Patterson v. Professional Adjustment Service, Inc.

544 S.W.2d 617, 1976 Tenn. App. LEXIS 232
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedFebruary 6, 1976
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 544 S.W.2d 617 (Patterson v. Professional Adjustment Service, Inc.) 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
Patterson v. Professional Adjustment Service, Inc., 544 S.W.2d 617, 1976 Tenn. App. LEXIS 232 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

CARNEY, Presiding Judge.

Upon the trial below the jury returned a verdict in favor of the Plaintiff, Lloyd W. Patterson, for $25,000 compensatory damages against the Defendants-Appellants, Professional Adjustment Service, Inc. and Park View Hospital, Inc. The jury failed to return a verdict for punitive damages.

The Defendant, Professional Adjustment Service, Inc., is a collection agency, a corporate entity engaged in the collection of delinquent accounts and indebtednesses in the Nashville area. The Defendant, Park View Hospital, Inc., is a private hospital for profit operated by the Hospital Corporation of America engaged in rendering professional hospital care to citizens in the Nashville area. The present litigation arises out of the collection by garnishment of a balance of $55.00 owed by the Plaintiff Lloyd Patterson to Defendant Park View Hospital, Inc. through the Defendant collection agency, Professional Adjustment Service, Inc.

His Honor the Trial Judge submitted the issue of Defendants’ liability to the jury on two different theories: (1) that the Defendants intentionally and wrongfully harassed the Plaintiff in his right of privacy and inflicted anguish and distress upon him and caused the issuance of an unlawful execution on his wages; and (2) that the Defendants engaged in unlawful practice of [619]*619law. The Defendants offered no proof and the case went to the jury on Plaintiffs proof only.

Both Defendants have appealed and assigned errors.

When the Plaintiff’s wife returned from a surgical operation in the Defendant Hospital, there was a balance on her hospital bill over and above medical insurance of approximately $75.00. After some communication between the Defendant Hospital and Mrs. Patterson, the account was turned over to the Defendant Professional Adjustment Service, Inc. for collection. The Plaintiff had been out of work. He himself had been ill with a heart attack. The Plaintiff and wife owed several bills in addition to the indebtedness to the Defendant Hospital. Mrs. Patterson was able to pay two $10.00 payments on the account.

An employee of the collection agency called the Patterson home by telephone. Mrs. Patterson answered and refused to call her husband to the phone because his doctor had told him not to be worried with bill collectors. The employee of the collection agency tried to get her and/or Mr. Patterson to agree to pay $15.00 per month on the bill. Mr. Patterson told Mrs. Patterson to tell the employee “No” which she did. Thereupon, the employee of the collection agency told Mrs. Patterson in a somewhat angry voice, “I know how to get my money,” or words of similar import and hung up the phone. Mr. and Mrs. Patterson understood that he would shortly thereafter file suit on the account which was done. Mr. Patterson did not appear and default judgment was taken against him in November 1973 in the General Sessions Court of Davidson County, Tennessee. Plaintiff Patterson went back to work as a foreman for his employer, Overby Construction Company in Williamson County, Tennessee. An execution by garnishment was levied against his wages in December 1973 but very little money was collected.

On February 14,1974, a second execution was issued by the Clerk of the General Sessions Court of Davidson County and delivered to the sheriff of Davidson County, Tennessee. The sheriff’s office of Davidson County prepared a garnishment and forwarded the same to the General Sessions Court in Williamson County, Tennessee, for service upon the employer of the Plaintiff.

On March 1,1974, the Clerk of the General Sessions Court of Davidson County received from the General Sessions Court of Williamson County the proceeds of the second garnishment which paid the entire balance of the judgment plus costs. This money was retained by the Clerk of the General Sessions Court of Davidson County until March 14,1974, when it was paid over to the Defendant collection agency along with the other collections against other judgment debtors.

The collection agency had a practice of seeking executions on judgments once each month. About March 7, 1974, the Defendant collection agency, not having been told by the Clerk that the judgment had been paid in full, requested the Clerk of the General Sessions Court of Davidson to issue another execution on the judgment and deliver the same to the sheriff of Davidson County for preparation of garnishment.

Through oversight, the Clerk of the General Sessions Court also failed to notice that the judgment had, in fact, been paid in full on March 1,1974, and issued another execution. This execution was delivered to the sheriff of Davidson County who in turn prepared the usual garnishment thereon and delivered it to the Clerk of the General Sessions Court of Williamson County for service on the employer of the Plaintiff. The employer realized that the judgment had been paid in full and called the collection agency. The employer was told by the collection agency to tear up the garnishment. Instead, the employer paid the garnishment to the Clerk of the General Sessions Court or sheriff of Williamson County by check. His check was returned to him uncashed about seven days later. The next day, after the employer paid the garnishment, the employer told Plaintiff that the invalid garnishment had been levied upon him. The only pecuniary loss Plaintiff suffered from the third garnishment was the [620]*620delay of about one week in receiving $58.89 salary.

Plaintiff testified that he was generally let down after the issuance of the third garnishment; that he felt badly; and about two months later he sustained a very severe heart attack requiring surgery. While he would not say that the garnishment caused his heart attack, at the same time he did not think it did him any good.

Plaintiff averred in his complaint that the Defendant Professional Adjustment Service, Inc. attempted to collect the small balance through harassment, coercion, and intimidation of the Plaintiff; that the Defendant Hospital knew and approved of such actions.

By amended complaint the Plaintiff averred that the Defendant Park View Hospital either knew or should have known that Professional Adjustment Service, Inc. uses unusually harsh tactics in the collection of bills and further knew or should have known that Professional Adjustment Service, Inc. engaged illegally and improperly in the practice of law by filing suits for others in General Sessions Court and by further issuing execution by garnishment and other process of law through the General Sessions Court as a regular practice; and that the collection agency regularly filed suits for and issued executions in this manner in the name of Park View Hospital, Inc. and therefore, Park View Hospital, Inc. ratified all of the acts of said Defendant collection agency.

Assignment of error No. I of both Defendants Professional Adjustment Service and Park View Hospital is to the effect that His Honor the Trial Judge erred in overruling the Defendants’ motion for a directed verdict made at the conclusion of the Plaintiff’s evidence. These assignments of error must be sustained. The Hospital Corporation of America had a legal right to turn over its delinquent account against Plaintiff Patterson to the Defendant collection agency, Professional Adjustment Service, Inc. The collection agency had a legal right to accept the account for collection. It was not an invasion of privacy nor outrageous conduct for the employee of the collection agency to request or beg or demand that Mr. and Mrs.

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

Related

MacDermid v. Discover Financial Services
488 F.3d 721 (Sixth Circuit, 2007)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
544 S.W.2d 617, 1976 Tenn. App. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patterson-v-professional-adjustment-service-inc-tennctapp-1976.