Dawn Lewis Williams v. Commonwealth of Virginia

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedApril 30, 2024
Docket1201222
StatusPublished

This text of Dawn Lewis Williams v. Commonwealth of Virginia (Dawn Lewis Williams v. Commonwealth of Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dawn Lewis Williams v. Commonwealth of Virginia, (Va. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges AtLee, Ortiz and Lorish PUBLISHED

Argued at Richmond, Virginia

DAWN LEWIS WILLIAMS OPINION BY JUDGE LISA M. LORISH v. Record No. 1201-22-2 APRIL 30, 2024

COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF CHARLOTTESVILLE Richard E. Moore, Judge

Seth R. Carroll (Melisa Azak; Commonwealth Law Group, PLLC, on briefs), for appellant. Laura H. Cahill, Assistant Attorney General (Jason S. Miyares, Attorney General; Charles H. Slemp III, Chief Deputy Attorney General; Maria N. Wittmann, Deputy Attorney General; Richard C. Vorhis, Senior Assistant Attorney General, on briefs), for appellee.

While in the custody of the Virginia Department of Corrections (“VDOC”), Dawn

Williams was injured and sent a notice of tort claim to the Office of the Attorney General. She

then filed an initial complaint seeking relief under the Virginia Tort Claims Act (“VTCA”), but

after she was released from prison, she nonsuited her first action and filed a new complaint. The

VTCA waives the Commonwealth’s sovereign immunity under certain circumstances, permitting

plaintiffs to bring tort suits against the Commonwealth. But the VTCA specifically excludes

from recovery “[a]ny claim by an inmate of a state correctional facility” unless the “claimant

verifies under oath, by affidavit, that he has exhausted his remedies” under the VDOC grievance

process. Code § 8.01-195.3. We hold that the VTCA requires a reviewing court to assess

whether a claimant is an inmate when the complaint was filed. If so, the claimant must have

exhausted her remedies. Because the operative complaint here was filed when Williams was no longer an inmate, the VTCA’s exclusion does not apply. We also find that Williams’s notices of

claim were sufficient under the VTCA. We therefore reverse the circuit court’s order sustaining

the Commonwealth’s plea in bar and dismissing Williams’s complaint.

BACKGROUND1

On October 11, 2018, while incarcerated at Fluvanna Correctional Center (“Fluvanna”),

Williams was scheduled to attend a medical appointment at UVA Health University Hospital

(“UVA Hospital”). Williams required handicap-equipped transportation to take her from

Fluvanna to the appointment. The VDOC officers assigned to transport Williams informed her

that a handicap-equipped van was unavailable and that they would instead use a standard

transport van. Because Williams had difficulty safely loading herself into the van while

shackled, the officers overseeing her transportation requested, and received, authorization to

unshackle her so that she could help pull herself inside. When the van arrived at the hospital,

one officer called again to request permission to unshackle Williams so she could help herself

out of the van. But because they were running late for the appointment, another officer did not

wait. Instead, this officer tried to pull Williams out of the van while she was still shackled. The

officer lost her balance, fell down, and pulled Williams down with her. As a result, Williams

injured several joints.

In August 2019, Williams filed, pro se, a handwritten notice of claim with the Office of

the Attorney General indicating that she intended to sue VDOC for causing her injuries. She

subsequently retained an attorney, who filed “further notice” of her claim with the Attorney

General on October 8, 2019.

1 We recite the facts as pleaded in the complaint. See Massenburg v. City of Petersburg, 298 Va. 212, 216 (2019). -2- While still incarcerated, Williams filed her first complaint in the Fluvanna Circuit Court a

few months later. She alleged that the Commonwealth was liable for the injuries she sustained

while being transported to the hospital and sought relief under the VTCA. She did not file an

affidavit stating that she had exhausted her remedies under the VDOC’s inmate grievance

procedures. In response, the Commonwealth filed a plea in bar asserting sovereign immunity.

Before the court ruled on the pending plea in bar, Williams was released from prison. In

July 2020, she nonsuited her original action, and refiled her complaint in the Charlottesville

Circuit Court a month later, again seeking recovery under the VTCA. The Commonwealth filed

another plea in bar asserting that the VTCA did not waive the Commonwealth’s sovereign

immunity because Williams asserted a “claim by an inmate” under Code § 8.01-195.3(7) and she

had not attached an affidavit stating that she exhausted administrative remedies through the

VDOC grievance process. The Commonwealth also argued that her notices of claim failed to

meet the statutory requirements of Code § 8.01-195.6(A). The circuit court agreed on both

fronts, sustaining the Commonwealth’s plea in bar and dismissing the complaint.

Williams timely appeals.

ANALYSIS

Williams asks us to reverse the circuit court’s decision to sustain the Commonwealth’s

plea in bar based on its claim of sovereign immunity. Where, as here, “no evidence is taken in

support of a plea in bar, the trial court, and the appellate court upon review, consider solely the

pleadings in resolving the issue presented.” Massenburg v. City of Petersburg, 298 Va. 212, 216

(2019). “The facts as stated in the pleadings by the plaintiff are taken as true for the purpose of

resolving the special plea.” Gray v. Va. Sec’y of Transp., 276 Va. 93, 97 (2008) (quoting Niese

v. City of Alexandria, 264 Va. 230, 233 (2002)). To determine whether the Commonwealth

-3- waived sovereign immunity here, we must interpret several sections of the VTCA, a task we take

up de novo. Wright v. Commonwealth, 278 Va. 754, 759 (2009).

I. The exhaustion requirement of Code § 8.01-195.3(7)

“The Commonwealth and its agencies are immune from liability for the tortious acts or

omissions of their agents and employees in the absence of an express constitutional or statutory

waiver of sovereign immunity.” Billups v. Carter, 268 Va. 701, 707 (2004). The VTCA

generally waives the Commonwealth’s sovereign immunity for claims for money “on account of

damage to or loss of property or personal injury or death caused by the negligent or wrongful act

or omission of any employee while acting within the scope of his employment.” Code

§ 8.01-195.3. But the VTCA excludes recovery for certain claims, including “claim[s] by an

inmate of a state correctional facility, as defined in § 53.1-1, unless the claimant verifies under

oath, by affidavit, that he has exhausted his remedies under the adult institutional inmate

grievance procedures promulgated by the Department of Corrections.” Code § 8.01-195.3(7).

Initiating the institutional inmate grievance procedure tolls “the time for filing the notice of tort

claim . . . during the pendency of the grievance procedure.” Id. Thus, the VTCA “partially

waives sovereign immunity” for “state prisoners” who comply with the exhaustion requirements

of Code § 8.01-195.3(7), but it does not waive immunity for claims by inmates who do not.

AlBritton v. Commonwealth, 299 Va. 392, 399 (2021).

Along with excluding certain claims, the statute imposes procedural requirements on

claimants. To assert a “claim cognizable against the Commonwealth,” a plaintiff must first file a

“notice of claim” with the Director of the Division of Risk Management or the Attorney General;

otherwise, her claim “shall be forever barred.” Code § 8.01-195.6(A)-(B). The notice of claim

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