Cashion v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedSeptember 17, 1999
Docket01A01-9903-BC-00174
StatusPublished

This text of Cashion v. State (Cashion v. State) 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
Cashion v. State, (Tenn. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE

AT NASHVILLE

AMANDA LINN CASHION, ) TENNESSEE CLAIMS COMMISSION ) (Middle Division Claim 99000601) Claimant/Appellant )

v. ) ) FILED APPEAL NO. 01A01-9903-BC-00174 ) September 17, 1999 STATE OF TENNESSEE ) ) Cecil Crowson, Jr. Appellate Court Clerk Defendant/Appellee ) AFFIRMED

Amanda Linn Cashion, Memphis, pro se for Appellant.

Paul G. Summers, Attorney General and Reporter; Michael E. Moore, Solicitor General; and Martha A. Tarleton, Senior Counsel, Nashville, for Appellee.

OPINION

INMAN, Senior Judge

This claim against the State for damages for alleged libel was filed with the

Division of Claims Administration on October 7, 1998, and subsequently

transferred to the Claims Commission, whose decision was upheld by the Chancery

Court. The claimant, a former probationary staff attorney for the Department of

Mental Health and Mental Retardation, alleges that she was libeled by an opinion

of the Court of Appeals styled Cashion v. Robertson, and reported in 955 S.W.2d

60 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1997), which reviewed and affirmed the judgment of the

Chancery Court.

The State of Tennessee is alleged to have acted by and through the (1) Court

of Appeals, (Middle Section), as an entity, (2) Judges Koch, Todd, and Cantrell,

(3) the members of the Supreme Court of Tennessee, and (4) John Knox Walkup,

the Attorney General of Tennessee. The Supreme Court is taken to task on account of its denial of the claimant’s application for permission to appeal the judgment of

the Court of Appeals. We deduce that the purported liability of the Attorney

General is founded upon his official function as Reporter of the decisions of the

Supreme Court.1

The State filed a Rule 12.02(b) motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim

upon which relief can be granted. The accompanying Memorandum argued that

(1) the claim is barred by the Statue of Limitations, (2) the claim is barred by

absolute immunity, and (3) the opinion of the Court of Appeals was not libelous.

The Claims Commission granted the motion to dismiss, and this appeal resulted.

Our review is de novo on the record with no presumption of correctness. Rule 13,

T.R.A.P.; Tenn. Farmers Ins. Co. v. Amer. Nat. Ins. Co., 840 S.W.2d 933, (Tenn.

Ct. App. 1992); Elliott v. Dollar Gen. Corp., 475 S.W. 651 (1971). The

propounded issues involved questions of privilege, immunity, libel and the statue

of limitations.

The Opinion complained of is reported, as aforesaid, in 955 S.W.2d 60. In

light of this publication, no reason comes to mind to justify a plenary recitation of

the claimant’s abbreviated tenure as a probationary staff attorney for the Tennessee

Department of Mental Health and Mental Retardation, and the reasons for her

termination. Suffice to state that she was employed on July 25, 1994 as “Attorney

III” and assigned to the Arlington Development Center in Shelby County, which

1 Claimant also filed a 42 U.S.C.§ 1983 case in the U.S. District Court at Nashville against Judges Koch, Todd and Cantrell. She also sought review by that Court of her state claim. The case was referred to the Magistrate Judge, who filed a Report finding, inter alia, “The claims asserted by the plaintiff border on the frivolous. It is difficult to believe that an attorney ..... could file such pleadings.” The Report and Recommendation of Dismissal by the Magistrate Judge was adopted and approved by U.S. District Judge Thomas A. Higgins on April 7, 1999. The case is on appeal to the Sixth Circuit. Plaintiff argues that the distinction between the State and Federal cases is found that, in the former, damages are sought against the State of Tennessee, whose liability is alleged to be derivative, for the alleged libelous statements in the opinion authored by Judge Koch, while in the latter, damages are sought against the individual judges for allegedly depriving the claimant-plaintiff of due process.

2 was then the subject of litigation brought by the U.S. Department of Justice

involving the Department’s alleged failure to provide a safe environment for the

residents. The claimant was critical of the Department’s handling of the federal

litigation, and did not report for work for several days. On August 22, 1994 she

was informed of her termination because she was not “fitting in”. Her termination

was effective as of August 25, 1994. On September 2, 1994 pursuant to T.C.A. §

4-5-223, she petitioned the Department and the Civil Service Commission for a

declaratory order respecting her rights as a probationary employee under T.C.A.§

8-30-312. A declaratory ruling was denied, and the claimant thereupon filed a

complaint in the Davidson County Chancery Court seeking a declaratory judgment

of her rights as a probationary employee. The complaint was dismissed for failure

to state a claim for which relief could be granted. The claimant appealed to the

Court of Appeals which affirmed the judgment in an opinion giving alleged rise to

this action.

The claim is focused on the following portion of the opinion authored by

Judge Koch:

“Ms. Cashion promptly shared Mr. Boyd’s remarks with her immediate supervisor. During this meeting, Ms. Cashion was extremely critical of the DMHMR’s handling of the federal investigation and of its standards and procedures at Arlington. She returned to Memphis following the meeting but did not report for work at Arlington for several days. She decided to work at home because the Department had not provided her with ‘proper office space’ . . . and because she believed that her work was on hold. . . Ms. Cashion met with Stanley Lipford . . .and Larry Durvin . . .when she returned to Arlington on August 22, 1994. When Ms. Cashion vehemently protested her dismissal, Dr. Durbin and Mr. Lipford instructed her to clear out her desk, return her keys, and leave . . . Arlington . . . by the end of the day.”

The claimant exegetes the quoted remarks as “a false, inaccurate, misleading

depiction of the appellant as staff counsel,” and “. . . by describing claimant to be

3 a person who is unreliable, unreasonable, unstable, near-hysterical, temperamental,

almost violent, over-bearing, overly demanding,” she was “portrayed as a person

no reasonable employer in his right mind would not consider firing her.”

III

With respect to the allegation of libel, our perplexity is boundless, because

however subjectively extrapolated, the remarks are clearly not libelous. A citation

of authority for this conclusion is not required. We agree with the finding of the

Commission that “This Commission cannot find anything at all in this opinion that

describes the ‘claimant to be a person who is unreliable, unreasonable, unstable,

near-hysterical, temperamental, almost violent, over-bearing, overly-demanding’--

this opinion just does not say any such thing and does not leave any such

impression. This opinion simply does not have the ‘the tendency to injure

Claimant’s professional reputation and to hold Claimant up to scorn and ridicule

. . .’ (as the addendum to the complaint says). Can this claimant be complaining

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