The jury in a civil trial found that Father Michael Kelly should be held liable for three counts related to child molestation, according to the lawyer for his accuser.
Attorney John Manly said Friday a civil jury unanimously agreed that his client, a 37-year-old man identified in court papers as John TZ Doe, was molested by Kelly while he was a priest at Cathedral of the Annunciation in Stockton. The plaintiff was a student at Annunciation School in the 1980s.
"Kelly will never again have access to a child as a member of the Stockton Diocese," Manly said.
Kelly, 62, was removed from the ministry immediately after the verdict, according to the Diocese of Stockton.
Before the verdict, Kelly served as the pastor at St. Joachim's Catholic Church in Lockeford.
Earlier in his career, he served in Modesto, Sonora and Ceres.
Now that Kelly's verdict has been delivered, the same jury will start a second phase of the trial Wednesday to determine the diocese's role in the alleged abuse and liability. Manly said removing Kelly from the diocese is a substantial victory.
Decisions in civil trials can be appealed, but an attorney for the Diocese of Stockton would not comment on whether one could be expected.
If an appeal were filed, it wouldn't take place until after the entire trial is complete.
Even though a civil jury has ruled against Kelly, he does not face criminal prosecution in San Joaquin County because the statute of limitations has expired.
Friday's verdict is the culmination of four years of litigation and a seven-week trial, Manly said. The hearings centered on the plaintiff's allegations of sexual abuse, memories of which he said he had repressed over the decades. The defense challenged the legitimacy of those memories.
The plaintiff's attorneys also argued Kelly had victimized multiple children, but testimony from an alleged second victim was not allowed at the trial.
Kelly and the plaintiff testified, and the alleged victim's courtroom breakdown was one of the defining moments of the trial, according to a man who attended multiple hearings.
"He was in Day 2 or 3 of testimony and cross-examination, and he had an outburst," said Tim Lennon, of Survivors Network of those Abused by Priests. "He pointed and yelled, 'You raped me, I was just a kid,' and it came from the very core of him as a person. It hit me to my heart, and I assume it had a similar effect on the jury."
Tom Beatty, an attorney for the diocese, said the jury was emotional when it delivered the verdict, which he said devastated Kelly.
"He's dismayed. It never occurred to him or the diocese that a guilty verdict would be the outcome," Beatty said. "He's out of the priesthood and leaves the rectory (today). He considers his life over."
Beatty maintains the former priest's innocence and said the defense was hampered because it could not enter into evidence a polygraph test that Kelly passed.
Statement from bishop
Bishop Stephen Blaire issued a news release supporting Kelly, despite the decision to remove him from the clergy.
"The diocese's decision to defend this case was based on a careful analysis of the information available and on a genuine belief that the accusations are not true," Blaire said. "Nevertheless, it is my belief that the jury verdict must be respected, and I have taken action."
When the trial resumes Wednesday, the diocese's previous handlings of child molestation cases will be the focus. That includes the case of defrocked and criminally convicted priest Oliver O'Grady.
O'Grady, a native of Ireland, recently was convicted of pornography charges in that country. Before that, the former Roman Catholic priest in the Diocese of Stockton served time for child molestation in San Joaquin County.
Before his 1993 arrest, O'Grady had been a priest at St. Anne's Catholic Church in Lodi, the Church of the Presentation in Stockton, St. Andrew's Catholic Church in San Andreas and others.
Allegations against O'Grady have cost the Diocese of Stockton millions of dollars in settlements in more than 20 lawsuits brought by alleged victims.
Most recently, the diocese settled with a brother and sister in 2010 who said they were sexually abused by O'Grady while they were students at Presentation Catholic School.
Lennon said he was pleased with Friday's decision and how it vindicates the plaintiff.
"It flies in the face of the church's easy dismissal of his accusation," he said. "Instead of investigating Kelly, they investigated the victim."