The opinion of the court was delivered by
Cоmmerce Bank of St. Joseph, N.A., (Commerce Bank) lent money to a licensed public warehouse, Twombly Grain Company, Inc., (Twombly Grain) for grain storage. The bank held, as collateral, warehouse receipts issued on company-owned grain. Grain shortages were concealed by the grain company for many years and the bank loans were not repaid. When thе shortages were discovered, in addition to suing Twombly Grain, Commerce Bank sued the Kansas State Grain Inspection Department (KSGID) and its chief warehouse examiner, Saverio Reda, claiming its damages occurred because Reda accepted money and warned the grain company when unannounced, “surprise” grain department audits were going to occur and what inspection techniques would be utilized during the audit. The State of Kansas was substituted as a party for KSGID and subsequently moved for summary judgment, asserting that under the Kansas Tort Claims Act it is not responsible for torts of an agent who is acting outside the scope of his employment. The trial court found (1) the chief warehouse examiner’s acceptance of a bribe to covеr up grain shortages was an act outside the scope of his employment (K.S.A. 75-6103[a]); (2) the State was immune from liability for the retention of the examiner because that was a discretionary function (K.S.A. 75-6104[e]); (3) the State was not liable for negligent supervision of its agent becausé that was a discretionary function (K.S.A. 75-6104[e]) and there was no evidence the State was negligent in supervising its emрloyee; and (4) the State does not recognize the common-law tort of negligent supervision. After summary judgment was granted to the State, the bank dismissed the examiner from the lawsuit without prejudice. Commerce Bank appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment to the State. We affirm.
Summary judgment is proper where the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and аdmissions on file, together with
For purposes of detеrmining the State’s motion for summary judgment and appeal, it is accepted as true that Reda accepted money from Raymond and his son, Tom Twombly, in exchange for information about the dates of forthcoming grain inspections and advised the Twomblys of the procedures that might be used during the audit so the Company could conceal grain shortages during the inspections.
Cоmmerce bank first argues (1) Reda was acting within the scope of his employment and (2) under the Kansas Tort Claims Act the State is liable as a private person would be under the same circumstances. The bank states the wrongful act of the agent is not the act of accepting the bribe, but the negligent or fraudulent act of arranging the surprise examinations and informing Twombly in advance when the examinations would occur, falsely registering warehouse receipts for company-owned grain, and fraudulently granting the grain company an annual license to operate as a public warehouse. The bank asserts these acts of the State’s agents allowed Twombly Grain to manipulate its records, generate fraudulent warehouse receipts, pass inspections to continue in business, and use the false warehouse receipts for nonexistent company-owned grain as collateral for loans from Commerce Bank.
Under K.S.A. 75-6103, the State is liable for damages (1) caused by the negligent or wrongful act or omission of any of its employees (2) while the employee was acting within the scope of the employment and (3) under circumstances where the governmental entity, if a private person, would be liable under the laws of this state.
Commerce Bank argues the scope of employment issue is not exclusively determinative of the State’s liability. Commerce Bank asserts the phrases “acting within the scope of their employment’’ and “under circumstances where the govеrnmental entity, if a
The bank points out that the Kansas Tort Claims Act covers “wrongful acts or omissions,” i.e., intentional torts. It observes that K.S.A. 1991 Supp. 60-2202(c) provides that there shall be no judgment lien on an employee’s property unless (1) the employee’s negligent or wrongful act or omissiоn occurred when the employee was acting outside the scope of the employment or (2) the employee’s conduct which gave rise to the judgment was because of actual fraud or actual malice of the employee. It claims K.S.A. 1991 Supp. 60-2202 recognizes that a state employee could commit a fraudulent act while acting within the scoрe of employment.
The trial court determined Reda’s acceptance of the bribes was an act outside the scope of his employment; therefore, although Reda may be liable for his act, the State was not. In reaching this conclusion, the trial court relied on
Focke v. United States,
PIK Civ. 2d 7.04 states that an employee is acting within the scope of the employment if the employee is performing services for which the employee has been employed or is doing anything reasonably incidental to the employment. The test is not necessarily whether the specific conduct was expressly authorized or forbidden by the employer, but whether such conduct should have been fairly foreseen from the nature of the employment and the duties relating to it.
In
Williams,
an employee of a corporate drive-in theater shot and injured a theater patron who the employee thought was threatening a fellow employee. The injured plaintiff filed an action against the corporate drive-in theater and the employee. The trial court granted summary judgment to the employer, finding that
The
Williams
court stated the liability of an employer for the acts of аn employee depends not upon whether the injurious act of the employee was wilful and intentional or was unintentional, but upon whether the employee, when he did the wrong, was acting in the prosecution of the employer’s business and within the scope of his authority, or had stepped aside from that business and done an individual wrong. The court recognized the general rule is that an employer is liable for the reckless, wilful, intentional, wanton, or malicious acts of an employee as well as for heedless and careless acts if they are committed while the employee is acting in the execution of his authority and within the course of his employment, or with a view to the furtherance of his employer’s business, and not for a purpоse personal to the employee. The court concluded, in determining whether an assault by an employee is of a personal nature and therefore unforeseeable, that the question whether the employment is of such a nature that the use of force may be contemplated to protect the interests of the employer may becomе a pertinent factor.
Williams,
In
Focke v. United States,
Here, the district court determined (1) the taking of bribes by grain inspectors does not further the purpose of the KSGID, but is only of personal benefit to the bribed inspector; (2) the State had neither expressed nor .implied that its agent could accept bribes from the Twomblys; (3) the supervisor of Reda had no reason to foresee Reda would act in this manner; so (4) Reda’s acts were not within the scope of his emрloyment;
The State asserts this appeal involves only the principle of imputed negligence and whether the State is vicariously liable for the alleged acts of its employee. The State argues it is not liable under the Kansas Tort Claims Act for acts of employees committed outside the scope of their employment. It claims that two thresholds must be met for thе State to be liable under the Tort Claims Act for an employee’s acts. First, the employee must have been acting within the scope of the employment; and second, the circumstances must have been such that the State, if a private person, would be liable under the laws of Kansas. The State contends if both tests are not met, there is no governmental liability to injured third parties.
The State asserts the criterion for determining whether an employee acted within the scope of employment is whether the employee was furthering the employer’s interest in some way. The State cites
Focke
for the proposition that the consideration
The State maintains that the only case analogous to this case is
Melton v. United States,
After reviewing the record, the court observed that Greenleaf’s criminal activity was not within the scoрe of his employment. The court concluded that under no persuasive theory could his involvement in a bribery scheme be regarded as furthering his employer’s interests. Accordingly, the government did not bear any direct responsibility for its agent’s criminal actions regarding plaintiff and her project.
Melton,
Here, the State argues Reda’s actions to earn the bribe did not further KSGID’s duty to protеct producers who stored their grain with Twombly Grain. The State asserts Reda’s alleged wrongful act was one of personal greed rather than fulfillment of any KSGID business.
The general rule is that a state (sovereign) cannot be sued without its consent. No suit, whether at law or in equity, can
When the concept of governmental immunity was first conceived in this state, the State and its agencies devoted their time and energy to the function of governing. As the needs and wants of the citizens increased, our state government began to engage in endeavors that were not governmental but proprietary functions. The judiciary began the erosion of governmental immunity and denied tort immunity to municipal governments performing “proprietary” or “permissive” functions.
In
Carroll v. Kittle,
In 1970, the legislature responded to the Carroll decision by enacting K.S.A. 46-901 et seq. (Weeks). These statutes declared the State and its departments, agencies, institutions, etc., to be immune from liability and suit on an implied contract, or for negligence or any other tort, unless otherwise specifically provided by law. K.S.A. 46-902 (Weeks) specified that the liabilities of local units оf government were to be unaffected by this legislative declaration of governmental immunity.
In 1979, the legislature repealed K.S.A. 46-901 et seq. (Weeks) and enacted the Kansas Tort Claims Act, K.S.A. 75-6101 et seq. For negligent or tortious conduct, liability became the rule, immunity the exception. The burden was placed upon the governmental entity or employee to establish entitlement to any of the exceptions set forth in K.S.A. 75-6104.
Under K.S.A. 75-6103, the State is liable for damages caused by the negligent or wrongful act or omission of any of its employees while the employee was acting within the scope of the employment and under circumstances where the governmental entity, if a private person, would be liable under the laws of this state. The language of K.S.A. 75-6103 is plain and unambiguous, and this court’s responsibility is to give effect to the intent of the legislature as expressed, not to rearrange the legislature’s work to express what the court thinks the law should or should not be.
Barber v.
Williams,
Commerce Bank claims Reda’s motivation is a factual issue and not an uncontroverted resolved fact. The bank argues his motivation may have been to aid Twombly Grain until it could correct the shortfall or perhaps spare KSGID from the embarrassment and adverse publicity of a major grain elevator failure. Therefore, it argues there is a question of fact for the jury to determine and the granting of summary judgment was erroneous.
We agree the question of scope of employment is ordinarily a jury question, but accepting a bribe cannot be considered within the scope of a state employee’s employment. Plaintiff requests this court to examine only the issue of whether liability should be imposed on a private person in like circumstances. In order to separate the bribery scheme and its various consequences, the plaintiff would require this court to write the “scope of employment” test out of the Tort Claims Act. This we are unable to
Affirmed.
