Coleman v. State

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMarch 17, 1999
Docket01A01-9805-BC-00239
StatusPublished

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

Opinion

STEVEN RAY COLEMAN, ) ) Plaintiff/Appellant, ) ) Appeal No. FILED 01-A-01-9805-BC-00239 v. ) March 17, 1999 ) Claims Commission STATE OF TENNESSEE, ) No. 301091 Cecil Crowson, Jr. ) Appellate Court Clerk Defendant/Appellee. ) )

COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE

APPEAL FROM THE TENNESSEE CLAIMS COMMISSION OF DAVIDSON COUNTY, AT NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE

THE HONORABLE W. R. BAKER, COMMISSIONER

RAYMOND W. FRALEY, JR. JOHNNY D. HILL, JR. 205 East Market Street Post Office Box 572 Fayetteville, Tennessee 37334 ATTORNEYS FOR PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT

JOHN KNOX WALKUP Attorney General and Reporter

MICHAEL E. MOORE Solicitor General

MARY M. BERS Assistant Attorney General Civil Rights and Claims Division Cordell Hull Building, Second Floor 426 Fifth Avenue North Nashville, Tennessee 37243 ATTORNEYS FOR DEFENDANT/APPELLEE

AFFIRMED AND REMANDED

WILLIAM B. CAIN, JUDGE OPINION This appeal involves the jurisdiction of the Tennessee Claims Commission. Plaintiff appeals the dismissal by the Claims Commission of his claim filed under Tennessee Code Annotated section 9-8-307(a)(1)(M) on the basis that the Claims Commission lacks subject matter jurisdiction. For the reasons stated in this opinion, we affirm the decision of the Claims Commission to dismiss this claim.

On October 20, 1992, Tennessee Alcoholic Beverage Commission (ABC) Special Agent, Mark Hutchens, acting on information he received, contacted Bedford County Sheriff Don Edwards. Agent Hutchens sought the assistance of Sheriff Edwards and members of his department in the investigation of a suspected drug transaction believed to be scheduled to take place that evening at the Rattlesnake Lodge in rural Bedford County, Tennessee. Sheriff Edwards agreed to assist and brought with him sheriff's deputies McCullough, Brown and Owens. ABC agents Jim Ray and Jim Richardson accompanied Agent Hutchens.

Agent Hutchens and Sheriff Edwards arrived first at Rattlesnake Lodge in an unmarked car driven by Agent Hutchens. They were followed by other vehicles occupied by the ABC officers and sheriff's deputies. Upon arrival at the lodge, Hutchens and Edwards observed two individuals standing beside a car outside of the lodge. These individuals were later identified as the claimant Steven Ray Coleman and Billy White.

Agent Hutchens and Sheriff Edwards emerged from their vehicle and shouted their identity as police officers. Coleman and White ran from the scene into heavy grass area and toward the nearby river. Agent Hutchens raced in pursuit. He later testified that someone fired shots at him from the area to which Coleman and White had fled. Hutchens returned fire with two shots from his weapon. Neither Coleman nor White were hit by this gunfire and Hutchens did not fire again. White leaped up from the grass and raced to his left disappearing from sight and was not apprehended by any of the officers. Claimant Coleman

-2- ran to his right toward the river, jumped in the river and started to swim across to the opposite side. Gunshots were fired at him by persons never identified. One of these gunshots struck him while he was in the water and seriously injured him. He reached the opposite bank of the river and yelled to the officers for help asserting that he had been hit. Officers and paramedics attended him at the scene and he was dispatched first to the Bedford County Hospital and from there transferred to Vanderbilt University Medical Center.

According to claimant Coleman, he had been invited by Billy White to participate in a high stakes dice game at Rattlesnake Lodge. In route to the lodge, his automobile overheated and he stopped at the home of his friend, Ricky Mencer, to borrow an automobile and continue his journey to the lodge. He borrowed the automobile belonging to Mencer's girlfriend, Deborah Cooper, and drove on to the lodge where he and Billy White were awaiting the arrival of a "high fader." When they saw the unmarked car of Hutchens and Edwards arrive, they thought they were going to be robbed and thereupon ran from the scene. Subsequently a search warrant was issued for search of the Deborah Cooper automobile, and a suitcase containing approximately ninety pounds of marijuana was taken from the trunk of the car.

Suit was brought by the claimant in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee against Bedford County and the county personnel involved. The federal suit was resolved before trial.

The State of Tennessee and its employees acting within the scope of their employment are protected by the doctrine of governmental immunity and thus can only be sued under statutory exceptions to this doctrine and only before the Tennessee Claims Commission which has exclusive jurisdiction to adjudicate the merits of claims under statutory exceptions to governmental immunity. Coleman first filed his claim alleging several of the exceptions to governmental immunity provided by Tennessee Code Annotated section 9-8-307. However, by agreed order the case was subsequently entered for trial limited to section 9-8- 307(a)(1)(M). The applicable statutory provision as it existed in 1992 states: The commission or each commissioner sitting

-3- individually has exclusive jurisdiction to determine all monetary claims against the state falling within one (1) or more of the following categories: . . . (M) Negligent operation of machinery or equipment.

Tenn. Code Ann. § 9-8-307(a)(1)(M)(1992).

The claim was tried on oral evidence before W. R. Baker, Claims Commissioner, on January 23, 1996. The Claims Commission dismissed the claim on the basis that it had no jurisdiction because Tennessee Code Annotated section 9-8-307(d) prohibits judgment against the State for "any willful, malicious or criminal acts by state employees." The Claims Commission made a specific finding that the shooting of Claimant was willful rather than negligent and that governmental immunity had not been waived as to such willful acts under the specific provisions of section 9-8-307(d).

On appeal the State asserts that the Claims Commission had no subject matter jurisdiction but on a different basis than asserted by the Claims Commission. The State asserts that the preponderance of the evidence at the trial showed that no state employee fired a shot at Claimant while he was in the water and that the definition of "state employee" in Tennessee Code Annotated section 8-42-101(3) does not include a deputy of the Bedford County Sheriff's Office. We agree with the State in its position that the firing of the offending shot cannot be determined as a matter of law to have been willful within the meaning of section 9-8-307(d) rather than negligent within the meaning of section 9-8- 307(a)(1)(M). Therefore, the basis on which the Claims Commission found that it lacked subject matter jurisdiction is erroneous.

Two questions remain for disposition, to wit: 1. Did Claimant carry his burden of proof by a preponderance of the evidence to establish that the offending shot was fired by an ABC agent? 2. If not, can the State be held liable for the actions of a Bedford County Deputy Sheriff?

As to the first question, it is conclusively established that the two shots

-4- originally fired by Agent Hutchens could not have caused the injuries to Claimant as they were fired long before Coleman reached the river and all of the testimony, including the testimony of claimant Coleman, establishes that he was actually shot while swimming the river. There is no evidence that Hutchens fired any other shots. Agent Richardson was carrying a shotgun and there is no evidence that a shotgun was ever fired.

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Related

Hill v. Beeler
286 S.W.2d 868 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1956)
Cooper v. Rutherford County
531 S.W.2d 783 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1975)
Brown v. State
783 S.W.2d 567 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1989)
Scates v. Board of Com'rs of Union City
265 S.W.2d 563 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1954)
Quinton v. Board of Claims
54 S.W.2d 953 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1932)
Phillips v. Marion County
59 S.W.2d 507 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1933)
Moore v. Tate
87 Tenn. 725 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1889)
Insurance Co. v. Craig
62 S.W. 155 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1901)

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Bluebook (online)
Coleman v. State, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coleman-v-state-tennctapp-1999.