Hedrick v. Blake, Civ. A. No. 81-261.

Decision Date05 February 1982
Docket NumberCiv. A. No. 81-261.
Citation531 F. Supp. 156
PartiesRoy Eugene HEDRICK, Plaintiff, v. George BLAKE, John Doyle, and the Town of Fenwick Island, a municipal corporation of the State of Delaware, Defendants.
CourtU.S. District Court — District of Delaware

Robert C. Wolhar, Jr., of Wolhar & Moore, Georgetown, Del., for plaintiff.

Howard M. Berg, and Marie C. Bifferato, of Howard M. Berg & Associates, P. A., Wilmington, Del., for defendants George Blake and The Town of Fenwick Island.

OPINION

CALEB M. WRIGHT, Senior Judge.

This suit is brought against the Town of Fenwick Island, Delaware, and two of its police officers by Plaintiff, a citizen of Maryland, who alleges that he was arrested without probable cause and subjected to physical abuse at the hands of the officers. Plaintiff alleges violation of his federal civil rights and several causes of action under state tort law. Defendant Town of Fenwick Island (hereinafter sometimes referred to as "Town" or "the Town"), has moved that it be dismissed as a defendant on the grounds that it is immune from suit pursuant to the County and Municipal Tort Claims Act, 10 Del.C. ch. 40, subch. II, §§ 4011-4013, and that Plaintiff's allegations of the Town's respondeat superior liability fail to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). The Town further contends that there is no independent federal claim before this Court sufficient to enable it to exercise pendent jurisdiction over the state tort claims. It is to that final contention, not addressed by any of the parties at oral argument, that the Court will first turn its attention.

I. Pendent Jurisdiction

Counsel for Plaintiff unequivocally stated at oral argument that the only liability it alleged against the Town was premised on a theory of respondeat superior. In Monell v. New York City Dep't of Social Services, 436 U.S. 658, 98 S.Ct. 2018, 56 L.Ed.2d 611 (1978), the Supreme Court held that a municipality was a "person" within the meaning of 42 U.S.C. § 1983. In the course of expanding municipalities' liability for their constitutional torts, however, the Court took care to state that "a municipality cannot be held liable solely because it employs a tortfeasor—or, in other words, a municipality cannot be held liable under § 1983 on a respondeat superior theory." Id. at 691, 98 S.Ct. at 2036 (emphasis original).

It is abundantly clear, then, that the Town of Fenwick Island is immune from liability under § 1983 on Plaintiff's theory of the present suit. Consequently, § 1983, the only federal law question before the Court, does not provide sufficient grounds for exercising pendent jurisdiction over the state law claims against the Town.

This Court has no pendent jurisdiction over the state tort law claims against the Town of Fenwick Island.1

II. Fenwick Island's Immunity Under 10 Del.C. ch. 40

Fenwick Island's first two arguments for dismissal—immunity under Delaware statutes and the failure of a respondeat superior theory to state a claim upon which relief can be granted—rely upon construction of the immunity granted to municipalities by 10 Del.C. ch. 40. The statute, enacted in 1979, extends immunity from damage suits to all "governmental entities" as defined by the statute.2 The statute also provides for certain explicit exceptions to the immunity it confers.3 Plaintiff argued that the facts of his case fall within one or more statutory exceptions to the Town's immunity.

A. Definition of "Equipment"

Plaintiff's complaint alleges that Defendant Blake repeatedly struck Plaintiff with a nightstick. In his brief and at oral argument, Plaintiff urged that the Court find the nightstick to constitute "other machinery or equipment" within the meaning of 10 Del.C. § 4012(1). The Court declines to do so. After due consideration of Plaintiff's argument, the Court cannot accept the proposition that the definition of "equipment" is independent of the statutory subsection in which it is found. In this case, a combination of factors leads us to the conclusion that the legislature could not have intended an officer's tortious use of a police nightstick to be in the same category of "negligent acts or omissions" as the municipality's "ownership, maintenance or use" of the equipment described in § 4012(1). The statute must be read in context and the facts of each case applied to that context.4 Application of that standard to the facts alleged in the pleadings and the text of the statute does not warrant a finding of a § 4012(1) exception to the Town's immunity.

B. Waiver Through the Purchase of Liability Insurance

Plaintiff argues that in addition to the exceptions of immunity enumerated in § 4012, municipalities are not immune from liabilities for which they have purchased insurance or made provisions to self-insure. Plaintiff further alleges that the insurance policy produced to Plaintiff by Defendant, a copy of which is appended to Defendant's Reply Brief,5 constitutes a waiver by the Town of its immunity to the tort claims covered by the policy.

Defendant first argues that this Court cannot find the existence of liability insurance to constitute a waiver of immunity. Defendant emphasizes the phrase "except as otherwise expressly provided by statute" found in § 4011(a) and contends that no such statutory waiver exists on the subject of insurance. At oral argument, both parties concentrated on the fact that the concept of waiver through insurance is largely a judicial doctrine. Plaintiff did, however, argue that various sections of the state insurance code, 18 Del.C. ch. 65, speak to this issue and have been interpreted by the Delaware Supreme Court.

In interpreting a Delaware statute, this Court sits as a court of the State. It is guided by the State Supreme Court's interpretation of the law of immunity and, in this case, of waiver. It is also mindful of the context in which the County and Municipal Tort Claims Act, 10 Del.C. ch. 40 subch. II, was passed.

Section 4011(a) explicitly provides that "the power to sue or be sued ... shall not create or be interpreted as a waiver of the immunity granted in this subchapter."6 This provision responds to a line of Delaware state court cases culminating in City of Wilmington v. Spencer, 391 A.2d 199 (Del.Supr.1978); Varity Builders v. Polikoff, 305 A.2d 618 (Del.Supr.1973), and Beck v. Claymont School District, 407 A.2d 226 (Del.Super.1979), in which state courts found an explicit waiver of immunity in the General Assembly's grant to municipalities or other independent administrative entities of the power to sue or be sued. In Varity Builders, supra, and particularly in Pajewski v. Perry, 363 A.2d 429 (Del.Supr.1976), the Delaware Supreme Court expressed its hostility to the concept of sovereign immunity. When, in Varity Builders, and Spencer, supra, the Court found that a legislative grant of the power to sue or be sued constituted an explicit waiver of immunity, the legislature responded with 10 Del.C. § 4011(a), quoted above, which forecloses that interpretation of the grant of litigant's status. The legislature was and is clearly aware of the Delaware courts' position on immunity and waiver.

In considering and drafting the County and Municipal Tort Claims Act, the legislature must have been aware not only of Pajewski, supra, and its interpretation of the Insurance Act, 18 Del.C. ch. 65, but of City of Wilmington v. Spencer, supra. In Spencer, the Delaware Court said that "sovereign immunity is an unjust legal concept of constitutional origin." Id. at 201. The Court held that, as in Varity Builders, supra, the power to sue and be sued constituted a waiver of immunity. In a footnote to its opinion in Spencer, the Delaware Supreme Court clearly reiterated the position it had taken in Pajewski, supra, that 18 Del.C. § 6511 waives immunity for all risks covered by insurance.7

The Delaware legislature declined to legislatively overrule the Spencer opinion, which it could have done by stating that the purchase of insurance would not be deemed to constitute a waiver of immunity under the County and Municipal Tort Claims Act. The legislature's omission is particularly significant in light of its explicit effort to overcome Varity Builders, supra, with statutory language about the power to sue and be sued.

After examination of the Tort Claims Act, the Insurance Act, and the applicable state case law, the Court concludes that the Delaware Supreme Court interprets 18 Del.C. § 6511 to constitute an explicit statutory waiver of the immunity from suit of any municipality which had insured itself against the particular liability for which it was being sued. If the Town of Fenwick Island is covered against the risks at issue, in this case claims of tortious conduct of employees of its police department, it has waived its immunity from this suit.

At oral argument, Plaintiff's counsel expressed his willingness to accept Defendant's counsel's assurance that the policy produced to Plaintiff was the only applicable policy and that if the Town was not covered under that policy, it was not covered at all. The Court will proceed on that assumption.8

The Court finds that the language of the policy does not support a conclusion that the Town is covered for respondeat superior liability incurred through the action of its insured employees. First, the policy clearly states that it covers "all sums which the Insured shall become legally obligated to pay." Throughout the policy, there is a careful distinction maintained between "Named Insured," in this case the Town, and "Insured." The policy explicitly defines both terms.9 It simply does not create a duty on the part of the insurance company to pay sums which the Named Insured may become obligated to pay. None of the further terms, conditions or declarations of the policy indicates an intent to cover the Town.

Counsel for Plaintiff argued strenuously that the repeated appearance of the name of the Town of...

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