Speakman v. Ada Ferrell Garden Apts.

CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedMay 30, 2000
DocketM1999-00509-COA-R3-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Speakman v. Ada Ferrell Garden Apts. (Speakman v. Ada Ferrell Garden Apts.) 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
Speakman v. Ada Ferrell Garden Apts., (Tenn. Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE AT NASHVILLE

OLLIE SPEAKMAN, JR. v. ADA FERRELL GARDEN APARTMENTS, ET AL.

Direct Appeal from the Circuit Court for Coffee County No. 28,210 L. Craig Johnson, Judge

No. M1999-00509-COA-R3-CV - Decided May 30, 2000

Ollie Speakman, Jr., an employee of Ada Ferrell Garden Apartments, appeals the summary judgment granted by the Circuit Court in favor of his employer. Mr. Speakman filed a complaint against his employer after he was discharged alleging that his employer discharged him in retaliation for filing a worker’s compensation claim. The employer filed a summary judgment motion, which was granted by the Circuit Court. We affirm the Circuit Court and remand for collection of costs.

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

GODDARD , P.J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which FRANKS, and SWINEY , JJ. joined.

Russell L. Leonard, Winchester, Tennessee, for the appellant, Ollie Speakman, Jr.

Russell D. Hedges, Tullahoma, Tennessee, for the appellees, Ada Ferrell Garden Apartments and Morris Property Management, Inc.

OPINION

The Appellant, Ollie Speakman, Jr. was employed as a maintenance supervisor by the appellees, Ada Ferrell Garden Apartments and Morris Property Management, Inc., from July 1992 through January 1993. In late November 1992, Mr. Speakman fell down a flight of stairs at Ada Ferrell while posting notices on tenants’ doors. He filed a claim for worker’s compensation. In January 1993, the resident manager of Ada Ferrell, Elizabeth Stubblefield, terminated Mr. Speakman’s employment. Mr. Speakman filed a complaint in the Circuit Court of Coffee County alleging that he was terminated in retaliation for filing a worker’s compensation claim. The appellees filed a motion for summary judgment, which was granted by the Circuit Court. Mr. Speakman argues on appeal that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment because there are material facts in dispute. The parties and their witnesses testified by deposition as follows:

OLLIE SPEAKMAN, JR. He was hired as a maintenance supervisor for Ada Ferrell Garden Apartments on July 20, 1992. He signed a job description sheet of a maintenance supervisor as a condition of employment. As part of his job, he was required to have some knowledge of heating and air conditioning. His field of expertise is electrical, such as repairing light switches. Prior to his employment with Ada Ferrell Garden Apartments, he had performed plumbing work, roof work, carpentry and appliance work. Most of his work experience was acquired at Tullahoma Housing. He has an electrical contractor’s license from the State of Tennessee. As maintenance supervisor, he was responsible for his own work and the work of his assistant, Tom Bennett. On October 30, 1992, Ms. Stubblefield evaluated his job performance. She told Mr. Speakman that he needed to improve his job performance in certain areas. Mrs. Lynn, the property manager, said he might receive a raise after 90 days, but he did not receive a raise after this evaluation. Mr. Speakman believed that he did not receive a raise because his beginning pay rate was too high. On November 25, 1992, the day of the worker’s compensation injury, Mr. Speakman and Mr. Bennett were on a general cleanup assignment and posting handouts on tenants’ doors. After posting handouts on two apartment doors at approximately 8:15 a.m., Mr. Speakman fell down a flight of stairs sustaining a lower back injury. At approximately 8:30 a.m., Mr. Speakman informed Ms. Stubblefield, the resident manager of Ada Ferrell Garden Apartments, about his fall. He filled out paperwork describing the injury and gave the paperwork to Ms. Stubblefield. The next morning, Mr. Speakman’s son took him to the emergency room. Mr. Speakman called work the day after his emergency room visit and talked to Ms. Stubblefield or Tonya, the assistant manager. He asked for information on a worker’s compensation doctor. After he was given a list of doctors, he made an appointment with Dr. George Lien in Murfreesboro. Dr. Lien told Mr. Speakman to wear a back brace. He wore the back brace during the rest of his employment. His ability to work was affected slightly because he had to perform tasks more slowly than before his injury. He has been released from treatment. When he applied for unemployment benefits, he did not state that the reason for his being fired was for filing a worker’s compensation claim. He copied the reasons for his discharge from his separation slip. However, he believed he had been fired for filing the worker’s compensation claim because they were slow in giving him doctors’ names for his injury and he refused to lift a washing machine due to his injury. In order to repair the washing machine, it needed to be lifted by two people. He could not assist Mr. Bennett in lifting the washing machine. An outside contractor, Larry Warren, was hired to repair the washing machine. After his injury, he noticed a difference in his relationship with Ms. Stubblefield. He noticed more “pressure” and less conversations between them. When he started working there, he was not told to turn in completed work orders every evening. Before he was injured, he was told to turn in work orders at least once a week on Friday evening. Ms. Stubblefield wanted Mr. Speakman to clean city ditches near the apartment property, but Mr. Speakman believed the ditches were part of the city’s responsibility. He cleaned the ditches anyway. Because of his back brace, Mr. Speakman refused to scrub the floors in the community room and laundry room on his hands and knees. Prior to his accident, Ms. Stubblefield had not asked him to clean those floors on his hands and knees.

-2- In December 1992, Mr. Speakman was behind schedule on the work orders. Ms. Stubblefield continually complained to Mr. Speakman that he failed to keep the shop area clean. In the December 18, 1992 employee review, Mr. Speakman was informed that the inventory of the shop and barn through December 31 was required to be completed by January 8, 1993. He did not receive the proper forms for inventory counting until January 6, 1993. Mr. Speakman refused to sign the review because he “could not personally guarantee anything in the future.”

ELIZABETH STUBBLEFIELD She is the resident manager of Ada Ferrell Garden Apartments. Her employment began in 1987. Morris Property Management, Inc. is the company that manages Ada Ferrell Garden Apartments. Mr. Speakman was hired on July 20, 1992 by Lynn Rice. Lynn Rice was the property manager from Morris Property Management, Inc. Mr. Speakman was employed through Morris Property and his checks were signed by Harold Morris, the owner of Morris Property. The decision to terminate anyone was a joint decision by the resident manager and property manager. Ms. Stubblefield always sought approval from the property manager in her decisions. A new Morris Property manual was issued in January 1993 which outlined disciplinary actions. When an employee needed disciplinary action, the 1993 manual required the resident manager to talk to the employee for the first violation and then give the employee a written violation slip for a second violation. The written warning was accompanied by time off without pay. Mr. Speakman was hired as the maintenance supervisor. His job responsibilities included insuring that the grounds were presentable on a daily basis, performing work orders in a timely and correct manner, and cleaning and repairing units in a timely manner for new tenants. The term used to describe the duty of cleaning and repairing a unit for a new tenant is turnkey. A turnkey involves cleaning, painting and maintenance of a unit in order to rent the unit. A turnkey should be completed in three days. Prior to Mr. Speakman’s evaluation on October 30, 1992, Ms.

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