FOR PUBLICATION
ATTORNEY FOR APPELLANT: ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:
COURTNEY B. JUSTICE PHILIP E. KALAMAROS
Delphi, Indiana Edward N. Kalamaros & Associates
Professional Corporation
South Bend, Indiana
ANGIE CLARK COBLE, )
)
Appellant-Plaintiff, )
)
vs. ) No. 91A02-9707-CV-415
)
JOSEPH MOTORS, INC., )
)
Appellee-Defendant. )
OPINION - FOR PUBLICATION
I. Whether the trial court properly dismissed the physical injury claim for
want of subject matter jurisdiction; and,
II. Whether Coble's intentional infliction of emotional distress claim was
appropriately disposed of through summary judgment.
amount of her finger in it. Scott was told that because they were not needed, they could be
disposed of in a red plastic biohazard bag, which in turn could be put into a hazardous
wastebasket. However, the next morning the red bag containing Coble's fingertip found its
way to the desk of human resources manager, Joe Dold ("Dold").
Coble testified that six days after her accident, she returned to Joseph Motors to
submit a doctor's note requiring that she be off work for two weeks. She claims that Dold's
assistant told her that Dold wished to see her in his office. There, they discussed her injury.
Coble claims to remember Dold pointing to a blue bag which she thought contained her
fingertip, and chuckling that he should get rid of it. He does not remember saying such a
thing.
Later in February, Dold held a safety meeting for group leaders. At the meeting, Dold
reviewed the accidents which had occurred at Joseph Motors within the previous month, and
attempted to institute preventative measures. Although he did not have the bag with him,
Dold commented that he had a girl's finger in his office. After the meeting, Dold brought the
bag from his office, emptied it, and displayed its contents to four or five people.
On September 19, 1995, Coble filed a "Complaint for damages for intentional
infliction of emotional distress and outrageous conduct." Record at 9. The complaint
alleged, inter alia:
7) Six days after her injury, . . . Coble saw her severed finger in a blue
plastic bag in the office of . . . Dold, who had placed her severed finger
permanently on public display in his office as an exercise in "company safety,"
and boasted at company safety meetings "Right now I've got a girl's finger in
a bag in my office."
8) . . . Dold has admitted his conduct to Joseph Motors' employees, that
in fact he did deliberately keep her fingertip for two weeks in his office and
referred to it at safety meetings.
9) Joseph Motors' outrageous and intentional misconduct constitutes an
independent tort, wholly outside the provisions of the Indiana Worker's
Compensation Act, was neither an accident, nor did it occur in the course of
her employment, and consists of intentional infliction of emotional distress,
bad faith and outrageous conduct, beyond all bounds of decency.
10) Joseph Motors' act, in publicly humiliating . . . Coble by using her
own body part to publicize and warn of the need for future company safety
measures was atrocious and utterly intolerable in a civilized community.
11) Joseph Motors' supervisors intended their acts would cause public
humiliation and emotional distress to [Coble]; knew that their acts were
substantially certain to cause her public humiliation; would invade her privacy
and knew they were committing outrageous acts against her.
WHEREFORE, . . . Coble demands compensatory and punitive
damages against Joseph Motors, Inc. in an amount sufficient to compensate
her for defendant's outrageous, intentional infliction of emotional distress, for
her costs and for all other relief in the premises, and to set a public example of
defendant to discourage such misconduct in the future.
Record at 9-10. Joseph Motors filed an answer and affirmative defenses, and later filed a
motion to dismiss and a motion for summary judgment.
The trial judge dismissed Coble's physical injury claim for lack of subject matter
jurisdiction based upon the exclusivity provision of the Worker's Compensation Act. As for
the non-physical injury claim, the trial court's order provided:
5. [Joseph Motors'] Motion for Summary Judgment as to
Plaintiff/Employee's Complaint against Defendant/Employer for damages
based on non-physical injuries as a result of the allegations of intentional
infliction of emotional distress is hereby granted. The facts and law are with
the Defendant and against the Plaintiff. Considering the facts as most
favorable to the Plaintiff, the Court finds there are not genuine issues of
material fact and the Defendant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. The
Plaintiff has not presented facts in the designation of evidence on Summary
Judgment to support Plaintiff/Employee's tort claim against
Defendant/Employer for intentional infliction of emotional distress. There are
no facts or reasonable inferences therefrom presented to support the
requirement that the Defendant/Employer intended injury. There are no facts
or reasonable inferences therefrom presented to support the requirement that
any tortious intent on the part of employer's representative, Joseph Dold, can
be imputed to the Defendant/Employer. There are no facts or reasonable
inferences therefrom presented to support Plaintiff's argument as part of
Plaintiff's Claim that the alleged tort feasor manager, Joseph Dold, acted
pursuant to policy or decision made through employer corporation's regular
decision making channels and that the injury to the employee was the intended
product of such policy or decision. Taking the evidence designated which is
most favorable to the Plaintiff/Employee, that being the allegations that the
Defendant's manager after the accident held up what was alleged to be
Plaintiff/Employee's partial fingertip in a bag at a safety meeting and that
Defendant's manager made a statement to the Plaintiff/Employee about
whether "it hurts", even such evidence does not support Plaintiff's theory that
the tort feasor acted pursuant to policy or decision made through Employer
Corporation's regular decision making channels by those in authority to do so
and that injury to employee was the intended product of any such policy or
decision. Based upon the evidence and reasonable inferences, there is nothing
in the record to establish that the Defendant/Employer, as a corporate entity,
as distinguished from its manager, intended to injure the Plaintiff/Employee.
Record at 74-75.See footnote
2
Coble briefly argues that the trial court should not have dismissed her common law
claim based upon the exclusivity provision of the Worker's Compensation Act. However,
the trial court did not dismiss all of her claims in this manner. Rather, as the following
excerpt from the trial court's order demonstrates, only her claim for physical injury was
dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction:
4. [Joseph Motors'] Motion to Dismiss, pursuant to Trial Rule 12(B)(1),
certain portions of [Coble's] Complaint for lack of subject matter jurisdiction,
is granted. The Plaintiff/Employee cannot sue the Defendant/Employer for
damages based upon physical injuries sustained in this case by an on-the-job
accident. To the extent [Coble's] claim against [Joseph Motors] is for
physical injuries as a result of the on-the-job accident, [Coble's] Complaint
is dismissed pursuant to Trial Rule 12(B)(1). The court lacks subject matter
jurisdiction due to the exclusionary provisions of the Worker's Compensation
Act.
Record at 74. Her other claims were dealt with via summary judgment.
To the extent Coble now asserts on appeal that she never presented any physical injury
claim in her complaint, we disagree. Her complaint contained the following allegations:
3) An ambulance took [Coble] to the White County Memorial Hospital
emergency room, but defendant failed to send the severed end of her left index
finger, preventing physicians at the emergency room from reattaching the
severed end of [Coble's] left index finger.
Record at 9. Thus, Joseph Motors and the trial court reasonably concluded that a claim for physical injury had been asserted. If indeed Coble did not mean to assert any physical injury
claim, then no harm occurred with the dismissal of a nonexistent claim.
Coble's brief at 36. Moreover, she argues that by awarding Dold a raise after learning of his
display of Coble's fingertip "and benefitting from Dold's aggression and harshness on safety,
Joseph Motors ratified that act." Coble's brief at 38.
In response, Joseph Motors first argues that non-physical injuries are covered under
the Worker's Compensation Act. As for the comments in Perry v. Stitzer Buick GMC, Inc.,
637 N.E.2d 1282, 1288-89 (Ind. 1994) to the contrary, Joseph Motors contends they are
dicta, and inconsistent with the Act and with other reported cases. We disagree.
Our supreme court determined that because the injuries at the heart of Perry's
complaint were not physical, nor was there any impairment or disability as those terms are
comprehended by the Worker's Compensation Act, he was entitled to maintain his action.
As in Perry, the heart of Coble's claim to the trial court was not physical. Any impairment
or disability had already been disposed of in an earlier settlement. Thus, upon the holding
in Perry, we conclude that Coble was entitled to maintain her civil tort action to recover for
the injury allegedly done her that did not constitute personal injury within the meaning of the
Worker's Compensation Act. That is, the trial court was not deprived of jurisdiction of her
case on this ground. See also Landis v. Landis, 664 N.E.2d 754, 755-56 (Ind. Ct. App. 1996)
(concluding that trial court had jurisdiction to award employee damages for intentional
infliction of emotional distress after she disclaimed recovery for physical injuries, medical
expense, or any impairment or disability defined by the Worker's Compensation Act), trans.
denied. Whether summary judgment was appropriately granted is a separate inquiry.
Upon review of the grant or denial of a summary judgment motion, we apply the same
legal standard as the trial court: summary judgment is appropriate only when there are no
genuine issues of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of
law. Ind.Trial Rule 56(C); North Snow Bay, Inc. v. Hamilton, 657 N.E.2d 420, 422 (Ind. Ct.
App. 1995). We may not search the entire record to support the judgment, but may only
consider that evidence which has been specifically designated to the trial court. Id. The
party appealing the trial court's grant or denial of summary judgment has the burden of
persuading this court that the trial court's decision was erroneous. Id.
Our supreme court recently held that the Worker's Compensation Act does not include
employers' intentional torts within its coverage. Baker v. Westinghouse Elec. Corp., 637
N.E.2d 1271, 1273 (Ind. 1994). Rather,
. . . the exclusivity provision is expressly limited to personal injury or death
arising out of and in the course of employment which occurs "by accident."
Because we believe an injury occurs "by accident" only when it is intended by
neither the employee nor the employer, the intentional torts of an employer are
necessarily beyond the pale of the act.
Id. The Baker court then examined the level of intent required and the question of who must
intend:
"[M]ere" employer negligence or recklessness is not sufficient to strip the
Worker's Compensation Board of jurisdiction and instead vest jurisdiction in
a court of law. The employer that acts in the belief that it is causing an
appreciable risk of harm to another may be negligent, and if the risk is great
its conduct may be characterized as reckless or wanton, but it is not an
intentional wrong. . . . [W]e agree that nothing short of deliberate intent to
inflict an injury, or actual knowledge that an injury is certain to occur, will
suffice.
Id. at 1275.
"Inasmuch as the intentions of co-workers and third parties play no part in this
consideration, many intentionally inflicted injuries must be deemed 'by accident' under the
act." Perry, 637 N.E.2d at 1287.
Tortious intent will be imputed to an employer that is a legal entity or artificial
person where either (1) the corporation is the tortfeasor's alter ego or (2) the
corporation has substituted its will for that of the individual who committed
the tortious acts. To prevail on the alter ego theory, the employee must show
that both ownership and control of the corporation are in the tortfeasor's hands.
. . . [A] corporation is chargeable with tortious intent when the individual who
committed the tortious act was acting pursuant to a policy or decision made
through the corporation's regular decision-making channels by those with
authority to do so. Because the requisite level of intentionality must also exist,
injury to the employee must be shown to have been the intended product of the
policy or decision at issue if the proponent of jurisdiction is to prevail.
Id. (citations omitted). In short, the tort must have been committed by the employer (or by
his alter ego), and the employer must also have intended the injury or actually known that
injury was certain to occur. Foshee v. Shoney's, Inc., 637 N.E.2d 1277, 1281 (Ind. 1994).
Where both these requirements are met, the compensation act does not bar an action at law.
The question remains whether the materials designated to the court were sufficient to
establish a genuine factual issue that could result in liability. Joseph Motors did not commit
the tort. Rather, it was Dold who displayed the tip of Coble's finger. Dold is not and has
never been an owner or controller of Joseph Motors. Thus, the alter ego theory does not
apply. Joseph Motors did not intend to injure, humiliate, or embarrass Coble in any way, nor
did the Joseph brothers actually know that injury was certain to occur. Similarly, Dold did
not intend to injure Coble nor did he actually know that injury was certain to occur. His
behavior may have been reckless, negligent or wanton, but it was not intended to hurt Coble.
Even if Dold had intended to hurt Coble, his intent could not have been imputed to Joseph
Motors.
Dold did not set policy at Joseph Motors, although he attempted to carry out corporate
policies promulgated by the Joseph brothers. When he showed Coble's finger, Dold was not
acting pursuant to a policy or decision made through the corporation's regular decision-
making channels by those with authority to do so. The Joseph brothers did not directly or
indirectly instruct Dold to display Coble's fingertip or injure her in any way. It was not
Joseph Motors' policy to embarrass or humiliate those who had been injured at work in an
effort to prevent future mishaps. Thus, Coble's efforts to establish her claim within the
intentional injury exception to the exclusivity of the Compensation Act fail.
We are also unconvinced that any genuine issue exists to establish that Joseph Motors
ratified Dold's actions by granting him a raise. Coble has not established any link between
the incident involving Coble's fingertip and the annual raise received by Dold. To the
contrary, rather than endorsing Dold's behavior, Joseph Motors apparently considered that
incident as one of the precipitating factors leading to Dold's termination.
In summary, Coble has failed to establish a genuine issue of fact that intentional
infliction of emotional distress was committed by Joseph Motors or by its alter ego, or that
Joseph Motors intended her injury or actually knew that it was certain to occur. Accordingly,
summary judgment was proper.
Affirmed.
SHARPNACK, J. and DARDEN, J. concur.
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