Sally Jo Witty v. Christopher Cantrell

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedJune 29, 2011
DocketE2010-02303-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Sally Jo Witty v. Christopher Cantrell (Sally Jo Witty v. Christopher Cantrell) 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
Sally Jo Witty v. Christopher Cantrell, (Tenn. Ct. App. 2011).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT KNOXVILLE Assigned on Briefs May 31, 2011

SALLY JO WITTY v. CHRISTOPHER CANTRELL ET AL.

Appeal from the Circuit Court for Blount County No. L-17145 David R. Duggan, Judge

No. E2010-02303-COA-R3-CV-FILED-JUNE 29, 2011

Sally Jo Witty is a teacher employed by the Blount County School System. She filed this action after her request to draw pay from a pool of donated sick leave was denied. She named as defendants the trustees appointed to administer the pool (collectively “the Trustees”). She also sued the Blount County Board of Education (“the School Board”) and alleged it is vicariously liable. She demanded the full monetary value of the requested sick leave and also asked for damages to compensate her for the mental suffering resulting from the “wrongful” decision to deny her benefits. The trial court held that the Trustees were an independent body for which the School Board could not be held vicariously liable. It also held that the Trustees were immune from liability in their individual capacities and that the action filed against the Trustees in their official capacity was a petition for writ of certiorari that was not timely filed. Therefore, it dismissed the complaint. Witty appeals. We affirm the trial court’s judgment in part and vacate it in part.

Tenn. R. App. P. 3 Appeal as of Right; Judgment of the Circuit Court Affirmed in Part and Vacated in Part; Case Remanded

C HARLES D. S USANO, J R., J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which D. M ICHAEL S WINEY and J OHN W. M CC LARTY, JJ., joined.

Kevin W. Shepherd, Maryville, Tennessee, for the appellant, Sally Jo Witty.

Robert N. Goddard, Maryville, Tennessee, for the appellees, Christopher Cantrell, Linda Goins, Alvin Hord, Dr. Don McNeilly and Alisa Teffeteller, as Trustees of the Sick Leave Bank of the Blount County Board of Education, and the Blount County Board of Education.

OPINION I.

A.

A “sick leave bank” is

a local system accounting of voluntarily pooled and irrevocably donated accumulated personal sick leave that is collected for the purpose of providing sick leave to members of the program who have suffered an unplanned personal illness, injury, disability or quarantine and whose personal sick leave is exhausted.

Tenn. Code Ann. § 49-5-802 (5)(2009). Local school systems are authorized by the Tennessee Teachers’ Sick Leave Bank Act (“the Act”) to form a sick leave bank. Tenn. Code Ann. § 49-5-803. The process of forming a sick leave bank is initiated by the filing of a petition of at least 20 teachers in the local system. Id. If the school board approves the petition, the request along with “proposed operating guidelines” are submitted to the commissioner of education. Id. If the commissioner approves the submission, the sick leave bank is born “effective the next August 1.” Id. It is administered by a board of five trustees. Tenn. Code Ann. §49-5-804. Two trustees are appointed by the school board; two are appointed by the teachers; and one is appointed by the director of schools. Id.

Participation is voluntary. Tenn. Code Ann. § 49-5-806. A teacher who wishes to participate must donate a specified number of sick days from her own personal accumulation of sick leave. Id. Once donated, the leave is non-refundable. Tenn. Code § 49-5-807. A teacher may not draw from the bank until she has exhausted her own accumulated sick leave. Tenn. Code § 49-5-808(e). “Sick leave granted a member from the bank need not be repaid by the individual except as all members are uniformly assessed.” Tenn. Code § 49-5-808(k).

Witty elected to participate in the sick leave bank and donated her quota of personal accumulated sick leave. She requested pay from the sick leave bank in January 2008 to cover an absence from work due to back surgery and rehabilitation. The request was denied on February 15, 2008. Witty filed this action in chancery court on June 11, 2009. It was later transferred to the trial court.

The complaint alleges that “the Trustees restricted the definition of when . . . leave is appropriate by stating that it only applied to life-threatening injuries, and since [Witty’s’] surgery was not ‘life-threatening,’ it was not covered.” Witty alleges that the restrictive definition used by the trustees is in violation of the statutory parameters. Witty’s complaint alleges she was “wrongfully denied the benefits” of the sick leave bank and that she “was

-2- damaged by the misfeasance of the Defendants.” She alleges that the School Board is “vicariously responsible” for the actions of the Trustees because (1) the Board established a policy that the Trustees followed and (2) it is the employer and offered the sick leave bank as a benefit. Witty seeks “full payment of [leave] wrongfully withheld” as well as damages for “increased stress, loss of quality of her life, anxiety, and insomnia.”

The School Board filed a motion to dismiss on the ground that, notwithstanding any allegation in the complaint, as a matter of law the sick leave bank as administered by the Trustees is an independent body established by statute. Therefore, as a matter of law, so the argument goes, it is not an instrumentality or agent of the School Board for which the Board could be held liable.

The Trustees filed two motions, one for the allegations made against them as individuals and one for the allegations made against them in their official capacity. The Trustees asserted that there were no factual allegations of individual wrongdoing to support a claim against them as individuals. They also asserted that they were immune from personal liability pursuant to Tenn. Code Ann. § 29-20-201(b)(2)(2000 & Supp. 2010), which states:

All members of boards, commissions, agencies, authorities, and other governing bodies of any governmental entity, created by public or private act, whether compensated or not, shall be immune from suit arising from the conduct of the affairs of such board, commission, agency, authority, or other governing body. Such immunity from suit shall be removed when such conduct amounts to willful, wanton, or gross negligence.

The motion directed at dismissing claims asserted against the Trustees in their official capacity was based upon the assertion that the complaint was not timely filed. The substance of the motion was that the only means of judicial review of the official actions of the Trustees, sitting as a board, was through petition for writ of certiorari, and that a petition for writ of certiorari must be filed within 60 days of the action being challenged. The complaint in this case was filed more than a year after the denial of benefits.

Witty responded to the School Board’s motion to dismiss by filing a copy of the School Board’s Policy No. 5.3021. The Policy is entitled “Sick Leave Bank.” It purports to establish “rules” applicable to requests for sick leave and states that the purpose of the sick leave bank is to provide leave to a member who has exhausted her own personal leave because of “a life-threatening illness, emergency surgery or accident.”

-3- B.

The trial court began its analysis by noting that it had been unable to find any cases on point and, therefore, it might well be deciding questions of first impression.

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Sally Jo Witty v. Christopher Cantrell, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sally-jo-witty-v-christopher-cantrell-tennctapp-2011.