Grand Union Company employed Richard Strickland and Frank Fox as security guards at one of its retail stores. When Fox purportedly observed a shoplifting, he and Strickland detained both Lolita Miller and Ametrius Nicely. Eventually, Ms. Nicely was convicted of theft by shoplifting, but the criminal charges against Ms. Miller were nolle prossed because of an exculpatory affidavit given by Fox. In exchange for the affidavit, Ms. Miller executed a covenant not to sue Fox. Ms. Miller brought suit against Grand Union asserting, among her other claims, false imprisonment, assault, and battery based upon a theory of vicarious liability for Fox’s conduct. Grand Union moved for summary judgment on the ground that the covenant not to sue Fox absolved it of liability to Ms. Miller. The trial court denied Grand Union’s motion for summary judgment, but certified its order for immediate review. The Court of Appeals granted Grand Union’s application for interlocutory appeal and, relying on
1. There is a distinction between a release and a covenant not to
sue. Whereas a release extinguishes the entire cause of action, a covenant not to sue merely prevents the institution of a civil action against the party named therein. See
Brantley Co. v. Briscoe,
Prior to
Posey v. Medical Center-West,
supra, the rule was different for releases. Because it extinguishes a cause of action, a release given to one joint tortfeasor was deemed to discharge even the unnamed joint tortfeasors, including the unnamed master whose liability was based upon the principle of respondeat superior. See
Giles v. Smith,
Accordingly,
Posey
did not purport to change the law regarding covenants not to sue.
Posey
merely changed the law as it related to releases by limiting the effect of those instruments to the named parties, as has always been the rule with covenants not to sue. Nothing in
Posey
indicates that its holding applies only in the limited context of traditional joint tortfeasors or that it has no applicability in a case involving vicarious liability. “Although the liability of the master and the servant is joint and several, the same principles apply to them in an action based solely on the negligence of the servant as would apply in actions against joint tort-feasors. [Cit.]”
Giles v. Smith,
supra at 542 (1) (e). Georgia courts, as well as the courts of most other states, have treated the master as if he were a joint tortfeasor with his servant. Anno., 92 ALR2d 533, 539, § 3 [b] (1963). Thus,
Posey
requires that the master be named in a release if he . is to be discharged thereby. See
Lackey v. McDowell,
supra. See also
Saranil
lio v. Silva,
2. Because this case involves a covenant not to sue, rather than a release,
Posey
has no substantive bearing on its outcome. Under the law as it has always existed in this state, a covenant not to sue discharges only the party or parties actually named therein. This is entirely consistent with the rule in other jurisdictions, which “similarly allow recovery against an employer following execution of a covenant not to sue an employee, even without an express reservation. [Cits.]”
Dworak v. Olson Constr. Co.,
Judgment affirmed in part and reversed in part.
