theory and thus ruled
that the Smith allocation principle is inapplicable. As such, the question before us with
respect to that aspect of the New Setoff Order is whether the district court erred in adopting
the collective injury theory, i.e., whether the court erred in finding that the jury’s
compensatory damages award against SCDSS was for a collective injury resulting from all
sexual abuse suffered by W.S. during his nearly three years at BHOTS. That is an issue
we review for clear error. See Atlas Food Sys. & Servs., Inc. v. Crane Nat’l Vendors, Inc.,
99 F.3d 587, 596 (4th Cir. 1996) (explaining that “a district court’s decision to set off a
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damage award is reviewed for clear error” and that “[w]e find clear error only if, after
reviewing all the evidence, we are left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake
has been committed”) (internal quotation marks omitted)).
Having carefully reviewed the trial record, we ascertain no clear error in the district
court’s adoption of the collective injury theory. We therefore affirm the New Setoff Order
on that basis, without unnecessarily reaching and deciding whether the court erred in
adopting SCDSS’s narrow release theory or in rejecting W.S.’s contention that the narrow
release theory is foreclosed by our Remand Opinion.
III.
Pursuant to the foregoing, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
AFFIRMED
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Plain English Summary
USCA4 Appeal: 23-1038 Doc: 83 Filed: 08/07/2025 Pg: 1 of 14 UNPUBLISHED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT No.
Key Points
01USCA4 Appeal: 23-1038 Doc: 83 Filed: 08/07/2025 Pg: 1 of 14 UNPUBLISHED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT No.
02CASSANDRA DANIELS; URSULA BEST; SOUTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES, Defendants – Appellees.
03CASSANDRA DANIELS; URSULA BEST; SOUTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL SERVICES, Defendants – Appellees, and BOYS HOME OF THE SOUTH INC; VERNON HAYES; KATHY COOK, Ph.D.; PETER HARRIS; NICOLE WHITE; NICOLE LINDSEY; CYNTHIA BROCK; RICHELLE OWENS
04JORDAN EARLE; DR CLARK JERNIGAN; JON MCCLURE; CLIFF BROWN; USCA4 Appeal: 23-1038 Doc: 83 Filed: 08/07/2025 Pg: 2 of 14 DR BETTY MCCONAGHY; GRANT BURNS; MALINDA L.
Frequently Asked Questions
USCA4 Appeal: 23-1038 Doc: 83 Filed: 08/07/2025 Pg: 1 of 14 UNPUBLISHED UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT No.
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This case was decided on August 7, 2025.
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