David Stokes v. Oconee County

CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 1, 2023
Docket2019-001648
StatusPublished

This text of David Stokes v. Oconee County (David Stokes v. Oconee County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
David Stokes v. Oconee County, (S.C. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA In The Court of Appeals

David T. Stokes, Appellant,

v.

Oconee County, Wayne McCall, and Edda Cammick, Respondents.

Appellate Case No. 2019-001648

Appeal From Oconee County R. Lawton McIntosh, Circuit Court Judge

Opinion No. 6033 Heard February 16, 2023 – Filed November 8, 2023

AFFIRMED

Joseph Clay Hopkins, of Charleston, for Appellant.

Stephanie Holmes Burton, of Gibbes Burton, LLC, of Spartanburg, and Roberta Elizabeth Barton, of Roberta Barton Law, Ltd. Co., of Seneca, both for Respondent Wayne McCall.

James W. Logan, Jr., and Stacey Todd Coffee, both of Logan & Jolly, LLP, of Anderson, and Roberta Elizabeth Barton, of Roberta Barton Law, Ltd. Co., of Seneca, all for Respondent Edda Cammick. James W. Logan, Jr., and Stacey Todd Coffee, of Logan & Jolly, LLP, of Anderson, both for Respondent Oconee County.

GEATHERS, J.: In this defamation action, Appellant David T. Stokes seeks review of the circuit court's rulings granting summary judgment to Respondents Wayne McCall and Edda Cammick and denying Stokes's motion to amend his complaint. Stokes also challenges the circuit court's ruling quashing a subpoena Stokes served on the Administrator for Respondent Oconee County (the County). Stokes argues that (1) Councilman McCall and Councilwoman Cammick were not entitled to immunity under the South Carolina Tort Claims Act because their alleged misconduct fell outside the scope of these council members' official duties; (2) the proposed amendment to his complaint would not have been futile because the alleged defamatory statements were not material to the purpose of the meeting at which they were made; and (3) Stokes was entitled to serve a subpoena on the County Administrator in his individual capacity because his prior deposition was taken in his capacity as a representative of the County pursuant to Rule 30(b)(6), SCRCP. We affirm the circuit court's orders granting summary judgment to McCall and Cammick and denying the motion to amend. We decline to address the circuit court's ruling quashing the subpoena as it is not immediately appealable.

FACTS/PROCEDURAL HISTORY

David Stokes worked as the County's "Building Official" from December 2011 to May 2017. "The Building Official is the administrator for building and/or code compliance within Oconee County[] and ensures that proper code is followed in the design, construction, and maintenance of buildings and structures within Oconee County." As such, Stokes oversaw the work of the Building Department's staff. In fall 2016, two county council members, Councilman McCall and Councilwoman Cammick, had several discussions with the County Administrator, Scott Moulder, about complaints the council members had received concerning various county departments, including the Building Department (the Department).1 McCall and Cammick told Moulder that "they wanted the matters cured" and Moulder's job depended on the "departure" of certain individuals responsible for the departments in question.

1 For ease of discussion, we henceforth refer to the council members by their last names only. No disrespect is intended. In March 2017, Cammick shared with McCall her personal experience with the Department when she had applied for a freestanding carport permit. A Department employee, Cynthia Adams, advised Cammick that she needed stamped engineering plans, and a second employee in that office, Casey Neal, asked Cammick where she purchased her carport. According to Cammick, when she told Neal that she purchased her carport from a certain business, Neal shook her head and stated, "They don't help their customers. They . . . won't help you with the building permit process. They won't help you get the documents[.]"

Additionally, Cammick questioned why plans, or even the permit itself, were required for her carport. According to Stokes, Neal requested that he personally meet with Cammick to explain the need for the permit and plans. While Stokes explained to Cammick the reason for these requirements, Adams gave Stokes a sample set of engineering plans to show to Cammick. When Stokes showed Cammick the example, Cammick stated, "You are trying to push me to buy from this guy." 2 Two days later, Cammick returned to the Department to submit the plans for her carport, and the Department e-mailed a copy of the permit to her the following day.

In April 2017, a builder contacted McCall to complain about a Department inspector who failed to appear for an inspection. Because Moulder was on vacation, McCall telephoned Cammick, who contacted Stokes to learn more about the matter and to ask Stokes to "take care of it." When Stokes told Cammick the inspector had a flat tire, Cammick stated that it "was kind of a lame excuse."

Subsequently, at the April 25, 2017 meeting of the county council's Budget, Finance, and Administration Committee, McCall recounted certain citizen complaints about the Department, and Cammick recounted her experience with the Department when she obtained her carport permit. Several statements made about the Department comprise the basis for this defamation action, and the pertinent parts of the meeting transcript are copied into one of two addenda attached to this opinion. (Addendum I). For example, McCall quoted the complaint of a constituent in response to McCall's suggestion that the constituent lodge a complaint: "I'm not saying a word 'cause [if] you make them mad[,] they will make life miserable for you." McCall also relayed a complaint that the Department was making up the rules as they went along and accused the Department of having "a sweet deal going" by "funneling people down to" a certain carport business.

2 Stokes explained that he was just using the plans as an example. Cammick later denied that she met with Stokes to discuss her permit application. Two days after the committee meeting, Moulder met with Stokes to advise him that he would be terminated unless he chose to resign. On the following day, the Oconee County newspaper, The Journal, published an article entitled "Oconee, building codes director part ways." The article's contents are copied into a second addendum attached to this opinion. (Addendum II).

On May 1, 2017, Moulder terminated Stokes. Subsequently, Stokes filed a grievance with the County over his termination, and the County's Grievance Committee recommended that the County either produce tangible evidence to refute Stokes's discipline-free personnel file or fully reinstate Stokes with back pay. Nevertheless, Moulder upheld the termination.

According to Stokes, people he knew in the community began to avoid him or had terse conversations with him. He also testified that two or three contractors and certain employees of the City of Seneca told his son, "Your dad's a crook," and "[he] got what he deserved." Another contractor told Stokes, "I heard that stuff," but "I didn't believe it."

Some of Stokes's former employees advised him that a video recording of the April 25 meeting on the County's YouTube channel showed accusations of criminal conduct within the Department. Stokes viewed the recording, and by the end of the month, he filed this defamation action against the County, McCall, and Cammick. The complaint included causes of action for slander per se and wrongful termination. The County and Cammick filed counterclaims for abuse of process and "frivolous lawsuit." Similarly, McCall filed counterclaims for defamation and "frivolous lawsuit."

Subsequently, the County and Cammick filed a joint motion for summary judgment, and McCall filed a separate summary judgment motion. Both motions listed multiple grounds, including immunity under the South Carolina Tort Claims Act.

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David Stokes v. Oconee County, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/david-stokes-v-oconee-county-scctapp-2023.