In effect, we are asked by Jane Doe ("the plaintiff") to require the defendants,1 *1210
through the State Employees' Liability Trust Fund (the "Fund"), established pursuant to Alabama Code 1975, §
In the federal action, the plaintiff alleged that while she was involuntarily committed at North Alabama Regional Hospital, she was sexually assaulted by Dr. Hall, a psychologist assigned to the hospital. A jury awarded the plaintiff $1.5 million in compensatory damages and $5 million in punitive damages against Dr. Hall. The allegations of the plaintiff's complaint in the federal action were that "Dr. Hall willfully and intentionally engaged in a course of conduct which he knew was in direct violation of his duties and obligations" and that he "recklessly and wantonly disregarded his duties and obligations." When the State of Alabama failed to pay the federal judgment against Dr. Hall out of the Fund, the plaintiff brought this state court action, seeking to prove that Dr. Hall was entitled to protection by the Act, because, the plaintiff alleged, his sexual assaults on her were "committed while in the performance of [his] official duties in the line and scope of [his] employment," and seeking to compel payment of the judgment from the Fund. The trial court entered summary judgment for the defendants. The plaintiff appealed.2
The express purpose of the Act is, in pertinent part, as follows (as quoted from the title of the Act):
"To provide for the protection of state employees . . . for certain wrongful acts . . . committed while in the performance of their duties in the line and scope of their employment. . . ."
Pursuant to the Act, certain "terms and conditions" were adopted, which the plaintiff contends should be interpreted to expand the protection authorized by the Act so as to cover all acts by state employees, regardless of whether such acts were done "while in the performance of their official duties in the line and scope of their employment." The trial court rejected such reasoning, holding as follows:
"The Court has examined [the Act] as a whole and concludes that the legislature could have only rationally intended that the State provide state employees coverage for their negligent or wrongful acts committed while in the performance of their official duties in the line and scope of their employment. See, John Deere Co. v. Gamble,
(Ala. 1988) (in determining legislative intent the Court should consider the act as a whole and will presume that the legislature intended a rational result). The Court does not believe that the State funds could be legally spent for liability insurance or errors and omissions insurance to cover the acts of state employees which were not committed in the performance of their official duties in the line and scope of employment. 523 So.2d 95 "The Court further finds that the requirements of [the Act] should be read into the comprehensive general liability insurance policy and that the coverage provided in Part 1B can only extend to occupational errors or omissions arising out of the performance of or failure to perform official duties in the employees' capacity and were either done or omitted in the line or scope of their employment. Any other interpretation results in the conclusion that the Finance Director exceeded the authority granted him by [the Act] in providing self insurance."
We agree — the Act controls the outer limits of the protection afforded. Thus, in order to resolve the dispositive issue, we must interpret the language in the Act, "while in *1211 the performance of their official duties in the line and scope of their employment."
There have been numerous Alabama cases interpreting the "line and scope language." These cases are relevant to interpret the phrase "line and scope" in the Act and, thus, the protection afforded by the Act.
Solmica of the Gulf Coast, Inc. v. Braggs,"'. . . The test is the service in which the employee is engaged. The rule which has been approved for determining whether certain conduct of an employee is within the line and scope of his employment is substantially that if an employee is engaged to perform a certain service, whatever he does to that end, or in furtherance of the employment, is deemed by law to be an act done within the scope of the employment.'
"The conduct of the employee . . . must not be impelled by motives that are wholly personal, or to gratify his own feelings or resentment, but should be in promotion of the business of his employment."
In Prosser v. Glass,
In Joyner v. AAA Cooper Transp.,
There are numerous other cases3 holding that sexual misconduct by an employee is purely personal and outside the line and scope of his employment. In Andrews v. United States,
The facts in Andrews were very similar to the facts in this case. Like the plaintiff in Andrews, this plaintiff sued the principal actor, Dr. Hall, and his supervisor, in the federal action. In that case, the claim against the supervisor was settled and payment was made by the Fund, since, as noted inAndrews, negligent supervision is within the line and scope of a supervisor's official duties. In her suit against Dr. Hall, the plaintiff established that she had been sexually assaulted by Dr. Hall, whose misconduct she alleged in her federal complaint was "wholly personal" and not done "in furtherance of his employment," but solely "to gratify his own feelings." The sexual assault was not committed in the line and scope of his employment by the State of Alabama.
We have carefully reviewed the cases cited by the plaintiff as authority for the proposition that "sexual acts can be in the line and scope of one's employment."4 We are not persuaded by the holdings in these cases. Furthermore, of these cases, only Simmons v. United States,
In the instant case, the plaintiff, in addition to making the contention made in her federal court complaint — that "[Dr.] Hall willfully and intentionally engaged in a course of conduct which he knew was in direct violation of his duties and obligations" and "recklessly and wantonly disregarded his duties and obligations" — makes the same contention that was made by the plaintiff in Simmons — that abuse of the transference phenomenon is within the line and scope of a counselor's employment. That is, she contends that sex between patient and counselor no longer automatically prevents the application of respondeat superior, because, she argues, abuse of the transference phenomenon is not "purely personal," but constitutes negligent counseling. However, the very case upon which she seeks to rely rebuts her argument.
In Simmons, the Government relied upon Andrews v. UnitedStates, supra. In Andrews, the physician's assistant suggested a sexual involvement to a patient on her second visit to the clinic and during her first counseling session with him. As egregious as his conduct was, it did not amount to an abuse of a trusting dependency relationship such as that which had evolved during Simmons's five years of successful therapy with Kammers. As the Court of Appeals noted in Simmons, it is not medically possible for the transference phenomenon to develop in a short period of time. There must be time for the patient to come to trust the counselor and to "transfer" to the counselor feelings of trust that the patient has previously had for someone else.
In the instant case, it is undisputed that Dr. Hall suggested sexual intercourse during his first meeting with the plaintiff and that the intercourse occurred that same afternoon. Furthermore, the plaintiff's sworn testimony in the federal court action shows that that intercourse was not consented to on her part as a result of any trust she placed in Dr. Hall. Rather, in the federal action, the plaintiff characterized her sexual relations with Dr. Hall as an assault by him for his own gratification. Thus, the plaintiff cannot seek shelter under the transference phenomenon "umbrella." The further undisputed evidence reveals that Dr. Hall's actions were against all rules of his profession and were without any benefit to his employer, the State Department of Mental Health and Mental Retardation. Applying established principles of law, we must conclude that Dr. Hall's sexual intercourse with the plaintiff was not for the benefit of his employer and was not "committed . . . while in the performance of [his] official duties in the line and scope of [his] employment." Ala. Code 1975, §
In opposition to the defendants' cross-motion for summary judgment, the plaintiff filed excerpts from the transcript of her testimony in federal court. The trial court informed the plaintiff that her trial testimony "clearly establishes that the sexual intercourse did not take place under a guise of treatment or therapy but resulted from Hall's threats to definitely [sic] institutionalize [the plaintiff] if she did not submit to his sexual advances." The plaintiff then sought the trial court's permission to *1214 file an affidavit. After the plaintiff filed her affidavit, the defendants moved to strike it on the basis that it contradicted her earlier testimony regarding the same matters.
Robinson v. Hank Roberts, Inc.," 'When a party has given clear answers to unambiguous questions which negate the existence of any genuine issue of material fact, that party cannot thereafter create such an issue with an affidavit that merely contradicts, without explanation, previously given clear testimony.' "
In ruling on the defendants' motion to strike, the trial court observed that the matters stated in the plaintiff's affidavit were "clearly relevant" to the merits of her previous trial. Subsequently, in its order, the court discussed in great detail how the plaintiff's affidavit contradicted her trial testimony. Specifically, the court found as follows:
"[T]he matters stated in [the plaintiff's] affidavit differ significantly in tone and content from her trial testimony. . . .
". . . .
"Her affidavit sequentially follows her trial testimony. . . . A comparison of her affidavit and trial testimony shows [clearly] an inconsistency between the affidavit and her testimony which leads the Court to the conclusion that either she did not give complete answers to counsel's questions at trial or material aspects of her affidavit are false.
"The Court does not find that her affidavit merely clarifies ambiguous questions by her counsel at trial. . . . Counsel's question called for her to testify to the matters stated in her affidavit; however, she did not relate to the jury the matter she now tends to put before the Court to create an issue of fact. A comparison of her affidavit and her trial testimony clearly shows that she failed, in response to straightforward questions, to testify to the matter set out in her affidavit about what occurred in the sessions in Dr. Hall's office. Not only is the affidavit clearly and inherently inconsistent with her trial testimony, it contradicts on its face . . . her trial testimony."
(Emphasis added.)
The trial court, noting that the plaintiff's explanation for the inconsistencies between her affidavit and her earlier testimony was inadequate, held that "[the plaintiff's] affidavit cannot be relied upon to create an issue of fact." The trial court further noted that the clear and unambiguous questions asked of the plaintiff at trial called for responses that she did not then give, but which she now gives in her affidavit. The trial court also noted that the plaintiff's responses at trial were clear and unambiguous. Therefore, the trial court held that it would not consider the plaintiff's affidavit in opposition to the defendants' cross-motions for summary judgment but that it would consider her earlier trial testimony. We agree with the trial court that we cannot permit the plaintiff to obtain a jury award against Dr. Hall based upon her testimony of a "purely unadulterated rape" and then in a later action recover that judgment from the Fund by testifying to her consensual submission due to the particular nature of a psychologist/patient relationship.
Having thoroughly reviewed the record, the applicable law, the trial court's order, and the parties' briefs, we are persuaded that the trial court did not err in refusing to consider the plaintiff's affidavit in opposition to the defendants' cross-motion for summary judgment.
Based on the foregoing, we hold that the trial court properly granted the defendants' motion for summary judgment. The plaintiff has raised numerous issues, some of which were not sufficiently argued in her brief for us to consider them. The others have been consolidated in our discussion. *1215
89-604 AFFIRMED.
89-703 AFFIRMED.
MADDOX, JONES, ALMON and ADAMS, JJ., concur.
STEAGALL, J., recused.
In Doe v. United States,
Also, holding similarly in regard to an employee's sexual acts are: Taylor v. Doctors Hosp. (West),
St. Paul Fire Marine Ins. Co. v. Asbury,
In Lyon v. Carey,
In Doe v. Ft. Lauderdale Medical Center Management, Inc.,
Simmons v. United States,
