Est. of Long v. Fowler

CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedAugust 13, 2021
Docket303A20
StatusPublished

This text of Est. of Long v. Fowler (Est. of Long v. Fowler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Est. of Long v. Fowler, (N.C. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF NORTH CAROLINA

2021-NCSC-81

No. 303A20

Filed 13 August 2021

ESTATE OF MELVIN JOSEPH LONG, by and through MARLA HUDSON LONG, Administratrix

v. JAMES D. FOWLER, Individually, DAVID A. MATTHEWS, Individually, DENNIS F. KINSLER, Individually, ROBERT J. BURNS, Individually, MICHAEL T. VANCOUR, Individually, and MICHAEL S. SCARBOROUGH, Individually

Appeal pursuant to N.C.G.S. § 7A-30(2) from the decision of a divided panel of

the Court of Appeals, 270 N.C. App. 241 (2020), reversing an order entered on 3 May

2019 by Judge Josephine K. Davis in Superior Court, Person County, and remanding

to the trial court. Heard in the Supreme Court on 18 May 2021.

Hardison & Cochran, PLLC, by John Paul Godwin; and Sanford Thompson, PLLC, by Sanford Thompson IV, for plaintiff-appellee.

Parker Poe Adams & Bernstein LLP, by Jonathan E. Hall and Patrick M. Meacham; and Joshua H. Stein, Attorney General, by Melissa K. Walker, Assistant Attorney General, Shannon Cassell, Civil Bureau Chief, and Sarah G. Boyce, Deputy Solicitor General, for defendant-appellants.

EARLS, Justice.

¶1 This case raises the question of whether the estate of an individual killed by

the allegedly negligent acts of State employees can proceed in state court to assert

wrongful death claims against those employees in their individual capacities or

whether such a suit is barred by the doctrine of sovereign immunity. Following our ESTATE OF LONG V. FOWLER

Opinion of the Court

precedent, sovereign immunity does not apply to suits against state employees in

their individual capacities. We therefore hold that the trial court erred in dismissing

the complaint on those grounds.

¶2 The tragic event giving rise to plaintiff’s claims occurred on the morning of 20

January 2017, when Melvin Joseph Long was working to reconnect a trailer-mounted

chiller on the campus of North Carolina State University (NCSU). To do so, he needed

to remove metal flanges that capped two water pipes on the chiller. However,

unbeknownst to Mr. Long, the pipes had become filled with pressurized gas after

water in the pipes froze and the pipes cracked. As he began to loosen one of the metal

flanges, it shot off the water pipe and hit him in the face with great force. Mr. Long

died from his injuries five days later, on 25 January 2017.

¶3 Following his death, Mr. Long’s estate brought the present action against

James D. Fowler, David A. Matthews, Dennis F. Kinsler, Robert J. Burns, Michael T.

Vancour, and Michael S. Scarborough (defendants), NCSU employees who had

worked on the chiller during the months before Mr. Long’s injury and, according to

plaintiff’s allegations, caused his injury. In addition to arguing that the complaint

failed to allege substantive elements of Mr. Long’s claims, defendants have asked us

to hold that Mr. Long’s claims are brought against defendants in their official

capacities or, in the alternative, that claims such as those brought by Mr. Long are

necessarily claims against the State that cannot be brought against defendants in

their individual capacities. Doing so would require us to overturn several decades of ESTATE OF LONG V. FOWLER

this Court’s precedent establishing that claims brought against State employees in

their individual capacities are not subject to the doctrine of sovereign immunity.

However, we are constrained to promote the “stability in the law and uniformity in

its application” which may only be achieved through “respect for the opinions of our

predecessors.” Wiles v. Welparnel Constr. Co., 295 N.C. 81, 85 (1978).

¶4 The tie between injury and remedy is so fundamental to our law that it is

enshrined in the first article of our state constitution—“every person for an injury

done him in his lands, goods, person, or reputation shall have remedy by due course

of law.” N.C. Const. art. I, § 18. Hewing close to our precedent in this case maintains

the general principle that the law provides remedies to injured persons. Cf. Wirth v.

Bracey, 258 N.C. 505, 508 (1963) (“The obvious intention of the General Assembly in

enacting the Tort Claims Act was to enlarge the rights and remedies of a person

injured by the actionable negligence of an employee of a State agency while acting in

the course of his employment.”). By preserving remedies in tort, we “deter certain

kinds of conduct by imposing liability when that conduct causes harm.” Haarhuis v.

Cheek, 255 N.C. App. 471, 480 (2017) (quoting Dan B. Dobbs, Paul T. Hayden & Ellen

M. Bublick, The Law of Torts § 14 (2d ed. 2011)). As we have previously stated,

“[t]here can be little doubt that immunity fosters neglect and breeds irresponsibility,

while liability promotes care and caution.” Rabon v. Rowan Mem’l Hosp., Inc., 269

N.C. 1, 13 (1967). Defendants in this case were sued in their individual capacities,

and the complaint adequately stated claims for the tort relief sought by Mr. Long’s ESTATE OF LONG V. FOWLER

estate. As a result, the trial court erroneously granted defendant’s motion to dismiss,

and we affirm the decision of the Court of Appeals reversing that order.

I. Background

¶5 Since this case comes to us on the trial court’s order granting a motion to

dismiss pursuant to Rules 12(b)(1), 12(b)(2), and 12(b)(6) of the North Carolina Rules

of Civil Procedure, we accept the allegations in the complaint as true. Corwin v.

British Am. Tobacco PLC, 371 N.C. 605, 611 (2018) (Rule 12(b)(1)); Parker v. Town of

Erwin, 243 N.C. App. 84, 96 (2015) (Rule 12(b)(2)); Bridges v. Parrish, 366 N.C. 539,

541 (2013) (Rule 12(b)(6)).

¶6 The Complaint alleges that in December 2016, NCSU owned, operated, and

used a large, trailer-mounted chiller. Around 21 December 2016, one or more of

defendants, pursuant to a work order completed during the course of their

employment, shut the chiller down, disconnecting its power and water sources. At

that time, they drained water from the chiller. However, two signs on the chiller

contained a warning indicating that it was “not possible to drain all water” from the

chiller and that the chiller “must be drained and refilled with” antifreeze solution

“[f]or freeze protection during shut-down.” Similarly, the chiller’s operating manual

instructed that the chiller should be filled with antifreeze to “prevent freeze-up

damage to the cooler tubes.” Defendants did not put antifreeze into the chiller.

¶7 Almost two weeks later, on 3 January 2017, one or more defendants tightly

secured heavy metal flanges, weighing approximately 13.1 pounds, to the ends of the ESTATE OF LONG V. FOWLER

chiller’s water pipes to cap the pipes. A few days after that, the area experienced a

hard freeze, with temperatures falling as low as nine degrees Fahrenheit. Water

remaining in the pipes froze and ruptured the pipes, which caused the pipes to fill

with a pressurized refrigerant gas. The gas built up in the pipes behind the metal

flanges, and the pipes became pressurized.

¶8 On 20 January 2017, Mr. Long attempted to loosen the flanges on the chiller

pipes so that the chiller could be reconnected. As he began doing so, one of the flanges

flew off the end of the pipe, propelled by the pressurized refrigerant gas, and struck

him in the face. The flange knocked off part of Mr. Long’s skull, and he died five days

later.

¶9 Marla Hudson Long, Mr.

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