Headen v. Commonwealth

87 S.W.3d 250, 2002 Ky. App. LEXIS 2025, 2002 WL 31095788
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky
DecidedSeptember 20, 2002
DocketNo. 2001-CA-001760-MR
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 87 S.W.3d 250 (Headen v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Headen v. Commonwealth, 87 S.W.3d 250, 2002 Ky. App. LEXIS 2025, 2002 WL 31095788 (Ky. Ct. App. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION

HUDDLESTON, Judge.

Patricia Headen appeals from a Franklin Circuit Court judgment that affirmed a Board of Claims’ order dismissing as untimely filed Headen’s claim for damages resulting from a personal injury sustained on the campus of Northern Kentucky Technical College (NKTC).

Headen asserts that on June 8,1999, she slipped and fell on a recently-mopped floor. As a result of her fall, Headen allegedly sprained her ankle and continues to experience pain. On June 1, 2000, within one year following her fall, Headen filed a complaint in Kenton Circuit Court against the Commonwealth of Kentucky and the Kentucky Community and Technical College System (KCTCS) which operates NKTC. KCTCS moved to dismiss Headen’s complaint on the ground that the Board of Claims has exclusive jurisdiction to hear negligence claims brought against the Commonwealth of Kentucky and its instrumentalities, including KCTCS.1 The parties stipulated to a dismissal of the circuit court action on July 21, 2000.

Headen then filed a claim on the prescribed form with the Board of Claims on July 28, 2000. KCTCS filed an answer on September 22, 2000, in which it asserted that Headen’s claim was filed more than one year after the cause of action accrued and thus is barred by the applicable statute of limitations, Kentucky Revised Statutes (KRS) 44.110(1).2 When the Board dismissed Headen’s claim as untimely filed, she appealed to Franklin Circuit Court as authorized by KRS 44.140(2). The circuit court agreed with the Board that Headen’s claim was barred because it was filed too late and affirmed the Board’s order dismissing it. In so doing, the circuit court rejected Headen’s argument that she was entitled to invoke the so-called “savings statute,” KRS 413.270, to salvage her claim because she had failed to plead it when her claim was pending before the Board of Claims. Headen followed by appealing to this Court.

KRS 413.270, the savings statute that Headen sought to invoke, provides that:

(1) If an action is commenced in due time and in good faith in any court of this state and the defendants or any of them make defense, and it is adjudged that the court has no jurisdiction of the action, the plaintiff or his representative may, within ninety (90) days from the time of that judgment, commence a new action in the proper court. The time between the commencement of the first and last action shall not be counted in applying any statute of limitation.
(2) As used in this section, “court” means all courts, commissions, and boards which are judicial or quasi-judicial tribunals authorized by the Constitution or statutes of the Commonwealth of Kentucky or any of the United States of America.

The parties agree that if the savings statute does apply, Headen’s claim was timely [252]*252filed. Therefore, the issue we must address is whether Headen was required to plead the savings statute in the claim form she initially filed with the Board of Claims in order to invoke it.

As previously noted, KRS 44.110 mandates that “[a]ll claims must be filed with the Board of Claims within one (1) year from the time the claim for relief accrued.” Headen’s initial claim form contained neither the factual information necessary to make the Board aware of the errant filing in Kenton Circuit Court nor any reference to the savings statute. Based on the pleadings before it — Headen’s claim and KCTCS’s answer, the Board of Claims was confronted with a claim for an injury that occurred on June 8, 1999, the filing of a claim on July 28, 2000, and a statute of limitations that bars claims filed more than one year after the occurrence that gave rise to the claim. The Board did not set a hearing to consider KCTCS’s statute of limitations defense nor did it notify the parties of its intent to rule on the defense; it simply dismissed Headen’s claim as untimely filed.

The parties rely on three cases: Clark v. Tecon Corporation,3 J.A. Jones Construction Co. v. Carrico4and Jent v. Commonwealth, Natural Resources & Environmental Protection Cabinet,5 but interpret them differently. We begin with a brief review of each of these cases.

In Clark, a claimant seeking review of the denial by the Workmen’s Compensation Board 6 of his claim for benefits appealed to Livingston Circuit Court.7 Although the applicable statute provided that an appeal from a Board decision to the appropriate circuit court was to be taken within twenty days, the Livingston Circuit Court appeal was taken some 87 days after the Board rendered its decision. The employer, Tecon Construction, moved to dismiss the appeal as untimely. The claimant responded by filing a brief in which he asserted through his counsel that he had initially, but mistakenly, filed a timely appeal in McCracken Circuit Court, and he invoked the savings statute, KRS 413.270.

After Livingston Circuit Court dismissed his appeal, the claimant appealed to the former Court of Appeals, then Kentucky’s highest court. That Court affirmed the dismissal of the claimant’s appeal saying that it was doing so because “there was no proper showing in the Livingston Circuit Court of the facts or grounds for [the application of the savings statute].” The Court went on to say that in determining legal questions, the circuit court “is limited to the consideration of the facts as pleaded. The facts relied on here were not alleged of record, and the court was not authorized to consider the attorney’s brief or argument unsupported by the record and presented extrinsically.”8

In J.A. Jones, this Court held that a workers’ compensation claimant had failed to timely appeal an adverse decision of the Board to the circuit court and thus his appeal should have been dismissed. The claimant attempted to invoke the savings statute to salvage his appeal, but this Court rejected the attempt saying that the statute “does not govern a continuing step in an ongoing legal action such as an app[253]*253eal.”9 “Even if the statute did apply,” the Court continued, “the record is bare of any evidence that the [Hancock Circuit Court] was aware of the fact an [apparently timely] appeal was filed in Jefferson Circuit Court [and had been dismissed for lack of jurisdiction] or that the [savings] statute was being relied on as a defense.” 10

In Jent, oil and gas operators filed in Muhlenberg Circuit Court an action (appeal) for review of a final order of the Cabinet for Natural Resources and Environmental Protection. After the action was dismissed for lack of jurisdiction, the operators filed a similar action in Franklin Circuit Court. The latter court dismissed the action as untimely, and this Court affirmed the dismissal.

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Related

COMMONWEALTH LABOR CABINET v. Morris
215 S.W.3d 49 (Court of Appeals of Kentucky, 2006)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 S.W.3d 250, 2002 Ky. App. LEXIS 2025, 2002 WL 31095788, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/headen-v-commonwealth-kyctapp-2002.