Hall v. Inh. of the Town of Patten

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedJanuary 11, 2011
DocketPENcv-09-07
StatusUnpublished

This text of Hall v. Inh. of the Town of Patten (Hall v. Inh. of the Town of Patten) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. Inh. of the Town of Patten, (Me. Super. Ct. 2011).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT Penobscot, SS. Docket No. CV-09-07

CARTER W. HALL, ) Plaintiff, ) ) ) v. ) JUDGMENT ) ) INHABITANTS OF THE TOWN ) OF PATTEN ) Defendant. )

This matter came before the Court for a non-jury trial on Counts I and III of Plaintiffs Complaint on December 9, 10 and 13, 2010. Written closing arguments were later submitted. Summary Judgment was granted for the Defendant on Counts II and IV on November 3, 2010.

The Court finds the following facts:

1. Carter Hall became employed by the Town of Patten Ambulance Service on an on-call basis. Carter Hall and the Town of Pattern, through the person of Edward Noyes, also made agreements that the Town would sponsor Carter Hall in his pursuit of EMT and paramedic licenses.

2. The agreements between Carter Hall and the Town contained the following elements: a. the Town would pay 25% of the tuition to Northern Maine Community College. If the student completed the coursework, was licensed and agreed to make himself available to work for the Town's Ambulance Service on an "as­ needed" basis for a specified period of time, the Town would pay the remaining 75% of the tuition; b. the Town would pay for Mr. Hall's books; c. initially, Mr. Hall and the Town agreed that there would not be any mileage reimbursement. l Later, in March of2005, the agreement was modified and the Town agreed to pay a $20.00 stipend per trip to Mr. Hall and the other student the Town was sponsoring in the EMT course, and the students were to coordinate their education so that mileage expenses would be kept to a minimum; and

1 The Selectmen approved Town sponsorship ofMr. Hall (and Mr. Morse). Before presenting the issue of town sponsorship to the Town, the town manager was consulted. The town manager, who is the supervisor of the ambulance director, would not support educational sponsorship ofMr. Hall and Mr. Morse if the proposal included a mileage reimbursement provision.

1 d. The Court does not find that Mr. Hall's agreement required the Town to provide Mr. Hall with work, but did require that Mr. Hall make himself available to work for the Ambulance Service for specified lengths of time upon attaining the various levels of licensure (ifhe accepted the Town's payment of his full tuition).

3. The agreement negotiated by the Town and Carter Hall (and Brett Morse) was different from a policy that the Town had adopted a few years earlier? The written policy provided that students would receive a per mile mileage reimbursement, and as mentioned above, the Court finds that Mr. Hall (and Mr. Morse) negotiated a different agreement with the Town. The Town's written policy was superseded by the particular agreement negotiated between the Town and Mr. Hall.

4. The Court was convinced by Mr. Noyes' testimony that he did not guarantee Mr. Hall any particular number of hours at any time.

5. The Court accepts Mr. Hall's testimony that Mr. Noyes spoke to him (Mr. Hall) about someone with an EMT license being given some "preference" in scheduling. However, the Court does not the accept the interpretation given by Mr. Hall to the term "preference" in scheduling. The Court finds Mr. Noyes scheduled people for hours with the ambulance service after taking into consideration many factors, including the licensure level of the employees, the length of service, availability, and other factors. While the Court accepts that Mr. Noyes spoke about a "preference" in scheduling for paramedics, the Court does not find that Mr. Hall was promised a particular schedule, a particular number of hours or a preference over other more senior employees. The Court accepts that employees are "worked into" the schedule of the ambulance department.

6. The Court is not satisfied that the agreement between Mr. Hall and the Town (or Mr. Morse and the Town) provided that the students would be given or guaranteed any hours of EMT work during their education or upon completion of education and licensure. While Mr. Hall certainly had a hope and perhaps in his own mind an expectation, the Court is not satisfied that the agreement between Mr. Hall and the town contained any provision for any hours of work upon attaining licensure. During his entire tenure with the ambulance service Mr. Hall never received more than 15 hours of work per month. The fact Mr. Hall did not receive many hours and continued with the ambulance service supports the Town's argument that the Town did not promise Mr. Hall any particular number of hours of work.

7. Mr. Hall began working for the ambulance service in April of 2004. He gained his intermediate EMT in February of2005. Mr. Hall's tuition for the

2 It appears that the differences between the policy as written and the agreement reached by Mr. Hall and the Town did not become an issue until November of2005 when Mr. Hall brought the 2001 document to the town's attention.

2 Intermediate course was fully paid by the Town, and in return Mr. Hall agreed to make himself available to the Ambulance Service on an "as-needed" basis through February, 2006.

8. As mentioned above, mileage reimbursement became a component of the agreement between Mr. Hall and the Town in March of 2005. The Court is satisfied that the Town instructed Mr. Morse and Mr. Hall to coordinate their schedules so that the Town's expenses would be kept to a minimum.

9. Mr. Hall and Mr. Morse completed the basic EMT course, and the Town paid in accord with the agreement. Mr. Hall and Mr. Morse completed the intermediate coursework and became licensed, and the Town paid in accord with the agreement. Mr. Hall and Mr. Morse began the education to become licensed paramedics in the spring of 2005. Mr. Morse and Mr. Hall signed up for the classes, but Mr. Hall dropped a course at some point during the spring semester.

10. In the late summer of2005, a controversy arose between the Town and Mr. Hall with respect to Mr. Hall's paramedic education. Mr. Morse presented his clinical and class schedule to Mr. Noyes, and Mr. Noyes asked whether Mr. Morse had coordinated with Mr. Hall. Mr. Morse reported to Mr. Noyes that he had tried to coordinate with Mr. Hall, but Mr. Hall was not being responsive. Mr. Noyes instructed Mr. Morse to try again to coordinate with Mr. Hall, but when Mr. Morse returned a few days later, and close to the time the classes were beginning, Mr. Morse again reported he had been unable to coordinate with Mr. Hall. Mr. Noyes accepted Mr. Morse's schedule and decided that he (Mr. Noyes) would deal directly with Mr. Hall.

11. Mr. Noyes asked Mr. Hall for his class and clinical schedule, but Mr. Hall did not provide the schedule.

12. On August 28,2005 Mr. Hall approached Mr. Noyes, who was in the local cemetery doing landscaping work. Apparently unbeknownst to the Town, the previous semester Mr. Hall had dropped a course that Mr. Morse had taken and therefore their class schedule become a bit mismatched. Neither party has treated Mr. Hall's change in class schedule as a breach of the agreement. However, with Mr. Hall's change in class schedule the prior semester, Mr. Hall and Mr. Morse could not again have the same class schedule. Moreover, this August 28, 2005 conversation included Mr. Hall also telling Mr. Noyes that he was not going to do clinicals in the upcoming semester and therefore couldn't coordinate clinicals with Mr. Morse either.

13. Mr. Hall contends that he did not want to start his clinicals until 2006 because he wanted to take a particular class before he started the clinicals. Mr. Noyes requested that Mr. Hall start some of his clinical work in the fall of 2005 and to

3 in some small way coordinate with Mr. Morse. Mr. Hall declined to do so, and a contest of wills then began.

14. The Court is convinced that Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
Hall v. Inh. of the Town of Patten, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-inh-of-the-town-of-patten-mesuperct-2011.