Michael Morgan v. Superior Catering Services

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedApril 7, 2015
DocketE2014-00005-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Michael Morgan v. Superior Catering Services (Michael Morgan v. Superior Catering Services) 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
Michael Morgan v. Superior Catering Services, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE October 29, 2014 Session

MICHAEL MORGAN v. SUPERIOR CATERING SERVICES, ET AL.

Appeal from the Chancery Court for Hamilton County No. 08-0730 W. Frank Brown, Chancellor

No. E2014-00005-COA-R3-CV – Filed April 7, 2015

The underlying claim in this appeal concerns age discrimination. The action was filed initially against a single defendant. Three additional defendants were later added, but the plaintiff served process for them on the attorney for the initial defendant, instead of the individual defendants, a fact about which the added defendants learned only a few days prior to the trial. The trial ensued after the court refused to grant a continuance. A jury found all the defendants liable. The trial court awarded the plaintiff $70,000. The defendants collectively filed a motion for a new trial and raised the issues of insufficient service and the inadmissibility of direct evidence. In its first order, the trial court granted the defendants‟ motion for a new trial. The plaintiff thereafter filed a motion to alter or amend, after which the court reversed its prior ruling granting the new trial and reinstated the jury verdict. The defendants appeal. We reverse.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Chancery Court Reversed; Case Remanded

JOHN W. MCCLARTY, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which CHARLES D. SUSANO, JR., C.J., and D. MICHAEL SWINEY, J., joined.

Charles G. Taylor, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellants, Superior Catering Services, Connelly Dean Cofer, Lynda Cofer, and Dean‟s Coffee Service.

Harry F. Burnette and Donna J. Mikel, Chattanooga, Tennessee, for the appellee, Michael Morgan.

OPINION

I. BACKGROUND

This age discrimination action initially was filed in September 2008 by the plaintiff, Michael Morgan (“Morgan”) against Superior Catering Services (“Superior”).1 At the time of the alleged discrimination in 2007, Superior existed as a proprietorship owned by Connelly Dean Cofer (“Dean”) and his father-in-law. The business is not incorporated and operates out of an office in Chattanooga. At the same location, another proprietorship, owned by Dean and called “Dean‟s Coffee Service” (“DCS”),2 is operated.3 During the relevant period, Dean‟s wife, Lynda Cofer (“Lynda”), was an employee or agent of Superior and did not own any interest in the businesses.

In his complaint, Morgan, then age 60, alleged that he applied for a salaried position with Superior as a “route driver” on an established route. He contends he was encouraged instead to establish a new route as an independent contractor. The salaried route driver position was given to a younger employee. According to Morgan, when he interviewed at Superior, Dean informed him that the company would not hire route drivers over 45 years old, despite the applicant‟s years of relevant experience. Morgan asserts this statement constitutes direct evidence of age discrimination. No allegations were raised regarding Lynda.

After being served with the complaint, Dean hired attorney James D. Purple to defend Superior. Edward A. Love was their personal attorney, but Dean and Lynda believed Mr. Purple would be a better “business attorney” to represent Superior in the age discrimination case. On October 24, 2008, on behalf of Superior, Mr. Purple filed an answer to Morgan‟s complaint.

In November 2009, 14 months after Morgan‟s complaint was filed, it is alleged that Dean received a shotgun blast to the face during an attempted robbery.4 Lynda later related that as a result of the incident, Dean suffered a stroke, loss of memory, loss of most of his eyesight, and loss of use of his right hand. He was in the hospital for five months and had to learn to walk and talk again. After the shooting, Dean was unable to return to work, could no longer drive an automobile, and was considered disabled. As a result of her husband‟s injuries and disability, along with her father‟s death, Lynda took over management of the businesses.

Approximately two years later, in September 2011, discovery depositions were scheduled in Morgan‟s lawsuit. It appears that because of his injuries, Dean had little memory of the events surrounding Morgan‟s claim. It therefore was stipulated that Dean

1 According to testimony, Superior is a wholesale business that prepares food and sells it to food truck drivers. 2 DCS is a retail business consisting of five food trucks. DCS bought food from Superior. 3 As proprietorships, the debts must be borne by the proprietor. See 14A Tenn. Prac. Legal Forms Business Organizations § 12:1. 4 Morgan notes that no medical evidence has been filed or offered to show the extent of Dean‟s injuries. -2- was unable to testify. Since Lynda was not a defendant in the litigation, she was deposed as a witness.

At the deposition, Lynda related that she was the individual who decided not to hire Morgan. She testified as follows:

Q . . . [W]ere you the one that made the choice not to hire him?

A Yes.

Q And why did you not hire him?

***

A I did not hire him because I didn‟t think he was ambitious and I didn‟t think he would do a good job.

Q Okay. And upon what basis did you conclude that he was not ambitious?

A Because when he delivered to me from Hostess Cakes, he made several comments about trying to get out of work and filling in and not running a route, that it was easier than getting out there and running a route. I remembered that. I still remember it today.

Q Okay. What do you recall that he said?

A About trying to get out of work?

Q About whatever it is that you say you recall.

A I remember him telling me that he was just there filling in for somebody and he would rather do that than get out and run a route. It was easier. He can do as he pleases. . . .

Lynda signed the discovery responses “Lynda Cofer, Manager, Superior Catering Services.”

Following that deposition, Dean and Lynda assert they heard nothing from Mr. Purple for almost two years. Due to the passage of time, they erroneously assumed that the lawsuit against Superior had been dismissed. Unbeknownst to the Cofers, the -3- litigation was continuing without their knowledge, with the matter scheduled for trial in January 2013.

Morgan eventually filed two motions in limine. Relying on Lynda‟s deposition testimony, he argued that because of Dean‟s “severe health impairments,” Mr. Cofer should not be allowed to testify at trial. It further was asserted by Morgan that the jury should not be allowed to hear the reason for Dean‟s impairment or the details of the “robbery . . . and the injuries resulting therefrom.” No objection to these motions in limine was filed by Mr. Purple, and he never informed his client, Superior, or the Cofers about them. The motions were granted by the trial court.

In January 2013, Morgan moved to amend his complaint, asking the court to allow him to add Dean and Lynda personally as additional defendants to the lawsuit, together with Dean‟s Coffee Service. Despite the fact that the one-year statute of limitations for age discrimination had expired, Mr. Purple did not object to the amended complaint, and the court allowed Dean, Lynda, and DCS (“the New Defendants”) to be added. The court directed that the “Defendant [sic] shall be served with the Amended Complaint after this Order is entered.”

Morgan thereafter attempted to serve the New Defendants by delivering summonses on May 6, 2013, to Superior‟s attorney, “Jim Purple Esq.” at his office. Nowhere on the summonses served was there any notation that Mr. Purple was the agent or attorney for the New Defendants, or that he had authority to accept service of process for them.

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Michael Morgan v. Superior Catering Services, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michael-morgan-v-superior-catering-services-tennctapp-2015.