McWhorter v. Barre

132 S.W.3d 354, 2003 Tenn. App. LEXIS 672
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedAugust 29, 2003
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 132 S.W.3d 354 (McWhorter v. Barre) 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
McWhorter v. Barre, 132 S.W.3d 354, 2003 Tenn. App. LEXIS 672 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

D. MICHAEL SWINEY, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court,

in which HOUSTON M. GODDARD, P.J., and HERSCHEL P. FRANKS, J., joined.

Professional pilot Shawn E. McWhorter (“Plaintiff’) sued Randall Barre (“Defendant”) for defamation based upon a letter Defendant wrote to the Federal Aviation Administration (“FAA”) containing allegations that Plaintiff was medically unfit to be a pilot. The jury returned a verdict for Plaintiff and awarded $25,000 in compensatory damages and $42,500 in punitive damages. The Trial Court entered its judgment, as later amended, in favor of Plaintiff against Defendant for $105,820.01, consisting of compensatory damages of $25,000, punitive damages of $42,500, and attorney fees and expenses in the amount of $38,320.01. The Trial Court’s award of attorney fees and expenses was based upon Defendant’s refusal to admit liability in response to requests for admission. Defendant appeals. We affirm, in part, and reverse, in part.

Background

Plaintiff sued Defendant in May of 2000, for defamation and outrageous conduct. Defendant filed his answer and a counterclaim. Defendant later filed a motion for summary judgment. The Trial Court held in a memorandum opinion that Defendant’s letter was a conditionally privileged communication. The Trial Court further found there was no evidence that Defendant acted with malice so as to lose the conditional privilege. The Trial Court then entered its order granting Defendant summary judgment. Plaintiff filed a motion to alter or amend the Trial Court’s summary judgment, and also filed a brief arguing that the determination of whether Defendant acted with actual malice was a question of fact that was in dispute and, therefore, summary judgment was improper. The Trial Court granted Plaintiffs motion to alter or amend and held that an issue of fact existed as to both the truth of the publication and as to whether it was published with malice. The Trial Court set aside the summary judgment granted *357 to Defendant. The case then proceeded to trial.

Plaintiff testified that he is the chief pilot employed by Covenant Transport (“Covenant”). Plaintiff pilots a Beechjet 400A, a light corporate jet, for Covenant. The Beechjet 400A carries seven passengers and is used to transport Covenant executives and their families. Plaintiff, who was 41 years old at the time of trial, has flown commercially since he was 19 years old. During the course of his career, Plaintiff has flown for several corporations and at the age of 24 was the youngest captain at Atlantic Southeast Airlines. Plaintiff also has been an instructor at several different flight schools. Plaintiff testified that during the course of his career he had flown several people of notoriety including “ex-governor Whitfield Dunn, present governor Don Sunquist, celebrity Don Douglas who was in the Beverly Hillbillies, Derrick Coe, race car driver, first former lady [sic] Barbara Bush and some other movie stars....” At the time of trial, Plaintiff had been a pilot for Covenant for four years.

Plaintiff testified that his flying record is important to him as a professional pilot. Prior to April of 2000, Plaintiff had no regulatory complaints, medical problems, or any blemishes on his flying record. Plaintiff testified that as a pilot, he is regulated by the FAA and by the National Transportation Safety Board (“NTSB”). He is required to have yearly physicals by a designated FAA medical examiner and, because he is over the age of 40, also is required to have EKG’s. If Plaintiff failed to meet any of the medical requirements, he would be grounded. Plaintiff testified that federal law imposes a duty upon flight crew members to report immediately the inability of a crew member either to perform his job function or to carry out his duties due to illness or medical problems. Plaintiff testified that the law requires this notification be made to the nearest NTSB field office in the United States immediately upon landing. The Trial Court took judicial notice of the federal regulations to which Plaintiff referred, 49 CFR § 830.5.

From August or September of 1998 until February of 2000, Defendant worked for Covenant as Plaintiffs co-pilot. Plaintiff and Defendant had flown together previously for another company. On all of the flights Plaintiff and Defendant flew together, Plaintiff was always the phot in command and Defendant was always the copilot. Plaintiff fired Defendant in February of 2000.

A couple of months after he was fired, Defendant wrote a letter (“Letter”) to the Office of Aviation Medicine in Oklahoma City stating he had flown with Plaintiff and was reporting the following regarding Plaintiff:

He has demonstrated a marked personality change in the last six months.
He has frequent headaches requiring ibuprofen in large amounts (I have seen him take four 800 mg tablets at a time and he has reported taking as many as ten).
He falls asleep in the cockpit for periods of two to ten minutes. I have witnessed at least ten such episodes.

In the Letter, Defendant also states “If [Plaintiff] were to present in my office prior to my retirement [as a physician] with the above noted problems, I should be obliged to perform at least a neurological examination, EEG and some type scan to assure he has no condition which would cause him to be permanently incapacitated in flight.” Defendant composed the Letter at approximately 2 a.m. on his home computer and signed it as the “Former Chief of Neurology, St Lukes Hospital.”

*358 In April of 2000, Plaintiff received a letter from the FAA stating they had “recently received information which indicates a reasonable basis to believe that your [sic] may not meet the medical standards prescribed in Part 67 of the Federal Aviation Regulations (FARs).” The FAA letter grounded Plaintiff from flying and requested that Plaintiff obtain and submit “complete reports of any/all information regarding headaches and/or sleep problems” from his attending physicians and treating hospitals. The FAA letter also requested that Plaintiff submit a current neurological evaluation. When Plaintiff received the letter from the FAA, he was unaware of Defendant’s Letter. After receiving the FAA letter, Plaintiff immediately notified his supervisors at Covenant that he had been grounded and cancelled a flight he was scheduled to fly the next day. Plaintiff testified he felt “[v]ery embarrassed” having to tell his employers at Covenant the FAA had grounded him.

On the next business day, Plaintiff drove to Nashville and met with several FAA inspectors. Plaintiff told the inspectors that he had recently fired a co-pilot and since that time had been “the subject of several suspicious attacks directed against my personal property and my reputation.” Plaintiff was not aware of Defendant’s Letter, but had his suspicions as to the source of the complaints to the FAA. As a result of this meeting, Plaintiff temporarily was cleared to fly, but was required to obtain letters from each of the FAA designated medical examiners who had given Plaintiff physicals during the course of his career and from other pilots who had flown with Plaintiff in the past.

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

Related

Richard Brock Hill v. State of Tennessee
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2025
Ronald Austin v. Angela Kay Plese
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2025
Bass v. Bass
W.D. Tennessee, 2024
Whiting v. City Of Athens
E.D. Tennessee, 2023
Mucerino v. Martin
M.D. Tennessee, 2021
Hudik v. Fox News Network, LLC
M.D. Tennessee, 2021
Nedra Finney v. Miles Jefferson
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2020
KELLY LOVE MCGUFFEY v. BELMONT WEEKDAY SCHOOL
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2020
Finley v. Kelly
384 F. Supp. 3d 898 (M.D. Tennessee, 2019)
In re Estate of Glenda Joyce Panter Hillis
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2016
Greg Grant v. The Commercial Appeal
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2015
Roger Byrge v. Stacey Campfield
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2014
Kenneth Seaton v. TripAdvisor LLC
728 F.3d 592 (Sixth Circuit, 2013)
Thomas Albert Dolan v. Bruce Poston
Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2005
Hibdon v. Grabowski
195 S.W.3d 48 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 2005)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
132 S.W.3d 354, 2003 Tenn. App. LEXIS 672, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcwhorter-v-barre-tennctapp-2003.