Radford v. CCA-DELTA CORRECTIONAL FACILITY

5 So. 3d 1158, 2009 Miss. App. LEXIS 168, 2009 WL 820215
CourtCourt of Appeals of Mississippi
DecidedMarch 31, 2009
Docket2007-WC-02270-COA
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 5 So. 3d 1158 (Radford v. CCA-DELTA CORRECTIONAL FACILITY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Radford v. CCA-DELTA CORRECTIONAL FACILITY, 5 So. 3d 1158, 2009 Miss. App. LEXIS 168, 2009 WL 820215 (Mich. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

CARLTON, J.,

for the Court.

¶ 1. Connie Radford worked for CCA-Delta Correctional Facility (DCF) from September 1996 until allegedly being unable to work after May 17, 2005, due to mental trauma suffered on the job. Rad-ford claims that her mental trauma resulted from the ill treatment she received at work. On September 11, 2000, Radford filed a petition to controvert with the Mississippi Workers’ Compensation Commission (Commission) alleging that she suffered her mental injury from work on or about February 10, 2000.

¶ 2. A hearing was held on the matter in November 2004 and in January 2005. On April 27, 2005, the administrative law judge awarded Radford temporary total disability benefits from June 9, 2000, to the *1160 present. DCF appealed to the Commission on May 17, 2005. On January 11, 2006, the Commission reversed the order of the administrative law judge finding that her decision was not supported by substantial evidence. Radford appealed the Commission’s decision to the Circuit Court of Leflore County on January 19, 2006. The circuit court affirmed the Commission’s decision on September 12, 2007. Finding no error, we affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶ 3. Radford was initially hired at DCF as a records clerk and was later promoted to the job of records supervisor, which is the job she held relevant to this claim. Radford received favorable performance evaluations from 1997 through 2000. Rad-ford’s husband, Donald Radford, also worked for DCF as the chief of security. At the start of Radford’s employment, she was supervised by Deputy Warden Don Grant.

¶ 4. Grant was eventually promoted to the position of chief warden. After Grant was promoted, Donald was appointed to the position of acting deputy warden, filling the position vacated by Grant. Upon appointing Donald to the new position, Grant determined it would be best for Radford to continue to report to him, instead of reporting to her husband. Donald later applied for permanent appointment as deputy warden, but he was denied the position. The position was eventually given to Deputy Warden Jackie Banks in September 1998 based on her previous employment as a warden at a Corrections Corporation of America (CCA) prison facility in Texas.

¶ 5. From them employment relationship, the Radfords, Grant, and Grant’s wife formed a friendly and close relationship. Both Radford and Grant testified that Radford often helped take care of Grant’s wife as she was sick with lupus. From the record, it appears this allegedly caused some friction among other employees at DCF as it was noted that Radford was being paid by DCF when she went to help Grant’s wife or to run other errands for the Grants. Radford testified that although Grant initially did not require her to use her leave time when she left to help Grant and his wife, she later told him that if this was causing problems at DCF that she would use her leave time. She testified that Grant later required her to use her leave time.

¶ 6. Radford alleges that when Banks’s temporary position as assistant became permanent, 1 that Banks began making disparaging remarks about her to other employees and harassed and ridiculed her in front of the other employees. Radford also claims that Banks was jealous of the friendship she and her husband had with Grant. Radford claims that although she went to Grant several times about the way Banks treated her, he did nothing to intervene and advised her to stay out of Banks’s way. Radford claims that Banks’s conduct caused her to suffer post-traumat-ie stress disorder and severe depression.

¶ 7. Radford continued to report to Grant after Banks’s arrival. When Grant was out of the office, Banks would fill in during his absence. On May 10, 2000, what has been termed as the “fax incident” occurred in which some papers had not been properly processed in the records department. On that date, Banks was in *1161 charge of the facility as Grant was out of the office. Radford and her assistant, Cassandra Swims, went to Banks about the mistake.

¶ 8. Radford contended that the mistake was Swims’s fault. In response, Swims told Banks that neither she nor Radford were to go into the room where the faxes came in; instead, they were to wait to have them delivered to them. Swims claimed that the particular fax in question had not been delivered to her for processing. According to several witnesses, a shouting match occurred between Radford and Banks. Banks told Radford and Swims that she was acting chief warden while Grant was out of the office and that neither Swims nor Radford were to check the fax machine. Radford allegedly argued that this was not how Grant would have handled the situation and that she was not required to take orders from Banks. Later that day when Grant called the prison to see how things were going, the incident was reported to him. Grant advised that he would handle the situation upon his return to the prison.

¶ 9. When Grant returned to work on May 11, 2000, he, Radford, and Banks met to discuss the “fax incident.” According to both Grant and Banks, Radford did most of the talking, and the meeting eventually broke down with no resolution. After the meeting, Radford was visibly upset and went back to her office where she stayed a short time. Radford then went to Grant and Warden Phillip McLaurin and told them she was going home. Radford testified that she was upset because she felt betrayed by Grant, who in her view had taken sides with Banks over her.

¶ 10. Radford went to her general physician, Dr. David Ball, on May 15, 2000, for medical treatment. In fact, according to the evidence presented in this case, before Radford was employed by DCF in 1996, she had endured an abusive childhood, a bankruptcy, and a host of other medical and psychiatric problems. However, Rad-ford testified that she sought medical treatment on May 15, 2000, for the following reasons: “I was experiencing low self-esteem to myself, that I wasn’t performing my job duty, that I [thought] I was. Grant always praised me, that everything I did [sic] and then it changed, just all of a sudden it changed.” Dr. Ball noted on his patient sheet that Radford was suffering “job stress,” and he noted that he advised Radford to seek legal assistance for her issues at work.

¶ 11. Additionally, according to the medical records provided by Dr. Ball, Rad-ford also visited Dr. Ball on February 10, 2000, and March 3, 2000, for “situational stress” and was prescribed medication on both visits. However, Dr. Ball did not note on either of the patient sheets from the February 2000 or the March 2000 office visit that Radford mentioned any type of job-related stress.

¶ 12. Upon Radford’s return to work, on May 15, 2000, Grant determined that Radford should begin reporting directly to McLaurin. On May 16, 2000, Grant issued a memo to all staff noting the change in command of the records department. Grant based this decision on his belief that his friendship with the Radfords compromised his ability to be an effective leader because of the perceived favoritism that he showed the Radfords.

¶ 13. Radford testified that she felt “devastated” by this change in command. She further testified that she felt “crushed” and felt like Grant had “thrown her away” by making her work under McLaurin.

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Bluebook (online)
5 So. 3d 1158, 2009 Miss. App. LEXIS 168, 2009 WL 820215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/radford-v-cca-delta-correctional-facility-missctapp-2009.