Annajoel Sullivan v. Tennessee Department of Safety and Homeland Security

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJuly 25, 2025
DocketM2023-01741-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Annajoel Sullivan v. Tennessee Department of Safety and Homeland Security (Annajoel Sullivan v. Tennessee Department of Safety and Homeland Security) 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
Annajoel Sullivan v. Tennessee Department of Safety and Homeland Security, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

07/25/2025 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE Assigned on Briefs November 1, 2024

ANNAJOEL SULLIVAN v. TENNESSEE DEPARTMENT OF SAFETY AND HOMELAND SECURITY

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Davidson County No. 20-393-IV Russell T. Perkins, Chancellor ___________________________________

No. M2023-01741-COA-R3-CV ___________________________________

Following an alleged failure to properly assess whether a driver was impaired as part of an investigation of a car crash, the Tennessee Department of Safety and Homeland Security fired a probationary employee trooper. The trooper filed suit, claiming that the Department actually fired her because of her age, sex, and national origin. The trial court granted summary judgment to the Department. The trooper appealed. We affirm.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Affirmed

JEFFREY USMAN, J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which THOMAS R. FRIERSON, II, and KENNY W. ARMSTRONG, JJ., joined.

Matthew R. Zenner, Brentwood, Tennessee, for the appellant, Annajoel Sullivan.

Jonathan Skrmetti, Attorney General and Reporter; J. Matthew Rice, Solicitor General; and Rachel A. Newton, Assistant Attorney General, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellee, Tennessee Department of Safety and Homeland Security.

OPINION

I.

Appellant Annajoel Sullivan worked for the Tennessee Department of Safety and Homeland Security (the Department) for approximately sixteen months. In December 2019, the Department terminated Trooper Sullivan’s1 employment following her alleged 1 In this opinion, we refer to Annajoel Sullivan as Trooper Trainee Sullivan, Trooper Sullivan, or Ms. Sullivan depending on the most appropriate usage in the particular context. All these references are to failure to properly investigate whether a driver who had been in a car crash was impaired by prescription drugs and/or alcohol.

Ms. Sullivan, who was born in Russia in 1972, applied for admission to the Tennessee Highway Patrol (THP) Academy on three separate occasions. She was denied admission the first time as a result of her interview. The second time she was denied admission as a result of failing the physical testing. The third time proved to be the charm, and she was admitted to the THP Academy in 2018. Ms. Sullivan was one of five women out of the sixty-seven cadets admitted to this class. She was also the oldest admit to the 2018 class. While her Academy records reflect that the Department expressed some concerns about her progress during the program in several “Counseling/Disciplinary Action” forms,2 these concerns did not ultimately prevent Ms. Sullivan from completing the Academy’s program. When she graduated in December 2018, Ms. Sullivan was one of three women out of 51 total graduates. The Department maintains that it dismissed the two other female cadets from Ms. Sullivan’s class because they sustained injuries that would have prevented them from successfully completing the program. When Ms. Sullivan was terminated, there were forty-eight women out of eight-hundred-seventy-two commissioned members of the THP.

In pursuing a position with the THP, Ms. Sullivan signed a “Trooper Probation Awareness Statement.” This document apprised prospective troopers that they would be “on probation for eighteen (18) months.” Every cadet from the 2018 Academy class had the same eighteen-month probationary period, stretching from July 29, 2018, to January 28, 2020. The Trooper Probation Awareness Statement explained that graduates would gain additional “specialized experience” during the probationary period through an “on- the-job training” program and that graduates were “expected to successfully complete” the training program before the end of the probationary period. The Trooper Probation Awareness Statement also informed troopers, “You may be dismissed during the probationary period if your work indicates you are unwilling or unable to satisfactorily perform your duties or if your work habits or dependability do not merit your continuation in the position.”

the same person. 2 For example, Ms. Sullivan was recommended for counseling because she “fell out of the class formation run” and THP Academy staff believed that she needed to “put forth the effort needed to improve [her] physical fitness level.” In another form, THP Academy officials expressed concern regarding Ms. Sullivan’s failure to complete a required driving test for patrol cars, observing that she allegedly skipped a portion of the test course on purpose. Ms. Sullivan maintains that every cadet received documents like these while at the Academy and that the mere existence of these documents in the record does not confirm that she performed any worse than her classmates. Regarding her THP Academy performance, Ms. Sullivan maintains that she had “excellent numbers. From the women, I was the best.”

-2- After graduating from the Academy, Ms. Sullivan joined the Wilson County Post as a THP Trooper Trainee. Wilson County is housed within “District 3,” which includes Nashville and thirteen of its surrounding counties. “District 3” is broken down into seven different alphabetically labeled “Troops” for staffing purposes. The Department assigned Trooper Trainee Sullivan to Troop D. Being in Wilson County, Trooper Trainee Sullivan reported to the two Wilson County sergeants: Jeffrey Pollard and Kenneth Hackett.3 These sergeants reported to Lieutenant Chad Bilbrey, who reported to Captain Anthony Griffin, who reported to Major Robert Johnson, who reported to Lieutenant Colonel James Hutcherson. Each of these THP officials ultimately reported to the Department’s deputy commissioner, and all persons in this chain of command within the Department were answerable to the Commissioner, Jeff Long.

The Department assigned field-training officers (FTOs) to oversee Trooper Trainee Sullivan’s transition to becoming a fully commissioned trooper. Ms. Sullivan testified during her deposition that, typically, trainees are assigned four FTOs, but that she was given an atypical assignment of eight FTOs to oversee her development, which made her feel uncomfortable. The Department denied in its answer “that there is a standard number of FTOs to which a cadet is assigned during on the job training,” but recognized that Ms. Sullivan “was assigned to a total number of eight FTOs during her on-the-job training, some of whom were Phase FTOs and some of whom were temporary fill-in FTOs.” Ms. Sullivan, however, maintains that her FTO assignment situation reflects a broader problem in the Department regarding her treatment as an older, Russian-born woman.

She described her sense of her day-to-day interactions during her deposition:

I felt lonely, not fit. No matter how hard I tried to be a part of the team, I felt I was not fitting in.

....

It’s a male-dominated profession, so – and I’m absolutely positive feeling that the men feel like they can do better. Like I said, I didn’t, as a woman, interact or interfere with anybody’s investigations or with investigations of crashes or whatever the case might be.

But they felt that they have to do it with me, and I felt it was because I was a woman. That’s how I felt. That’s how it was.

3 Troop D also encompasses Sumner County, which was overseen by its own sergeant, Vincent Turocy. While the record contains evidence that Trooper Trainee interacted with Sgt. Turocy on several occasions, it does not provide clarity on exactly how much daily oversight responsibility, if any, Sgt. Turocy had over Trooper Sullivan at the time of her termination. -3- ....

You feel the difference. I couldn’t close that gap, the cultural gap. It was . . . I felt – like I said, that . . . is a difference – again, cultural, yes, the cultural difference. We’re totally different.

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Annajoel Sullivan v. Tennessee Department of Safety and Homeland Security, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/annajoel-sullivan-v-tennessee-department-of-safety-and-homeland-security-tennctapp-2025.