MacE v. CHARLESTON AREA MED CTR. FOUND.

422 S.E.2d 624
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1992
Docket20123
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 422 S.E.2d 624 (MacE v. CHARLESTON AREA MED CTR. FOUND.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MacE v. CHARLESTON AREA MED CTR. FOUND., 422 S.E.2d 624 (W. Va. 1992).

Opinion

422 S.E.2d 624 (1992)
188 W.Va. 57

Robert L. MACE, Plaintiff Below, Appellee,
v.
CHARLESTON AREA MEDICAL CENTER FOUNDATION, INC., a West Virginia Corporation, Defendant Below, Appellant.

No. 20123.

Supreme Court of Appeals of West Virginia.

Submitted January 28, 1992.
Decided July 15, 1992.

*627 Fred F. Holroyd, Brian D. Yost, Holroyd & Yost, Charleston, for appellant.

John A. Kessler, James A. McKowen, Hunt & Wilson, Charleston, for appellee. *625

*626 BROTHERTON, Justice:

The appellee, Robert L. Mace, filed a lawsuit against the appellant, Charleston Area Medical Center Foundation, Inc. (CAMC), alleging breach of an employment contract and retaliatory discharge. The case was tried before a six person jury which found for Mace on both counts and awarded him $55,700.29 in damages for lost wages, $50,000.00 for emotional distress, and $125,000.00 in punitive damages. CAMC now appeals from the judgment order which was entered by the Circuit Court of Kanawha County on January 19, 1990.

Mace began working as a pharmacy technician at CAMC in January, 1981. He did not receive any specialized training for this job; instead, "they trained you as you went." Mace's duties as a pharmacy technician

included filling drug carts each day according to patient profiles, filling employee prescriptions, preparing intravenous medications, and copying doctors' written orders for individual patients.[1]

In July, 1985, Mace informed his employers that he had joined the National Guard and would report for active duty on August 1, 1985. At that time, CAMC's personnel director, Kris Lyon, told Mace that his job would be posted if he was gone for more than thirty days. According to Mace, his wife spoke with management-level employees at CAMC twice during his thirteenweek basic training period and told them that Mace's position was protected by federal law while he was serving in the Guard. Nevertheless, while he was away, Mace's position as a pharmacy technician was eliminated.

Following thirteen weeks of active duty, Mace applied for reemployment at CAMC on November 8, 1985. He was informed that he could be placed in another position of like status, seniority, and pay until he could be returned to the position of pharmacy technician. Mace refused to accept a position as nursing attendant at CAMC's General Division and insisted upon having his former job back. The United States Department of Labor interceded on Mace's behalf, and he was reinstated to his original position on December 9, 1985, after another employee was transferred out of a pharmacy technician post. However, Mace's efforts to collect back pay continued for nearly a year and a half.[2]

In July, 1986, Mace injured his back while off on his annual active duty training with the National Guard. He did not return to work until September 8,1986. During his time off, he began taking several medications prescribed by his family physician, Jerry Edens, M.D., for back pain. At *628 the hospital on September 12, 1986, Mace refused to obey an order that he take a drug cart up to the next floor. He later went to Employee Health and complained of back pain, and he was sent home early that day.

Mace returned to work on September 16, 1986, and received a written warning regarding his insubordination. At trial, Mace admitted that he refused to move the drug cart and that he occasionally used profanity. Several coworkers also testified that Mace had seemed different since his return to work. For example, Terri Steele Spencer, who was Mace's supervisor at the time, stated that he "seemed to be ... disturbed about something" and "he would often be muttering obscenities to himself."

On September 23, 1986, Mace took his medication on an empty stomach after he arrived to work at the hospital. He became sleepy, dizzy, and unable to concentrate, so he went to Employee Health, where he was examined by Dr. Willard Pushkin. Mace hoped that he would be sent home. According to Pushkin, Mace's speech was slurred, he appeared off-balance, and his eyelids were droopy. Pushkin stated, "I couldn't tell if it was an overdose. I felt that it was an excess."

Instead of sending Mace home, Dr. Pushkin instructed him to report to Kris Lyon in the Personnel Department for a drug screen. When he was asked at trial what he would have done with the drug screen results, Pushkin stated that "... if the drug screen was significant in terms of concentration, or if it suggested the possibility that he was on medication over a chronic period, they [CAMC] would have arranged for a rehabilitative participation for him."

When Mace met with the personnel director, Kris Lyon, he gave her a list which contained the names of nine drugs he was then taking. Mace refused to take a urine screen and told Lyon that he would do so only if it was required of everyone in the pharmacy department. Mace was told that he would be fired if he refused to be tested, but that he could go home and think about whether he would submit to the drug screen the next day. Lyon told him she would phone him later in the day. She called at approximately 4:00 P.M. and told Mace that she wanted to have a meeting with him at 8:00 A.M. the next morning in her office.

Mace met with Lyon the next morning, September 24, 1986, and he gave her the names of five additional drugs he was taking. Mace states that he asked Lyon to check with Dr. Edens and verify the drugs and their known side effects, but she refused. Mace was again advised that he was required to submit to a drug screen and that his failure to do so would result in the termination of his employment. Once again, Mace refused. At trial, Mace explained that although he was tempted to go ahead and submit to the screen because he had a family to support, he felt he was being singled out and punished by CAMC for asserting his rights under the Veterans' Reemployment Rights Act and pursuing his ongoing claim for back pay.

Instead of being fired, Mace asked Lyon if he could submit a letter of resignation, and she agreed. Mace testified that his only options were to be fired or resign, and because "it would have been real hard to find a job as a pharmacy technician" after being fired for refusing to take a drug test, Mace preferred to resign. Within a matter of days, however, Mace contested his "resignation."

Pursuant to CAMC policy, Mace appealed his dismissal to a hospital grievance committee. Testimony was taken from all parties involved in the decision to terminate Mace, and the grievance committee made the following recommendations: (1) that Mace be reinstated after a two-week suspension; (2) that he be referred to Employee Assistance; (3) that a thorough investigation of Mace's allegations against the pharmacy be made; and (4) that CAMC make a clear written statement of their drug testing policy. CAMC management chose not to follow the grievance committee's recommendation that Mace be reinstated.[3]

*629

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Bluebook (online)
422 S.E.2d 624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mace-v-charleston-area-med-ctr-found-wva-1992.