Commonwealth of Kentucky Transportation Cabinet v. Estate of Zavier Froeber ( 2023 )


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  •                  RENDERED: JANUARY 27, 2023; 10:00 A.M.
    TO BE PUBLISHED
    Commonwealth of Kentucky
    Court of Appeals
    NO. 2021-CA-1137-MR
    COMMONWEALTH OF KENTUCKY
    TRANSPORTATION CABINET                                               APPELLANT
    APPEAL FROM JEFFERSON CIRCUIT COURT
    v.            HONORABLE SUSAN SCHULTZ GIBSON, JUDGE
    ACTION NO. 21-CI-000476
    ESTATE OF ZAVIER FROEBER;
    AND COMMONWEALTH OF
    KENTUCKY, PUBLIC PROTECTION
    CABINET, BOARD OF CLAIMS                                             APPELLEES
    OPINION
    AFFIRMING
    ** ** ** ** **
    BEFORE: ACREE, CALDWELL, AND LAMBERT, JUDGES.
    CALDWELL, JUDGE: This case involves the tragic death of a young man, Zavier
    Froeber, which occurred when his vehicle was struck by a train. The Estate of
    Zavier Froeber (hereinafter “the Estate”) alleged that the Appellant, the Kentucky
    Transportation Cabinet (hereinafter “Transportation Cabinet”) was liable to the
    Estate for the death because it negligently failed to warn Zavier of the approaching
    train as he exited a work zone. The Board of Claims agreed, finding the
    Transportation Cabinet 20% responsible for the accident, apportioning the
    remaining 80% of responsibility to the decedent. The Jefferson Circuit Court
    affirmed the order of the Board of Claims.1 The Transportation Cabinet now
    appeals pursuant to KRS 49.160.
    FACTS
    On March 29, 2016, 19-year-old Zavier Froeber was driving
    northbound on KY-1020 in Bullitt County on his way to attend a mandatory work
    meeting at his place of employment. He encountered a Transportation Cabinet
    work zone as he approached the final turn to his workplace, Sabert Corporation,
    which is located off Blue Lick Road. After Zavier turned left onto Blue Lick
    Road, his vehicle was immediately struck by a train, and he was killed. At the time
    of the accident, Zavier was less than a mile from Sabert Corporation’s location.
    Transportation Cabinet employees had set up a work zone to do work
    excavating a ditch on the shoulder of northbound KY-1020, a state highway. The
    Transportation Cabinet had received reports of water collecting in the shallow
    1
    In 2021, the former Claims Commission was replaced by the Office of Claims and Appeals,
    Board of Claims. See Kentucky Revised Statutes (“KRS”) 12.020, KRS 13B.020, and KRS
    49.010 et seq.
    -2-
    ditch between the road and the railway, flooding the road. The railway ran parallel
    to KY-1020 and intersected Blue Lick Road.
    After holding a meeting concerning how to properly conduct the work
    in the work zone, the Transportation Cabinet employees had erected signage on
    KY-1020 indicating to drivers they were approaching a work zone; the road would
    narrow to one lane, and traffic onto the lane would be controlled by flaggers. One
    flagger, Jeremy Nichols, was positioned beside the northbound lane on the south
    end of the zone and equipped with a “slow/stop” paddle. Another employee, Paul
    Beckham, was similarly equipped and positioned on the west side of the road by
    the southbound lane. Both flaggers had a pick-up truck beside them with lights
    flashing.
    A dump truck and a backhoe were in the closed northbound lane,
    along with Nichols’ pick-up truck. Zavier proceeded north, now travelling in the
    southbound lane as directed by Nichols; all traffic was directed to the southbound
    lane, with the flaggers communicating via radio as to which of them would allow
    traffic to proceed and which would turn his paddle to “stop.”
    Beckham was responsible for controlling southbound traffic, as well
    as traffic turning left onto KY-1020 and into the work zone from East Blue Lick
    Road, which ran perpendicular to KY-1020 to the east. Traffic on East Blue Lick
    Road would have to cross railroad tracks which ran across Blue Lick Road just
    -3-
    before it ended at the junction with KY-1020. The railroad tracks were about
    forty-five feet from KY-1020. Beckham also had to control traffic leaving an auto
    service business to the west of KY-1020. Nichols was responsible for controlling
    northbound traffic on KY-1020, as well as traffic entering and leaving Solite
    Corporation, which was located at the southern edge of the work zone.
    Zavier’s vehicle was not the lead vehicle when northbound traffic was
    released to proceed but was either the second or third vehicle. Megan Jones was
    stopped in the southbound lane by Beckham and was second in line behind another
    vehicle while they waited for northbound traffic to clear the lane. Megan Jones
    watched in horror as Zavier turned east onto Blue Lick Road and into the path of a
    northbound train. The crossing had lights and bells, which had activated. It had no
    gate.
    Christopher Pollett is a highway superintendent and was in charge of
    the worksite. He would ensure the zone was properly set up, perform other
    supervisory duties, and then proceed to another worksite in his jurisdiction. He
    happened to be onsite at the time of the accident involving Zavier. He was in his
    Transportation Cabinet vehicle at the stop sign on Blue Lick Road, leaving the
    worksite to proceed to his next supervisory detail. He was waiting for Beckham to
    release him to turn left onto southbound KY-1020. He heard the train whistle and
    observed the lights of the crossing signal and so he pulled his truck up a bit closer
    -4-
    to KY-1020, to ensure the bed was not on the tracks. He made eye contact with
    Zavier as Zavier turned right onto Blue Lick Road. He briefly saw the collision in
    his rear-view mirror as the train slammed into Zavier’s vehicle.
    No Transportation Cabinet employee on the worksite gave any
    warnings about the train to any vehicles proceeding through the worksite. Though
    the dump truck and excavator were approximately eleven feet tall and were
    occupying the space between traffic and the railroad tracks, effectively blocking
    the view of those travelling through the work zone, no employee believed they had
    any duty to warn motorists as to the approach of the train as it was not located on
    the worksite. The worksite ended, they believed, before the railroad tracks and
    Blue Lick Road was not a part of the work zone, though the southbound flagger
    had to control traffic entering KY-1020 from Blue Lick, whether proceeding north
    or southbound on KY-1020.
    The Estate filed a claim with the Kentucky Board of Claims (formerly
    the Kentucky Claims Commission, hereinafter “the Board”). The Estate claimed
    that the Transportation Cabinet employees were negligent in setting up the work
    zone, which led to Zavier’s view of the train being obstructed. The Estate also
    alleged that the activity of the work zone created distractions and confusion which
    increased the likelihood that a driver would miss the alerts that a train was
    approaching from the rear, and that the Transportation Cabinet employees failed to
    -5-
    warn Zavier about the approaching train. The Transportation Cabinet admitted it
    owed an ordinary duty of care to all drivers passing through the work zone but
    disclaimed any responsibility for drivers’ safety once they had left the work zone.
    The Transportation Cabinet specifically denied it was negligent in any way which
    led to the death of Zavier.
    On October 30 and 31, 2019, the Board held a hearing on the claim.
    The Estate called Andrea Davis, formerly of the human resources department at
    Zavier’s employer, Sabert Corporation, to establish his earnings. The Estate also
    called six Transportation Cabinet workers present at the time of the accident:
    Christopher Pollett, who was the Bullitt County supervisor; Raymond Allen, who
    was the on-site supervisor; flaggers Jeremy Nichols and Paul Beckham; dump
    truck operator James Lawson; and backhoe operator William Peabody. The Estate
    also presented the testimony of accident reconstructionist Joseph Stidham, a retired
    Kentucky State Trooper and reconstruction trainer, and Megan Jones, who
    witnessed the accident. Zavier’s mother, Bridgett, and his father and executor of
    his estate, Scott, also testified. The Transportation Cabinet called only Christopher
    Pollett and its retained expert, Kenneth Agent.
    Following the hearing, the hearing officer issued findings of fact,
    conclusions of law and a recommended order which found the Transportation
    Cabinet twenty percent responsible for the accident. In so finding, the hearing
    -6-
    officer found the Transportation Cabinet violated Section 6B.01(5) of the Manual
    on Uniform Traffic Control Devices for Streets and Highways (“MUTCD”), which
    is the standard by which the Transportation Cabinet operates.2 The hearing officer
    further found:
    In this case, the Hearing Officer concludes that the
    obligation of the Respondent to warn motorists of
    foreseeable dangers in or immediately adjacent to its
    work zone was ministerial. Its employees may well have
    had discretion in how they went about giving those
    warnings, but they were not free to fail to do so at all.
    The Hearing Officer reasoned that the Transportation Cabinet had
    failed to warn motorists of foreseeable dangers, i.e., a train approaching and the
    view of said train being obstructed by the equipment, as well as the distraction of a
    work zone. The hearing officer apportioned eighty percent of the fault to Zavier.
    The hearing officer found the duty to warn to be a ministerial function of the
    Transportation Cabinet. The hearing officer found that the future earning capacity
    2
    KRS 189.337; 603 Kentucky Administrative Regulations (“KAR”) 5:050 (“This administrative
    regulation establishes that the MUTCD shall be the uniform system of traffic control devices in
    Kentucky.”). Section 6B.01(05) of the MUTCD contains Fundamental Principles of Temporary
    Traffic Control and reads as follows:
    Road user and worker safety and accessibility in TTC zones should be an integral
    and high-priority element of every project from planning through design and
    construction. Similarly, maintenance and utility work should be planned and
    conducted with the safety and accessibility of all motorists, bicyclists, pedestrians
    (including those with disabilities), and workers being considered at all times. If
    the TTC zone includes a grade crossing, early coordination with the railroad
    company or light rail transit agency should take place.
    -7-
    of Zavier had been $956,800 over his expected natural life span, and awarded the
    Estate twenty percent of that amount, or $191,360.3
    The Board of Claims adopted the hearing officer’s recommendation in
    a final order issued December 22, 2020. The Transportation Cabinet timely
    appealed that determination to the Jefferson Circuit Court. After allowing
    pleadings and conducting oral arguments, the Jefferson Circuit Court affirmed the
    Board. The matter was then appealed to this Court. We affirm.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    The standard of review for appeals from the Board of Claims is
    limited in scope as to whether the factual findings of the Board are supported by
    substantial evidence and whether the conclusions based thereon were clearly
    erroneous. Department for Human Resources v. Redmon, 
    599 S.W.2d 474
    , 476
    (Ky. App. 1980). Additionally, even if a reviewing court might disagree with the
    conclusion reached by the Board, it is not to substitute its judgment for that of the
    Board. Commonwealth, Department of Highways v. General & Excess Insurance
    Co., 
    355 S.W.2d 695
    , 699 (Ky. 1962). With this standard in mind, we begin our
    analysis.
    3
    The statute controlling at the time of the incident was KRS 44.070(5), which limited recovery
    to $200,000.
    -8-
    ANALYSIS
    Generally, the Commonwealth and its Cabinets and agencies enjoy
    immunity from lawsuits. See Yanero v. Davis, 
    65 S.W.3d 510
    , 517-18 (Ky.
    2001).4
    Section 231 of the Kentucky Constitution provides that
    “[t]he General Assembly may, by law, direct in what
    manner and in what courts suits may be brought against
    the Commonwealth.” Under this section, “no one can
    sue the State without its consent, which is usually given
    by a joint resolution of the General Assembly.” Bach v.
    Bach, 
    288 S.W.2d 52
    , 54 (Ky. 1956).
    Commonwealth Labor Cabinet v. Morris, 
    215 S.W.3d 49
    , 52 (Ky. App. 2006).
    The Board of Claims was created by statute:
    The Board of Claims created by KRS 49.010 shall have
    the following powers and authority to investigate, hear
    proof, and compensate persons for damages sustained to
    either person or property as a proximate result of
    negligence on the part of the Commonwealth, any of its
    cabinets, departments, bureaus, or agencies, or any of its
    officers, agents, or employees while acting within the
    scope of their employment by the Commonwealth or any
    of its cabinets, departments, bureaus, or agencies; except,
    however, regardless of any provision of law to the
    4
    [S]overeign immunity is a concept that arose from the common law of England
    and was embraced by our courts at an early stage in our nation’s history. [Reyes
    v. Hardin Memorial Hospital, 
    55 S.W.3d 337
    , 338 (Ky. 2001)]. It is an inherent
    attribute of a sovereign state that precludes the maintaining of any suit against the
    state unless the state has given its consent or otherwise waived its immunity.
    Restatement (Second) of the Law of Torts § 895B(1) (A.L.I. 1979); 72 Am.Jur.2d,
    States, Territories, and Dependencies, § 99 (1974). This principle was
    recognized as applicable to the Commonwealth of Kentucky as early as 1828.
    Divine v. Harvie, 
    23 Ky. (7 T.B. Mon.) 439
    , 441 (1828).
    Id. at 517-18.
    -9-
    contrary, the Commonwealth, its cabinets, departments,
    bureaus, and agencies, and its officers, agents, and
    employees, while acting within the scope of their
    employment by the Commonwealth or any of its
    cabinets, departments, bureaus, or agencies, shall not be
    liable for collateral or dependent claims which are
    dependent on loss to another and not the claimant or
    damages for mental distress or pain or suffering, and
    compensation shall not be allowed, awarded, or paid for
    such claims for damages.
    KRS 49.020(5).5
    Our review of the determination of the Board of Claims and the circuit
    court’s affirmance thereof is limited. Only if we find that the Board acted without
    power, or in excess of its granted powers, that fraud was perpetrated to extract the
    award, or that the findings of fact of the Board fail to support the determination, or
    we find that the award is contrary to the provisions of the statutes establishing the
    5
    Formerly KRS 44.070(1):
    A Board of Claims, composed of the members of the Crime Victims
    Compensation Board as hereinafter provided, is created and vested with full
    power and authority to investigate, hear proof, and to compensate persons for
    damages sustained to either person or property as a proximate result of negligence
    on the part of the Commonwealth, any of its cabinets, departments, bureaus, or
    agencies, or any of its officers, agents, or employees while acting within the scope
    of their employment by the Commonwealth or any of its cabinets, departments,
    bureaus, or agencies; provided, however, regardless of any provision of law to the
    contrary, the Commonwealth, its cabinets, departments, bureaus, and agencies,
    and its officers, agents, and employees, while acting within the scope of their
    employment by the Commonwealth or any of its cabinets, departments, bureaus,
    or agencies, shall not be liable for collateral or dependent claims which are
    dependent on loss to another and not the claimant, damages for mental distress or
    pain or suffering, and compensation shall not be allowed, awarded, or paid for
    said claims for damages . . . .
    -10-
    Board of Claims may the award be reversed. KRS 49.150(5). The Transportation
    Cabinet argues that the findings of fact do not support the determination in that the
    acts here were not ministerial, but discretionary.
    “In any appeal from a decision of the [Board of Claims], the critical
    inquiry is whether the allegedly negligent act is discretionary or ministerial.”
    Commonwealth v. Russell, 
    578 S.W.3d 747
    , 750 (Ky. App. 2019).
    In recent years, very little has been added to
    improve upon the explanation given more than 50 years
    ago by our predecessor court in Upchurch v. Clinton
    Cnty., 
    330 S.W.2d 428
    , 430 (Ky. 1959), and we find it
    worth repeating here:
    The essentials of a ministerial as contrasted
    with a discretionary act are thus set forth in
    43 Am.Jur., Public Officers, sec. 258, p. 75:
    ‘An official duty is ministerial when it is
    absolute, certain, and imperative, involving
    merely execution of a specific act arising
    from fixed and designated facts; that a
    necessity may exist for the ascertainment of
    those facts does not operate to convert the
    act into one discretionary in its nature.
    Discretionary or judicial duties are such as
    necessarily require the exercise of reason in
    the adaptation of means to an end, and
    discretion in determining how or whether
    the act shall be done or the course pursued.
    Discretion in the manner of the performance
    of an act arises when the act may be
    performed in one or two or more ways,
    either of which would be lawful, and where
    it is left to the will or judgment of the
    performer to determine in which way it shall
    be performed. However, an act is not
    -11-
    necessarily taken out of the class styled
    ‘ministerial’ because the officer performing
    it is vested with a discretion respecting the
    means or method to be employed.
    Gaither v. Justice & Public Safety Cabinet, 
    447 S.W.3d 628
    , 633-34 (Ky. 2014).
    It is uncontroverted that the Manual on Uniform Traffic Control
    Devices is “the national standard for all traffic control devices installed on any
    street, highway, or bicycle trail open to public travel[.]” 23 C.F.R.6 § 655.603
    (2010). KRS 189.337(2) requires the Department of Highways to “promulgate and
    adopt a manual of standards” for control of traffic devices. The Transportation
    Cabinet complied with KRS 189.337(2) in 603 KAR 5:050. “The MUTCD
    published by the Federal Highway Administration shall be the standard for all
    traffic control devices installed on any street, highway, bicycle trail, or private road
    open to public travel in Kentucky.” 603 KAR 5:050 § 2(2)(a) (2013 version).
    Thus, employees of the Cabinet must act in compliance with the dictates of the
    MUTCD. The only question here is whether the Board correctly determined, and
    the circuit court affirmed, that the decision not to warn motorists traversing
    through the worksite was discretionary, and thus not a matter which subjects the
    Cabinet to liability.
    6
    Code of Federal Regulations.
    -12-
    The Transportation Cabinet insists that the decisions made at the
    subject worksite were a matter of discretion, and that it cannot therefore be held
    liable for any negligence which occurred. The evidence adduced at the hearing
    establishes that the employees working the site that day in no way prepared for the
    eventuality of a train arriving adjacent to the worksite. The Transportation Cabinet
    argues that since the railroad track was without the work zone proper, it had no
    duty to warn motorists of an approaching train, regardless of whether the activity
    and equipment of the worksite impeded the view of or the warnings attendant to
    the arrival of a train at a crossing.
    The hearing officer concluded that “if the [Transportation Cabinet] is
    negligent inside of its work zone, and as a result causes injury or damage to a
    motorist outside the work zone, especially if he has just left the work zone, the
    [Transportation Cabinet] would be liable for such injury.” In short, the Board
    found that it matters not if the injury or accident occurs within the work zone, so
    long as the failure to warn occurred within the worksite and is a direct cause of the
    injury. The circuit court affirmed this finding. We cannot say this finding was
    clearly erroneous.
    It was the complete failure of those at the work zone to foresee the
    reasonable likelihood that a train would appear on the tracks adjacent to the
    worksite and that the equipment and activity associated with the operation might
    -13-
    occlude the perception of the arrival of the train by motorists. The tracks, only
    forty-five feet from KY-1020, were just adjacent to the worksite. The proximity of
    the tracks to the worksite is relevant here. If the tracks had been further away – we
    cannot say how far, the facts of each particular case determine relevance – we may
    well have agreed with the Transportation Cabinet’s position. However, as the
    circuit court pointed out:
    The record reflects that the KTC did not consider
    the safety of motorists or warn them about the danger of
    turning right onto East Blue Lick Road as [Z]avier did
    while there was an oncoming train, and that the danger of
    a collision was foreseeable as multiple trains passed
    through that crossing every day, many cars turned onto
    East Blue Lick Road from KY 1020 every day and there
    had been other accidents at that crossing. The position
    taken by the KTC and its employees that they bore no
    responsibility after motorists proceed through the work
    zone after being waived through by a flagger is contrary
    to the fundamental principles stated in Section 6B 01(05)
    of the MUTCD. The Hearing Officer’s conclusion, as
    adopted by the Claims Commission, that the KTC was
    liable for breaching a ministerial duty within the work
    zone rendering it liable for damages because of
    [Z]avier’s death which occurred immediately outside of
    the work zone is legally sound and supported by
    substantial evidence.
    The proximity of the train to the worksite, coupled with the view of
    the tracks being obstructed by the dump truck and backhoe for northbound drivers,
    plus the inherent distraction of a worksite, all formed to require those employees
    working and supervising that day to recognize the foreseeable eventuality of a train
    -14-
    arriving adjacent to the worksite. One flagger was controlling traffic as soon as it
    crossed the railroad tracks from Blue Lick Road, and he clearly saw the train
    approaching from behind Zavier. Since the Transportation Cabinet employees had
    not discussed this eventuality in the meeting prior to beginning work, nothing was
    done to warn Zavier of the approaching train. However, when there is ongoing
    construction or maintenance work, the Department of Highways not only has this
    general duty, but also a specific duty, to warn motorists of known hazards.
    Commonwealth, Dep’t of Highways v. Young, 
    354 S.W.2d 23
    , 24 (Ky. 1962)
    (“[T]hose charged with the maintenance of highways are under a duty to safeguard
    the traveling public while the highway is being repaired and anyone making repairs
    is under duty to observe proper precautions by the erection of suitable barriers or
    warning devices.”).
    The circuit court concluded its order:
    The record reflects that the KTC breached its duty under
    Section 6B.01(05) of the MUTCD by failing to plan (for)
    the foreseeable contingency of a train coming through
    next to the work zone and a motorist turning onto East
    Blue Lick Road at the same time, by failing to plan of
    [sic] a motorist failing to notice a train, because of the
    partial obstruction created by the KTC’s equipment and
    the distractions inherent in the work zone, and by failing
    to warn [Z]avier of such danger.
    -15-
    This conclusion of the circuit court finds support in the Supreme
    Court determination in Gaither, 447 S.W.3d at 636, holding that certain rules of
    safety are
    absolute, certain, and imperative, involving merely
    execution of a specific act arising from fixed and
    designated facts.” Yanero[, 65 S.W.3d] at 522. It is “an
    essentially objective and binary directive.” Haney [v.
    Monsky, 
    311 S.W.3d 235
    , 242 (Ky. 2010)]. You follow
    the rule or you violate it; there is no in-between area for
    discretion about how to comply. Adherence to the rule
    may require some modicum of forethought and planning,
    but it requires no judgment.
    We believe the same in this instance – the duty to warn of an approaching train, the
    view of which your equipment will obstruct, and knowing the activity inherent in
    the work of the day will serve as a distraction to drivers – is so fundamental here as
    to be ministerial. Also, the hearing officer noted the evidence of other prior
    accidents between vehicles and trains at that crossing, making it ever more
    necessary to be cautious as to how the distraction of the worksite was ameliorated.
    The crew had discretion in how they planned to warn drivers and protect against
    accidents, but to not even contemplate the danger to motorists should a train
    approach is violation of an absolute, certain, and imperative duty. We affirm.
    -16-
    CONCLUSION
    We agree with the circuit court. The findings of the Board are
    supported by substantial evidence, and we discern no clear error in their
    conclusions of law. The award to the Estate is affirmed.
    ALL CONCUR.
    BRIEFS FOR APPELLANT:                     BRIEF FOR APPELLEE ESTATE OF
    ZAVIER FROEBER:
    Marlin A. Jones
    Frankfort, Kentucky                       Vanessa B. Cantley
    Patrick E. Markey
    Louisville, Kentucky
    -17-