Aegis Investigative Group v. Metropolitan Government of Nashville & Davidson County

98 S.W.3d 159, 2002 Tenn. App. LEXIS 287
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 26, 2002
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 98 S.W.3d 159 (Aegis Investigative Group v. Metropolitan Government of Nashville & Davidson County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aegis Investigative Group v. Metropolitan Government of Nashville & Davidson County, 98 S.W.3d 159, 2002 Tenn. App. LEXIS 287 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION

VERNON NEAL, Sp. J.,

delivered the

opinion of the court,

in which WILLIAM B. CAIN and PATRICIA J. COTTRELL, JJ., joined.

This appeal involves the efforts of defendant, The Metropolitan Government of Nashville and Davidson County, to reverse a judgment in favor of Aegis Investigative Group (Aegis). Plaintiff, a private investigating firm, was hired to watch the wife of a Murfreesboro client for information in a divorce action by placing an electronic tracking device on her car. After the wife discovered the device, she came to the Metropolitan Nashville Police Department to have the device removed as part of a stalking investigation on September 5, 1997. Metro held the device as potential evidence in a stalking and illegal use investigation and notified the Murfreesboro Police Department of a possible violation of Tenn.Code Ann. § 39-13-606. No charges were placed against Aegis. Notwithstanding the conclusion of its investigation, Metro did not return the device to plaintiff for some five (5) months after suit was filed, resulting in a judgment for $20,000 for negligence under the provisions of the Tennessee Governmental Tort Liability Act for failure to return the tracking device. We hold that a finding of negligence on the part of the defendant is not supported in the record and reverse the judgment entered by the trial court and assess the costs of this appeal to the appellee.

Plaintiff, a private investigating group, filed this cause in the First Circuit Court for Davidson County on October 30, 1998, alleging that employees of the Metropolitan Nashville Davidson County Police Department removed an electronic tracking device from the vehicle of the wife of one of its clients. The plaintiff was doing business as a partnership, although it alleged in the complaint that it was a corporation. The complaint filed by Aegis sought recovery both for unlawful seizure of the tracking device in violation of Tenn.Code Ann. § 40-33-215 and on a negligence theory under the Tennessee Governmental Tort Liability Act, Tenn.Code Ann. § 29-20-101, et seq., seeking $700,000 in damages and recovery of the property. Plaintiff alleged that defendant took possession of *161 and held the property for possible criminal investigation and failed to return it.

At trial, plaintiff abandoned the unlawful seizure theory and relied solely for recovery based on negligence under the Governmental Tort Liability Act. After conducting a bench trial, the trial court found that the defendant had a duty to return the plaintiffs property once it was no longer subject to its criminal investigation and was hable to plaintiff for loss of use and/or lost rental value of the device, but that plaintiff was not entitled to recover for any loss of use or lost rental based upon defendant’s retention of the device during the period of time between the time the device was seized as evidence and the filing of the lawsuit because the plaintiff had failed to mitigate damages and was negligent in failing to act on its own behalf in seeking to recover the device by either directly requesting the defendant to return the device or by filing a court action to recover the device. The court limited the defendant’s liability to plaintiff for loss of use and of lost rental value of the device for a period of ninety (90) days after the lawsuit was filed because the court found the defendant was negligent in failing to contact plaintiff to return the device and/or failed to reasonably respond to plaintiffs demand for the return of the tracking device by virtue of a possessory lawsuit filed by the plaintiff and the defendant having no reasonable basis for retaining the tracking device and the defendant having received adequate demand for the immediate return of the property when the property was no longer subject to criminal investigation. The trial court further found that the plaintiff was not negligent in seeking to recover the device after the hold was released in November, 1999, because plaintiffs counsel had corresponded with the defense counsel in an attempt to recover the device after the suit was filed. Accordingly, the court found that plaintiff suffered damages in the amount of $20,000 for loss of use and loss of rental based upon the sole negligence of the defendant in failing to return the tracking device in a reasonable and prudent manner.

Aegis purchased the transmitter or tracking device for $2,290 on August 20, 1996. Christopher Scott Spradlin, an owner of Aegis, testified at trial that the tracking device could have been replaced for approximately $2,500. A partner of Aegis, John Christopher White, testified that the tracking device had been used in one investigative case prior to trial and that the plaintiff had received some $7,000 for fees and charges in that case. However, the invoices filed as exhibits in this case reveal that total fees and charges in the sum of $2770.40 were recovered as a result of an investigation conducted for one Jim Griffith in a domestic case, which type of use has since been made illegal by the Tennessee General Assembly. The $2770.40 represented fees generated for use of the tracking device over the period from August 20,1996, date of purchase, to the date of seizure by the defendant on September 5, 1997. Plaintiff also testified that it had been compelled to reduce its hourly investigative rate by $10 as a result of not having use of the tracking device. The trial court relied on the loss of $10 per hour for investigative work together with testimony that John Gamble would have used the device in connection with an investigation related to his business. Mr. Gamble said that it would have cost him around $17,000 to use the tracker in his investigation. He said he would have been glad to have paid up to around $70,000 for using it. Gamble’s purpose for wanting to use the device was for tracking a truck and loader that he felt an employee was using for his own benefit. If the tracker had been available for rent and if Mr. Gamble had rented it, there is obviously no reason *162 able way of knowing how long it would have taken him to catch his suspected employee.

The defendant argues that Metro did not owe a duty to return plaintiffs property without first having received a demand from Aegis for return of the property. Aegis had placed the electronic transmitter (tracking device) on the automobile of the wife of its client prior to September 5, 1997. After having discovered the tracking device, the wife turned it over to the Metropolitan Nashville Police Department on September 5, 1997, in connection with a possible stalking charge and illegality of use of device charge. Inasmuch as plaintiffs client and his wife were residents of Rutherford County, the Metropolitan Nashville Police Department notified the Murfreesboro Police Department of the seizure and that the property was being held for criminal investigation. The Mur-freesboro Police Department immediately notified John Christopher White, a partner at Aegis, that the Metropolitan Police Department had seized the transmitter.

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Bluebook (online)
98 S.W.3d 159, 2002 Tenn. App. LEXIS 287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aegis-investigative-group-v-metropolitan-government-of-nashville-tennctapp-2002.