Kathleen Baker and Rick Baker v. Deborah A. Snedegar

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedOctober 8, 2013
DocketM2012-02348-COA-R9-Cv
StatusPublished

This text of Kathleen Baker and Rick Baker v. Deborah A. Snedegar (Kathleen Baker and Rick Baker v. Deborah A. Snedegar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kathleen Baker and Rick Baker v. Deborah A. Snedegar, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE May 9, 2013 Session

KATHLEEN BAKER AND RICK BAKER v. DEBORAH A. SNEDEGAR

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Davidson County No. 07C1158, 05C3627 Joseph P. Binkley, Jr., Judge

No. M2012-02348-COA-R9-CV - Filed October 8, 2013

Plaintiff filed suit against a medical legal examiner alleging the medical legal examiner was negligent in failing to inform her of certain preventative medications. The medical legal examiner contended she was a government employee protected from liability by the Governmental Tort Liability Act and moved for summary judgment. The trial court denied the motion because the medical legal examiner could not prove she was paid by the payroll department of the governmental entity at issue, as required by Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-20- 107(a)(2). The medical legal examiner appealed, and we affirm the trial court’s judgment.

Tenn. R. App. P. 9 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed

P ATRICIA J. C OTTRELL, P.J., M.S., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which A NDY D. B ENNETT and R ICHARD H. D INKINS, JJ., joined.

Thomas M. Pinckney, Susan Duvier Bass, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Deborah A. Snedegar.

Marshall Herbert McClarnon, Donald D. Zuccarello, Nashville, Tennessee, for the appellees, Kathleen Baker and Rick Baker.

OPINION

This case involves the meaning of the term “government employee” for purposes of the Tennessee Governmental Tort Liability Act (“GTLA”), Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 29-20-101 et seq., specifically, whether an individual employed by Nashville General Hospital at Meharry (“NGH”) as a medical legal examiner (“MLE”) qualifies as a government employee for purposes of the Act under the circumstances of the relationship proved herein. I. B ACKGROUND

Deborah A. Snedegar was working as an MLE on the evening of November 29, 2004, when Kathleen Baker was brought into NGH after suffering a sexual assault. She performed a forensic examination and claims she followed the protocol NGH had in place for MLE’s to follow when performing their forensic examinations.

Ms. Baker contends Ms. Snedegar did not discuss or inform her of the option of using certain medications to prevent, treat, or control potential infection or disease. A few months later Ms. Baker learned she had contracted a virus that could have been prevented, she alleges. Ms. Baker then filed a negligence complaint against Ms. Snedegar in which she alleged Ms. Snedegar failed to use due and reasonable care in her role as an MLE.1

Following discovery, Ms. Snedegar filed a motion for summary judgment in which she argued she was a government employee for purposes of the GTLA and, thus, immune from suit, because the government was not a defendant in the case. In relevant part, Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-20-310(b) provides,

No claim may be brought against an employee or judgment entered against an employee for damages for which the immunity of the governmental entity is removed by this chapter . . . .

Ms. Snedegar argued that since NGH was not a defendant in the case, she could not be sued if she could prove she was an employee of NGH, a governmental entity. The GTLA defines a governmental employee as follows:

(a) Any person who is not an elected or appointed official or a member of a board, agency or commission shall not be considered an employee of a governmental entity for purposes of this chapter unless the court specifically finds that all of the following elements exist:

(1) The governmental entity itself selected and engaged the person in question to perform services;

(2) The governmental entity itself is liable for the payment of compensation for the performance of such services and the person receives all of such person’s

1 Ms. Baker and Rick Baker sued NGH and other individuals and entities in addition to Ms. Snedegar, but those other defendants have either settled with the Bakers and/or been dismissed from the case. Ms. Snedegar is currently the only defendant left in the case.

-2- compensation directly from the payroll department of the governmental entity in question;

(3) The person receives the same benefits as all other employees of the governmental entity in question including retirement benefits and the eligibility to participate in insurance programs;

(4) The person acts under the control and direction of the governmental entity not only as to the result to be accomplished but as to the means and details by which the result is accomplished; and

(5) The person is entitled to the same job protection system and rules, such as civil service or grievance procedures, as are other persons employed by the governmental entity in question.

The parties agree Ms. Snedegar’s employment as an MLE was a part-time position. The requirements set forth in (a)(3) and (a)(5) are modified for part-time workers by section (e):

(e) Persons who are employed in part-time, seasonal, or probationary positions by a governmental entity shall not be disqualified by subdivision (a)(3) or (a)(5) from the immunity granted by this chapter if they receive the same benefits or are subject to the same job protection system and rules as other persons employed by that government in comparable part-time, seasonal, or probationary positions.

II. T RIAL C OURT’S R ULING

The trial court held an evidentiary hearing in December 2011 on Ms. Snedegar’s motion for summary judgment. Ms. Snedegar testified at the hearing and portions of depositions were read into evidence. The trial court then held additional hearings in April and July 2012. Based on the evidence presented and arguments of counsel, the trial court denied Ms. Snedegar’s motion. The court issued a ruling in July holding that Ms. Snedegar did not satisfy the second part of section (a)(2), which requires that she receive all of her compensation directly from the payroll department of NGH. At the end of the hearing in April 2012 the court explained its ruling in open court as follows:

All the payments are [from] Metro Government under the Department of Finance. But as I understand from Mr. Latham’s testimony, they have an account where they pay traditional employees, where they take out social

-3- security, tax, Medicare, that kind of thing. Then they have other, and I think there’s maybe several different accounts, but I refer to them as vendors, people who do business with Metropolitan Government. And they’re not employees, they’re people who do business with Metropolitan Government. I think that’s who Nurse Snedegar - - I think that’s where she falls.

But back to 29-20-107(a)(2), the second part, and the person receives all such person’s compensation directly from the payroll department of the governmental entity in question. The legislature put that there for a reason. And the way the Metropolitan Government works, this governmental entity we’re dealing with in this case, they have different accounts by which they pay different types of people who do work for the Metropolitan Government, employees and vendors . . . .

I think there is a distinction. If there was not a distinction, then everybody who got paid by the Metropolitan Government Department of Finance, they’d all be the same, and they’re not the same. And there is a differentiation in how these different people are paid.

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Kathleen Baker and Rick Baker v. Deborah A. Snedegar, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kathleen-baker-and-rick-baker-v-deborah-a-snedegar-tennctapp-2013.