Analysis: The recent Tennessee Court of Appeals
decision of Celia Moody
Rodgers v. GCA Services Group, Inc. and Weakley County Tennessee, 2013 WL 543828
(Tenn. Ct. App. February 13, 2013) provided a good discussion about the exclusive
remedy rule found in the Tennessee Workers Compensation Act at T.C.A. §
50-6-108(a). Simply put, this rule provides that an
employee can only sue his or her employer under Tennessee Workers Compensation
Law for injuries sustained while working and not in a tort suit. In this case, the plaintiffs asserted the
employee died as a result of pneumonia she had because of her exposure to mold
in her job with her employer. The
defendants filed motions to dismiss under the exclusive remedy rule asserting
the employees only remedy was under the Tennessee Workers’ Compensation Act,
not a suit in tort. The trial court dismissed
the case due to the exclusive remedy rule.
On appeal, the Tennessee Court of Appeals
noted that Tennessee Workers Compensation Law “provides the exclusive remedy
for an employee who is injured during the course and scope of his employment, meaning
the employee is precluded from seeking tort damages for the injury.” Rodgers at 4 (quoting, Valencia v.
Freeland and Lemm Constr. Co., 108 S.W.3d 239, 242 (Tenn. 2003)). T.C.A. §
50-6-108(a)
provides as follows:
The rights and
remedies granted to an employee subject to this chapter, on account of personal
injury or death by accident ... shall exclude all other rights and remedies of
the employee, the employee's personal representative, dependents or next of
kin, at common law or otherwise, on account of the injury or death.
However, there is an exception to the general
Tennessee exclusive remedy rule.
Specifically, “Tennessee courts have created an exception to the
exclusivity provision for intentional torts committed by an employer against an
employee; these torts give rise to a common-law tort action for damages . . . However,
the employee cannot sustain a tort action against the employer under the
intentional tort exception unless he can prove the employer acted with ‘actual
intent’ to injure.” Rodgers at 4 (quoting Valencia, 108
S.W.3d at 242). The Rodgers court further noted
that cases applying the “actual intent” requirement clearly show this exception
to the exclusive remedy rule is very “narrow”.
Rodgers at 4.
In order to establish this exception
exists, the court noted that “it is not enough merely to allege actual intent;
rather, there must be alleged facts constituting an actual intent to bring
about injury. Absent allegations of
facts which support actual intent, an employee cannot maintain a common law
action against his employer for his work-related injuries.” Rodgers at 7 (quoting 6
Larson’s Workers Compensation Law, § 103 (2002)). In the Rodgers case, the plaintiff
alleged the employer was aware of the dangers of the mold and fraudulently
induced the employee to work in the harmful mold environment. Further, the claim was the employer
disseminated information to the employees that there was no harmful mold inside
the area where the deceased was working when the employer knew this was
false. Despite these allegations the
Tennessee Court of Appeals found the allegations were simply not sufficient to trigger
the exception to the exclusive remedy rule and therefore dismissed the claim on
this basis because the only remedy was through Tennessee Workers Compensation
law.
This case shows how strong the exclusive
remedy rule is in Tennessee.
Additionally, the main exception to the exclusive remedy rule, the
intentional tort exception, is a very narrow exception that is construed in a
very limited fashion by Tennessee courts.
Tennessee courts have a long history of making sure that very few cases
come within the intentional tort exception to the Tennessee Workers’
Compensation exclusive remedy rule.
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blog.
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