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Posted on Oct 2 2016 6:07PM by Attorney, Jason A. Lee
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Sometimes state government
employees are sued on an individual basis for actions that they took as a
government employee. Often these cases
are § 1983 claims asserting
the state employee acted inappropriately under the “color of law.” However, this new statute is not limited to
claims under § 1983. In response, the
Tennessee legislature felt it was necessary to provide protection to the State when
the individual governmental employee is successful in defending such a claim. As a result, the 2016 Tennessee added a
provision in the law that provides that attorney’s fees and costs should be
awarded to the state or the state employee when the state employee is not found
to be not responsible when they are sued in their individual. In fact, the employee is not even required to
be successful on the merits, but instead, even if the case is voluntarily
dismissed greater than 45 days after an Answer is filed making specific
assertions, then the employee is still awarded attorney’s fees and costs.
Public
Chapter No. 848, which was signed into law on April 19, 2016 by Governor
Bill Haslam, has been amended and now provides as follows:
(a) Notwithstanding § 20-12-119(c)(5)(A), if a claim is filed with a Tennessee or federal court, the Tennessee claims
commission, board of claims, or any other judicial body established by the
state or by a governmental entity of the state, against an employee of the
state or of a governmental entity of the state in the person's individual
capacity, and the claim arises from actions or omissions of the employee acting
in an official capacity or under color of law, and that employee prevails in
the proceeding as provided in this section, then the court or other judicial
body on motion shall award reasonable attorneys' fees and costs incurred by the
employee in defending the claim filed against the employee.
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Posted on Jul 31 2016 1:53PM by Attorney, Jason A. Lee
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One interesting theory
of potential liability against a premises owner is to sue the premises owner
for civil liability regarding something that occurred on the property involving
guns or other weapons. The Tennessee
legislature previously adopted T.C.A.
§ 39-17-1359 which provides that a person, business or other entity who
controls or manages properties, has the authority to prohibit weapons on that property
by making a specific posting. The key
language in that statute is as follows:
(a)(1) Except as provided in §
39-17-1313, an individual, corporation, business entity or local, state or
federal government entity or agent thereof is authorized to prohibit the
possession of weapons by any person who is at a meeting conducted by, or on
property owned, operated, or managed or under the control of the individual,
corporation, business entity or government entity.
(2) The prohibition in subdivision (a)(1) shall apply to any person who
is authorized to carry a firearm by authority of § 39-17-1351.
The question that has
come up since the adoption of this statute (T.C.A.
§ 39-17-1359), is whether premises owners can be held liable if they do not
ban guns from their property using this posting procedure and there is an
incident that involves injury to an individual due to the use of such weapons. The Tennessee legislator addressed this issue
in 2016 when it adopted Public Chapter No. 947,
which took effect July 1, 2016. This new
statute provides immunity for people, businesses or entities that own property under
the legal theory that they failed to prohibit weapons on their property and an
injury or death resulted from those weapons.
In other words, under this new statute, the theory that a landowner had
the power to ban weapons under T.C.A.
§ 39-17-1359, they failed to do so, and therefore they are liable for gun
violence on their property – is not a legal theory that is viable in Tennessee. This statute will be found in Title 39,
Chapter 17, Part 13, but it has not yet been officially placed in the Tennessee
Code (it should be very soon). This new
statute provides as follows:
(a) A person, business, or
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Posted on May 27 2016 4:54PM by Attorney, Jason A. Lee
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Tennessee law has long
provided that individuals who are adjudicated incompetent at the time the cause
of action accrued, may commence the action after their legal rights are
restored within the normal time period for the statute of limitations for that
cause of action. The statute did not
provide for the statute of limitations time period to run if they never gained
competency. As a result, essentially, an
individual who was incompetent who was permanently incompetent, would not have
any statute of limitations for any cause of action until the time they die.
In 2016, the Tennessee
legislator fixed this problem by amending the applicable statute, T.C.A. §
28-1-106 in Public
Chapter 932. They added subsection (c)(2)
of this statute now provides that any individual who has a court-ordered
fiduciary (such as a guardian or conservator) or someone who possesses the
legal right to bring suit on behalf of a person who lacks capacity, must
commence the action on behalf of that person within the applicable statute of
limitations. The statute provides that
the fiduciary may not rely upon any tolling of the statute of limitations
unless the individual can establish by “clear and convincing evidence that the
individual did not and could not reasonably have known of the accrued cause of
action.”
The new statute
(T.C.A. § 28-1-106) now provides the following:
(a) If the person
entitled to commence an action is, at the time the cause of action accrued,
either under eighteen (18) years of age, or adjudicated incompetent, such
person, or such person's representatives and privies, as the case may be, may
commence the action, after legal rights are restored, within the time of
limitation for the particular cause of action, unless it exceeds three (3)
years, and in that case within three (3) years from restoration of legal
rights.
(b) Persons over the age of eighteen (18) years of age are presumed
competent.
(c)(1) If the person entitled to commence an action, at the time the
cause of action accrued, lacks capacity, such person or such person's
representatives and privies, as the case may be, may commence the action, after
removal of such incapacity, within the time of limitation for the particular
cause of action, unless it exceeds three (3) years, and in that case within
three (3) years from removal of such incapacity, except as provided for in
subdivision (c)(2).
(2) Any individual with court-ordered fiduciary
responsibility towards a person who lacks capacity, or any individual who
possesses the legal right to bring suit on behalf of a person who lacks
c...
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