Butt-Dial To Boss Firing Case Decided By GA Judge

Shared from the Douglasville, GA Patch

A former state of Georgia employee is suing his boss after he was fired for what the boss heard after an accidental butt dial.

LAWRENCEVILLE, GA — The so called Georgia “Butt Dial” case that gained popularity on social media earlier in the year has been dealt a blow by a Gwinnett County State Court judge who has dismissed the civil lawsuit of a former state employee who claimed he lost his job after accidentally dialing his boss.

James Stephens, who worked for the Georgia Subsequent Injury Trust Fund, is appealing the decision to the Georgia Court of Appeals, according to his attorney, David Guldenschuh.

“The judge granted the state’s motion to dismiss the case and found that the conduct of the supervisor was in an official capacity,” Guldenschuh said. “The supervisor chose to eavesdrop on a personal call, made after hours, from my client’s home where the supervisor is arguably committing a crime by eavesdropping.

“We’re very disappointed the Attorney General has decided to weigh in on the side of this case with a very misguided state employee and not the citizens of Georgia,” he said. “We’re pursuing this because Mr. Stevens represents the privacy rights for everyone in Georgia.”

Former state employee James Stephens, from Cedartown, Georgia, accidentally butt-dialed his boss and now he has a new job and decided to sue his former boss.

In January 2016, Stephens worked as the chief financial officer for the Georgia Subsequent Injury Trust Fund. His supervisor, Mike Coan, the director of the organization, called him at home after hours one evening, as happened often, according to Guldenschuh.

“His boss called my client’s private cell phone from his own private cell phone,” Guldenschuh said. “They were both at home when the conversation took place, which tangentially was work related. When the conversation ended, my client walked into the kitchen and, after a time, touched his phone and pocket-dialed his boss.

“The boss determined my client was not talking to him but listened for about 12 and a half minutes,” Guldenschuh said. “James and his wife spoke about the phone call he just had with his boss. Mrs. Stevens made some unflattering comments about his boss which the boss took negatively. So the boss ended up firing my client.”

It is normal for aged men to appalachianmagazine.com generic sildenafil viagra have this problem. Also, the act can aid in strengthening bulbocavernosus muscle which performs various functions like allowing the penis to fill with blood. http://appalachianmagazine.com/2014/10/14/are-drugs-destroying-west-virginia/ cheapest cialis india The comparison includes total number of fixed broadband subscriptions canada cialis online per 100 inhabitants, according to the database stored in OECD statistical database, of the previous year. In the years we have always notice that somehow Google discriminates or just doesn’t “force” all websites into following their own guidelines and what for many websites would be an instant ban cheap levitra no prescription in stock is the success of others. The next work day, Stephens was asked to attend a meeting with his boss and a human resources representative.

“The boss said, based on the conversation he heard, Stephens could resign or be fired,” Guldenschuh said. “James didn’t want it to compromise future state jobs, so he resigned. It’s referred to as a ‘constructive discharge.'”

It was shortly after that that Stephens decided to sue his ex-boss for eavesdropping and invading his privacy. Coan lives in Gwinnett County so the lawsuit is filed in Gwinnett County State Court.

“From what Mr. Coan heard Mr. Stephens say during the second phone call, it was evident to Coan that, given Stephens’ opinions and criticisms of Coan and his job performance, Stephens and Coan could no longer have an effective working relationship and Coan could not trust Stephens as a subordinate,” reads Coan’s response to the lawsuit.

“The lawsuit is against Coen, personally,” Guldenschuh said. “Not against the State. Regardless, the Georgia Attorney General decided to step in and defend [Coan] because he is employed by the State. [The AG] is elected to defend the citizens of the State and I think he’s in an untenable position.”

A spokeswoman for Georgia Attorney General Chris Carr, who is representing Coan, has told media the office does not comment on matters that are pending.

“[The AG] is saying the eavesdropping was part of an official act by a State employee,” he said. “The AG should be protecting the citizens of the State, not the questionable conduct of an official employee of the State of Georgia, trying to escape a Georgia felony statue.”

Guldenshuh, who is representing both Stevens and his wife, Gina.

Photo courtesy David Guldenschuh law firm

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