In аn amended complaint filed in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City, William L. Tall, as parent and next friend of William L. Tall, Jr. (“Roy”), appellant, sued the Board of School Commissioners of Baltimore City (the “Board”), appel-lee, and Robert Manning 1 for negligence (Count I), assault (Count II), battery (Count III), intentional infliction of emotional distress (Count IV), and violations of the Maryland Declaration of Rights (Count V). Appellee filed a motion to dismiss and, following a hearing, the court granted the motion. After the court granted appellant’s motion for final judgment, Tall noted his timely appeal. He presents one question for our review, which we have rephrased slightly:
Did the trial court err in granting appellee’s motion to dismiss?
For the reasons set forth below, we shall affirm.
FACTUAL SUMMARY
Appellant’s son, Roy, suffers from Down’s syndrome. During the summer of 1995, when Roy was nine years old, he participated in a special educational program at School No. 304, Harbor View Elementary, sponsored by the Board. During the course of the program, Manning, who was an employee of the Board, served as Roy’s teacher.
While at school on July 18, 1995, Roy urinated in his pants. Manning responded by physically disciplining Roy; this included beating the child on his arms and legs with a ruler. When Roy arrived home that day, Gwyneth Tall, his mother, noticed that he was wearing a long-sleeved shirt and long *240 pants, which were different than the clothes he had worn to school that morning. As she helped Roy change his clothes, Ms. Tall discovered raised welts and bruises on her son’s arms and legs. Consequently, she took Roy to the emergency room аt Harbor Hospital Center, where Roy was x-rayed and treated for his injuries.
Later that same day, the Tails reported the injuries to the Baltimore City Police, at the Southern District. An investigation of the matter culminated in criminal charges against Manning for child abuse, assault, and battery. Subsequently, Manning pled guilty to assault, for which he received a five year suspended sentence and five years of supervised probation. He was also ordered not to engage in any activity as a teacher or supervisor of any individual under the age of twenty-one.
On January 31, 1997, appellee filed a Motion to Dismiss First Amended Complaint. Attached to the motion was a copy of Maryland Code (1978, 1992 Repl.Vol., 1996 Supp.), § 7-305 of the Education Article (“E.A.”). Section 7-305(a) 2 provided:
(a) Corporal punishment prohibited. -Notwithstanding any bylaw, rule, or regulation made or approved by the State Board, a principal, vice-principal, or other employee may not administer corporal punishment to discipline a student in a public school in the State.
Appellee also attached to the motion a copy of the “RULES OF THE BOARD OF SCHOOL COMMISSIONERS OF BALTIMORE CITY” (the “local rules”). Section 506.04 of the local rules provided:
506.04-Corporal Punishment Prohibited
The schools shall be governed without corporal punishment.
Additionally, appellee appended a document entitled “Informational Guide for Parents and Students, Fall 1996 ” (the *241 “Supplement”), which contained a section entitled “Corporal Punishment.” It stated:
Corporal punishment usually happens when a teacher, principal, or other school employee hits students as a way of disciplining them.
Corporal punishment is any deliberate striking, paddling, application of an object or body part against the body оf a student, or any other physical punishment used as a corrective or retaliatory measure against a student.
In the Baltimore City Public Schools, corporal punishment is forbidden (Rules of the Board of School Commissioners, 506. (U).
There are circumstances and/or conditions under which [Baltimore City Public School] employees are permitted to touch students appropriately. Maintaining a safe and orderly school environment, administering first aid, and attending to health needs are categories of these circumstances and/or conditions where touching students is permitted. Typical examples of these circumstances are as follows:
• Intervening in fights
• Preventing accidental injury
• Protecting oneself
• Providing appropriate care to disabled students
• Moving through a crowd to address an emergency
• Employing passive restraint with students with emotional disabilities
(Italics in original; boldface added).
Thereafter, the circuit court (Dancy, J.) conducted a hearing on thе Board’s motion to dismiss and, by order dated February 18, 1997, granted appellee’s motion. Judge Dancy hand-wrote the following on the Order:
The Complaint fails to state a cause of action as the conduct of the Board’s employee complained of is malicious and intentional and is outside the scope of his employment and not in furtherance of the Board’s business of educating *242 students. This is particularly so as this employee was a teacher specifically instructed not to use corporal punishment.
Manning subsequently filed his answer to the amended complaint. Pursuant to Maryland Rule 2-602(b), the court granted appellant’s motion for final judgment with respect to the disposition of the claims asserted against appelleе.
We will include additional facts in our discussion.
DISCUSSION
I.
As a threshold matter, we must determine whether the trial court properly directed the entry of a final judgment. Absent a proper final order, of course, we have no jurisdiction to entertain this appeal, because the court’s ruling did not dispose of the case as to both parties.
In a case involving multiple parties, Maryland Rule 2-602(b) permits a court to enter final judgment as to a particular party so long as “the court expressly determines in a written order that there is no just reason for delay.” Here, appellant filed a motion pursuant to Maryland Rule 2-602(b) stating, inter alia, that there was no just reason for delay with respect to the claims against the Board. The court’s written order granting appellant’s “Motion For Final Judgment” stated:
Upon consideration of [appellant’s] Motion for Final Judgment, any responses and replies filed thereto, it is ... ORDERED:
1. That [appellant’s] Motion for a Final Judgment is GRANTED;
2. That Final Judgment is entered with regard to Defendant Board of School Commissioners of Baltimore City as it relates to the Court’s Order dated February 18, 1997 dismissing [appellant’s] claim against [the Board] for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.
*243
It is clear that the court failed to comply with Rule 2-602(b), because it did not make an express determination in the written order that there was “no just reason for delay.” Consequently, the court’s order granting final judgment was ineffective, and there is no final appealable judgment in favor of the Board.
Waters v. USF & G,
Maryland Rule 8-602(e)(l) provides:
If the appellate court determines that the order from which the appeal is taken was not a final judgment when the notice of appeal was filed but that the lower court had discretion to direct the entry of a final judgment pursuant to Rule 2-602(b), the appellate court may, as it finds appropriate, (A) dismiss the appeal, (B) remand the case for the lower court to decide whether to direct the entry of a final judgment, (C) enter a final judgment on its own initiative or (D) if a final judgment was entered by the lower court after the notice of appeal was filed, treat the notice of appeal as if filed on the same day as, but after, the entry of the judgment.
(Emphasis added).
To be sure, certification under Rule 2-602(b) “should be used sparingly so that pieсemeal appeals and duplication of efforts and costs in cases involving multiple claims or multiple parties may be avoided.”
Maryland-Nat’l Capital Park & Planning Comm’n v. Smith,
II.
We next address appellant’s contention that the circuit court improperly considered the local rules and the Supplement that appellee appended as an exhibit to its motion to dismiss. Appellant asserts that the court should not have considered the local rules and the Supplement because they were not supported by affidavit. Appellant’s claim is not preserved. We explain.
A party must lay the proper foundation for a document that is attached to a motion.
See Diffendal v. Kash and Karry Serv. Corp.,
A document can be made part of the motion only through affidavit, deposition, or answers to interrogatories that adequately lay the proper foundation for the document’s admission into evidence. Authenticity and relevancy of the document must be shown. Attaching documents to a motion for summary judgment without the necessary affidavit is no more acceptable than standing up in open court and attempting to offer the same documents into evidence without a witness or a stipulation.
Paul V. Niemeyer
&
Linda M. Schuett,
Maryland Rules Commentary
332 (2d ed.1992); see
Moura v. Randall,
Appellant complains that appellee failed to include an affidavit to support the documents. He asserts in his brief that he “objected to the court’s consideration of the rules in his Memorandum in Opposition to Appellee’s Motion to Dismiss.” Our review of the record indicates, however, that appellant filed an opposition only in connection with appellee’s motion to dismiss the original complaint; he never filed an opposition to the motion to dismiss the amended complaint. Moreover, in that opposition, he focused on the fact that appellee failed to attach the local rules and the Supplement, and that those documents were unsupported by affidavit. Thereafter, when appellee filed its motion to dismiss the amended complaint, it attached the local rules and the Supplement.
As noted, despite his original opposition, appellant then failed to file an opposition to the motion to dismiss the amended complaint. Moreover, at the hearing, appellant seems to have acquiesced to the court’s apparent consideration of the local rules and the Supplement, because he failed to challenge the attachments. Nor did he dispute either the relevancy or the authenticity of the documents. Given appellant’s failure to renew his objection “to the lack of the prerequisite foundation, the objection is waived.” Niemeyer
&
Schuett,
supra,
at 332;
see
Md. Rule 8-131(a);
see also Geisz v. Greater Baltimore Medical Ctr.,
We must next resolve whether the court’s consideration of appellee’s attachments altered the character of the motion. When, as here, a court considers extrinsic material in connection with a motion to dismiss, the motion to dismiss is ordinarily transformed into a motion for summary judgment.
Hrehorovich v. Harbor Hosp. Ctr., Inc.,
III.
Maryland Rule 2-501, which governs summary judgment, contemplates a two-level inquiry; it requires that, in order to grant summary judgment, the trial court must determine that no genuine dispute exists as to any material fact, and that one party is entitled to judgment as matter of law.
Bagwell v. Peninsula Regional Medical Ctr.,
To defeat a motion for summary judgment, the non-moving party must establish that a genuine dispute exists as to a material fact.
Moura,
In the absence of a genuine dispute as to material fact, we must decide if the trial court reached the correct legal conclusion.
Beatty,
With these principles in mind, we must determine whether there are any disputes of material fact. If not, we must then decide whether the trial court was legally correct in its decision.
Appellant alleged in his amended complaint that Manning was “an agent, servant, and/or employee of the School Board acting within the scope of his employment while he was teaching ... Roy....” His claims against the Board are all premised on the doctrine of respondeat superior, 3 Under this doctrine, the Board, as employer, cannot be liable for Manning’s actions unless his conduct was within the scope of employment. Appellant argues that, merely because Manning’s acts were intentional, this does not compel the conclusion that his conduct was beyond the scope of employment. Instead, appellant avers that he presented disputed questions of material fact that should have been resolved by the jury. *248 He argues: “A school board may be held vicariously hable for such [intentional] acts and it should be left to the fаct finder to determine whether or not the acts were committed within the scope of employment.” Therefore, in his view, the circuit court erred in deciding, as a matter of law, that Manning’s conduct was outside the scope of employment.
Appellant’s argument is founded on the assertion that Manning’s conduct was incidental to conduct authorized by the Board for educating special needs children, it was foreseeable, and it was in furtherance of appellee’s objective of educating these children. According to appellant, Manning’s physical contact with Roy was foreseeable because, as a result of Roy’s disability, Manning was required to give him special attention, which included “clothing, touching, and cleaning” Roy. In addition, appellant observes that the Supplement “contemplate[d] that a teacher may touch a student to provide appropriate care for disabled students with emotional disabilities.” Appellant states:
It is a fair and reasonable inference that Defendant Manning’s responsibilities included taking Roy and other such disabled students to the bathroom and that his duties included helping the students with their clothing, touching and cleaning them, and disciplining them if they misbehaved or failed to listen. It was during the carrying out of these duties and responsibilities by the teacher that the alleged misconduct occurred.
(Emphasis added). Therefore, appellant claims Manning’s actions were arguably within the scope of employment.
■Various statutory provisions are relevant here. Maryland Code (1978, 1997 Repl.Vol.), E.A. § 4-105 provides for county board immunity in certain situations. A “County board” includes “the Board of School Commissioners of Baltimore City.” E.A. § 101(d). 4 At the relevant time, E.A. § 4-105(d) provided: “A county board shall have the immunity from *249 liability described under § 5-353 of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article.”
Maryland Code (1974, 1995 RepLVoL), § 5-353 of the Courts and Judicial Proceedings Article (“C.J.”) 5 provided, in part:
(d) Parties in tort claims; separate litigation of issues.— (1) The county board shall be joined as a party to an action against a county board employee or volunteer that alleges damages resulting from a tortious act or omission committed by the employee in the scope of employment or by the volunteer within the scope of the volunteer’s service or duties.
(2) The issuе of whether the county board employee acted within the scope of employment may be litigated separately.
(e) Employees. — A county board employee acting within the scope of employment, without malice and gross negligence, is not personally liable for damages resulting from a tortious act or omission for which a limitation of liability is provided for the county board under subsection (b) of this section, including damages that exceed the limitation on the county board’s liability.
(g) Judgment levied against board. — Except as provided in subsection (e) or (f) of this section, a judgment in tort for damages against a county board employee acting within the scope of employment or a volunteer acting within the scope of the volunteer’s services or duties shall be levied against the county board only and may not be executed against the county board employee or the volunteer personally.
(Boldface added).
Appellant relies on C.J. § 5-353 to support his claim that the intentional character of Manning’s conduct is not disposi- *250 tive of appellee’s liability. He points out that C.J. § 5-353 did not provide that “if a teacher acts with malice or gross negligence that the school board is automatically immune and absolved of all liability.” Rather, he observes that it provided that “the plaintiff may seek recovery from both the school board and the teacher.”
Further, appellant contends that the language of the Local Government Tort Claims Act, codified in C.J. §§ 5-401 through 5-404, 6 supports his position that an intentional act does not necessarily foreclose appellee’s liability. 7 C.J. § 5-403(b)(1) provided:
Except as provided in subsection (c)[ 8 ] of this section, a local government shall be liable for any judgment against its employee for damages resulting from tortious acts or omissions committed by the employee within the scope of employment with the local government.
Appellant also looks to C.J. § 5-402(b), which stated:
(b) Immunity; exceptions.-(l) Except as provided in paragraph (2) of this subsection, a person may not execute against an employee on a judgment rendered for tortious acts or omissions committed by the employee within the scope of employment with a local government.
(2)(i) An employee shall be fully liable for all damages awarded in an action in which it is found that the employee aсted with actual malice.
(ii) In such circumstances the judgment may be executed against the employee and the local government may seek indemnification for any sums it is required to pay under § 5-403(b)(l) of this subtitle.
*251 Thus, appellant argues that “the [Legislature considered factual scenarios under which a local government may be liable for the intentional acts, even acts committed with ‘actual malice,’ by one of its employees within the scope of employment.” In those cases, however, local governments may seek indemnification from the employee. He posits that the Board’s immunity under C.J. § 5-353 should be interpreted in the same way. “Contrary to the lower court ruling in this case,” appellant maintains that “there should not be an automatic bar to suits against the board for vicarious liability when the alleged acts committed within the scope of their employment are intentional or malicious.”
In this case, we need not resolve appellant’s contention that the Board is not immune merely because of the intentional nature of Manning’s conduct. This is because appellant concedes, as he must, that the Board cannot be liable unless Manning acted within the scope of employment. As we see it, Manning did not act within the scope of employment in beating Roy. We explain.
It is well settled that an employer may be held vicariously liable under the doctrine of
respondeat superior
for tortious acts committed by an employee, so long as those acts аre within the scope of employment.
Oaks v. Connors,
*251 “To be within the scope of the employment the conduct must be of the kind the servant is employed to perform and must occur during a period not unreasonably disconnected from the authorized period of employment in a locality not unreasonably distant from the authorized area, and actuated at least in part by a purpose to serve the master.”
*252
Even if the employee’s acts were “ ‘ “wilful, or reckless,” ’ ” an employer may be liable for the wrongful acts of an employee, so long as the employee’s acts were within the scope of employment and in furtherance of the employer’s business.
Market Tavern, Inc. v. Bowen,
Nonetheless, the Sawyer Court made clear that where an employee’s actions are personal, or where they represent a departure from the purpose of furthering the employer’s business, or where the employee is acting to protect his own interests, even if during normal duty hours and at an authorized locality, the employee’s actions are outside the scope of his employment.
Sawyer,
In order to be deemed within the scope of employment, an employee’s tortious conduct need not be expressly authorized by an employer. An employee’s unauthorized conduct might fall within the scope of employment if it was of the same general nature as conduct that was authorized or incidental to that conduct.
Sawyer,
“ ‘By “authorized” [it] is not meant authority expressly conferred, but whether the act was such as was incident to the performance of the duties entrusted to’ ” the employee by the employer.
Ennis,
The
Sawyer
Court enumerated a host of factors that apply to ascertain whether the conduct in issue was so similar or incidental to the conduct authorized as to be considered within the scope of employment. These include:
*254
Sawyer,
*253 “ ‘(a) whether or not the act is one commonly done by such servants; (b) the time, place and purpose of the act; (c) the previous relations between the master and the servant; (d) the extent to which the business of the master is apportioned between different servants; (e) whether the act is outside thе enterprise of the master or, if within the enterprise, has not been entrusted to any servant; (f) whether or not the master has reason to expect that such an act will be done; (g) the similarity in quality of the act done to the act authorized; (h) whether or not the instrumentality by which the harm is done has been furnished by the master to the servant; (i) the extent of departure from the normal method of accomplishing an authorized result[;] and (j) whether or not the act is seriously criminal.’ Id., 229.”
*254
Ordinarily, the question of whether an employee’s conduct is within the scope of employment is one for the jury.
Sawyer,
In analyzing the scope of employment issue in the educational contеxt,
Hunter v. Board of Education of Montgomery County,
Where, as here, it is alleged that the individual educators have wilfully and maliciously acted to injure a student enrolled in a public school, such actions can never be considered to have been done in furtherance of the beneficent purposes of the educational system. Since such alleged intentional torts constitute an abandonment of employment, the Board is absolved of liability for these purported acts of its individual employees.
Id. (Emphasis added).
Appellant argues that the dicta in Hunter is not dispositive of the issue presented here. In observing that a school bоard could be liable for an employee’s intentional torts committed within the scope of employment, he asserts that the Hunter Court contemplated that intentional torts could be “committed at least in part in the furtherance of the employer’s business.” *255 Therefore, according to appellant, the ultimate determination in this case is one for a jury.
In support of his position, appellant relies on cases from other jurisdictions that have considered the scope of employment issue in the context of a teacher’s assaultive conduct on a student. For example, he cites to
McIntosh v. Becker,
The
McIntosh
court recognized that “a governmental unit may be liable under the doctrine of
respondeat superior
for an agent’s intentional misconduct.”
Id.
not believe that any factual development can arise which could justify the finder of fact in concluding that the racial and sexual slurs alleged to have occurred here were within the apparent scope of [the teacher’s] employment.
Id.
Appellant also relies on
Randi F. v. High Ridge YMCA,
Despite the refusal of the Randi F. court to hold the day care center vicariously liable, appellant refers us to the following language in the opinion:
[I]f an employee commits an intentional tort with the dual purpose of furthering the employer’s interest and venting personal anger, respondeat superior may lie; however, if the employee acts purely in his own interest, liability under respondeat superior is inappropriate.
Id.
at 788,
The above referenced cases do not persuade us to adopt appellant’s position. In
McIntosh,
then existing Michigan law expressly permitted the teacher’s use of reasonable force for discipline. In marked contrast, both Maryland law and the local rules expressly bar the use of corporal punishment. Further, the
McIntosh
court stated that the school district could be held liable, under the theory of
respondeat superior,
only “if the plaintiffs son reasonably could have viewed [the employee’s] actions as within the scope of his apparent authority----”
McIntosh,
Although we have not uncovered any Maryland cases dealing with the precise issues presented here, other jurisdictions that have considered the scope of employment issue with respect to acts of assault or sexual child abuse committed by a teacher upon a student provide guidance.
Boykin v. District
*257
of Columbia,
In Boykin, the field coordinator of a program for deaf and blind children, who was employed by the District of Columbia, sexually assaulted a student. Thereafter, the employee resigned and entered a guilty plea to a charge of assault. The child’s mother, as the legal representаtive of the child, then filed suit against the employee and, based on the doctrine of respondeat superior, against the District of Columbia. After the trial court granted the employer’s motion for summary judgment, appellant appealed. 9 The Boykin court concluded that, as a matter of law, the employee’s tortious conduct was not within the scope of his employment. Id. at 561. Acknowledging that scope of employment is ordinarily a question for the jury, the court nonetheless recognized that it “becomes a question of law for the court ... if there is not sufficient evidence from which a reasonable juror could conclude that the action was within the scope of the employment.” Id. at 562.
As in this case, the appellant in Boykin argued that the assault was a direct outgrowth of the employеe’s job assignment, because that assignment contemplated physical contact with the child. She asserted that “a deaf, blind and mute child can be taught only through the sense of touch,” and because “physical touching was necessarily a part of the teacher-student relationship,” she claimed that it was “foreseeable that sexual assaults could occur.... ” Id. Rejecting this argument, the Boykin court stated that it did “not believe that a sexual assault may be deemed a direct outgrowth of a school official’s authorization to take a student by the hand or arm in guiding her past obstacles in the building.” Id. It reasoned:
*258 The sexual attack by [the employee] on [the student] was unprovoked. It certainly was not a direct outgrowth of [the employee’s] instructions or job assignment, nor wаs it an integral part of the school’s activities, interests or objectives. [The employee’s] assault was in no degree committed to serve the school’s interest, but rather appears to have been done solely for the accomplishment of [the employee’s] independent, malicious, mischievous and selfish purpose.
Id.
The decision of the
Boykin
court is consistent with decisions from other jurisdictions that have refused to hold employers liable under the doctrine of
respondeat superior
for sexual assaults upon children perpetrated by school employees.
See, e.g., Smith v. American Express Travel Related Servs. Co.,
These cases compel the conclusion that Manning’s conduct was not within the scope of his employment. As we see it, appellant has not generated a genuine dispute as to whether the assaultive conduct alleged here is оf a type that is sanctioned by the Board. Indeed, Manning’s conduct violated E.A. § 7-305(a), and it constituted a drastic departure from the Board’s policy, as reflected in the local rules and the Supplement. Moreover, as a result of his conduct, Manning was convicted of assault. Even if the criminal conviction is not dispositive of the issue, it surely establishes the egregiousness of Manning’s misconduct, and lends support to the Board’s claim that his action was outside the scope of his employment.
We are thus unpersuaded by appellant’s argument that Manning’s conduct should be considered in furtherance of the Board’s objectives, because it was arguably incidental to its objective of educating students. We recognize that there arе legitimate occasions when a teacher may have to touch a student. These instances may include assisting in breaking up fights, preventing an accidental injury, protecting oneself, providing appropriate aid to disabled students, or employing passive restraint with a student who has emotional disabilities. Certainly, it is foreseeable that a teacher of a child with special needs may have to touch the student in order to assist the child in clothing himself, clean the child after the child eats, help the student in the bathroom, ensure that the child *260 does not physically injure himself, or attend to the child’s health needs. That physical contact may be appropriate in certain situations, however, in no way constitutes implied authority for a teacher to beat a mentally disabled child as a means to discipline him. Indeed, as the Supplement indicates, “touching students is permitted” only for the purpose of “[mjaintaining a safe and orderly school environment, administering first aid, and attending to health needs____”
In sum, we fail to see how the act of physically striking a disabled child could be considered in furtherance of the Board’s objective of educating disabled children, particularly when, as here, both State and local law forbid the use of corporal punishment for discipline purposes. Therefore, we conclude that no material factual dispute existed concerning whether Manning’s conduct was within the scope of employment; Manning’s conduct wаs neither expected, foreseeable, nor sanctioned. Rather, it was so extreme in nature, and so far beyond the bounds of appropriate behavior, that it cannot possibly be considered to have been in furtherance of appel-lee’s objectives. Even when we view the facts and inferences in the light most favorable to appellant, as we must, we cannot say that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment.
JUDGMENT AFFIRMED.
COSTS TO BE PAID BY APPELLEE.
Notes
. Initially, appellant filed a complaint against the Board and Manning, as well as the City of Baltimore, Dr. Walter Amprey, (the Superintendent of Baltimore City Public Schools), and Barbara Avery-Anderson (the Principal of Harbor View Elementary School). Thereafter, the City, Dr. Amprey, Ms. Avery-Anderson, and appellee filed motions to dismiss. Prior to the resolution of the motions, appellant filed his First Amended Complaint against the Board and Manning only; appellant voluntarily dismissed defendants Amprey, the City, and Ms. Avery-Anderson.
. Effective April 9, 1996, E.A. § 7-305 was renumbered as E.A. § 7-306. 1996 Md. Laws, ch. 10.
. At the outset, we note that this case does not present an issue of negligent hiring. Nor is there any contention that the Board had prior knowledge of any assaultive behavior by Manning toward students. Therefore, we do not address whether the Board could be liable for such claims, and this opinion should not be construed to suggest that a school board could not be liable if it negligently hired a teacher or knowingly allowed an abusive teacher to remain in its employ.
. Effective June 1, 1997, the Legislature substituted "New Baltimоre City Board of School Commissioners” for "Board of School Commissioners of Baltimore City,” in E.A. § 1 — 101(d). 1997 Md. Laws, ch. 105.
. Effective April 8, 1997, C.J. § 5-353 was transferred to C.J. § 5-518. 1997 Md. Laws, ch. 14. Maryland Code (1978, 1997 Repl.VoL), E.A. § 4-105(d) refers to C.J. § 5-353. Maryland Code (1978, 1997 Repl. Vol., 1997 Supp.), E.A. § 4-105(d) refers to C.J. § 5-518.
. Effective April 8, 1997, C.J. §§ 5-401 through 5-404 were transferred to C.J. §§ 5-301 through 5-304. 1997 Md. Laws, ch. 14.
. Interestingly, in his argument to the trial court, counsel for appellant advised the judge that the Local Government Tort Claims Act is "not applicable” to this case.
. C.J. § 5-403(c) provided, inter alia, that a local government may not be liable for punitive damages.
. In Boykin, a default judgment was entered against the employee, subject to ex parte proof. At the time the trial court granted summary judgment as to the District of Columbia, however, it had not yet entered judgment against the employee. Accordingly, the court entered the certification that made the summary judgment final and appealable.
