FRED STANSBURY, Plaintiff and Appellant, v. PROFESSOR RUEY-LIN LIN, Defendant and Respondent.
No. 91-486
Supreme Court of Montana
Submitted on Briefs March 26, 1992. Decided March 10, 1993.
257 Mont. 245 | 848 P.2d 509 | 50 St. Rep. 251
For Defendant and Respondent: Norman C. Peterson, Agency Legal Services Bureau, Helena; Donna Davis, Matovich, Addy & Keller, Billings; Bill Gianoulias, Tort Claims Division, Helena; LeRoy H. Schramm, Chief Legal Counsel, Office of the Commissioner of Higher Education, Helena.
JUSTICE GRAY delivered the Opinion of the Court.
Fred Stansbury (Stansbury) appeals from an order of the District Court of the Thirteenth Judicial District, Yellowstone County, granting summary judgment in favor of the respondent, Professor Ruey-Lin Lin (Professor Lin). We affirm.
The sole issue on appeal is whether the District Court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of Professor Lin.
On March 26, 1990, Stansbury appeared as a student for the first day of a sociology class taught by Professor Lin, a professor at Eastern Montana College in Billings. Stansbury alleges that Professor Lin demanded that he leave the classroom and that, upon his departure from the classroom, Professor Lin slandered him in a thirty-minute tirade to the remaining students in the class.
On January 23, 1991, Stansbury‘s attorney, on behalf of Stansbury, signed a settlement agreement in which Stansbury released Eastern Montana College and its officers, employees and
To resolve this case, the parties agree as follows:
b. Nothing herein precludes Fred Stansbury from pursing [sic] legal recourse against Professor Ruey-Lin Lin for actions of his outside the course and scope of employment authority of Eastern Montana College or the Montana University System.
The agreement was also signed by representatives of Eastern Montana College and the Montana University System. Stansbury received the settlement provided in the agreement.
Following the execution of the settlement agreement, Stansbury filed a slander complaint in the District Court against Professor Lin as an individual defendant. The complaint was accompanied by and incorporated an affidavit made by Stansbury. Stansbury alleged that Professor Lin‘s conduct in slandering him was willful and malicious. He sought actual and punitive damages.
Professor Lin moved to dismiss Stansbury‘s complaint, arguing that since Stansbury had settled the slander action with Professor Lin‘s employer, the State of Montana, Stansbury was statutorily barred by
The motion to dismiss was briefed by both parties. The District Court determined that the parties had relied on facts not contained in the pleadings and, therefore, converted the motion to dismiss into a motion for summary judgment and set a date for an evidentiary hearing.
At the evidentiary hearing, neither party presented evidence and both waived any further presentation of evidence. The District Court then proceeded to hear oral argument on the summary judgment motion. Stansbury contended during oral argument that Professor Lin was acting outside the course and scope of his employment at the time of the alleged slander and that the State previously had acknowledged that fact. Because there was no evidence before the court that
Professor Lin presented nothing further. Stansbury submitted an additional affidavit of his own. Stansbury also submitted an affidavit in which his attorney stated that during the course of settling with Eastern Montana College, he had spoken with JoAnne Sherwood from the office of the Commissioner of Higher Education and had “expressed a distinct concern about the continuation of this action against Professor Ruey-Lin Lin as an individual.” Stansbury‘s attorney also stated in his affidavit that the language of the original settlement agreement had been altered to allow Stansbury to proceed against Professor Lin individually.
Thereafter, the District Court granted summary judgment in favor of Professor Lin, stating:
It is clear under
§ 2-9-305, MCA , that an employee whose conduct gave rise to the suit is immune from liability by reasons of the same subject matter if the governmental entity acknowledges that his conduct was within the course and scope of the employee‘s employment. Accordingly, the recovery, by virtue of the settlement against the governmental entity, to wit: Eastern Montana College, constitutes a complete bar to this action.Counsel for the plaintiff has not produced any evidence to constitute a bar to the application of the express terms of the statute.
This appeal followed.
Did the District Court err in granting summary judgment in favor of Professor Lin?
Summary judgment is proper when no genuine issues of material fact exist and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
Eastern Montana College, as a college run by the State of Montana, is a governmental entity as defined in Title 2, Chapter 9, MCA.
Recovery against a governmental entity under the provisions of parts 1 through 3 of this chapter constitutes a complete bar to any action or recovery of damages by the claimant, by reason of the same subject matter, against the employee whose negligence or wrongful act, error, or omission or other actionable conduct gave rise to the claim. In any such action against a governmental entity, the employee whose conduct gave rise to the suit is immune from liability by reasons of the same subject matter if the governmental entity acknowledges or is bound by a judicial determination that the conduct upon which the claim is brought arises out of the course and scope of the employee‘s employment, unless the claim constitutes an exclusion provided in (b) through (d) of subsection (6). [Emphasis added.]
The validity of this statute has not been challenged as part of this appeal.
In interpreting statutes, we must give language its plain meaning. Keller v. Smith (1976), 170 Mont. 399, 404-05, 553 P.2d 1002, 1006.
As stated above, the settlement between Stansbury and Eastern Montana College provided that “[n]othing herein precludes Fred Stansbury from pursing [sic] legal recourse against Professor Ruey-Lin Lin for actions of his outside the course and scope of employment authority of Eastern Montana College or the Montana University System.” Stansbury argues that this provision in the settlement agreement affirms his continuing right to sue Professor Lin personally. We disagree. This provision only precludes the settlement agreement from cutting off Stansbury‘s right to sue Professor Lin. It does not cancel the statutory bar to this action provided by
The District Court considered, and in their briefs to this Court the parties have argued, whether Professor Lin‘s actions were within the course and scope of his employment, as discussed in the second sentence of
Because we have concluded that the first sentence of
Affirmed.
CHIEF JUSTICE TURNAGE, JUSTICES McDONOUGH and WEBER concur.
JUSTICE TRIEWEILER dissenting.
Fred Stansbury has been sandbagged twice. Once by the attorneys for the University System, and a second time by the Supreme Court. Therefore, I dissent.
On January 3, 1991, Stansbury filed a complaint against Ruey-Lin Lin and Eastern Montana College (EMC). He alleged, among other things, that on March 26, 1990, when he entered Lin‘s sociology class at EMC as a student, he was ordered out of the classroom by Lin. He further alleged that after his departure from the room, Lin embarked on a 30 minute tirade during which he intentionally and maliciously defamed Stansbury by referring to him as “lazy” and “stupid,” and otherwise impugned his character and learning ability.
In the affidavit in support of his amended complaint, Stansbury also pointed out that Lin told the rest of the students in the class that Stansbury was ignorant, obnoxious, incapable of learning, and no good as a person or a student.
Shortly after the original complaint was filed, Stansbury negotiated a settlement with EMC. However, according to the af-
Nothing herein precludes Fred Stansbury from pursuing legal recourse against Professor Ruey-Lin Lin for actions of his outside the course and scope of employment authority of Eastern Montana College or the Montana University System.
The amended settlement agreement was signed on January 23, 1991, and on February 20, 1991, an amended complaint was filed naming Lin as the only defendant and repeating Stansbury‘s allegation that Lin‘s actions were intentional and malicious.
An appearance was filed on behalf of EMC by Norman C. Peterson, an attorney employed by the Agency Legal Services Bureau of the Department of Justice of the State of Montana.
On March 27, 1991, Peterson filed a motion to dismiss the complaint, and in support of that motion, filed the affidavit of Leroy Schramm. Schramm is the Chief Legal Counsel to the Commissioner on Higher Education, and in his affidavit stated that the actions of Lin which were complained of by Stansbury were committed within the course and scope of Lin‘s employment as a professor at EMC.
The District Court granted the motion to dismiss because it concluded that pursuant to
Of course, the District Court‘s judgment of dismissal could not be affirmed on the basis that Lin acted within the course of his employment because this Court has since held, in Maguire v. State of Montana (Mont. 1992), [254 Mont. 178], 835 P.2d 755, 758-60, 49 St. Rep. 688, 689-91, that where intentional torts are not committed for the benefit of the employer, they are outside the course of employment as a matter of law and the employer cannot be held vicariously liable for the consequences of such an act. In this case, the defamatory conduct that Lin is accused of was an intentional act, and according to the majority opinion in Maguire, was outside the course of his
Therefore, ignoring all rules of statutory construction, the majority has simply concluded that based on
For example,
It is the purpose of this section to provide for the immunization, defense, and indemnification of public officers and employees civilly sued for their actions taken within the course and scope of their employment. [Emphasis added.]
Furthermore, the second sentence of subsection (5) explains the first sentence by providing that:
In any such action against a governmental entity, the employee whose conduct gave rise to the suit is immune from liability by reasons of the same subject matter if the governmental entity acknowledges or is bound by a judicial determination that the conduct upon which the claim is brought arises out of the course and scope of the employee‘s employment .... [Emphasis added.]
The construction of the majority ignores this provision of the statute and ignores the express purpose of the statute which is to immunize employees for only those acts which are in the course and scope of their employment.
The majority opinion concludes that the second sentence is not applicable because this action “is not now and never has been an action against a governmental entity.” The majority is incorrect. This action started out as an action against EMC. The complaint was amended to dismiss EMC only after a settlement was entered into with that defendant.
The majority opinion ignores other rules of construction.
The majority makes passing reference to the fact that
In summary, this Court has previously held that intentional torts are outside the course and scope of State employees’ employment. That rule of law cannot be changed by an affidavit of one of the State‘s agents when it serves the State‘s interest to do so.
For these reasons, I dissent from the opinion of the majority and would reverse the judgment of the District Court.
JUSTICES HARRISON and HUNT concur in the foregoing dissent.
