Chase Dear v. Cares Center Inc.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedJune 15, 2021
Docket2020-CA-00341-COA
StatusPublished

This text of Chase Dear v. Cares Center Inc. (Chase Dear v. Cares Center Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chase Dear v. Cares Center Inc., (Mich. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

NO. 2020-CA-00341-COA

CHASE DEAR APPELLANT

v.

CARES CENTER INC. APPELLEE

DATE OF JUDGMENT: 03/04/2020 TRIAL JUDGE: HON. PRENTISS GREENE HARRELL COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED: LAMAR COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: DANIEL MYERS WAIDE ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEE: JASON SCOTT GILBERT HUGH RUSTON COMLEY NATURE OF THE CASE: CIVIL - OTHER DISPOSITION: AFFIRMED - 06/15/2021 MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED: MANDATE ISSUED:

BEFORE WILSON, P.J., McCARTY AND SMITH, JJ.

SMITH, J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. Chase Dear filed a complaint against his former employer, Cares Center Inc. (Cares),

and asserted that Cares wrongfully terminated his employment after he reported a coworker’s

criminal conduct. The Lamar County Circuit Court granted Cares a directed verdict under

Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 50(a) after finding that (1) Dear failed to show the

reported conduct was criminal, and (2) the evidence failed to demonstrate that Cares

terminated Dear’s employment because he reported the alleged criminal conduct. On appeal,

Dear asserts the circuit court should have submitted the case to the jury rather than granting

Cares’s directed verdict motion. Specifically, Dear asserts the following: (1) a reasonable juror could have found that he reported criminal conduct to Cares; (2) the circuit court

erroneously concluded that Cares intended to terminate his employment regardless of his

report; and (3) the circuit court erroneously determined the cause of the termination.

¶2. Upon review, we conclude that Dear failed to present sufficient evidence for a

reasonable juror to find that a criminal act occurred. Because we affirm the circuit court’s

judgment on the first ground, we need not address Dear’s remaining assignments of error

pertaining to the second basis for the circuit court’s decision. See Estate of Turner v. Town

Pharmacy & Gifts LLC, 310 So. 3d 1229, 1236 (¶25) (Miss. Ct. App. 2021).

FACTS

¶3. In November 2018, Canopy Children’s Solutions (Canopy) hired Dear to work at

Cares, its school for children with emotional and behavioral disabilities. Each Cares

classroom was assigned one teacher and one behavioral education interventionalist (BEI).

The BEI assisted whenever a behavioral issue arose with a student so that the teacher could

maintain the role of educator. Although Dear originally applied to work at Cares as a BEI,

Canopy offered him a teaching position. The offer letter Dear received from Jynger Morris,

Canopy’s human-resources director, specified that Dear’s employment would be at-will and

that he or Canopy could terminate the employment at any time with or without notice and

either with or without cause. In addition, because Dear had not yet obtained his special-

education teaching license, Canopy hired Dear as a substitute teacher and classified him as

a pro re nata (PRN) employee to work on an as-needed basis.

¶4. Despite Dear’s designation as a PRN employee, Dr. Anne Russum, the principal at

2 Cares, testified that Dear was hired with the expectation that he would soon obtain his

teaching license and become eligible to fill a full-time teaching vacancy. As a result, Canopy

placed Dear as a substitute teacher in a classroom with about seven to ten children who had

severe behavioral issues. Canopy and Cares hoped that Dear would prove to be a good fit

for the classroom and could become the classroom’s full-time teacher once he obtained his

teaching license.

¶5. On Monday, December 10, 2018—the ninth day that Dear had worked at Cares—Dear

witnessed Arthur McLaughlin, a BEI assigned to his classroom, perform a management-of-

assaultive-behavior (MAB) hold on a disruptive student named N.T.1 Later that same

morning, Dear met with Russum and Robin Davis, the individual-education-plan (IEP)

coordinator and teacher-supervisor at Cares, to discuss Dear’s eligibility for healthcare

benefits. At the beginning of the meeting, Dear reported that McLaughlin had performed an

improper MAB hold because he had “body slammed” N.T. to the ground. After Dear

informed her of the incident, Russum assured him that an investigation would follow. Both

Russum and Davis testified that Dear then immediately began questioning them about his

eligibility for healthcare benefits.

¶6. When Dear walked outside to take a smoke break, another employee informed

Russum and Davis that Dear possibly had the flu. Upon Dear’s return, Russum inquired

about his health, and Dear indicated that he did had a fever and might have the flu. Russum

sent Dear home for the day and suggested that he see a physician.

1 We use initials to protect the minor child’s privacy.

3 ¶7. The next morning, on Tuesday, December 11, 2018, Dear informed Davis that he had

pneumonia. That same morning, Davis texted Dear the following message: “After our

conversation yesterday, since you expressed you did not want to work every day, I’ll call you

when a substitute is needed.” Dear responded that afternoon and stated that he did want to

work every day at Cares but also “need[ed] benefits for full-time hours.” Dear stated that he

hoped to obtain his special-education teaching license soon and to move into a full-time

position at Cares. After forty-five minutes passed without Davis responding to his message,

Dear called the child-abuse hotline for the Mississippi Department of Child Protection

Services (CPS) and reported the incident from the previous day.

¶8. On December 14, 2018, Morris and Russum had a conference call with Dear and

informed him of his termination. The two women assured Dear that his termination was in

no way related to the report of abuse, and they explained they simply felt Dear was not a

good fit for Cares. The following week, on December 21, 2018, Dear filed his civil

complaint and asserted that Cares had wrongfully terminated his employment because he

reported McLaughlin’s alleged criminal conduct. The circuit court held a two-day jury trial

in November 2019. During his case-in-chief, Dear testified on his own behalf and called as

adverse witnesses the following Canopy/Cares employees: Morris, Russum, Davis, and

Sonya Felts, who not only served as the lead BEI at Cares but also witnessed the hold

McLaughlin had performed on N.T.

¶9. At trial, Davis testified that she served as Dear’s direct supervisor while he worked

at Cares. Although Davis did not formally observe Dear during his nine days at Cares, she

4 informally observed him by walking around his classroom multiple times. Davis explained

that the teachers at Cares could not simply stand at the front of a classroom and teach a

lesson. Instead, because the students were at different academic levels and proficiencies, the

teachers had to rotate around the classroom and work individually with students to address

the students’ needs. Davis testified that each time she observed Dear, he was always seated

at his desk and did not appear to be engaged with the students.

¶10. Based on her observations of Dear, Davis opined that Dear was not interested in

teaching the students but was more interested in working as a BEI. Davis stated she had

explained to Dear when he first began working at Cares that behavioral intervention was the

role of the BEI rather than the teacher. Nevertheless, Davis testified that Dear left his

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Chase Dear v. Cares Center Inc., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chase-dear-v-cares-center-inc-missctapp-2021.