RENDERED: MARCH 7, 2025; 10:00 A.M. NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
Commonwealth of Kentucky Court of Appeals NO. 2023-CA-0098-MR
HIGHLANDS ARH REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER APPELLANT
APPEAL FROM FLOYD CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE THOMAS M. SMITH, JUDGE ACTION NO. 20-CI-00555
ASHLEY SHEPHERD APPELLEE
AND
NO. 2023-CA-0118-MR
ASHLEY SHEPHERD CROSS-APPELLANT
CROSS-APPEAL FROM FLOYD CIRCUIT COURT v. HONORABLE THOMAS M. SMITH, JUDGE ACTION NO. 20-CI-00555
HIGHLANDS ARH REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER; HIGHLANDS HOSPITAL CORPORATION; AND HIGHLANDS REGIONAL MEDICAL CENTER CROSS-APPELLEES OPINION AFFIRMING IN NO. 2023-CA-0118-MR, AND REVERSING AND REMANDING IN NO. 2023-CA-0098-MR
** ** ** ** **
BEFORE: THOMPSON, CHIEF JUDGE; A. JONES AND LAMBERT, JUDGES.
LAMBERT, JUDGE: These appeals stem from the Floyd Circuit Court’s
September 12, 2022, judgment, following a jury trial, on Ashley Shepherd’s claims
for wrongful termination and retaliation against her former employer, Highlands
ARH Regional Medical Center (hereinafter “Highlands”). Highlands appeals from
the portion of the judgment finding that Shepherd had been wrongfully terminated1
and awarding her damages, and Shepherd cross-appeals from the portion
dismissing her claim that Highlands retaliated against her in violation of Kentucky
Revised Statutes (KRS) 216B.165. Having considered the briefs, record, and law,
we reverse the judgment in Shepherd’s favor and remand for dismissal, and we
affirm the dismissal of her retaliation claim.
1 The parties agree that this was the claim decided by the jury even though the judgment states that both the retaliation and wrongful termination claims were dismissed on Highlands’ motion for a directed verdict. For purposes of this appeal, we assume that the parties are correct.
-2- BACKGROUND FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
Shepherd, a social worker, worked as a therapist in the behavioral
health unit at what is now Highlands2 from October 2016 until October 2019 as a
contractor and from November 2019 until April 2020 as an employee of
Highlands. Shepherd’s immediate supervisor was Bruce Fletcher, Head Nurse
Manager, and his supervisor was Susan Ellis, Community Chief Nursing Officer.
On the behavioral health unit, Shepherd worked with patients with mental health
needs. Her job duties included performing safety assessments to determine if the
patients were a danger to themselves or others and, in conjunction with a multi-
disciplinary treatment team, to make discharge recommendations that were heavily
relied on by the psychiatrist, who made the final determinations.
During the term of her work at Highlands, both as a contractor and an
employee, Fletcher repeatedly told Shepherd that Ellis had instructed that patients
who were unable to pay for treatment, generally because they had exceeded their
insurance coverage, needed to be discharged. This typically happened after
Fletcher had attended his morning meeting with management. Depending on the
patient, Shepherd often responded to Fletcher that she was not comfortable with his
instructions because the patients were not safe for release, and, in those
2 Highlands acquired the hospital in August 2019, and it began operating the behavioral health unit in November 2019.
-3- circumstances, she informed the treatment team that she did not recommend
discharge.
At some point, Fletcher advised Shepherd that her charts were being
audited, that there was “an invisible target” on her back, and that, while he liked
having her there, she might want to consider alternative employment because
things were “out of his hands.” On January 23, 2020, Shepherd learned from two
other Highlands social workers, Rachel Farrell and Brittany Blankenship, that Ellis
had spoken with them multiple times trying to elicit negative information about her
work performance and her personal life and that Ellis had promised them
promotions in exchange for their assistance.
On February 4, 2020, Shepherd filed a complaint with the Highlands
human resources department about Ellis’s attempts to solicit information about her.
As a result, Shepherd met with various representatives of Highlands and of
Appalachian Regional Healthcare, including the Community CEO, the Director of
Risk and Compliance, and the Chief Legal Officer. Shepherd was assured that her
job was safe, that the behavior would stop immediately, and that Ellis would not be
permitted in the behavioral health unit pending the investigation. Shepherd was
encouraged to bring any additional concerns to Highlands’ attention. Shepherd did
not inform any of the individuals that she met with that she was being instructed to
-4- prematurely discharge patients for financial reasons, and she stated that she had no
idea why Ellis was targeting her.
Despite assurances that Ellis would not be on Shepherd’s floor, Ellis
not only continued to conduct rounds, but she increased the frequency to up to
twice a day. However, Shepherd had no direct interaction with her, Shepherd
made no further complaints to Highlands, and Ellis was ultimately removed as
Bruce’s supervisor, taking her out of Shepherd’s chain-of-command.
Also in February, at Fletcher’s urging, Shepherd applied for Director
of Behavioral Science and Psychology, a newly created position within Highlands.
Shepherd alleges that she was the only individual at Highlands who met the job
requirements; however, she asserts that the requirements were later modified, and
another person was offered the position. Shepherd attributes this to nepotism, as
the selected individual was the daughter of an employee in Highlands’ human
resources department, her refusal to prematurely discharge patients without the
means to pay for treatment, and her complaints to that effect to Fletcher.
Shepherd sought and secured alternative employment, and on March
27, 2020, she resigned, citing constructive discharge tactics by Highlands’
administrative officials. Highlands accepted her resignation, and, after working
her two-week notice period, her final day of employment was April 10, 2020.
-5- On September 23, 2020, Shepherd filed the underlying suit alleging
that she was pressured by Highlands administration, through her supervisor, to
recommend discharge for financial motives on patients who were not safe for
release, that she refused to comply, and that she reported this to her supervisor.
The complaint, asserts that Highlands retaliated against her by placing her in a
hostile work environment and taking hostile actions for the purpose of forcing her
to resign, constituting constructive discharge, and that their actions violated KRS
216B.165. Shepherd sought compensatory damages for emotional pain and
distress as well as punitive damages. Highlands answered the complaint, denying
all claims of wrongdoing and asserting that Shepherd was not entitled to relief.
In January 2022, Highlands filed a motion for summary judgment,
seeking dismissal of all claims. In the motion, Highlands argued that, accepting
Shepherd’s deposition testimony as true, she had not made a prima facie claim of
retaliation in violation of KRS 216B.165 and that her common law claim based on
the same statute should be preempted or dismissed for the same reasons. Shepherd
opposed the motion. On April 4, 2022, the court concluded that there were
genuine issues of material fact and denied Highlands’ motion.
The case was tried before a jury on August 30 and 31, 2022.
Shepherd testified on her own behalf as set forth above. She confirmed that she
had not been fired, reprimanded, or suspended, and that Highlands had not changed
-6- her pay or duties. Shepherd stated that she had not raised the issue of premature
discharge of patients with anyone other than Fletcher and that, other than her
February 2020 complaint about Ellis soliciting information about her, she had not
reported any concerns regarding her treatment at Highlands.
Farrell and a nurse who worked with Shepherd testified in support of
her harassment claims, and the nurse confirmed that she heard Fletcher tell
Shepherd that patients who could not pay needed to be discharged. Fletcher
testified that he had no memory of instructing Shepherd to recommend the
premature discharge of patients, of Shepherd complaining that she had been
pressured to make false recommendations, of increased chart audits after
Highlands took over the unit, or of Shepherd being the target of audits.
After Shepherd closed her case-in-chief, Highlands moved for a
directed verdict on all claims. The court granted the motion as to the KRS
216B.165 retaliation claim, finding that there was no evidence that Highlands had
retaliated against Shepherd, but it determined that Shepherd could still succeed on
her wrongful termination claim.
Highlands presented testimony from various witnesses disputing
Shepherd’s claims of harassment. Testimony from Ellis and a nurse in Highlands’
utilization review, who was tasked with providing insurance companies with the
necessary information to secure a patient’s coverage, established that audits
-7- increased unit-wide after October 2020, when documentation issues caused denials
in coverage in many cases. Ellis denied that Shepherd was targeted by the audits.
She also denied soliciting information from social workers Farrell and Blankenship
about Shepherd’s work performance or personal life or offering them incentives to
provide such information. Blankenship confirmed Ellis’s recounting, denying that
anyone solicitated information from her about Shepherd’s personal life or directly
about her job performance, and she denied that she was offered a promotion in
exchange for such information.
Both the Community CEO and the Director of Risk and Compliance
testified that Shepherd’s complaint about Ellis’s conduct was investigated, that she
had not raised any additional concerns regarding alleged harassment or patient
safety, and that the qualifications for the Director of Behavioral Science and
Psychology position had not been modified during the hiring process.3 The
Community CEO had no memory of telling Shepherd that Ellis was banned from
her floor, noting that a ban would have prevented Ellis from doing her job and
conducting rounds to check on her nurses. He denied that Highlands attempted to
prematurely discharge patients or had a policy to discharge patients who could not
pay. The Director of Risk and Compliance testified about Highlands’ harassment
3 A log of the job posting was accepted as Highlands’ Exhibit 14, but it is not contained in the record on appeal.
-8- policy and code of conduct as well as the various means provided for reporting
safety concerns, including anonymously. She confirmed that no complaints about
patient discharge had been made.
The jury found in Shepherd’s favor on the claim of wrongful
termination and awarded her $400,000.00 in pain and suffering and $2 million in
punitive damages. On September 12, 2022, the court entered a judgment in
accordance with the jury’s verdict, although it also stated that both the statutory
retaliation and the wrongful termination claims had been dismissed on Highlands’
motion for a directed verdict, and awarded Shepherd reasonable attorney fees.
Highlands filed motions for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict
and/or to alter, amend, or vacate the judgment and for a new trial, arguing
relevantly that Shepherd’s proof was wholly insufficient. Shepherd also filed a
motion to alter or amend pursuant to Kentucky Rules of Civil Procedure (CR)
59.05, asserting that the judgment erroneously stated that her wrongful termination
claim had been dismissed.
The court denied Highlands’ motions via a January 4, 2023, order, but
it did not address Shepherd’s motion. Thereafter, Highlands filed its notice of
appeal from the judgment and post-trial order, and Shepherd filed a notice of cross-
appeal. Shepherd subsequently filed motions seeking a ruling on her CR 59.05
motion to correct the judgment. Highlands agreed that the judgment should be
-9- amended to reflect that only the statutory retaliation claim had been dismissed.
The court denied the motions via an order entered August 2, 2023, and Shepherd
amended her cross-appeal to include the latest order. This appeal followed.
ANALYSIS
On appeal, Highlands raises several issues arising from all stages of
the proceedings, including that the court erred by denying a directed verdict on all
claims.4 Shepherd defends the judgment, but argues that, if the matter is remanded
for a new trial, her claim that Highlands retaliated against her in violation of KRS
216B.165, which had been dismissed on directed verdict, should be reinstated.5
On appeal from an order granting or denying a motion for directed
verdict, this Court “is under a duty to consider the evidence in the strongest
possible light in favor of the party opposing the motion. Furthermore, it is required
to give the opposing party the advantage of every fair and reasonable inference
which can be drawn from the evidence.” Turner v. Norton Healthcare, Inc., 681
4 Specifically, Highlands appeals: (1) the court’s failure to grant its three separate motions for summary judgment (one that was denied, and two that were not ruled on); (2) the failure to grant its motions in limine to exclude Farrell, Fletcher, and the nurse from testifying (the court only addressed the first two and held the motion in abeyance); (3) the denial of its renewed motion to exclude Farrell from testifying; (4) the denial of its motion for a directed verdict on the wrongful termination claim; (5) the jury instructions on wrongful termination, punitive damages, and emotional distress damages; (5) the denial of an affirmative defense instruction; (6) the award of attorney fees; and (7) the denial of its motion for a judgment notwithstanding the verdict and/or for a new trial. 5 Shepherd also argues that the judgment should be amended to remove the statement that her wrongful termination claim was dismissed and to award her costs.
-10- S.W.3d 26, 33 (Ky. 2023) (quoting Taylor v. Kennedy, 700 S.W.2d 415, 416 (Ky.
App. 1985)). A directed verdict should only be “granted if there is a complete
absence of proof on a material issue in the action, or if no disputed issue of fact
exists upon which reasonable men could differ.” Id.
We begin by addressing Shepherd’s claim under KRS 216B.165.6
The statute provides:
(1) Any agent or employee of a health care facility or service licensed under this chapter who knows or has reasonable cause to believe that the quality of care of a patient, patient safety, or the health care facility’s or service’s safety is in jeopardy shall make an oral or written report of the problem to the health care facility or service, and may make it to any appropriate private, public, state, or federal agency.
...
(3) No health care facility or service licensed under this chapter shall by policy, contract, procedure, or other formal or informal means subject to reprisal, or directly or indirectly use, or threaten to use, any authority or influence, in any manner whatsoever, which tends to discourage, restrain, suppress, dissuade, deter, prevent, interfere with, coerce, or discriminate against any agent or employee who in good faith reports, discloses, divulges, or otherwise brings to the attention of the health care facility or service the circumstances or facts to form the basis of a report[.]
6 Shepherd’s claim is authorized by KRS 446.070, which states that “[a] person injured by the violation of any statute may recover from the offender such damages as he sustained by reason of the violation, although a penalty or forfeiture is imposed for such violation.”
-11- Based upon the statutory language, to state a valid claim, Shepherd
had to prove that she made or attempted to make a good faith written or oral report
disclosing, divulging, or otherwise bringing to Highlands’ attention that a patient’s
quality of care or safety was in jeopardy. Highlands asserts that, as a matter of
law, Shepherd did not make a qualifying report.
There is relatively little published case law interpreting or applying
KRS 216B.165. However, because it is analogous in both its general purpose and
in its substantially similar language to the Kentucky Whistleblower Act (KWA),
barring retaliation by the Commonwealth towards its employees who disclose
qualified wrongdoing, we are guided by the Supreme Court of Kentucky’s
interpretation and application of the KWA. Compare KRS 61.102(1)7 with KRS
216B.165(1), (3).
7 KRS 61.102(1) states:
No employer shall subject to reprisal, or directly or indirectly use, or threaten to use, any official authority or influence, in any manner whatsoever, which tends to discourage, restrain, depress, dissuade, deter, prevent, interfere with, coerce, or discriminate against any employee who in good faith reports, discloses, divulges, or otherwise brings to the attention of [the designated officials] any facts or information relative to an actual or suspected violation of any law, statute, executive order, administrative regulation, mandate, rule, or ordinance of the United States, the Commonwealth of Kentucky, or any of its political subdivisions, or any facts or information relative to actual or suspected mismanagement, waste, fraud, abuse of authority, or a substantial and specific danger to public health or safety. No employer shall require any employee to give notice prior to making such a report, disclosure, or divulgence.
-12- It is a well-settled concept that to be a whistleblower under the KWA,
one must expose concealed wrongdoing. See Pennyrile Allied Cmty. Servs., Inc. v.
Rogers, 459 S.W.3d 339, 345 (Ky. 2015); Admin. Office of Courts v. Miller, 468
S.W.3d 323 (Ky. 2015); and Workforce Dev. Cabinet v. Gaines, 276 S.W.3d 789,
792 (Ky. 2008). As the Court explained in Rogers, supra, the KWA’s use of the
words “‘reports, discloses, divulges, or otherwise brings to the attention of . . . ’
[(the same language as in KRS 216B.165(3))] describes behavior that brings to
light facts not otherwise known to the recipient.” Applying these principles, we
turn to the proof presented at trial.
Shepherd asserts on appeal that she made repeated oral “reports” to
Fletcher, who, as her supervisor, had an obligation to investigate pursuant to KRS
216B.165(2), and to unidentified others, challenging Highlands’ discharge policy,
which she asserts is plainly a patient safety concern. However, Shepherd’s
testimony was only that, often after a morning meeting for management, her
supervisor would announce that particular patients who were no longer covered by
insurance needed to be discharged. If Shepherd believed it was premature, she
would respond that she was not comfortable with that direction or that the patient
was not ready to be released, and she made sure that all of the treatment team
members knew of her recommendation.
-13- Although Shepherd’s response evinces a refusal to follow instructions
detrimental to patient safety, we agree with Highlands that recommending that
patients be retained is not the same as disclosing the care or safety issue of a policy
or instructions to prematurely discharge those with the inability to pay, and thus it
is not a report under KRS 216B.165. Moreover, the only named recipient of
Shepherd’s alleged report was the very same supervisor who instructed her to
engage in the challenged conduct; ergo, Shepherd did not expose a concealed or
unknown issue. “[C]omplaints by an employee directly to her supervisor
concerning the supervisor’s own wrongful conduct generally cannot qualify as a
whistleblower disclosure.” Harper v. Univ. of Louisville, 559 S.W.3d 796, 802
(Ky. 2018).
Shepherd’s actions did not further the purpose of KRS 216B.165 and
therefore do not qualify as a report. Accordingly, albeit on different grounds, we
affirm the dismissal of Shepherd’s statutory retaliation claim on Highlands’ motion
for directed verdict.
We turn now to Shepherd’s common law wrongful termination claim.
As a narrow exception to the terminable-at-will doctrine, an employer may be
liable for wrongful termination if it discharges an employee in contravention of a
fundamental and well-defined public policy established by a constitutional or
statutory provision. Grzyb v. Evans, 700 S.W.2d 399, 401 (Ky. 1985). Discharge
-14- can be constructive if, “based upon objective criteria, the conditions created by the
employer’s action are so intolerable that a reasonable person would feel compelled
to resign.” Northeast Health Mgmt., Inc. v. Cotton, 56 S.W.3d 440, 445 (Ky. App.
2001).
Shepherd again relies on KRS 216B.165 for the required statutory
public policy justifying her wrongful termination claim. She argues that, even if
her complaints to her supervisor were insufficient to support her claim for
retaliation in violation of the statute directly, consistent with this Court’s holding in
Foster v. Jennie Stuart Med. Ctr., Inc., 435 S.W.3d 629 (Ky. App. 2013), she could
still maintain a common law termination claim if, as the jury found, the hospital
constructively discharged her based on its belief that she had made a qualifying
report. We disagree that Foster is applicable.
Foster is a consolidated appeal from an order summarily dismissing
two nurses’ claims of wrongful termination in violation of KRS 216B.165 against
their former employer, a hospital. The nurses alleged that they had been fired
because the hospital believed that they were the authors of an email disclosing
patient safety issues sent anonymously to the Kentucky Board of Nursing. It was
disclosed during litigation that one of the two nurses was the author of the email.
Because the second nurse was not the true whistleblower, this Court affirmed the
dismissal of her KRS 216B.165 retaliation claim. However, the Court held that the
-15- second nurse’s allegation that she was discharged based on the hospital’s, albeit
incorrect, belief that she was the whistleblower violated the purpose of KRS
216B.165 to improve healthcare by requiring disclosure of issues and protecting
reporters from reprisals, and thus supported a common law termination claim.
In the case at bar, Shepherd did not make a qualifying report and,
unlike in Foster, she has not alleged that she was incorrectly identified as the
source of a qualifying report. A wrongful termination claim based solely on
Shepherd’s responses to Fletcher that in no way exposed the patient safety issue for
investigation and correction is beyond the scope of KRS 216B.165. Further,
Shepherd’s attempts to conflate her refusal to prematurely discharge patients with
the applicable public policy are unavailing, because KRS 216B.165 deals strictly
with disclosures of patient safety issues and not with a patient care decision in and
of itself. Accordingly, Shepherd cannot establish that her constructive discharge
was in contravention of the public policy set out in KRS 216B.165.8 For these
reasons, the judgment of the circuit court on Shepherd’s common law wrongful
termination claim must be reversed.
8 For clarity, we emphasize that Shepherd has not alleged that she was constructively discharged to prevent or discourage her from making a qualifying report.
-16- Because we conclude Shepherd’s claims must be dismissed as a
matter of law, we need not address the remaining issues raised in the parties’
appeals.
CONCLUSION
For the forgoing reasons, in appeal No. 2023-CA-0098-MR, the
judgment for Shepherd on wrongful termination is reversed, and the matter is
remanded for the entry of a dismissal order. In appeal No. 2023-CA-0118-MR, the
judgment dismissing Shepherd’s claim of retaliation in violation of KRS 216B.165
is affirmed.
THOMPSON, CHIEF JUDGE, CONCURS.
JONES, A., JUDGE, DISSENTS AND DOES NOT FILE SEPARATE OPINION.
BRIEFS FOR APPELLANT/ BRIEFS FOR APPELLEE/ CROSS-APPELLEES: CROSS-APPELLANT:
Laura L. Mays Jerry A. Patton Lexington, Kentucky Prestonsburg, Kentucky
Kevin C. Burke Jamie K. Neal Louisville, Kentucky
-17-