KNOX COUNTY EX REL. ENVIRONMENTAL TERMITE & PEST CONTROL, INC. v. Arrow Exterminators, Inc.

350 S.W.3d 511, 2011 Tenn. LEXIS 619, 2011 WL 2857197
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 20, 2011
DocketE2007-02827-SC-R11-CV
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 350 S.W.3d 511 (KNOX COUNTY EX REL. ENVIRONMENTAL TERMITE & PEST CONTROL, INC. v. Arrow Exterminators, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
KNOX COUNTY EX REL. ENVIRONMENTAL TERMITE & PEST CONTROL, INC. v. Arrow Exterminators, Inc., 350 S.W.3d 511, 2011 Tenn. LEXIS 619, 2011 WL 2857197 (Tenn. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

WILLIAM C. KOCH, JR., J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court,

in which CORNELIA A. CLARK, C.J., JANICE M. HOLDER, GARY R. WADE, and SHARON G. LEE, JJ., joined.

This appeal involves a claim under Tennessee’s False Claims Act. A local vendor of termite control services became suspi *513 cious that two of its competitors had over-billed Knox County for termite control services provided to Knox County’s public schools. After confirming its suspicions by obtaining and reviewing public records and by hiring an attorney and private investigator, the vendor presented a detailed report of its findings to county officials who were unaware that the overbilling had occurred. When the County delayed taking remedial action, the vendor filed a qui tam suit authorized by Tenn.Code Ann. § 4-18-104(c) (2005) in the Chancery Court for Knox County. The County joined the vendor’s lawsuit and eventually settled with both of the companies named as defendants in the vendor’s lawsuit. When the qui tam plaintiff sought a share of the County’s settlement with one of the defendants, the County asserted that the qui tam plaintiff was not eligible to receive any of the settlement proceeds. The trial court heard the matter without a jury and held that the qui tam plaintiff was an “original source” for the purpose of Tenn. Code Ann. § 4-18-104(d)(3)(A) and, therefore, was entitled to receive 28% of the settlement proceeds or $71,546.46. The Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court’s conclusion that the qui tam plaintiff was entitled to recover 28% of the value of the settlement proceeds but remanded the case for the purpose of redetermining the value of the settlement proceeds. In re Knox Cnty., Tenn. ex rel. Envtl. Termite & Pest Control, Inc., No. E2007-02827-COA-RS-CV, 2009 WL 2144478 (Tenn.Ct. App. July 20, 2009). The County filed a Tenn. R.App. P. 11 application on the sole issue of whether the qui tam plaintiff is eligible to recover a portion of the settlement proceeds. We affirm the decisions of both the trial court and the Court of Appeals that the qui tam plaintiff is an “original source” and, therefore, is eligible to receive a portion of the proceeds from the County’s settlement with one of the vendors.

I.

Knox County contracts with private vendors for termite control services at its eighty-four public schools. Prior to November 2000, Arrow Exterminators, Inc. (“Arrow”) had the contract. When the contract was put out for bids in November 2000, both Environmental Termite & Pest Control, Inc. (“Environmental”) and Allied Pest Control (“Allied”) submitted bids for the work. The County awarded the contract to Allied and agreed to pay Allied $2.90 per linear foot treated.

After Allied won the contract, Edward Howard, Environmental’s president, noticed that the County’s decision to award the contract to Allied coincided with Allied’s decision to hire Fred Thomas away from Arrow. Mr. Howard knew that Mr. Thomas was a close friend of Floyd Swann, a county employee involved with evaluating and awarding the termite control contract. Based on his prior dealings with both individuals, Mr. Howard became suspicious that Mr. Swann was actively directing the contracts to Mr. Thomas’s employers. From his vantage point as an insider in the termite control industry in the Knoxville area, Mr. Howard also became concerned about the perfunctory manner in which the County had been reviewing the bills submitted by both Arrow and Allied for termite control services.

In December 2000, Mr. Howard’s suspicions about the County’s handling of the termite control contracts prompted him to look into the matter further. He retained Daniel F. McGehee, a Knoxville attorney who had performed legal work for Environmental in the past, to advise him how to proceed.

On December 13, 2000, acting on Mr. McGehee’s direction, Cheri Coldwate, En *514 vironmental’s office manager, requested the Knox County Purchasing Division to provide her with information relating to the payments that the Knox County schools had made over the past four years for conventional termite treatments, bait elimination treatments, spot treatments, and contract renewals. At the same time, Environmental retained a private investigator to measure the footprints of all the buildings at the County’s schools.

On January 25, 2001, Ms. Coldwate mailed Mr. McGehee her analysis of the data contained in the records she received from Knox County. She noted two irregularities in particular. First, she noted that the bills submitted by Arrow and Allied had not received the same level of scrutiny that Environmental’s bills had received on its pest control contracts. Second, she noted that the actual number of linear feet of the County’s school buildings requiring treatment and the contract price per linear foot was greatly exceeded by the amount of the bills submitted both by Arrow and by Allied. Ms. Coldwate specifically discussed the bills for services at eight different schools and stated that her analysis indicated that the vendors had overbilled the County for these services between $3,000 and $16,000 per school.

Based on the purchasing and payment records obtained from the County and on Ms. Coldwate’s analysis, Mr. McGehee became convinced that Mr. Swann was paying the invoices for termite services without reviewing them and, as a result, that the County was being significantly over-billed. In January 2001, he met with the County’s Director of Finance and Administration, two representatives of the County purchasing department, and two lawyers from the Office of the Knox County Law Direetor. Mr. McGehee informed these officials that he was acting on behalf of Environmental and that Environmental’s analysis of the billing and payment records indicated that Arrow and Allied were significantly overbilling the County. Prior to their meeting with Mr. McGehee, none of the officials were aware of the possibility that the County was being overbilled for termite control services.

Following the January 2001 meeting, Mr. McGehee provided Knox County with an extensive and thoroughly documented report, including twenty-two exhibits, describing the details of Allied’s and Arrow’s fraudulent billing practices. The report concluded that the County began to receive fraudulent bills in 1997 and that Mr. Swann arranged to pay these bills more promptly than the bills of other vendors.

On February 8, 2001, Mr. McGehee met again with the County officials with whom he had met in January 2001. The Knox County Law Director also attended this meeting. Mr. McGehee provided the officials with copies of Environmental’s detailed report. According to Mr. McGehee, the County officials “were pretty much stunned that somebody had taken the time to go back and research in such detail all of the false billings that were there.”

The participants in the February 8, 2001 meeting decided not to release Environmental’s detailed report.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Pamela Cotham v. Nicholas Jay Yeager
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2020
Madison County, Tennessee v. Delinquent Taxpayers for 2012
570 S.W.3d 223 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2018)
Starlink Logistics, Inc. v. ACC, LLC
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2018
Town of Smyrna v. Municipal Gas Authority
129 F. Supp. 3d 589 (M.D. Tennessee, 2015)
Joshua Cooper v. Logistics Insight Corp. - Dissent
395 S.W.3d 632 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 2013)
Jeanette Rea Jackson v. Bradley Smith
387 S.W.3d 486 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 2012)
In Re Estate of Ardell Hamilton Trigg
368 S.W.3d 483 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 2012)
Stephen Bernard Wlodarz v. State of Tennessee
361 S.W.3d 490 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 2012)
Sheila Brown v. Rico Roland
357 S.W.3d 614 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 2012)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
350 S.W.3d 511, 2011 Tenn. LEXIS 619, 2011 WL 2857197, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knox-county-ex-rel-environmental-termite-pest-control-inc-v-arrow-tenn-2011.