Commonwealth of Kentucky, Administrative Office of the Courts v. Patricia Greene

CourtKentucky Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 21, 2011
Docket2008 SC 000783
StatusUnknown

This text of Commonwealth of Kentucky, Administrative Office of the Courts v. Patricia Greene (Commonwealth of Kentucky, Administrative Office of the Courts v. Patricia Greene) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Kentucky Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth of Kentucky, Administrative Office of the Courts v. Patricia Greene, (Ky. 2011).

Opinion

RENDERED: SEPTEMBER 22, 2011 UBLISHED c-cfi ,51uptrittr C:nurf of 4 dtift* 2007-SC-000511-DG A7r" U PATRICIA GREENE, THELMA CORNELIUS, APPELLANTS SANDY WOOD JOHNSON, ANNA PERKINS, DEAN WOOD, DOROTHY WOOD, LORELLA WOOD AND JOHN C. WOOD

ON REVIEW FROM COURT OF APPEALS V. CASE NO. 2006-CA-000683-MR FRANKLIN CIRCUIT COURT NO. 04-CI-00353

COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY, APPELLEES ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE OF THE COURTS; HONORABLE JERRY WINCHESTER, JUDGE OF MCCREARY CIRCUIT COURT; CHARLES E. KING; AND KENTUCKY BOARD OF CLAIMS

AND 2008-SC-000783-DG

COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY, CROSS-APPELLANT ADMINISTRATIVE OFFICE OF THE COURTS

ON REVIEW FROM COURT OF APPEALS CASE NO. 2006-CA-000683-MR FRANKLIN CIRCUIT COURT NO. 04-CI-00353

PATRICIA GREENE, THELMA CORNELIUS, CROSS-APPELLEES SANDY WOOD JOHNSON, ANNA PERKINS, DEAN WOOD, DOROTHY WOOD, LORELLA WOOD, JOHN C. WOOD, HONORABLE JERRY WINCHESTER, JUDGE OF MCCREARY CIRCUIT COURT; CHARLES E. KING; AND KENTUCKY BOARD OF CLAIMS OPINION OF THE COURT BY SPECIAL JUSTICE RHOADS

REVERSING

This action is before the Court on discretionary review of whether the

Board of Claims had jurisdiction over the Appellants' claims brought against

Appellees pursuant to the Kentucky Board of Claims Act, KRS 44.070, et. seq.

Appellants consist of a group of heirs who were entitled to receive the net

proceeds of a judicial sale of four tracts of land previously owned by John and

Zola Wood. For reasons explained hereafter, the net proceeds of the judicial

sale were never distributed to Appellants, resulting in the Appellants filing

claims against Appellees in the Board of Claims. Appellees are (i) Charles E.

King, former master commissioner of the McCreary Circuit Court ("King"); (ii)

Circuit Judge Jerry Winchester of the McCreary Circuit Court ("Judge

Winchester"); and (iii) Kentucky's Administrative Office of the Courts (the

"AOC").

The Board of Claims (the "Board") entered a final order dismissing

Appellants' claims for lack of jurisdiction. The Franklin Circuit Court and the

Court of Appeals affirmed. This Court now reverses for the reasons set forth in

this opinion.

I. Background

On May 11, 1987, Judge Winchester appointed King as the master

commissioner for McCreary County pursuant to KRS 31A.010. A master

commissioner serves at the pleasure of the circuit judge, except that no term of

appointment shall exceed four years without reappointment by the circuit

2 judge. KRS 31A.010(3)(a). KRS 31A.020 requires that the master

commissioner execute a bond with surety approved by the court (i.e., the

circuit judge). In this case, at the time of Judge Winchester's appointment of

King, Judge Winchester ordered that King execute a bond in the amount of

$25,000.00, which King did.

At the end of the four-year term, Judge Winchester did not reappoint

King as master commissioner, nor did he appoint anyone else to the office.

Nevertheless, King continued to act as, and was treated by Judge Winchester

as the master commissioner for the ensuing period of more than ten years. In

essence, King was acting as the de facto master commissioner for McCreary

County when the events which gave rise to this matter transpired.

On August 19, 2002, Judge Winchester, in the course of a proceeding

before the McCreary Circuit Court, ordered King, as master commissioner, to

conduct a judicial sale of four tracts of land so that the proceeds could be

distributed among the Appellants. King proceeded to sell the property at

auction on September 21, 2002 for $234,600. King's Report of Sale dated

October 11, 2002, was approved and confirmed by the McCreary Circuit Court

on October 22, 2002. The court, on January 2, 2003, approved an itemization

of disbursements, which included administrative fees and costs, the amounts

due to the respective heirs. The court's order also directed King to distribute

the proceeds of the sale in accordance with the itemization. King did not

comply, and therefore, the court ordered King to make an immediate

3 distribution of the proceeds by an order entered on January 21, 2003. King,

however, never made any disbursement.

As a result of King's failure to disburse the proceeds pursuant to his

orders, Judge Winchester ordered an accounting of King's funds. An

investigation revealed that "[w]hile acting as Master Commissioner for

McCreary Circuit Court, King misappropriated the proceeds from numerous

separate sales by transferring funds from the Master Commissioner's account

to his own personal account instead of to the rightful beneficiaries. The

aggregate value of the misappropriated funds exceeded $300,000." King v.

Kentucky Bar Ass'n, 162 S.W.3d 462, 462 (Ky. 2005).

King's wrongs were not without additional consequences. Numerous

criminal charges were filed against him, and in 2005, he pleaded guilty to 132

counts of theft by failure to make required disposition of property valued at

over $300. This, in turn, led this Court to permanently disbar King later that

same year. Id.

In the interim, Appellants each filed substantially identical claims with

the Board of Claims naming King and Judge Winchester as the state actors,

and the AOC as the state agency on August 11, 2003. 1 The Board of Claims

consolidated the claims into a single action by an order entered on October 16,

2003.

1 The ultimate fate of the funds misappropriated by King is not clear from the record. The claims filed by Appellants at the Board of Claims state that "lilt appears that the funds are no longer available." Presumably, the flinds have been dissipated. A. Allegations Regarding the AOC at the Board of Claims Level

Appellants and Appellees have made various allegations regarding the

designation of King and Judge Winchester as employees of the AOC. Although

the Court does not consider the resolution of this appeal to turn upon which

party either first or more emphatically asserted that King and Judge

Winchester were employees of the AOC, the Court briefly sifts through the

competing allegations because the parties expend considerable effort in arguing

the point. Further, some discussion of the issue may clarify the principles

which are dispositive of this appeal.

Appellants assert that their claims "were filed against the Commonwealth

based on its waiver of immunity through the Board of Claims Act for King's and

Judge Winchester's failure to perform the duties of their official capacities."

(Emphasis added.) The claim forms submitted by Appellants, which they

maintain were provided to them by the Board, included a section designated

"Name of State Agency involved with the incident (employee's name, if known)."

Appellants, in their completion of the form, stated:

Administrative Office of the Court [sic] 1) Charles E.

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