Steven Kampmeyer v. State of Tennessee ( 2022 )


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  •                                                                                                        FILED
    01/13/2022
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF TENNESSEE                                                    Clerk of Me
    April 28, 2021 Session'                                          Appellate Courte
    STEVEN KAMPMEYER ET AL. V.STATE OF TENNESSEE
    Appeal by Permission from the Court of Appeals
    Tennessee Clahns Commission, Middle Division
    No. T20190265-1 Robert N.Hibbett, Commissioner
    No. M2019-01196-SC-R11-CV
    This case involves claims against the State of Tennessee asserted by a husband and wife.
    The claimant husband suffered injuries when his car collided with a Tennessee state vehicle
    parked in the roadway. He gave written notice of his claim to the Tennessee Division of
    Claims and Risk Management. The Division did not resolve it, so the Division transferred
    the claim to the Tennessee Claims Commission. The husband and wife then filed a
    complaint with the Claims Commission. The complaint contained a loss of consortium
    claim by the wife that was not in the written notice the husband gave to the Division of
    Claims and Risk Management. The Claims Commission complaint was filed within the
    applicable one-year statute of limitations. The Claims Commission granted the State's
    motion to dismiss the wife's loss of consortium claim as time-barred because she did not
    give the Division of Claims and Risk Management written notice of her claim within the
    limitations period. The Court of Appeals affirmed. The claimants appeal, relying on the
    holding in Hunter v. State, No.01-A-01-9210-BC00425, 
    1993 WL 133240
    (Tenn.Ct. App.
    Apr. 28, 1993), that a complaint filed with the Claims Commission within the statute of
    limitations fulfills the requirement in Tennessee Code Annotated § 9-8-402(a)(1) that
    claimants give timely written notice of their claim against the State to the Division of
    Claims and Risk Management. We reject this argument, overrule Hunter v. State, and
    affirm the Claims Commission's dismissal ofthe wife's claim for loss of consortium.
    1 We heard oral argument through video conference under this Court's emergency orders restricting
    court proceedings because ofthe COVID-19 pandemic.
    Tenn. R. App.P. 11 Appeal by Permission;
    Judgment of the Court of Appeals Affirmed
    HOLLY KIRBY,J., delivered the opinion of the court, in which ROGER A.PAGE,C.J., and
    SHARON G. LEE and JEFFREY S. MANS, JJ., joined. CORNELIA A. CLARK, J., not
    participating.2
    Sidney W. Gilreath and Cary L. Bauer, Knoxville, Tennessee, for the appellants, Steven
    Kampmeyer and Melissa Kampmeyer.
    Herbert H. Slatery III, Attomey General and Reporter; Andrée Sophia Blumstein, Solicitor
    General; and Meghan Murphy, Senior Assistant Attorney General, for the appellee, State
    of Tennessee.
    OPDT1ON
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY3
    On December 11, 2017, Tennessee Department of Transportation ('TDOr)
    employees parked two TDOT trucks on an overpass in the center lane of State Highway
    111 in Sequatchie County, Tennessee, not far from the exit to Dunlap, Tennessee. After
    exiting the trucks, two TDOT employees applied a de-icing agent to the overpass. The
    TDOT employees placed no signs or other devices to warn oncoming drivers of the
    presence of the trucks in the middle of the highway. As the employees worked on the
    overpass, neither TDOT vehicle displayed hazard signals.
    Meanwhile,Plaintiff/Appellant Steven Kampmeyer,a Florida resident, was driving
    his vehicle north on State Highway 111 toward that same overpass and the TDOT vehicles
    parked in the middle ofthe road. Mr. Kampmeyer's vehicle plowed into the rear ofone of
    the TDOT vehicles. Mr.Kampmeyer suffered extensive injuries in the collision, including
    a broken leg, broken facial bones, and traumatic brain injury.
    On August 9, 2018, Mr. Kampmeyer filed written notice of a claim for damages
    with Tennessee's Division of Claims and Risk Managernent. Pursuant to Tennessee Code
    Annotated § 9-8-402(c), once ninety days passed without resolution of Mr.Kampmeyer's
    2 Sadly, our honored   colleague and friend Justice Clark passed away on September 24,2021.
    The trial court decided this case on a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim. Consequently,
    we recount the facts as stated in the complaint and presume them to be true,"giving the plaintiffthe benefit
    of all reasonable inferences!' Webb v. Nashville Area Habitatfor Hwnan., Inc., 
    346 S.W.3d 422
    , 426
    (Tenn.2011)(quoting Tigg v. Pirelli Tire Coip.,
    232 S.W.3d 28
    ,31(Tenn.2007)).
    - 2-
    claim,the Division ofClaims and Risk Management transferred the claim to the Tennessee
    Claims Commission. Both entities are housed administratively within the Tennessee
    Department ofTreasury.4
    On December 5, 2018, Mr. Kampmeyer and his wife, Plaintiff/Appellant Melissa
    Kampmeyer,jointly filed a complaint with the Claims Commission based on the same
    factual allegations in the written notice Mr. Kampmeyer filed with the Division of Claims
    and Risk Management. The complaint alleged that TDOT violated Tennessee law and its
    own safety standards. It also contained a claim for loss ofconsortium by Mrs. Kampmeyer
    that had not been included in the written notice of claim Mr. Kampmeyer filed with the
    Division of Claims and Risk Management.
    In response, the State filed a motion to dismiss. In pertinent part, the State argued
    that Mrs. Kampmeyer did not give written notice of her claim against the State to the
    Division of Claims and Risk Management as required by Tennessee Code Annotated § 9-
    8-402(a)(1).5 As a result, the State asserted, her claim for loss of consortium was barred
    by the one-year statute oflimitations.
    In reply, the Plaintiffs acknowledged that Mr. Kampmeyer's notice of claim with
    the Division ofClaims and Risk Management did not include Mrs. Kampmeyer's claim for
    loss ofconsortium. They noted, however,that the Kampmeyers'joint complaint was filed
    with the Claims Commission within the one-year statute of limitations. Consequently, as
    to Mrs.Kampmeyer,the Claims Commission should have treated the complaint as a written
    notice of claim mistakenly filed with the Claims Commission instead of the Division of
    Claims and Risk Management and transferred it to the Division. For those reasons, they
    contended, the Claims Commission should deem Mrs. Kampmeyer's consortium claim
    timely.
    The Claims Commission granted the State's motion to dismiss Mrs. Kampmeyer's
    consortium claim. It held Mrs. Kampmeyer was a separate claimant and had to give written
    notice of her claim to the Division of Claims and Risk Management within the statute of
    limitations. Because she had not, the Claims Commission dismissed her claim.
    At Mrs. Kampmeyer's request, the Claims Commission made its dismissal order
    final and appealable pursuant to Rule 54.02 of the Tennessee Rules of Civil Procedure.
    Mrs. Kampmeyer then appealed to the Court ofAppeals.
    4 see infra   note 11.
    5The State's motion argued for dismissal of Mr. Kampmeyer's claims as well. The Claims
    Commission's disposition ofthe motion as to Mr. Kampmeyer's claims is not at issue in this appeal.
    -3-
    On appeal,the Court ofAppeals agreed with the Claims Commission that Tennessee
    Code Annotated § 9-8-402(a)(1) required Mrs. Kampmeyer to give written notice of her
    Ioss of consortium claim to the Division of Claims and Risk Management. Kampmeyer v.
    State,No.M2019-01196-COA-R3-CV,
    2020 WL 5110303
    ,at *3(Tenn. Ct. App. Aug. 28,
    2020), perm. app. granted, (Tenn. Jan. 13, 2021). It affirmed the dismissal of Mrs.
    Kampmeyer's claim.
    The Kampmeyers then sought permission to appeal to this Court, which was
    granted.
    ANALYSIS
    The only issue in this appeal is whether the Claims Commission erred by dismissing
    Mrs. Kampmeyer's claim for loss of consortium.6 Resolving this issue requires us to
    interpret statutes governing the Tennessee Claims Commission and the Division of Claims
    and Risk Management. Issues ofstatutory interpretation present a question of law, which
    we review de novo on appeal, giving no deference to the lower court decision. In re
    Kaliyah S.,
    455 S.W.3d 533
    , 552(Tenn. 2015).
    The Tennessee Claims Commission was created by the General Assembly to
    adjudicate certain types ofclaims against the State.7 Mullins v. State,
    320 S.W.3d 273
    ,279
    (Tenn. 2010)(citing 1984 Tenn. Pub. Acts, ch. 972, §§ 1, 5(a)(codified as amended at
    
    Tenn. Code Ann. §§ 9-8-301
    (a), -305(1)(2020 & Supp. 2021))). When the legislature
    created the Claims Commission, it also created the Division of Claims and Risk
    6 It is undisputed that Mrs.Kampmeyer's consortium claim,though derivative, is separate from Mr.
    Kampmeyer's claim for injuries. See Ki v. State,
    78 S.W.3d 876
    ,880(Tenn.2002)("[T]he right to recover
    for loss of consortium is a right independent of the spouse's right to recover for the injuries themselves."
    (quoting Hunley v. Silver Furniture Mfg. Co.,38 S.W3d 555,557(Tenn. 2001))).
    7 The Kampmeyers' complaint filed with the Claims Commission alleges personal injury claims
    arising out of"the acts or omissions of'state employees," specifically "'negligent operation ofstate-owned
    motor vehicles," as well as "Negligent care, custody and control of persons," which are among the types
    of claims that can be considered by the Claims Commission. 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 9-8-307
    (a)(1)(A),(E)
    (2020 & Supp. 2021).
    -4 -
    Management8 in order to facilitate informal settlement of claims against the State.9
    Currently, both are housed within the Department ofTreasury.
    This Court has summarized the process of giving initial written notice ofa claim to
    the Division of Claims and Risk Management and filing a complaint with the Claims
    Commission:
    The Claims Commission Act sets forth a structure designed to afford the
    State ample opportunity to resolve a claim administratively, without the need
    for a lawsuit. Thus, it requires a written notice with basic information about
    the claim, and provides that the applicable statute of limitations is tolled by
    the filing ofthe notice. Tenn. Code Ann.§ 9-8-402. The Act then gives the
    Division of Claims a "ninety-day settlement perioe in which it is to
    investigate the claim and "make every efforr' to either honor or deny it.
    
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 9-8-402
    (c). If the Division decides to honor the claim,
    the statute addresses its efforts to settle with the claimant. 
    Id.
     Ifthe claim is
    either honored or denied within the 90-day "settlement period," the claimant
    is informed of his right to file a claim with the Claims Commission.
    However,if it is neither honored nor denied during the settlement period, the
    claim is automatically transferred to the administrative clerk of the Claims
    Commission for adjudication. 
    Id.
    ...[I]f the matter is not settled during the 90-day settlement period
    and is transferred to the Claims Commission's administrative clerk, the
    Claims Commission regulations provide that the claimant "shall file a
    complaint ...." 
    Tenn. Comp. R. & Regs. 0310
    -01-01-.01(2)(d)(3). Thus,
    under the Claims Commission Act and the accompanying regulations, the
    written notice and the complaint serve different functions. The written notice
    triggers a protected 90-day "settlement period" designed to facilitate the
    resolution of claims without litigation. The State is neither expected nor
    required to file an answer to the notice of the claim, and the claimant is not
    entitled to discovery during the protected settlement period. To adjudicate
    the claim, the notice alone will not suffice; the claimant must also file a
    The Division of Claims and Risk Management was originally called the "Division of Claims
    Administration?' In 2017, the entity's narne was changed to the "Division of Claims and Risk
    Management." See 2017 Tenn. Pub. Acts, ch. 271,§ 1. For clarity, in this opinion, we will refer to it as
    the "Division of Claims and Risk Management" or simply the "Division."
    9See Study Comm.Created by S.J. Res. 216 ofthe 92d Gen. Assemb.,Rep. on the State Purchasing
    Com. Liab. Ins. & Sovereign Immunity, at 1 (Tenn. 1984)(on file with the Tennessee State Library &
    Archives).
    -5 -
    complaint that complies with Rules 8 and 10 ofthe Tennessee Rules of Civil
    Procedure.
    Moreno v. City ofClarbville,
    479 S.W.3d 795
    , 804-05 (Tenn. 2015)(footnote and some
    citations omitted).
    As referenced in Moreno,Tennessee Code Annotated § 9-8-402 requires claimants to give
    written notice of their claim to the Division of Claims and Risk Management. It states:
    "The claimant must give written notice of the claimant's claim to the division of claims
    and risk management as a condition precedent to recovery." 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 9-8
    -
    402(a)(1)(2020). The Kampmeyers' appeal requires us to interpret and apply section 9-8-
    402(a)(1)to these facts.
    In this case, Mr.Kampmeyer complied with section 9-8-402(a)(1) by filing written
    notice of his claim with the Division of Claims and Risk Management. As the
    Kampmeyers concede,however,the written notice Mr.Kampmeyer filed with the Division
    did not include Mrs. Kampmeyer's consortium claim.
    On appeal, the Kampmeyers contend that they gave the requisite notice of Mrs.
    Kampmeyer's consortium claim by including it in the complaint with the Claims
    Commission, which was filed within the one-year statute oflimitations.1° They argue that
    the relationship between the Claims Commission and the Division is such that the Claims
    Commission complaint provided notice to the Division. Relying on Hunter v. State, No.
    01-A-01-9210-BC00425, 
    1993 WL 133240
     (Tenn. Ct. App. Apr. 28, 1993), the
    Kampmeyers contend that the Claims Commission should have simply forwarded the
    complaint containing Mrs. Kampmeyer's claim to the Division.
    In Hunter,claimant Anthony Hunter did not file written notice ofhis wrongful death
    claim with the Division of Claims and Risk Management. Instead, he sent a complaint by
    Federal Express to the Claims Commission; it arrived one day before the statute of
    limitations ran. Id, at *1. The Claims Commission transferred the complaint to the
    Division, which Hunter described as in keeping with the Claims Commission's "practice"
    when "claims [were] mistakenly filed there." 
    Id.
     The complaint, however, did not arrive
    at the Division until after the limitations period had lapsed. 
    Id.
    I° See Tenn. Code Ann.§ 9-8-402(b)(2020)("The claim is barred unless the notice is given within
    the time provided by statutes oflimitations applicable by the courts for similar occurrences from which the
    claim arises ... ."); 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 28-3-104
    (a)(1)(2017)(one-year statute of limitations for personal
    injury actions). It is undisputed in this appeal that, if the complaint jointly filed with the Claims
    Commission by the Kampmeyers does not constitute written notice ofMrs.Kampmeyer's consortium claim
    under section 9-8-402(a)(1), her claim is time-barred.
    -6 -
    After it received Mr. Hunter's complaint, the Division determined it could not act
    on it within the statutory ninety-day period, so it transferred the complaint back to the
    Claims Commission. 
    Id.
     The Commission then dismissed the complaint as time-barred.
    
    Id.
     The claimant appealed.
    On appeal, the Court of Appeals in Hunter reversed. Interpreting the statutes that
    govern the Claims Commission and the Division of Claims and Risk Management, the
    intennediate appellate court first noted that Tennessee Code Annotated § 9-8-307(a)
    describes the Claims Commission as having "exclusive jurisdiction over certain types of
    claims. Id. Despite this exclusivity, the court observed, Tennessee Code Annotated § 9-
    8-402(c)gives the Division of Claims and Risk Management authority to make settlement
    offers on claims. They are transferred to the Claims Commission only after the Division
    has first had an opportunity to settle them. Id.
    Hunter perceived these statutes as "potentially inconsistent," in that the Claims
    Commission purportedly had exclusive jurisdiction over claims against the State but the
    Division of Claims and Risk Management was given limited authority over them as well.
    Id. at *2. The potential inconsistency put a duty on the court, it said, to avoid construing
    the statutes in a manner that would place them "in conflict" with one another. Id. (citing
    Parlcridge Hosp.,Inc. v. Woods, 
    561 S.W.2d 754
    ,755(Tenn. 1978)). The court then held:
    In order for us to construe these two provisions without conflict, we are
    compelled to find that the Division [of Claims and Risk Management],
    although from a different department of the state, is but an extension or
    adjunct of the Claims Commission. Otherwise, the Claims Commission
    could not be said to have exclusive jurisdiction. Thus, under our
    interpretation a claim filed with the Division [of Claims and Risk
    Management] or with the Claims Commission is valid if filed within the
    applicable statute oflimitations.
    
    Id.
     On that basis, Hunter reversed the Claims Commission's dismissal ofthe complaint.
    - 7-
    In a footnote, the court commented that "allowing claims to be filed with the Claims
    Commissioe did not prejudice the Division, and added: "Moreover, as the record
    indicates, claims mistakenly filed with the Claims Commission are usually forwarded to
    the Division ... on the same day." 
    Id.
     at *2 n.1.
    In reliance on Hunter, the Kampmeyers maintain that they timely gave written
    notice of Mrs. Kampmeyer's consortium claim by including her claim in the complaint
    with the Claims Commission, which was filed within the statute of limitations. Under
    Hunter, a complaint filed with the Claims Commission within the statute of limitations
    serves as notice to the Division of Claims and Risk Management, so they satisfied the
    requirements of Tennessee Code Annotated § 9-8-402(a)(1). For that reason, the
    Kampmeyers insist, the Claims Commission erred in granting the State's motion to dismiss
    Mrs. Kampmeyer's consortium claim.
    Though not explicitly stated in Hunter, the court in that case implicitly interpreted
    Tennessee Code Annotated § 9-8-402(a)(1), which states that claimants must give written
    notice of claims "to the division of claims and risk managemenr as a condition precedent
    to recovery of damages. Hunter's interpretation of that provision essentially adds "or the
    Claims Commissioe to that statute based on the perceived conflict between sections 9-8-
    307(a) and 9-8-402(c), as well as the Hunter court's description ofthe Division of Claims
    and Risk Management as "an extension or adjuncr ofthe Claims Commission.
    Is Hunter's interpretation warranted? We think not. In statutory interpretation,
    "Wile text of the statute is of primary importance." In re Kaliyah S., 455 S.W.3d at 552
    (quoting Mills v. Fulmarque,
    360 S.W.3d 362
    ,368(Tenn.2012)). A statute should be read
    naturally and reasonably, with the presumption that the legislature says what it means and
    means what it says. Chattanooga-Hamilton CnOi. Hosp. Auth. v. UnitedHealthcare Plan
    ofthe River Valley, Inc., 
    475 S.W.3d 746
    ,758(Tenn. 2015). Here, the General Assembly
    could have added language to section 9-8-402(a)(1) stating that claimants can give written
    notice of claims to either the Division of Claims and Risk Management or to the Claims
    Commission. It chose not to do so.
    Nor is there a conflict between sections 9-8-307(a) and 9-8-402(c) that would
    necessitate implication of additional language to section 9-8-402(a)(1). The Division of
    Claims and Risk Management has a limited function as to claims against the State—it can
    settle them, deny them, or choose not to act. Under section 9-8-402, the Division is
    "designed to afford the State ample opportunity to resolve a claim administratively, without
    the need for a lawsuit." Moreno,479 S.W.3d at 804 (citing Brown v. State, 
    783 S.W.2d 567
    , 572(Tenn. Ct. App. 1989)(Koch, J., concurring)). The Claims Commission retains
    exclusive jurisdiction to "determine," i.e., decide, claims that are not settled and proceed
    to litigation. See 
    Tenn. Code Ann. § 9-8-307
    (a)(1)(2020 & Supp. 2021). The function
    -8-
    assigned to the Division of Claims and Risk Management does not infringe on the Claims
    Commission's ability to exercise exclusivejurisdiction over claims that are litigated. Thus,
    there is no conflict between sections 9-8-307(a) and 9-8-402(c) that would require us to
    hold, as Hunter did, that written notice of a claim against the State can be filed with either
    the Claims Commission or the Division of Claims and Risk Management.
    We see little in the statutes to support Hunter's assertion that the Division ofClaims
    and Risk Management "is but an extension or adjunct ofthe Claims Commission." 
    1993 WL 133240
    , at *2. From the beginning, they were separate entities. See 1984 Tenn. Pub.
    Acts,ch.972,§§ 1,9. Indeed, at the time Hunter was decided,the two entities were housed
    administratively in different parts of state government. See 
    1993 WL 133240
    , at *2. At
    that time,the Division ofClaims and Risk Management was in the Department ofTreasury
    and the Claims Commission was in the Department of Commerce and Insurance.I1
    The Court of Appeals' opinion in Hunter included comments that "claims
    mistakenly filed with the Claims Commission are usually forwarded to the Division of
    Claims [and Risk ManagemenV describing this as the Commission's normal "practice."
    
    Id.
     at *1 & n.1. Whatever the record in Hunter may have shown, nothing in the record
    before us indicates the Commission has such a "practice today. Moreover, nothing in the
    governing statutes requires the Claims Commission to forward complaints to the Division
    of Claims and Risk Management.
    The Kampmeyers point out hopefully that another provision of section 9-8-402
    requires the Claims Commission to transfer some claims to yet another separate entity,the
    Board ofClaims. See Tenn. Code Ann.§ 9-8-402(a)(5)('Claims not within thejurisdiction
    ofthe claims comrnission shall be sent to the board of claims."). This shows only that the
    legislature knows how to require the Claims Commission to transfer claims when it wants
    them transferred. Cf. Mier v. Purdue Pharma L.P., 
    614 S.W.3d 681
    , 689(Tenn. 2020)
    ("[I]f the Legislature had intended to enact a certain provision missing from the statute,
    then the Legislature would have included the provision. Thus, the missing statutory
    provision is missing for a reason—the Legislature never meant to include it."(citing Rich
    v. Tenn. Bd ofMed. Exam'rs, 
    350 S.W.3d 919
    , 927(Tenn. 2011))). No statute required
    the Claims Commission to transfer Mrs. Kampmeyer's claim, contained in the
    Kampmeyers'joint complaint,to the Division of Claims and Risk Management.
    In sum, we find little to support Hunter's holding. Consequently, we expressly
    overrule Hunter.
    "From the beginning, the Division of Claims and Risk Management was housed administratively
    in the Department of Treasuty. The Claims Commission was transferred from the Department of
    Commerce and Insurance to the Department ofTreasury in 1997. See 1997 Tenn.Pub. Acts, ch. 165,§ 2.
    -9-
    Both parties argue that this case is governed by our decision in Moreno,and indeed
    the Court of Appeals below held as much. See Kampmeyer, 
    2020 WL 5110303
    , at *4
    ("Notwithstanding Hunter, we are bound by the binding precedent of the Tennessee
    Supreme Court in the subsequent case of Moreno . . . ."). We respectfully disagree.
    Certainly, Moreno discusses in general terms the statutes governing the Claims
    Commission and the Division ofClaims and Risk Management,as noted above. However,
    the issue decided in Moreno was whether a written notice ofclaim filed in the Division of
    Claims and Risk Management within the statute of limitations is "an original complainr
    within the meaning of our comparative fault statute, Tennessee Code Annotated § 20-1-
    119.12 Moreno, 479 S.W.3d at 804; see also Nationwide Mut. Fire Ins. Co. v. Memphis
    Light, Gas & Water, 
    578 S.W.3d 26
    , 38 (Tenn. Ct. App. 2018) C[T]he Moreno court
    merely provided guidance on what constitutes an 'original complaint' for purposes of
    [section 20-1-119]."). This issue differs significantly from the one presented in this appeal.
    For that reason, we disagree that Moreno controls this case.
    Ultimately, our decision must rest on the text ofTennessee Code Annotated § 9-8-
    402(a)(1). It plainly requires claimants to give written notice oftheir claim "to the division
    of claims and risk management as a condition precedent to recovery." Tenn. Code Ann.§
    9-8-402(a)(1). The statute does not provide claimants the option of giving written notice
    to the Claims Commission. "We presume the legislature intentionally omitted such an
    option." Ken Smith Auto Parts v. Thomas, 
    599 S.W.3d 555
    , 565 (Tenn. 2020). Reading
    the text of the statute naturally and reasonably, we must conclude that Mrs. Kampmeyer
    was required to give written notice of her consortium claim to the Division of Claims and
    Risk Management in order to recover in this case. She failed to do so. For that reason, we
    affirm.
    CONCLUSION
    We hold that Tennessee Code Annotated § 9-8-402(a)(1)requires claimants to give
    written notice oftheir claim to the Division of Claims and Risk Management as a condition
    precedent to recovery. In doing so, we overrule Hunter v. State, No. 01-A-01-9210-
    BC00425, 
    1993 WL 133240
    (Tenn. Ct. App. Apr. 28, 1993). Because Mrs. Kampmeyer
    did not give written notice of her loss of consortium claim to the Division of Claims and
    Risk Management within the one-year statute of limitations, we affirm the Claims
    Commission's grant ofthe State's motion to dismiss Mrs. Kampmeyer's
    12 Thus, Moreno presented essentially the converse of the issue in this appeal. Moreno asked
    whether the written notice filed with the Division could serve as a complaint with the Commission,and the
    Kampmeyers argue that a complaint filed with the Commission can serve as a written notice to the Division.
    - 10 -
    The judgment of the Court of Appeals is affirmed. Costs on appeal are taxed to
    appellants Steven and Melissa Kampmeyer,for which execution may issue if necessary.
    HOLLY KIRBY,JUSTICE