Brantley v. Department of Human Resources

523 S.E.2d 571, 271 Ga. 679, 99 Fulton County D. Rep. 4019, 1999 Ga. LEXIS 954
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 15, 1999
DocketS99G0595
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 523 S.E.2d 571 (Brantley v. Department of Human Resources) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brantley v. Department of Human Resources, 523 S.E.2d 571, 271 Ga. 679, 99 Fulton County D. Rep. 4019, 1999 Ga. LEXIS 954 (Ga. 1999).

Opinion

Sears, Justice.

We granted certiorari in this case to consider whether the Court of Appeals 1 properly construed the discretionary function exception to state liability under the Georgia Tort Claims Act. 2 For the reasons that follow, we conclude that the Court of Appeals did not properly construe that exception, and we therefore reverse.

On July 18, 1996, two-year-old Lisa Marie Wynn tragically drowned in a pool in the backyard of her foster parents, Victor and Vickie Sheffield. Lisa Marie had been placed in the custody of the Sheffields by the appellee, the Georgia Department of Human Resources (the “DHR”). The appellants, Chris Wynn and Donna Kay Brantley, are the biological parents of Lisa Marie. Brantley and Wynn, whose actions necessitated that the DHR take custody of Lisa Marie, instituted this action under the Georgia Tort Claims Act (the “GTCA”) against the DHR. Brantley and Wynn alleged 3 that Mr. Sheffield left Lisa Marie alone in the pool in an inflatable tube, that he was negligent in doing so, and that the DHR was liable under the doctrine of respondeat superior for the negligence of Mr. Sheffield. 4 The trial court, however, dismissed the action, ruling that a foster parent’s supervision of a child placed in his custody is a discretionary function, and that therefore Mr. Sheffield’s acts fell within the discretionary function exception to the state’s waiver of sovereign immunity under the GTCA. 5 6 The Court of Appeals affirmed, and we then *680 granted certiorari.

Under this State’s Tort Claims Act, the State has agreed to waive its sovereign immunity for the torts of state officials and employees subject to certain exceptions and limitations. 6 One of those exceptions is the so-called discretionary function exception. Under it, the State has no liability for “[t]he exercise or performance of or the failure to exercise or perform a discretionary function or duty on the part of a state officer or employee, whether or not the discretion involved is abused.” 7 The GTCA defines a “discretionary function or duty” as “a function or duty requiring a state officer or employee to exercise his or her policy judgment in choosing among alternate courses of action based upon a consideration of social, political, or economic factors.” 8

In Department of Transp. v. Brown, 9 we specifically approved of cases from other jurisdictions that construed their discretionary function exception to apply only to “basic governmental policy decisions,” and adopted that same construction for the discretionary function exception set forth in the GTCA. 10 Further emphasizing our concern that the discretionary function exception should be limited to basic governmental policy decisions, we noted that

[t]he scope of the discretionary function exception urged by [the Department of Transportation], which would include any decision affected by “social, political, or economic factors,” is so broad as to make the exception swallow the waiver. Whether to buy copier paper from a particular vendor, and in which colors, are decisions that might be affected by all three factors, but they are not policy decisions. 11

We also concluded that, in determining the scope of our discretionary function exception, we no longer needed to review cases decided before the GTCA was enacted since the definition of discretionary function set forth in that Act is now controlling. Although this Court has continued to apply the pre-existing definition of discretionary function to cases involving the official immunity of county employees, 12 county employees fall outside the scope of the GTCA, 13 and *681 their actions therefore are not subject to the Act’s definition of discretionary function. 14

In its decision in the present case, the Court of Appeals distinguished Brown simply on the fact that Brown involved planning and design decisions regarding a road and this case involved a decision regarding the supervision of a child. 15 This distinction, however, fails to account for the statutory definition of discretionary function; fails to account for our discussion of that definition in Brown; fails to account for the fact that planning and designing a road requires at least as much exercise of discretion and consideration of policy as the supervision of a two-year-old child; and is an inadequate basis on which to distinguish the two cases. Moreover, at least two other decisions by the Court of Appeals have distinguished Brown on the same inadequate factual basis that the Court of Appeals distinguished Brown in this case. 16 The Court of Appeals has also decided cases involving the discretionary function exception without mentioning or examining either the statutory definition of discretionary function or, in cases decided after Brown, our discussion in Brown regarding that definition. 17

In another case, however, the Court of Appeals has recognized that the definition of discretionary function in § 50-21-22 (2) is a narrower, more restrictive definition than the court-created definition that pre-dated the GTCA. 18 As noted by the Court of Appeals in Wilkins,

[a] sizable body of case law developed prior to the enactment of the 1991 amendment contrasting the “discretionary’ acts of a state employee, for which official immunity applied to protect the employee from personal liability, and “ministerial” acts of an employee, for which the employee was potentially personally liable. The cases held that “ ‘(a) discretionary act . . . calls for the exercise of personal deliberation and judgment, which in turn entails examining the facts, *682 reaching reasoned conclusions, and acting on them in a way not specifically directed.’ (Cit.)” Joyce v. Van Arsdale, 196 Ga. App. 95, 96 (395 SE2d 275) (1990). “(T)he intent of the (1991 constitutional) amendment and the Tort Claims Act enacted under its authority is to redraw and redefine the terms of the State’s waiver of sovereign immunity.” Gilbert v. Richardson, 264 Ga. 744, 748 (452 SE2d 476) (1994).

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Bluebook (online)
523 S.E.2d 571, 271 Ga. 679, 99 Fulton County D. Rep. 4019, 1999 Ga. LEXIS 954, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brantley-v-department-of-human-resources-ga-1999.