The appellant, Gloria Kinder, an inmate in the Missouri Department of Corrections (DOC) system, was injured when a van driven by an employee of the DOC went off of the highway and overturned. The trial court sustained the DOC’s motion for summary judgment which stated that the one-year statute of limitation contained in § 516.145, RSMo 1994,
1
applied thus bar
Factual and Procedural History
On April 21, 1993, Lillian Vaughn, a correctional officer employed by the DOC, picked up nine female inmates at the Renz Correctional Center to transport them by van to the Boonville Correctional Center. Kinder was injured when Ms. Vaughn lost control of the van. The van overturned and went off of the highway. Kinder was knocked unconscious and had to be hospitalized for several days. Kinder filed a petition for personal injuries on April 16, 1998. In her amended petition filed in July of 1998, she alleged that the DOC was a political subdivision of the state of Missouri and had waived sovereign immunity for vehicular accidents pursuant to § 537.600. The petition also claimed that the van’s driver, Lillian Vaughn, an agent and employee of the Missouri Dept, of Corrections, was negligent. 2 The DOC was the only defendant in the case.
The DOC filed a motion for summary judgment alleging that it was entitled to summary judgment on the ground that Kinder’s petition was not filed within the one-year statute of limitation contained in § 516.145. The circuit court sustained DOC’s motion for summary judgment. Kinder appeals the judgment of the circuit court.
Standard of Review
Summary judgment is proper where the moving party has demonstrated, on the basis of facts as to which there is no genuine dispute, a right to judgment as a matter of law.
ITT Commercial Fin. Corp. v. Mid-Am. Marine Supply Corp.,
For purposes of summary judgment, a “defending party” is one against whom recovery is sought.
ITT,
I.
Kinder argues in her first point that the circuit court erred in granting the DOC’s motion for summary judgment because the applicable statute of limitation is five years as indicated in § 516.120(4),
Kinder asserts that the legislature did not intend for § 516.145 to reduce the time limit for filing lawsuits for personal injury actions resulting from negligent driving by a DOC employee. Kinder’s theory that the five-year statute of limitation for personal injuries applies is as follows: 1) In 1978 the legislature adopted § 537.600 which waived sovereign immunity for injuries resulting from negligence of public employees operating public vehicles; 2) The doctrine of official immunity shields government officials from civil liability related to their performance of discretionary duties, but does not affect their liability for ministerial duties; 3) Operating a motor vehicle in non-emergency situations, such as in the case at bar, is not a discretionary duty so, under the doctrine of official immunity it did not apply to the driver.
Davis-Bey v. Missouri Department of Correction,
Although Davis-Bey involved an inmate who was injured in a situation similar to the present case, the statute of limitation for filing such an action was not an issue. The inmate in Davis-Bey was injured on August 26, 1995, and filed suit on February 15, 1996, well within the limitation period of § 516.145. Id. at 296. Since Davis-Bey is not instructive on this issue, it is necessary to turn our attention to cases in which § 516.145 was directly in issue.
Cooper v. Minor,
The primary rule of statutory construction requires a court to determine legislative intent by considering the plain and ordinary meaning of words used in the statute.
State of Kansas, Secretary of SRS v. Briggs,
Section 516.145 reads, “Within one year: all actions brought by an offender, as defined in § 217.010, against the department of corrections or any entity or division thereof, or any employee or former employee for an act in an official capacity, or by the omission of an official duty.” Neither party disputes that Kinder is an offender as defined in § 217.010, or that Ms. Vaughn was a correctional officer employed by the DOC. The phrases of § 516.145 that require a closer look are “all actions” and “an act in an official capacity.”
Section 516.145 states that it pertains to all actions brought by an offender. The word “all” prefacing the word “actions” indicates that the legislature did not intend for there to be any type of claim that an offender could bring that would be an exception to the one-year time limit in § 516.145. “All” is defined as “the whole number, quantity or amount.” Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary 29 (10th ed.1993). As such, Kinder’s claim falls within the phrase “all actions brought by an offender.” The only question that remains is whether transporting inmates in a DOC van is an “act in an official capacity.”
The phrase “act in an official capacity” means that a public servant is acting within the scope of what he or she is employed to do rather than being engaged in a personal frolic.
See State v. O’Neill,
Kinder also argues that § 516.145 is analogous to § 516.130, which provides a three-year statute of limitation for actions against sheriffs or other officers “upon a liability incurred by the doing
of
an act in his official capacity....” Kinder cites
Nitcher v. Newton County Jail,
Kinder did not file this action within one year from her injury. Based upon the plain and ordinary meaning of § 516.145, this court finds that the circuit court was correct in granting summary judgment in favor of the DOC.
II.
Kinder argues in her second point that if § 516.145 is deemed to be applicable, it is unconstitutional as it violates equal protection, due process and the prohibition against special legislation.
The Supreme Court of Missouri in
Cooper
held that § 516.145 was constitutional as it did not violate equal protection, due process or the prohibition against special legislation.
The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
All concur.
Notes
. All statutory references are to RSMo 1994, unless otherwise indicated. Section 516.145 states, "Within one year: all actions brought by an offender, as defined in §217.010
. The specific claims of negligence are: driving at an excessive speed, failing to keep a careful lookout, failing to drive on the main traveled portion of the roadway, failing to keep the motor vehicle under such control that it could have been stopped, slowed or swerved upon the first appearance of danger, failing to equip her motor vehicle with seat-belts for inmates who were handcuffed, shackled and otherwise restrained, failing to restrain plaintiff by the use of a seatbelt or other safety restraint.
. This court in
Cooper v. Knox,
. "[T]he Supreme Court of the United State held in
Wilson
that the forum state’s statute of limitation applicable to tort actions for the recovery of damages for personal injuries was the one to be applied to actions under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.”
Nitcher,
