Stacia Kerns v. United States , 478 F. App'x 44 ( 2012 )


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  •                             UNPUBLISHED
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
    No. 11-1350
    STACIA   LYNN   KERNS,   Individually,   and    as Personal
    Representative of the Estate of Dennis Gregory Kerns, Jr.
    and as mother and next friend of A.K. and D.K.,
    Plaintiff - Appellant,
    v.
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Defendant - Appellee.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of
    Maryland, at Baltimore.    Catherine C. Blake, District Judge.
    (1:07-cv-01006-CCB)
    Argued:   March 22, 2012                  Decided:   April 20, 2012
    Before MOTZ, KING, and GREGORY, Circuit Judges.
    Affirmed by unpublished opinion.       Judge Gregory     wrote   the
    opinion, in which Judge Motz and Judge King joined.
    ARGUED: Emily Claire Malarkey, Paul David Bekman, SALSBURY,
    CLEMENTS, BEKMAN, MARDER & ADKINS, Baltimore, Maryland, for
    Appellant.    Larry David Adams, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES
    ATTORNEY, Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellee.  ON BRIEF: Rod J.
    Rosenstein, United States Attorney, Michael L. Schlepp, Second
    Year Law Student, OFFICE OF THE UNITED STATES ATTORNEY,
    Baltimore, Maryland, for Appellee.
    Unpublished opinions are not binding precedent in this circuit.
    GREGORY, Circuit Judge:
    The issue presented is whether the United States authorized
    Debra    Scott       to    rent    an    automobile       on    a    business      trip   for
    purposes      of    traveling       from    the    airport      to     her    hotel.      The
    district court found that there was no material dispute of fact
    that    Scott      was    not     authorized      to   rent    an    automobile      on   her
    business      trip    and       therefore    Scott     was     not   acting     within    the
    scope of her employment at the time of her collision with the
    deceased Dennis Kerns, Jr.                  The district court held that under
    Maryland law the United States could not be held vicariously
    liable for Scott’s negligence.                  For the reasons that follow, we
    affirm the district court’s ruling.
    I.
    This case arises out of a motor-vehicle accident on June
    24, 2005, in which plaintiff Stacia Lynn Kerns’s now deceased
    husband, Dennis Kerns, Jr., was hit by Scott on Maryland Route
    175    near   the        Fort    Meade   Army     Base.        Scott    was    a   contract
    employee for the 99th Regional Readiness Command Family Program
    Office (“RRC”); more specifically, Scott was the secretary and
    administrative assistant for the RRC family programs director.
    Although Scott’s office was in Pennsylvania, Scott was in Anne
    Arundel County, Maryland, at the time of the accident to work at
    an RRC conference.
    2
    On April 27, 2005, Barbara Wilson, RRC director of family
    programs, sent an email to RRC staff and volunteers, noting that
    a conference would be held at the Annapolis, Maryland Radisson
    hotel    on   June    24-26,    2005.     She    stated    that    a    few     travel
    arrangements      were   possible.         One    option    was    to     fly     into
    Baltimore-Washington           International      Airport.             “The      hotel
    recommends      the   Super     Shuttle   . . .    for     transport      from       the
    airport to the hotel,” the email said.                   “The cost is $29 per
    person.       If there are sufficient persons flying, a van may be
    rented for all to travel to the hotel.                Please advise of your
    flight schedules as soon as possible for these arrangements to
    be made.”       For those who did not wish to fly, they could drive
    their own cars, for which they would be reimbursed for mileage,
    or they could rent cars.            “If you would rather take a rental
    car, please fill out the registration form accordingly.”                       In all
    cases,    the    email   said,    an    employee’s   travel       plans       must    be
    reflected on her travel orders.
    A few days before the trip, Scott had a conversation with
    Wilson and Thomas Cannon, a coworker, about whether Scott would
    like to rent a car or be listed as a driver on one of their
    rental cars.      Scott declined both options because she planned to
    rent a car for her own personal purposes.                 Nothing in the record
    suggests she ever filled out the registration form indicated in
    Wilson’s email.
    3
    On May 20, 2005, the RRC issued travel orders to Scott, and
    it authorized her to travel from McKees Rocks, Pennsylvania, to
    Annapolis,    Maryland,       to    attend    the       conference.         Her   orders
    provided     for    government      lodging       and    commercial        air    travel.
    Although the orders did not say how she should get from the
    airport to the conference center, they specifically stated that
    she was not authorized to rent a car.                         The orders said that
    “[i]f      traveling       by      non-government             procured       commercial
    transportation, the maximum reimbursement will be limited to the
    least    costly     service     which   would      have       been   permitted      [for]
    satisfactory completion of the mission.”                      Cannon’s travel orders
    were modified on June 24, 2005, authorizing a rental car.
    On    June     24   Scott     traveled    in       her    own   vehicle      to   the
    Pittsburgh,        Pennsylvania      airport        and       flew    to     Baltimore-
    Washington     International         Airport       on     a     government-purchased
    ticket.     Upon arrival, she rented a vehicle from the airport’s
    Alamo Car Rental.         She rented the car in her name and paid for
    it with her personal credit card.
    June 24 was set aside on the agenda as a travel day with no
    scheduled meetings.        Scott traveled to downtown Baltimore to see
    the inner harbor and the aquarium.                She then drove to Fort Meade
    to visit the Post Exchange, where she looked at clothing.                               At
    9:30 p.m., Scott turned into oncoming traffic and directly into
    4
    Dennis Kerns, Jr., who was riding a motorcycle.                                 Kerns died of
    the injuries sustained in the crash.
    Scott        subsequently         sought      reimbursement           for     roundtrip
    mileage       for     her      personal     vehicle         used     to     travel       to   the
    Pittsburgh airport, two taxi fares, and her per diem.                                    She was
    reimbursed.          She did not request reimbursement for her rental
    car.
    Stacia       Kerns      brought     suit     against       the     United    States      on
    April    19,    2007,       alleging       the      United    States       should      be     held
    vicariously liable for the negligence of its employee, Scott.
    On   February        2,    2008,     the    district        court    granted       the    United
    States’       motion      to     dismiss    for      lack    of     jurisdiction         on   the
    grounds that Kerns had not shown that Scott was acting within
    the scope of her employment, as required by 28 U.S.C. § 1346(b).
    This    Court,       on     appeal,      held     the    question         was    sufficiently
    intertwined         with       the   merits       that      the     plaintiff      should      be
    permitted to conduct discovery.                     See Kerns v. United States, 
    585 F.3d 187
       (4th       Cir.    2009).         Both    parties        moved    for     summary
    judgment at the close of discovery.                           On March 28, 2011, the
    district      court       handed     down     its    memorandum         opinion,       awarding
    summary judgment to the United States.
    5
    II.
    The   district     court   ruled   that    there      was   not    a   triable
    dispute of fact and that the government had not authorized Scott
    to use a rental car during the conference.               The court went on to
    find that even if the government authorized the rental of a car,
    Scott was not engaged in job-related duties at the time of the
    accident.     We affirm the district court on the former grounds
    without reaching the latter.
    We review de novo the district court’s grant of summary
    judgment.     Roe   v.    Doe,    
    28 F.3d 404
    ,   406    (4th   Cir.     1994).
    Summary judgment is appropriate when there is no genuine dispute
    of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as
    a matter of law.          FED. R. CIV. P. 56(a).              In reviewing the
    disputed facts, this Court must draw all inferences in favor of
    the   non-moving    party.       Scott   v.    Harris,      
    550 U.S. 372
    ,   378
    (2007).
    The United States is liable under the Federal Tort Claims
    Act (“FTCA”) to the extent a private person would be liable
    under state law when a plaintiff has been injured because of the
    tort of an employee acting within the scope of her employment.
    28 U.S.C. § 1346(b)(1).          Under Maryland law, an employer may be
    held vicariously liable for the tortious act of its employee
    when the employee was acting in the scope of the employment
    relationship at the time of the tort.            Oaks v. Connors, 
    660 A.2d 6
    423,    426   (Md.    1995).      An    employee’s       tortious    acts    will   be
    considered within the scope of her employment if “they were in
    furtherance of the employer’s business and were ‘authorized’ by
    the employer.”         Sawyer v. Humphries, 
    587 A.2d 467
    , 470 (Md.
    1991).    This general rule, however, is refined in the context of
    negligent operation of the employee’s automobile; in such cases,
    a master will not be held responsible for negligent
    operation of a servant’s automobile, even though
    engaged at the time in furthering the master’s
    business unless the master expressly or impliedly
    consents to the use of the automobile, and . . . had
    the right to control the servant in its operation, or
    else the use of the automobile was of such vital
    importance in furthering the master’s business that
    his control over it might reasonably [be] inferred.
    
    Oaks, 660 A.2d at 426
    (quoting Dhanraj v. Potomac Elec. Power
    Co., 
    506 A.2d 224
    , 226 (1986)) (alterations in original).                           The
    right-to-control concept is critical to the respondeat superior
    analysis with respect to motor vehicles.                  “The doctrine may only
    be successfully invoked when an employer has either ‘expressly
    or    impliedly,     authorized       the    [servant]    to   use    his    personal
    vehicle in the execution of his duties, and the employee is in
    fact engaged in such endeavors at the time of the accident.’”
    
    Id. at 427 (quoting
    Dhanraj, 506 A.2d at 226
    ).                      In other words,
    the    test   has    two   prongs:     (1)    employer    authorization       of    the
    transportation method or employer control over the employee’s
    operation of that transportation (or that transportation is a
    “vital   necessity”        to   the   employer’s    business)        (2)    while   the
    7
    employee is engaged in employment duties.                           We deal with the
    first prong, not reaching the second.
    A.
    Kerns argues that there is at least a triable issue of fact
    as to whether the government expressly or impliedly consented to
    the use of a rental car on the trip.                 We disagree.
    As    Barbara       Wilson   noted     in     her    April    25,    2005    email
    regarding transportation, travel plans must be reflected on each
    employee’s travel orders.              Scott’s travel orders specifically
    precluded the use of a rental car.                     The email discussing the
    travel      orders    notes    that   “[i]f      there     are   sufficient        persons
    flying, a van may be rented for all to travel to the hotel.”
    This phrase does not indicate that anyone could rent a van to
    travel      from     the    airport   to      the     hotel;     only      enough    vans
    sufficient to carry those flying would be rented.
    Nevertheless, there is some evidence in the record that
    reimbursement was sometimes given to employees for travel not
    initially authorized on their travel orders.                          Scott testified
    that   after-the-fact         approval      of     rental    cars    was    a   “regular
    occurrence” and she had “no doubt” that she would have been paid
    if she had submitted a rental car reimbursement.                        But Scott did
    not in fact seek a rental car reimbursement, suggesting that she
    knew it was not authorized either explicitly or implicitly.
    8
    Before the trip, Wilson told Scott she could travel with
    Wilson     or    Cannon    in   their     authorized         rental   cars      from   the
    airport to the hotel.           Wilson also offered to authorize Scott to
    rent   a    car,    presumably      so    Scott      could    transport        other   RRC
    employees from the airport to the hotel.                        Scott declined the
    offers.     The facts show that Scott rented her own car so that
    she could explore and sightsee before the conference.                            She did
    not seek authorization for the car before the trip despite the
    fact that she made a reservation for the car before the trip
    began.      It     is    telling   that   the       RRC   altered     Cannon’s     travel
    orders prior to the trip to include the use of a rental car but
    it did not modify Scott’s.
    The facts here are arguably weaker for the plaintiff than
    those in the relevant Maryland state court cases in which the
    plaintiffs       could    not   establish    respondeat        superior        liability.
    See Oaks v. Connors, 
    660 A.2d 423
    (Md. 1995); Dhanraj v. Potomac
    Elec. Power Co., 
    506 A.2d 224
    (Md. 1986); Henderson v. AT&T
    Info. Sys., Inc., 
    552 A.2d 935
    (Md. Ct. Spec. App. 1989).                           Here,
    the government neither promised nor gave travel reimbursements
    to Scott, whereas in Henderson the plaintiff was reimbursed for
    mileage and travel expenses by his employer.                             
    Henderson, 552 A.2d at 939
    .        Furthermore,     Scott       traveled      by    an    expressly
    unauthorized form of travel prohibited by her travel orders.                            In
    contrast, the Dhanraj employer did not specifically authorize
    9
    any particular mode of travel, suggesting that it implicitly
    approved of any reasonable method of transportation -- again, a
    much stronger case for the plaintiff than the instant case.                                     See
    
    Dhanraj, 506 A.2d at 227
    .
    There may still be vicarious liability in the automobile
    context when “the use of the automobile was [ ] of such vital
    importance      in    furthering         [the    employer’s]          business          that    the
    control over it might reasonably be inferred.”                              
    Id. at 228. The
    closest Maryland case to the instant facts is Regal Laundry Co.,
    Inc.   v.    A.S.     Abell      Co.,    
    163 A. 845
        (Md.    1933).           There,    a
    Baltimore      Sun    reporter      was     returning          to     the    office      from     a
    meeting     that     he    was   assigned        to    cover     when       he    got    into    an
    accident.      The Court of Appeals held that the Baltimore Sun had
    implicitly authorized the use of the reporter’s own car because
    the editor knew that would be how the reporter would get to and
    from the meeting and because the reporter was reimbursed for his
    mileage.       
    Id. at 847. Furthermore,
              the    reporter      was    never
    diverted from his route.                
    Id. at 848. Here,
    however, the use of
    a rental car was explicitly not authorized for Scott, and Scott
    was    never    reimbursed         for     her        rental    car     expenses.              Even
    accounting for the fact that Scott would not have rented a car
    were it not for the Maryland conference, Scott did not need to
    rent a car to arrive there.                See 
    Oaks, 660 A.2d at 427
    (finding
    that   the     fact    that      employee       used     his    car     at       work    for    the
    10
    employer’s benefit did not render the drive to work “special
    circumstances”           warranting     respondeat      superior     liability);
    Barclay v. Ports Am. Baltimore, Inc., 
    18 A.3d 932
    , 938 (Md. Ct.
    Spec. App. 2011) (“[T]he requisite ‘special circumstances’ must
    admit      some    express     or   implied   control   over   the   vehicle   or
    consent to its use in performing work duties.”).                   Regal Laundry
    is therefore distinguishable.
    We affirm the district court’s finding that there is no
    material dispute of fact that Scott was not authorized to rent a
    car to travel from the Baltimore airport to the hotel.                   Because
    we hold that a rental car was not authorized for Scott, we need
    not reach the issue of whether she was within the scope of her
    employment at the time of the accident. *
    B.
    Kerns has another argument:            that the district court should
    have certified to the Maryland Court of Appeals the question of
    whether to import the traveling-employee doctrine into the tort
    context.          The district court found that the “available state
    law”       was     not    so    “insufficient”     that    certification       was
    appropriate.        J.A. 467 n.2 (quoting Roe v. Doe, 
    28 F.3d 404
    , 407
    *
    Nor need we analyze whether Maryland’s scope-of-employment
    prong of the respondeat superior test is coextensive with the
    FTCA requirement for governmental liability that the tortfeasor
    acted within the scope of her employment.
    11
    (4th Cir. 1994)); see also Buckingham v. United States, 124 F.
    Supp. 2d 943, 944-45 (D. Md. 2000) (declining to certify to the
    Maryland Court of Appeals a question on the applicability of the
    traveling-employee doctrine in the respondeat superior context).
    Under     Maryland     law,       the    Court        of     Appeals     may    answer
    questions     certified      to        it     only       “if     the     answer      may    be
    determinative      of   an    issue           in     pending       litigation        in    the
    certifying court and there is no controlling appellate decision,
    constitutional provision, or statute of this State.”                                 MD. CODE
    ANN., CTS. & JUD. PROC. § 12-603.                  The Court of Appeals has noted
    that the purpose of the certification procedure is “to promote
    the widest possible use of the certification process                            . . . [and
    to]   address    questions        of    Maryland          law     that   are    unsettled,
    uncertain, or otherwise controversial in light of cases decided
    by other courts.”          Proctor v. Wash. Metro. Area Transit Auth.,
    
    990 A.2d 1048
    , 1056 (Md. 2010).                         Here, as the district court
    correctly found, there is clear appellate court precedent.
    The language of Dhanraj may be amenable to two readings.
    The Maryland Court of Appeals either decided that importation of
    the traveling-employee doctrine is inappropriate or it refused
    to determinatively resolve the question beyond its own facts.
    “We see no need to resort, in the circumstances here,” the court
    said,   “to     cases   under       the       Workmen’s          Compensation     Act      and
    comparable      employee     compensation               statutes    to    determine        the
    12
    applicability of the doctrine of respondeat superior in this
    tort action.”      
    Dhanraj, 506 A.2d at 227
    -28.        A subsequent court
    of   special     appeals   case   interpreted     Dhanraj   to    mean      that
    Maryland courts may not import the traveling-employee doctrine
    into the tort context.       See Sheets v. Chepko, 
    573 A.2d 413
    , 418
    (Md. Ct. Spec. App. 1990) (“[I]n Dhanraj, the Court of Appeals
    specifically rejected the application of principles of Worker’s
    Compensation to a determination of whether a particular activity
    was within the scope of employment for purposes of establishing
    vicarious liability of an employer.”).            There is no conflicting
    authority   in    the   appellate   cases    of   Maryland,      and   it    was
    therefore not error for the district court to refuse to certify
    the issue to the Maryland Court of Appeals.
    III.
    For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district
    court is affirmed.
    AFFIRMED
    13