delivered the opinion of the Court.
Rеcent events around our nation and here in New Jersey have made it clear that children in our schools are vulnerable to dangers that many of us could not have even imagined when we were growing up. In response to that sad reality, our school systems, often in cooperation with law enforcement personnel, have embraced a variety of means and methods designed to return our neighborhood schools to the relatively safe havens long believed to be most conducive to effective education. Those efforts have much to commend them. At the same time, however, those same strategies often impact on the freedoms once enjoyed, and long cherished, by both the students and those who work in our schools. Creating mechanisms to ensure that our children, our educators, and our other school employees can learn and work in an atmosphere that is both safe and nurturing while, at the same time, maintaining a system that protects the rights of all of them, are not mutually exclusive goals. Rather, they are goals that, *567 although sometimes in apparent conflict, nonetheless can and must be harmonized.
Today we are confronted with a factual setting in which we must balance those important rights and responsibilities in one such apparent conflict. This matter stands at the intersection between the rights of a school employee who, it is alleged, uttered words that threatened the safety of the children then in her care, and the obligations of the other school employees who claim to have heard those words or who, when advised of them, exercised what they believed was their authority to act to ensure the safety of those students. That the school employee’s words may have been misunderstood, that the other school employees or authorities might have had other options available to them for dealing with the perceived threat, are but a part of the fabric against which we must analyze these important goals and interests in the specialized setting of our public schools.
I.
The claims for relief set forth by plaintiff Sopharie Leang and her spouse, Song Leang, arise from a complex series of events relating to plaintiff
1
Sopharie Leang’s employment as a teacher of English as a Second Language (ESL) in a Jersey City elementary school. Because the factual assertions are recited at length in the Appеllate Division’s published opinion,
Leang v. Jersey City Bd. of Educ.,
399
N.J.Super.
329,
Plaintiff, who was bom and raised in Cambodia, where she asserts her family was victimized by the Khmer Rouge, emigrated to this country and achieved an advanced degree in foreign languages. She was hired, pursuant to a one-year contract, by defendant Jersey City Board of Education, as a provisional teacher, N.J.S.A. 18A:26-2a(a), of ESL. At the time, defendant Charles T. Epps, Jr. was the Superintendent of Schools, defendant Angela Bruno was the principal of the school where plaintiff was assigned, and defendant Vladimir Ashworth was another ESL teacher. Plaintiff asserts that Ashworth sexually harassed her, that she rebuffed his advances, and that she complained about him to some of the other teachers. She concedes that she did not heed the advice of her acquaintance, an attorney in New York, who suggested that shе make a complaint about Ashworth to Bruno.
On May 14, 2002, plaintiff was advised in writing that her contract would not be renewed for the following year. She did not *569 request a statement of reasons or otherwise challenge the non-renewal decision. As part of this litigation, however, she asserts that Ashworth did not give her the ESL textbooks that she needed and that Bruno did not provide her with a mentor, both of which interfered with her job performance and negatively impacted her evaluations, and both of which, she alleges, were motivated by Ashworth, who sought revenge for her refusal of his advances.
The events that give rise to plaintiffs essential factual allegations took place on June 24, 2002, which was the last day of the school year. All parties agree that plaintiff and Ashworth were in a classroom, along with two teaching assistants and twenty-two students, and that Ashworth asked plaintiff what had happened to her voice. Plaintiff asserts that she told him that she had laryngitis, and that, as the discussion between them continued, she said that it was caused by stress. According to plaintiff and one of the witnesses, when Ashworth pressed her about that comment and about the cause of her stress, she said, “my doctor said the amount of stress in my body could have killed some рeople.” Ashworth, however, insists that plaintiff initiated the conversation and, more to the point, that plaintiff said to him “I’m so stressed out that I can kill twenty-two people.”
Ashworth was alarmed by that statement in light of what he described as plaintiffs “bizarre behavior” and her “stressed out and ... very unkempt” appearance. Believing that plaintiff had uttered a threat to the safety of the students in the room, he immediately reported what he had heard to the school nurse, and eventually to Bruno. Based on Ashworth’s report, plaintiff was escorted to the nurse’s office. Apparently plaintiff believed that if she went to the nurse’s office and awaited Bruno’s return from the graduation ceremony that was then underway, she would be rehired for the following year. When Bruno and the school board’s social worker attempted to speak with plaintiff about what Ashworth reported had happened, and about what was troubling her, she became distraught.
*570 At the time of those events, the Board was a signatory to a document entitled “A Uniform State Memorandum of Agreement Between Education and Law Enforcement Officials” (the Agreement), which had been adopted by the Board and approved by both the Department of Law and Public Safety and the Department of Education. Section 1.2 of the Agreement, titled “Nature of the Problem,” declares: “[rjeeent events in New Jersey and throughout the nation have made clear that while schools are generally safe places for students and staff members, a wide range of offenses are occasionally committed on school property, during operating school hours.” That section further provides that the signatories recognize that any such offense, including “the actual or threatened infliction of bodily injury ... not only undermines the educational environment, but can directly endanger the safety and well-being of members of the school community.” Because of those concerns, the parties also agree that an event of that type “requires an appropriate and decisive response.”
In order to effectuate its purposes, Section 4.10 of the Agreement requires school officials to immediately notify the Jersey City Police Department,
whenever any school employee in the course of his or her employment develops reason to believe that a student has threatened, is planning, or otherwise intends to cause death, serious bodily injury, or significant bodily injury to another person under circumstances in which a reasonable person would believe that the student genuinely intends at some time in the future to commit the violent act or to carry out the threat.
Although the Agreement addressed perceived threats by students rather than by a faculty member, defendant Jersey City Police Department’s Emergency Services Unit (ESU) was summoned in response to plaintiffs behavior. Because it had been reported to ESU that there was an “emotionally disturbed person” at the school, when ESU arrived, it was accompanied by defendant Jersey City Medical Center Mobile Crisis Unit and its Emergency Medical Technicians (EMTs). According to Steven Nacim, one of the EMTs, plaintiff was “irate,” “upset,” and “frantic,” and reported that she had a history of hypertension. When she allowed him to do so, Nacim took her blood pressure and found that it was *571 elevated. Nacim testified that a police officer accompanied them when they took plaintiff to the hospital for an evaluation and that they changed their route to accommodate plaintiffs request that they take her to a different hospital.
Hospital personnel performed both a physical examinаtion and a psychiatric evaluation. Although plaintiff alleges that she was repeatedly kicked at the school by the police with the result that she sustained “seventy-two bruises” and was bleeding, the emergency room records of her physical examination include neither a reference to, nor any other indication of, either bleeding or bruises. Instead, those records reveal that plaintiff was suffering from high blood pressure and that the psychiatric evaluation included an Axis I diagnosis of “generalized anxiety, rule out homicidal ideation.”
In spite of those findings and the treatment recommendations of the physicians relating to her elevated blood pressure, plaintiff left the hospital that evening against medical advice. She never underwent any other medical or psychiatric evaluation thereafter and received no treatment of any kind in connection with those events.
II.
Plaintiffs original complaint named only the Jersey City Board of Education, Epps, Bruno, and Ashworth as defendants (the school defendants) and included eleven counts, all directed to the Board of Education. 3 The counts are: (1) false imprisonment; (2) battery; (3) assault; (4) invasion of privacy, alleged to have been a “strip sеarch” and psychiatric examination performed at the hospital; (5) defamation, libel, and slander, asserted to be based on the “notorious manner of the accusations that amount to malice per se”; (6) sexual harassment and retaliation, the latter of which is *572 asserted to be poor performance reviews that led to her non-renewal; (7) breach of her employment contract; (8) violation of due process, asserted to have been a deprivation of her property interest in her employment; (9) wrongful discharge and constructive discharge; (10) intentional infliction of emotional distress; and (11) a per quod claim asserted by her spouse.
Plaintiffs second, separately filed complaint, which was later consolidated with the original complaint, named only the Jersey City Medical Center Mobile Crisis Unit, the Jersey City Medical Center (the medical defendants), Jersey City Police Department, 4 John and Jane Does described as employees of the Jersey City Police Department and City of Jersey City. That complaint included five counts, as follows: (1) acts taken under color of law and excessive use of force and abuse of governmental authority; (2) per quod; (3) false аrrest; (4) malicious prosecution; and (5) intentional infliction of emotional distress.
Following discovery, defendants successfully moved for summary judgment, essentially based on the motion judge’s analysis of qualified immunity and an alternative analysis relating to an absence of evidence supporting damages. The Appellate Division, in its published opinion,
5
affirmed in part and reversed in part.
See Leang, supra,
399
N.J.Super.
at 380,
In analyzing the federal causes of action, the appellate panel recognized that plaintiff had abandoned any Fourth Amendment argument. Using instead a Fourteenth Amendment analysis, the panel reinstated the federal claims against Bruno and Ashworth.
Leang, supra,
399
N.J.Super.
at 360-62,
The panel also reinstated plaintiffs state law claims for false arrest, assault and battery, defamation, invasion of privacy, and intentional infliction of emotional distress, and it revived her claim for punitive damages and her spouse’s per quod claim.
Id.
at 371,
Turning to plaintiffs employment claims, the panel affirmed in part and reversed in part. First, the panel affirmed the dismissal
*574
of all claims against Epps.
Id.
at 360,
The appellate panel then considered the series of claims made against the medical defendants. The court affirmed the grant of summary judgment in favor of thе JCMC Mobile Crisis Unit (MCU), finding no evidence that it performed a clinical screening of plaintiff.
Id.
at 374,
We granted the separate petitions for certification filed by the school defendants and the medical defendants, 196
N.J.
87,
*575 For the reasons that follow, we (1) reverse the judgment of the Appellate Division to the extent it reinstated plaintiffs breach of contract and employment claims; (2) reverse the judgment of the Appellate Division to the extent it reinstated plaintiffs federal claims against the school defendants; (3) affirm the judgment of the Appellate Division to the effect that plaintiffs state law defamation and intentional infliction of emotional distress claims for compensatory and punitive damages and per quod claims should be allowed to proceed and are not barred by the Tort Claims Act’s immunity provisions; (4) affirm the judgment of the Appellate Division reinstating plaintiffs state law tort claim for invasion of privacy, in part, and as against defendant Ashworth but reverse that judgment to the extent that it reinstated the claim as against defendant Bruno; (5) reverse the judgment of the Appellate Division that allowed plaintiffs false imprisonment and assault and battery claims to proceed; and (6) reverse the judgment of the Appellate Division rejecting the assertion of the medical defendants of the statutory immunity under Title 30.
III.
We begin our analysis with the constellation of counts in the complaint that, broadly speaking, can be said to fall within the ambit of employment claims. We include plaintiffs claims for breach of contract, violation of due process, sexual harassment, workplace retaliation, and wrongful or constructive* **** 7 discharge in this category.
*576
As we have previously held, public entities may be found liable for discrimination claims brought by their employees notwithstanding the limitations imposed by the TCA.
See, e.g., Abbamont v. Piscataway Twp. Bd. of Educ.,
138
N.J.
405, 428,
First, there can be no doubt on the record before this Court that plaintiffs claims for sexual harassment or workplace discrimination fail. As to the Board, which was plaintiffs employer, those claims fail because she made no complaints.
See Carmona v. Resorts Int’l Hotel, Inc.,
189
N.J.
354, 373,
Second, plaintiffs other employment claims also fail because of the unique statutory framework within which such claims, as they *577 relate to teachers, must be analyzed. See N.J.S.A. 18A:1-1 to 18A:76-4.
In summary, the panel held that because the Contractual Liability Act,
N.J.S.A.
59:13-1 to -10, governs contractual liability of public entities, it applies to the school defendants.
Leang, supra,
399
N.J.Super.
at 371,
We reverse the judgment of the Appellate Division to the extent that it reinstated plaintiffs breach of contract claim as against the Board. We do so both because the Contractual Liability Act itself does not apply to those claims 8 and because the relevant statutory provisions offer plaintiff no basis for relief.
The Contractual Liability Act, which governs contracts of the State, by definition excludes “any such entity which is statutorily authorized to sue and be sued.” N.J.S.A. 59:13-2. It therefore does not apply to the Board of Education, which, by statute, qualifies as just such an entity. See N.J.S.A. 18A:ll-2(a) (authorizing boards of education to sue and to be sued). Contrary to the Appellate Division’s conclusion, the Contractual Liability Act has no application to plaintiffs claims.
Even so, considered in the appropriate statutory context as set forth in Title 18A, none of plaintiffs employment-based claims can survive as against any of the school defendants. As a non *578 tenured public school teacher, plaintiff was employed pursuant to a one-year contract, see N.J.S.A 18A:27-3, which the Board had no obligation to renew, N.J.S.A. 18A:27-4.1. When the Board elected not to rehire her for the next school year, it was required to, and it did, notify her in writing of that fact by May 15 of the school year. N.J.S.A 18A:27-10. In light of the Board’s clear statutory right to decline to renew her contract, plaintiffs breach of contract claim must fail because that claim is based on the Board’s non-renewal decision.
Nor is there any basis on which to conclude, as did the appellate panel, that plaintiff can sustain a breach of contract or quasi-contract claim grounded on an assertion that she was deprived of supplies or a mentor and therefore suffered economic damages. She was paid for her work for the entire school year and had no right to renewal of her contract. At most, her claim that she was not assigned a mentor would relate to her discrimination claim or her non-renewal claim, but neither of those claims survives the statutory analysis.
Similarly, we conclude that the appellate panel erred in addressing plaintiffs due process argument as it bears on her employment claims. As with her breach of contract claim, her due process claim must be analyzed in light of the applicable statutory protections afforded to her. Upon plaintiffs receipt of the notification from the Board that her contract would not be renewed, she had a statutory right to request and to receive a written statement of reasons for the Board’s decision not to renew her contract. N.J.S.A 18A:27-3.2. In addition, she had a statutory right to demand an “informal appearance” before the Board during which she would be permitted “to convince the members of the board to offer reemployment.” N.J.S.A. 18A:27-4.1.
Those statutory rights are the embodiment of the process created by the Legislature through which plaintiff could seek to challenge and to be heal’d about the Board’s non-renewal decision. Plaintiff did not avail herself of those statutory rights and therefore failed to take advantage of the avenues of relief that would *579 have afforded her the due process she now complains was denied to her. We will not permit her to expand upon her statutorily-protected right to be hеard by authorizing her to pursue a claim that she was in some way deprived of due process in the Board’s non-renewal decision.
Because the Appellate Division did not analyze the breach of employment claims in accordance with the applicable statutory and decisional framework, and because those claims, when considered in accordance with those principles, are barred, we reverse the judgment to the extent that it reinstated plaintiffs breach of contract and employment claims.
IV.
We turn next to plaintiffs federal claims, some of which the Appellate Division reinstated through its Fourteenth Amendment analysis, but which, we conclude, do not survive scrutiny. Her original complaint, which was directed solely to the school defendants, did not include any counts that can be understood to allege either a federal constitutional or statutory cause of action. Even as the case progressed through discovery and proceeded on appeal, the essential allegations remained insufficient to support any form of federal relief. The lynchpin of the appellate panel’s reasoning was its focus on the due process guarantee found in the Fourteenth Amendment. That approach was based on plaintiffs argument on appeal
9
in which she asserted that her complaint included a claim that was based on an alleged deprivation of substantive and procedural due process rights and that was explicitly tethered to the Fourteenth Amendment.
10
Leang, supra,
399
*580
N.J.Super.
at 358,
Our analysis of the federal claims compels us to reverse the judgment of the appellate panel for several reasons. First, plaintiffs only asserted constitutional claim was the one she described in her complaint, specifying it to be a deprivation of her property right in her employment. Her claim was directed only to her argument that she was not afforded an opportunity to be heard when her contract was not renewed; it had nothing to do with her assertion, first raised on appeal, that she was deprived of liberty when taken to the nurse’s office or transported to the hospital.
Second, even if we, like the appellate panel, elected to treat her complaint as if it included such a claim, we do not concur in the рanel’s analysis of federal qualified immunity.
See Saucier, supra,
533
U.S.
at 202, 121
S.Ct.
at 2156,
In part, we reach our conclusion about federal qualified immunity because of our evaluation of the context in which these events occurred, a school setting that we have repeatedly regarded as calling for protections geared toward the safety of students.
See
*581
Jerkins v. Anderson,
191
N.J.
285, 289,
More to the point, in light of the fact that the school was a signatory to the Agreement, and in light of the obligations of the individual defendants to act so as to protect the safety of the students, we see no basis on which to conclude that, whatever rights plaintiff may have had, “it would be clear to a reasonable [person] that [the individual defendants’] conduct was unlawful in the situation ... confronted.”
Saucier, supra,
533
U.S.
at 202, 121
S.Ct.
at 2156,
Third, we reverse the judgment of the appellate panel to the extent that it concluded that Ashworth’s mere presence in the nurse’s office independently would suffice to support a cause of action against him pursuant to § 1983. The terse holding to that effect gives no clue as to its theoretical basis, and we discern none in the applicable case law, which requires that, in order to be liable, the actor must engage in conduct that violated plaintiff’s constitutional right.
Ibid.,
121
S.Ct.
at 2156,
We therefore reverse the judgment of the Appellate Division to the extent that it reinstated plaintiffs federal claims against any of the school defendants.
*582 V.
We next consider the several state law tort claims raised as against the school defendants, together with the assertions of those defendants that their acts are entitled to the cloak of qualified immunity afforded by the TCA.
We begin with a brief overview of the TCA and the qualified immunity it confers. Public officials are cloaked with immunity from, or with limitations upon, tort claims under certain circumstances designated in the TCA, N.J.S.A. 59:1-1 to 59:12-3, several sections of which are particularly relevant to our consideration of the issues raised in this appeal.
First, the public employee has the burden to plead and prove his immunity under the TCA.
Kolitch v. Lindedahl,
100
N.J.
485, 497,
The TCA sets forth the test for immunity, providing.it to a public employee who “acts in good faith in the execution or enforcement of any law.”
N.J.S.A.
59:3-3. We have held that in order for that immunity to apply, the public employee must “establish that [his or her] acts were objectively reasonable or that [he or she] performed them with subjective good faith.”
Canico v. Hurtado,
144
N.J.
361, 365,
In addition to the grant of immunity, the TCA includes a “verbal threshold,” N.J.S.A. 59:9-2(d), which serves to limit claims seeking to recover damages for pain and suffering. It provides that such damages are only available “in cases of permanent loss of a bodily function, permanent disfigurement or dismemberment where the medical treatment expenses are in excess of $3,600.00.” Ibid.
It is only through a careful balancing of those separate provisions, some of which operate in favor оf plaintiffs seeking to recover and others of which have the opposite intent and effect, that we can understand and evaluate the claims raised in this appeal. We turn, then, to our analysis of the state law tort claims raised by plaintiff which are before us on appeal. More particularly, we address plaintiffs claims for defamation, intentional infliction of emotional distress, invasion of privacy, assault and battery, and false imprisonment, all of which the Appellate Division reinstated as against Bruno and Ashworth individually on the ground that they were not entitled to TCA immunity against those claims. 11
A.
We begin our analysis with an examination of the TCA provisions that strip away immunity for acts of willful misconduct. As
*584
we have held, “[b]y its plain, unambiguous, and specific terms,
N.J.S.A.
59:3-14(a) [the actual fraud, actual malice or willful misconduct provision] creates an exception to the verbal threshold,”
Toto v. Ensuar,
196
N.J.
134, 145,
The traditional formulation of willful misconduct has required “a showing that there has been a deliberate act or omission with knowledge of a high degree of probability of harm and rеckless indifference to consequences.”
Berg v. Reaction Motors Div., Thiokol Client. Corp.,
37
N.J.
396, 414,
Viewed together, these articulations of the concept demand an evaluation of the evidence adduced rather than a focus on the label given to the cause of action. Because the appellate panel looked generally at the intentional torts, our review must include a separate analysis of each of these torts, and the factual assertions supporting each, to determine which of them, in light of this standard, will withstand scrutiny when tested against the willfulness standard.
B.
We begin with plaintiff’s claims for defamation and for intentional infliction of emotional distress, both of which illustrate the operation of the statutory immunities that we have explained. The Appellate Division reinstated the defamation claim based on its comparison of the elements included in such a claim against the immunity defense. In short, the panel concluded that because
*585
defamation includes the element of “actual malice,”
see New York Times Co. v. Sullivan,
376
U.S.
254, 279-80, 84
S.Ct.
710, 726,
Defendants argue that the panel erred both in failing to recognize that plaintiff offered no factual evidence sufficient to support her defamation claim and in refusing to extend to them the statutory immunity protection. We consider those arguments in turn. We have identified the elements of the cause of action for defamation to be: “(1) the assertion of a false and defamatory statement concerning another; (2) the unprivileged publication of that statement to a third party; and (3) fault amounting at least to negligence by the publisher.”
DeAngelis v. Hill,
180
N.J.
1, 13,
In order to evaluate a statement’s content, a court must consider “the fair and natural meaning that will be given to the statement by reasonable persons of ordinary intelligence.”
Ibid,
(citations omitted). When considering verifiability, a court must “determine whether the statement is one of fact or opinion.”
Ibid.
While a statement of opinion generally enjoys absolute immunity, a statement of fact is actionable “[o]nly if the statement suggested specific factual assertions that cоuld be proven true or false.”
Ibid.
Finally, to decide whether a statement is capable of a defamatory meaning, a court must consider “the listener’s reasonable interpretation, which will be based in part on the context in which the statement appears.”
Id.
at 15,
*586 Although the record is far from clear, we agree with the Appellate Division that, viewed in a light most favorable to plaintiff, her factual allegations suffice. Plaintiff alleged in her complaint that the school defendants made a false accusation against her in “an open and notorious manner” and that the accusation destroyed her good name, “as it was publicly indicated that she was mentally unbalanced and was an imminent [danger] to the safety of herself and/or others.” Although, in the end, plaintiff will be left to her proofs, a reasonable person could consider the school defendants’ accusation that she had threatened to kill twenty-two students, if it is not true, to be defamatory. We turn, then, to consider whether the school defendants are immune.
In analyzing the defamation claim, the Appellate Division focused on whether the defendants can claim the protection of immunity, regardless of what they said. In doing so, the panel utilized the “actual malice” standard, reasoning that it would be inconsistent with a grant of immunity against plaintiffs defamation claim.
See Jobes, supra,
369
N.J.Super.
at 395,
In a similar context, we have recognized that speech relating to teachers in their role as educators implicates a matter of public concern, thus calling for the highest level of protection.
See Rocci v. Ecole Secondaire MacDonald-Cartier,
165
N.J.
149, 156-57,
By the same reasoning, we also agree with the Appellate Division’s reinstatement of plaintiffs claim for punitive damages associated with her defamation claim. Because a punitive damages award also requires either actual malice or willful disregard of a likelihood of harm,
N.J.S.A.
2A:15-5.12, plaintiffs assertions, if proven, could suffice to support such an award. Similarly, although the record is insufficient to evaluate with precision whether plaintiffs spouse will be able to succeed on his per quod claim, by applying the same analysis, it too was appropriately reinstated.
See Murphy v. Implicito,
392
N.J.Super.
245, 269-70,
We reach a similar result in our evaluation of plaintiffs intentional infliction of emotional distress claim. We have held that, in order to prevail on that common law claim, “the plaintiff must establish intentional and outrageous conduct by the defendant, proximate cause, and distress that is severe.”
Tarr, supra,
181
N.J.
at 77,
Plaintiffs emotional distress claim rests on several factual assertions. She contends that Ashworth, seeking revenge against her, intentionally “put words in her mouth” and inaccurately reported what she had said. Plaintiff asserts that Bruno knew that she is a practicing Buddhist and a non-violent person who would not have made such a threat. She argues that both of those *588 defendants knew of her past suffering in Cambodia and her fear of governmental authorities and that they intentionally arranged for her to be taken away in a “public and notorious” way with the intention of preventing her from pursuing future employment as a teacher.
As with our evaluation of plaintiffs defamation claim, those assertions, if they can be proven at trial, could support a recovery. Likewise, the elements of the cause of action place the claim outside of the scope of the qualified immunity and the verbal threshоld protection otherwise available to defendants. Although not entirely overlapping with our evaluation of the defamation claim, we agree with the Appellate Division’s assessment to the extent that those facts, if proven, would bespeak a willfulness permitting relief. Moreover, by an analysis similar to that employed for plaintiffs defamation claim, the punitive damages and per quod claims associated with her intentional infliction of emotional distress claim also were properly reinstated.
See N.J.S.A.
2A:15-5.12;
Murphy, supra,
392
N.J.Super.
at 269-70,
C.
We affirm in part and reverse in part the reinstatement of plaintiffs claim for invasion of privacy. Although she did not specify which privacy cause of action she was asserting, the common law right to privacy recognizes essentially two.
See Hennessey v. Coastal Eagle Point Oil Co.,
129
N.J.
81, 94,
Plaintiffs invasion of privacy claim is based on two specific events, which she has referred to as the “strip search,” by which she means the physical examination conducted by the hospital doctors, and the psychiatric evaluation she underwent. The claim therefore must be analyzed within the parameters of the tort of intrusion on seclusion. In addition, our evaluation of this claim is complicated because the critical events about which plaintiff complains are, in large part, separated from the acts of these defendants. Moreover, our evaluation must remain faithful to the immunity and verbal threshold provisions of the TCA, either of which could prevent plaintiff from succeeding.
Nevertheless, we approach these claims, as we do the others, in the context of a summary judgment motion, and we evaluate them with that in mind. In order to recover on either version of this tort, plaintiff must first demonstrate that the physical and psychiatric examination at the hospital was “highly offensive to a reasonable person.” However, because both of these examinations took place at the hospital and at the direction of hospital personnel, plaintiff can only recover if she can prove a causal link between them and defendants’ actions and if her proofs suffice to meet the TCA. That is, she must prove that defendants’ actions were such that they fall outside of the protection of immunity and, to the extent that she falls short of the verbal threshold’s requirements, she can only recover if she can prove that defendants’ actions were both wrongful and willful.
Generously read, plaintiffs invasion of privacy claim rests on her assertion that Ashworth, seeking revenge, intentionally and falsely reported that plaintiff had uttered a threat, with the *590 malicious intent that she would be taken to the hospital and subjected to examinations that would be highly offensive to an ordinary person, and that his false report caused those events to occur. As to Bruno, plaintiffs invasion of privacy claim must rest on the assertion that she shared or joined in Ashworth’s plan with a malicious intent and knowing that his claim about the threat was false.
Our careful review of the record convinces us that plaintiff simply cannot mеet these proof requirements as to Bruno, because there is no evidence that Bruno acted with the requisite intent or that she thought that the report of a threat was false. Although the question is a closer one as to Ashworth, there is evidence that he did not accurately report what plaintiff said and that he would have been aware that under the Agreement, his report would trigger a call to the police or a mental health evaluation. We find in those assertions the bare minimum needed for plaintiff to be able to proceed on her claim against Ashworth for invasion of privacy.
We caution the trial court, however, that because plaintiff has suffered no injury sufficient to meet the verbal threshold, in order to succeed on this claim, plaintiff will be required to demonstrate that Ashworth’s report was not simply inaccurate, but that he knew it to be false and willfully reported it as true. Moreover, plaintiff will also be required to prove that the medical and psychiatric examinations were “highly offensive to a reasonable person” and that Ashworth, rather than the police or EMTs, was the proximate cause of those two discrete events on which her invasion of privacy claim is based.
D.
Nеxt, we consider, and we reject, the assertion that plaintiff can proceed to trial on her claim of false imprisonment. Although the claim, on its face, is excluded from the statutory immunities, that does not equate with a conclusion that plaintiff *591 should be permitted to proceed. On the contrary, the record here demonstrates that she cannot prevail on that claim.
False imprisonment is “the constraint of the person without legal justification.”
Mesgleski v. Oraboni,
330
N.J.Super.
10, 24,
Plaintiff testified that she did not try to leave the nurse’s office because the nurse told her that Bruno would consider rehiring her for the following year if she waited there until Bruno arrived. In other words, plaintiff, by her own admission, was not constrained unlawfully in the nurse’s office by the school defendants. Instead, she voluntarily went to the office, and she chose to remain there in order to better her chances of being rehired. More to the point, the record reflects that she napped in the nurse’s office while awaiting Bruno’s return from the graduation ceremony, an undisputed fact in sharp contrast with any suggestion that she was held there against her will. There being no evidence in the record to support that critical element of the proofs required to sustain a cause of action for false imprisonment, it was appropriately dismissed, and we reverse the appellate panel’s contrary judgment.
E.
For separate reasons, we find no basis on which to permit plaintiffs claims for assault and battery to proceed. A person is subject to liability for the common law tort of assault if: “(a) he acts intending to cause a harmful or offensive contact with the person of the other or a third person, or an imminent apprehension of such a contact, and (b) the other is thereby put in such imminent apprehension.”
Wigginton v. Servidio,
324
N.J.Super.
114,129,
*592 Tested against this standard, there are two insurmountable impediments to plaintiffs ability to proceed with her claims for assault and battery. First, there is no evidentiary support for plaintiffs assertion of “bleeding” and “seventy-two braises” as the factual basis for those claims. Those injuries appear nowhere in the medical records and plaintiff, in response to the motion for summary judgment, failed to produce any evidencе, including the photographs she asserts would prove the truth of those assertions. Second, it is noteworthy that all of plaintiffs factual assertions about assault and battery are directed to an alleged beating by the police, rather than acts by the school defendants. Consequently, we find no basis on which she can proceed with these claims as against the school defendants.
VI.
We granted the petition of the medical defendants to consider their arguments that the Appellate Division erred in its rejection of their assertions that they were entitled to immunity. Pointing to two separate statutory constructs, namely the Good Samaritan Act, N.J.S.A. 2A:62A-1, and Title 30, N.J.S.A. 30:4-27.7, they argued that the Appellate Division erred in concluding that they were not within either of those statutory grants of immunity. Although we agree with the appellate panel’s conclusion that the Good Samaritan Act does not apply to these defendants, we conclude that the panel erred in rejecting the alternate statutory basis for immunity, and we therefore reverse the panel’s judgment reinstating plaintiffs claims against the medical defendants.
Our analysis of the Good Samaritan Act, and its application to the facts of this appeal, need not be lengthy. Thе Act essentially provides that certain licensed practitioners of healing arts and emergency or first aid volunteers “who in good faith render[] emergency care at the scene of an accident or emergency ... or while transporting” the victim for care, “shall not be liable for any civil damages as a result of [their] acts or omissions.” N.J.S.A. 2A:62A-1. The statute does not define accident or emergency, *593 but the statement that accompanied the bill that became the Good Samaritan Act makes it plain that the statute’s intent was to apply to events such as roadside accidents and like emergencies. That statement commented: “The purpose of this bill is to encourage the rendering of aid to injured persons at the scene of an accident or emergency without fear of civil liability.” Statement accompanying Assembly Bill No. 62, L. 1963, c. 140 (1963).
We have relied on that understanding of the Act, concluding that it refers to “physicians [or other covered individuals] who come upon such patients by chance,” and therefore does not apply to treatment rendered by such professionals in other settings.
See Velazquez v. Jiminez,
172
N.J.
240, 259,
Plaintiff was not the victim of an accident or an emergency of the kind envisioned by the Legislature when it enacted the Good Samaritan Act; the medical defendants did not come upon plaintiff “by chance” but instead came upon her when responding to a call for their assistance. Were we to read the statute’s language as they do, we would be granting to emergency responders a far broader immunity than the Legislature included in the statute, because it would inevitably apply to any and all calls for their assistance. More to the point, even if that might be an appropriate reading to apply to emergency responders, who, at least in theory, are always coming to the scene of an emergency, it would greatly expand the reach of the Act as it relates to every other covered individual, including the practitioners of all of the healing arts. That being the case, we decline their invitation to give a broader reading to the statute than did the drafters.
We reach a contrary conclusion, however, with respect to Title 30, the other statutory basis on which the medical defendants relied for their assertion of immunity. The section of Title 30 that *594 defendants assert applies relates to the care and treatment of persons who are mentally ill, and, in particular, governs involuntary civil commitment of such individuals. See N.J.S.A. 30:4-27.1 to -31. Included within that regulatory scheme are provisions relating to evaluation and screening of persons who are believed to be in need of involuntary civil commitment, one part of which is focused on those law enforcement and related persons who may be involved in that process. The immunity provision in issue is found within that larger statutory scheme.
In pertinent part, the statute confers immunity on certain designated individuals, including law enforcement personnel, who “take[] reasonable steps to assess, take custody of, detain or transport” someone who is in need of the mental health assessment warranted by the statute. N.J.S.A 30:4-27.7(a). One section of that statutory grant of immunity, however, specifically extends to emergency services personnel and persons involved in medical transport, N.J.S.A 30:4-27.7(b), which includes a member of a first aid, ambulance, rescue squad or fire department, whether paid or volunteer, auxiliary police officer or paramedic. The statutory grant of immunity provides as follows:
b. An emergency services or medical transport person or their respective employers, acting in good faith pursuant to this act and pursuant to the direction of a person designated in subsection a. of this section, who takes reasonable steps to take custody of, detain or transport an individual for the purpose of mental health assessment or treatment is immune from civil and criminal liability.
[N.J.S.A. 30:4—27.7(b).]
In order to claim the protections of that immunity, therefore, an individual who falls within the definition of an emergency services or medical transport person must act in good faith pursuant to the statute and at the direction of one of the designated individuals, including a law enforcement officer.
In concluding that there was a genuine issue of material fact about whether the medical defendants were entitled to immunity, the appellate panel recognized that the key was whether the EMTs acted at the direction of a law enforcement officer. In addressing that question, however, the panel imported its analysis *595 of the earlier statutory section that fixes the standards for involuntary commitment and the authority it vests in law enforcement personnel, see N.J.S.A. 30:4—27.6(a), and, finding it wanting, the panel extended that failure of proofs to the EMTs.
In doing so, however, the panel overlooked the fact that plaintiffs essential factual claim was not whether the EMTs acted pursuant to the direction of law enforcement personnel; rather, her claim was that the EMTs only transported her because the police had already arrested her for the purpose of being taken for a psychiatric evaluation. Seen in that light, the evidence on which the Appellate Division relied might have been relevant if the question were about immunity for an involuntary commitment.
See Ziemba v. Riverview Med. Ctr.,
275
N.J.Super.
293, 301-03,
Based on the undisputed factual record, there can be no question that the medical defendants are entitled to the protection of this statutory immunity. They were summoned through a 911 call alerting them to an individual who was described to them to be emotionally disturbed, and they arrived on the scene of a volatile situation at an elementary school whеre they found plaintiff, who was frantic and agitated. When they arrived, law enforcement personnel were in command on the scene and an officer accompanied them in their rescue vehicle when they transported plaintiff to a hospital where an evaluation could be conducted. Particularly when viewed in light of plaintiffs essential assertions about the involvement of law enforcement personnel, we find no genuine issue of material fact about whether the EMTs acted with the authority and under the direction that the statutory immunity contemplates.
Our conclusion that the medical defendants are entitled to a grant of summary judgment also supports the conclusion that *596 there is no basis on which to permit plaintiff to proceed against them for punitive damages. ' We therefore reverse that aspect of the Appellate Division’s judgment and direct that judgment in favor of the medical defendants be entered.
VII.
The judgment of the Appellate Division is reversed to the extent that it reinstated plaintiffs federal causes of action and employment claims and to the extent that it reinstated plaintiffs state tort claims for assault and battery, and false imprisonment as against the school defendants. The judgment of the Appellate Division is reversed to the extent that it reinstated the tort claim for invasion of privacy as against defendant Bruno, only. The judgment of the Appellate Division is reversed to the extent that it reinstated plaintiffs claims against the medical defendants. In all other respects, the judgment of the Appellate Division is affirmed.
For affirmance in part; reversal in part Chief Justice RABNER and Justices LONG, LaVECCHIA, WALLACE RIVERA-SOTO and HOENS—6.
Opposed—None.
Notes
All of the facts relate to plaintiff Sopharie Leang; because plaintiff Song Leang's only involvement in this matter arises from his per quod claim, our references to plaintiff throughout will refer only to Sopharie Leang.
We would be remiss if we did not comment briefly on the fact that plaintiff's failure to comply with the dictates of
Rule
4:46-2(b) either in a timely manner or in the fashion demanded by that
Rule
made any analysis of her essential factual allegations more complex than necessary. That shortcoming, which led the motion judge to deem all of defendants’ factual assertions to have been admitted, rather than to impose a sanction, however, resulted in an inadvertent failure by the motion judge to recognize that the moving papers themselves demonstrated significant factual disputes. Those factual disputes alone should hаve resulted in a denial of some of the requested relief. Moreover, as the Appellate Division pointed out, in the context of a voluminous, factually complex record, deeming facts to be admitted, although perhaps more expedient, did not in these circumstances, achieve substantial justice. We again reiterate that we expect parties to comply with the dictates of
Rule
4:46-2(b) rather than hope for mercy when they do not, and we encourage the use of sanctions to enforce compliance where appropriate in place of a reflexive grant of dismissal.
See Lyons v. Twp. of Wayne,
185
N.J.
426, 435-36,
We recite these counts at some length because the pleading does not conform with the articulation utilized by the Appellate Division in ways significant to our analysis.
The record reflects that plaintiff reached a settlement with Jersey City and the Jersey City Police Department, including the ESU, prior to the filing of the appeal.
Portions of the appellate decision were not published pursuant to Rule 1:36— 3. To the extent relevant to our analysis, those portions are summarized in greater detail throughout.
We granted the motion filed on behalf of plaintiffs that sought leave to file a cross-petition for certification out of time, but denied the cross-petition after
*575
consideration of its merits. 196
N.J.
598,
Although not raised in the petition for certification, we agree that plaintiff's claim for common law wrongful discharge cannot be sustained.
See Pierce, supra,
84
N.J.
at 72,
Although the basis for the panel’s decision as to Bruno and Ashworth is also flawed, it is not challenged.
Although plaintiff also raised a First Amendment argument on appeal to which the panel referred,
see Leang, supra,
399
NJ.Super.
at 358,
Plaintiff urges this Court to consider her federal claims as having an alternate basis in the Fourth Amendment. That is, she argues that the false *580 arrest and false imprisonment claims included in her original complaint were "seizure” allegations that might have supported a Fourth Amendment analysis and, by extension, a federal statutory remedy. See 42 U.S.C. § 1983. We decline to permit plaintiff to raise a theory that she has not pleaded and, at the appellate level, conceded was not available to her.
The Appellate Division reasoned that the grant of summary judgment to the Board was also in error,
see Leang, supra,
399
N.J.Super,
at 367,
