McLain v. Training and Development Corp.

572 A.2d 494, 1990 Me. LEXIS 105
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedApril 2, 1990
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 572 A.2d 494 (McLain v. Training and Development Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McLain v. Training and Development Corp., 572 A.2d 494, 1990 Me. LEXIS 105 (Me. 1990).

Opinion

McKUSICK, Chief Justice.

Training and Development Corporation (TDC) appeals from a $250,000 judgment entered against it in favor of William McLain following a jury trial in Superior Court (Penobscot County, Chandler, J). Finding TDC’s contentions on appeal without merit, we affirm.

William McLain was 21 years old when, in January 1983, he entered the Job Corps Program in Bangor, run jointly by TDC and the Penobscot Consortium, with the express goal of improving his reading and writing skills to enable him to pass the entrance exam for the U.S. Marine Corps. As part of the Job Corps Program McLain was assigned a Job Training Counselor, Thomas Hebert, who told McLain that he could get into the Marines through physical “tests” despite having twice previously failed the written entrance exam. Hebert told McLain not to tell anyone of this secret way into the Marines or both of them would be “in trouble.”

From February through April 1983, Hebert engaged McLain in several “progress reports” and two “tests” that required McLain to perform a number of bizarre physical activities and inflicted upon him substantial pain and humiliation. Following the second test, performed according to *496 Hebert in front of secret “recruiters” whom McLain neither saw nor spoke to, Hebert told McLain that his admission to the Marines was assured. " When McLain later went to an armed forces recruiting center, he again failed the written entrance exam and again was denied admission to the Marines. McLain confronted Hebert and several other staff members, and his mother contacted TDC and the District Attorney. TDC immediately fired Hebert, but McLain left the program.

About a year later McLain filed suit against TDC and the Penobscot Consortium, alleging fifteen counts of personal injury arising from the tortious conduct of TDC’s employee Hebert. When trial began, however, the court on McLain’s motion dismissed the Penobscot Consortium and dismissed all but four counts of the complaint. McLain proceeded to trial on two principal theories of TDC’s liability for the consequences of Hebert’s conduct 1 : TDC’s direct negligence in its hiring and supervision of Hebert, and its vicarious liability for the negligence and assault and battery of Hebert acting as TDC’s employee. Under any theory McLain claimed from TDC full compensatory damages for all of the injuries he had suffered at Hebert’s hands.

Before the jury retired, the court instructed it to consider McLain’s comparative fault only with regard to his negligence claims against TDC, and not with regard to TDC’s liability for any intentional tort. 2 Using a special verdict form, the jury found TDC liable for both negligence and the intentional tort of assault and battery. The jury set McLain’s damages at $250,000, but then reduced that amount to $105,000 by deducting what it thought “a just and equitable sum having regard to [McLain’s] fault” that contributed to his own injuries. Because the jury found TDC liable for assault and battery, however, the court entered judgment in the full amount of $250,000, on the theory that the Maine comparative fault statute does not apply to intentional torts.

I.

On appeal TDC contends that the Superior Court erred in refusing to instruct the jury to consider McLain’s comparative fault with regard to the assault and battery count and in refusing to enter a reduced judgment of $105,000 following the jury’s assessment of McLain’s comparative fault. We disagree. In Wing v. Morse, 300 A.2d 491 (Me.1973), and again in Austin v. Raybestos-Manhattan, Inc., 471 A.2d 280 (Me.1984), we held that 14 M.R.S.A. § 156, the comparative fault statute, contains two separate definitions of “fault,” one for the defendant and one for the plaintiff. 3 The definition of a defendant’s fault, phrased in terms of the nature of the claim against him, is broadly inclusive of any “act or omission which gives rise to a liability in tort.” Id. Under the broad sweep of that language, section 156 would apply to the intentional tort of assault and battery committed by the defendant. Our analysis cannot stop there, however. For the comparative fault statute to apply, the plaintiff’s negligence to be compared with the defen *497 dant’s intentional tort must constitute “fault” as defined under section 156 to be an “act or omission [of the plaintiff] which ... would, apart from th[is] section, give rise to the defense of contributory negligence.” Austin, 471 A.2d at 285-86 (citing Wing, 300 A.2d at 499). In the case at bar the question thus becomes whether, at common law, contributory negligence was a defense to an intentional tort. See Austin, 471 A.2d at 286; Wing, 300 A.2d at 499.

From a review of the law prevailing prior to the enactment of section 156, it appears without exception that “[contributory negligence never has been considered a good defense to an intentional tort such as a battery, and it would likewise appear contrary to sound policy to reduce a plaintiffs damages under comparative fault for his ‘negligence’ in encountering the defendant’s deliberately inflicted harm.” Pros-ser & Keaton on Torts § 67, at 477-78 (5th ed. 1984). See also Restatement (Second) of Torts § 481, at 537 (1965) (“The plaintiff’s contributory negligence does not bar recovery against a defendant for a harm caused by conduct of the defendant which is wrongful because it is intended to cause harm to some legally protected interest of the plaintiff”). Our own case law is in accord with these principles. Indeed, we have expressly recognized that even short of an intentionally tortious action, “contributory negligence, that is, lack of due care, does not bar recovery for wanton misconduct.” Blanchard v. Bass, 153 Me. 354, 362, 139 A.2d 359, 363 (1958). See also Moses v. Scott Paper Co., 280 F.Supp. 37 (D.Me.1968) (under Maine’s comparative fault statute wanton misconduct by the defendant allows the plaintiff to recover regardless of the plaintiff’s contributory negligence). We have never recognized contributory or comparative negligence as a defense to the intentional tort of assault and battery and we decline to do so now.

As stated above, McLain sued TDC on the theories of both negligence and intentional tort. The jury found TDC liable under both theories and was not asked to apportion McLain’s damages between them. Although appellant-defendant TDC did preserve its objection to the court’s refusal to instruct the jury that the comparative fault statute is to be applied to intentional torts as well as to negligence, TDC at no time, either before that court or before us, has asserted that McLain’s damages of $250,000 should be apportioned if it fails in its comparative fault argument. For example, TDC has never asserted that only part of McLain’s damages resulted from Hebert’s intentional tort, with the other part resulting from negligence.

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572 A.2d 494, 1990 Me. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mclain-v-training-and-development-corp-me-1990.