Martinez v. Wake Cty. Bd. of Educ. , 258 N.C. App. 466 ( 2018 )


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  •                 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF NORTH CAROLINA
    No. COA17-475
    Filed: 20 March 2018
    North Carolina Industrial Commission, I.C. No. TA-24791
    JAMIE1 FERNANDEZ MARTINEZ, Administrator of the Estate of MARIA J.
    FERNANDEZ JIMENEZ, Plaintiff
    v.
    WAKE COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION, Defendant.
    North Carolina Industrial Commission, I.C. No. TA-24792
    EDUARDO FERNANDEZ JIMENEZ, Plaintiff
    v.
    WAKE COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION, Defendant.
    North Carolina Industrial Commission, I.C. No TA-24793
    JAMIE FERNANDEZ MARTINEZ, Plaintiff
    v.
    WAKE COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION, Defendant.
    Appeal by defendant from order entered 20 January 2017 by the North
    Carolina Industrial Commission. Heard in the Court of Appeals 15 November 2017.
    Smith Moore Leatherwood LLP, by Matthew Nis Leerberg, and Law Offices of
    James Scott Farrin, by Marie D. Lang, for plaintiffs-appellees.
    Attorney General Joshua H. Stein, by Special Deputy Attorney General Olga E.
    Vysotskaya de Brito, Assistant Attorney General Alexander G. Walton, and
    Special Deputy Attorney General Christina S. Hayes, for defendant-appellant.
    1  Although the first name of Mr. Martinez is listed as “Jamie” in the caption of the 20 January
    2017 order from which this appeal is being taken, we observe that the record contains a 26 May 2016
    affidavit in which he identifies his name as “Jaime.”
    MARTINEZ V. WAKE CTY. BD. OF EDUC.
    Opinion of the Court
    Tin Fulton Walker & Owen, PLLC, by Sam McGee, and Maginnis Law, PLLC,
    by T. Shawn Howard, for North Carolina Advocates for Justice, amicus curiae.
    DAVIS, Judge.
    In this appeal from an action brought under North Carolina’s Tort Claims Act,
    we consider the scope of the Industrial Commission’s jurisdiction over negligence
    claims related to the operation of school buses. The Wake County Board of Education
    (the “Board”) appeals from an order entered by the Commission denying their motion
    to dismiss various claims arising from the death of Maria J. Fernandez Jimenez, a
    14-year-old girl who was struck by an oncoming vehicle while crossing the street to
    board her school bus.
    In its 20 January 2017 order, the Industrial Commission concluded that it
    possessed jurisdiction under the Tort Claims Act to hear not only (1) the plaintiffs’
    claims for negligence on the part of the school bus driver and maintenance personnel
    but also (2) their claims against various administrators within the Wake County
    Public School System alleging negligence in the development and design of school bus
    routes as well as in making various hiring, training, and staffing decisions. Because
    we conclude that the Industrial Commission lacks jurisdiction over this latter
    category of claims, we reverse the Commission’s 20 January 2017 order and remand
    for further proceedings.
    Factual and Procedural Background
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    MARTINEZ V. WAKE CTY. BD. OF EDUC.
    Opinion of the Court
    On 25 March 2013, Maria lived with her parents and her brother Eduardo in
    Garner, North Carolina. Their home was located on North Carolina Highway 50, a
    divided two-lane road with a posted speed limit of 55 miles per hour. Maria and
    Eduardo both attended Garner Magnet High School, a Wake County public school.
    The two siblings were transported to and from school each day on a school bus.
    The bus stop for Maria was located across the street from her home and
    required her to cross Highway 50 prior to boarding the bus. Upon picking up Maria
    and Eduardo, the school bus would then travel southbound on Highway 50 for about
    a quarter of a mile before turning around and passing directly in front of their house
    while traveling northbound.
    On 25 March 2013, Gloria Smith was the school bus driver assigned to Maria’s
    route. That morning, Smith stopped at the designated school bus stop across from
    Maria’s house at approximately 6:32 a.m. Maria began crossing the street as Smith
    stopped the school bus. Around the same time, a vehicle driving along Highway 50
    at a speed of approximately 50 miles per hour failed to stop for the school bus and
    fatally struck Maria as she was crossing the road.
    Pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 143-300.1, several of Maria’s family members
    and her estate brought an action under the Tort Claims Act in the Industrial
    Commission against the Board. In accordance with N.C. Gen. Stat. § 143-297, they
    filed in conjunction with their complaint affidavits naming various Board employees
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    MARTINEZ V. WAKE CTY. BD. OF EDUC.
    Opinion of the Court
    whose alleged negligent acts formed the basis for their claims against the Board. In
    addition to Smith, the individuals listed in the affidavits as having allegedly
    committed negligent acts and omissions contributing to Maria’s death included
    Anthony Tata, Superintendent of the Wake County Public School System (“WCPSS”);
    Stephen Gainey, Interim Superintendent of WCPSS; Drew Cook, Principal of Garner
    Magnet High School; Donald Haydon, Jr., Chief Facilities and Operations Officer of
    WCPSS; Robert E. Snidemiller, Jr., Senior Director of Transportation for WCPSS;
    and unnamed maintenance personnel employed to maintain WCPSS school buses.
    With regard to Smith, Plaintiffs asserted that she was negligent in (1) failing
    to report to her supervisor that the assigned bus stop was dangerous and that a safer
    alternate stop existed; (2) instructing Maria and Eduardo to cross the street prior to
    her arrival at the bus stop; (3) failing to activate her flashers upon arriving at the bus
    stop; (4) failing to warn Maria of the oncoming vehicle that struck her; and (5) failing
    to conduct a prior inspection of the bus she was operating. Plaintiffs further alleged
    that unnamed maintenance workers were negligent in failing to ensure regular
    maintenance, inspection, and repair of the bus being operated by Smith, including its
    warning lights, signs, and safety signals.
    With respect to the WCPSS administrators named in the affidavits, Plaintiffs
    alleged that they had been negligent regarding (1) the development and design of the
    bus route and bus stop to which Maria was assigned; (2) the organization and staffing
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    MARTINEZ V. WAKE CTY. BD. OF EDUC.
    Opinion of the Court
    of the WCPSS transportation department; (3) the failure to ensure the proper
    working order of school buses and their warning systems; (4) the failure to sufficiently
    instruct and train school bus drivers; (5) the failure to adequately instruct Maria’s
    family members regarding the safest way in which to reach their assigned bus stop;
    and (6) the failure to ensure a safe means for Maria to board the school bus.2
    On 1 May 2015, the Board filed a motion to dismiss Plaintiffs’ administrative
    negligence claims pursuant to Rules 12(b)(1), 12(b)(2), and 12(b)(6) of the North
    Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure on the ground that “a tort claim cannot be filed in
    the North Carolina Industrial Commission against individuals who are not the
    driver, transportation safety assistant, or monitor of a public school bus.” The Board
    did not move to dismiss the negligence claims premised upon the conduct of Smith or
    the unnamed maintenance personnel. On 18 May 2015, Deputy Commissioner J.
    Brad Donovan entered an order granting the Board’s motion to dismiss, stating in
    pertinent part as follows:
    In the instant case, plaintiffs allege sufficient facts
    regarding negligence on the part of the bus driver to
    survive a motion to dismiss these claims. In fact, [the
    Board] has not moved to dismiss any more than the claims
    of negligent route planning and design. Accordingly, the
    ruling of the undersigned allowing [the Board’s] Motion to
    Dismiss is limited to the alleged negligence on the part of
    members of the school board in the development, design,
    establishment,     implementation,      designation    and
    assignment of routes and school bus stops and instruction,
    2Throughout this opinion, we refer collectively to this category of claims against the WCPSS
    administrators as the “administrative negligence claims.”
    -5-
    MARTINEZ V. WAKE CTY. BD. OF EDUC.
    Opinion of the Court
    training and education of bus drivers and others.
    Plaintiff appealed the deputy commissioner’s decision to the Full Commission.
    On 20 January 2017, the Full Commission issued an order vacating Deputy
    Commissioner Donovan’s order and denying the Board’s motion to dismiss. The
    Board filed a timely notice of appeal to this Court.
    Analysis
    The Board’s sole argument on appeal is that the Commission erred in denying
    its motion to dismiss Plaintiffs’ administrative negligence claims. It contends that
    the Industrial Commission possesses jurisdiction under the Tort Claims Act only for
    claims arising from the negligence of school bus drivers, bus monitors, transportation
    safety assistants, and maintenance personnel.
    I.   Appellate Jurisdiction
    As an initial matter, we must determine whether this Court possesses
    jurisdiction over the Board’s interlocutory appeal. The Board’s appeal is based on the
    denial of their motions under Rules 12(b)(1) and (2) in which they asserted the lack
    of both personal jurisdiction and subject matter jurisdiction with respect to the
    administrative negligence claims. In this appeal, the Rule 12(b)(1) and Rule 12(b)(2)
    motions raise a common question — that is, whether the Board is subject to suit in
    the Industrial Commission with regard to Plaintiffs’ administrative negligence
    claims.
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    MARTINEZ V. WAKE CTY. BD. OF EDUC.
    Opinion of the Court
    It is well settled that “[a] county or city board of education is a governmental
    agency, and therefore is not liable in a tort or negligence action except to the extent
    that it has waived its governmental immunity pursuant to statutory authority.”
    Beatty v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Bd. of Educ., 
    99 N.C. App. 753
    , 755, 
    394 S.E.2d 242
    ,
    244 (1990) (citation omitted), disc. review improvidently allowed, 
    329 N.C. 691
    , 
    406 S.E.2d 579
    (1991). “According to well-established North Carolina law, governmental
    immunity is an immunity from suit rather than a mere defense to liability. For that
    reason, this Court has held that denial of dispositive motions such as motions to
    dismiss that are grounded on governmental immunity affect a substantial right and
    are immediately appealable.” Doe v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Bd. of Educ., 222 N.C.
    App. 359, 363, 
    731 S.E.2d 245
    , 248 (2012) (internal citations, quotation marks,
    brackets, and ellipsis omitted). Therefore, we possess jurisdiction to hear the Board’s
    appeal.
    II.   Jurisdiction of Industrial Commission under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 143-300.1
    In order to analyze the Board’s arguments, it is helpful to first review the basic
    principles surrounding a local school board’s potential waiver of its immunity. As
    noted above, due to their status as governmental entities, local boards of education
    are immune from tort liability absent a waiver of their governmental immunity. The
    North Carolina General Assembly has provided for the waiver of their immunity in
    two ways.
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    MARTINEZ V. WAKE CTY. BD. OF EDUC.
    Opinion of the Court
    First, the Tort Claims Act waives the governmental immunity of school boards
    for certain types of negligence claims specified therein. The relevant portion of the
    Tort Claims Act dealing with claims arising from the operation of school buses is N.C.
    Gen. Stat. §143-300.1. This statute states, in pertinent part, as follows:
    (a) The North Carolina Industrial Commission shall
    have jurisdiction to hear and determine tort claims against
    any county board of education or any city board of
    education, which claims arise as a result of any alleged
    mechanical defects or other defects which may affect the
    safe operation of a public school bus or school
    transportation service vehicle resulting from an alleged
    negligent act of maintenance personnel or as a result of any
    alleged negligent act or omission of the driver,
    transportation safety assistant, or monitor of a public
    school bus or school transportation service vehicle. . . .
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 143-300.1(a) (2017).
    Second, the General Assembly has authorized local boards of education to
    waive their governmental immunity from other types of tort claims through the
    purchase of liability insurance. Pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 115C-242, local boards
    can elect to waive their governmental immunity from tort actions in North Carolina’s
    superior courts by purchasing liability insurance. That statute provides, in relevant
    part, as follows:
    Any local board of education, by securing liability
    insurance as hereinafter provided, is hereby authorized
    and empowered to waive its governmental immunity from
    liability for damage by reason of death or injury to person
    or property caused by the negligence or tort of any agent or
    employee of such board of education when acting within the
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    MARTINEZ V. WAKE CTY. BD. OF EDUC.
    Opinion of the Court
    scope of his authority or within the course of his
    employment. Such immunity shall be deemed to have been
    waived by the act of obtaining such insurance, but such
    immunity is waived only to the extent that said board of
    education is indemnified by insurance for such negligence
    or tort.
    ....
    Provided, that this section shall not apply to claims for
    damages caused by the negligent acts or torts of public
    school bus, or school transportation service vehicle drivers,
    while driving school buses and school transportation
    service vehicles when the operation of such school buses
    and service vehicles is paid from the State Public School
    Fund.
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 115C-42 (2017).
    We have held that — per the statute’s concluding proviso — N.C. Gen. Stat.
    § 115C-42 “by its own terms, apparently does not apply to the type of claims which
    are covered by G.S. 143-300.1[.]” Smith v. McDowell Cty. Bd. of Educ., 
    68 N.C. App. 541
    , 543 n.1, 
    316 S.E.2d 108
    , 110 n.1 (1984). Therefore, the statutory framework
    erected by the General Assembly does not provide for concurrent jurisdiction between
    the Industrial Commission and North Carolina’s superior courts.              See Stein v.
    Asheville City Bd. of Educ., 
    168 N.C. App. 243
    , 251, 
    608 S.E.2d 80
    , 86 (2005) (“[I]f a
    plaintiff’s claim against a Board of Education falls within the scope of N.C. Gen. Stat.
    § 143-300.1, then N.C. Gen. Stat. § 115C-42 excludes the claim from the waiver of
    immunity. Without a waiver of immunity, the Board of Education cannot be sued in
    superior court.”), rev’d on other grounds, 
    360 N.C. 321
    , 
    626 S.E.2d 263
    (2006).
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    MARTINEZ V. WAKE CTY. BD. OF EDUC.
    Opinion of the Court
    As a result of these statutes, two principles are apparent: (1) the governmental
    immunity of local school boards no longer exists for claims falling within N.C. Gen.
    Stat. § 143-300.1 and such claims must be brought in the Industrial Commission; and
    (2) all other tort claims against school boards not similarly covered by the Tort Claims
    Act are barred unless the school board has opted to purchase liability insurance that
    provides coverage for the specific claim being asserted and in such cases the claim
    must be brought in superior court.
    Based on the statutory language of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 143-300.1(a), it is evident
    that the Industrial Commission possesses jurisdiction over claims alleging negligence
    by school bus drivers, monitors, transportation safety assistants, or maintenance
    personnel.   The question in this appeal, however, is whether the Industrial
    Commission also possesses jurisdiction over claims brought pursuant to § 143-300.1
    that arise from the negligent acts of administrators.       If so, then the Industrial
    Commission properly denied the Board’s motion to dismiss in the present case. If
    not, then the Board’s motion to dismiss should have been granted.
    Our Supreme Court has made clear that “[t]he state and its governmental
    units cannot be deprived of the sovereign attributes of immunity except by a plain,
    unmistakable mandate of the General Assembly. In addition, State statutes waiving
    this immunity, being in derogation of the sovereign right to immunity, must be
    strictly construed.” Irving v. Charlotte-Mecklenburg Bd. of Educ., 
    368 N.C. 609
    , 611,
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    MARTINEZ V. WAKE CTY. BD. OF EDUC.
    Opinion of the Court
    
    781 S.E.2d 282
    , 284 (2016) (internal citations, quotation marks, and brackets
    omitted). “When we review a statute that operates to waive governmental immunity,
    the statute must not only be strictly construed, but also be given its plain meaning
    and enforced as written, so long as its language is clear and unambiguous.” 
    Id. at 615,
    781 S.E.2d at 286 (internal citations omitted).
    In analyzing the parties’ respective arguments in this appeal, we recognize at
    the outset that we are not writing on a clean slate. The seminal case from our
    Supreme Court addressing the scope of the Industrial Commission’s jurisdiction to
    hear claims related to the operation of school buses pursuant to N.C. Gen. Stat. § 143-
    300.1 is Huff v. Northampton County Board of Education, 
    259 N.C. 75
    , 
    130 S.E.2d 26
    (1963).    In Huff, two high school students riding a school bus operated by the
    Northampton County Board of Education were involved in a fight that was broken
    up by the bus driver.     Although the driver had been instructed to report any
    misconduct on the school bus to the principal of the high school, he failed to report
    this incident. 
    Id. at 76,
    130 S.E.2d at 27. Seven months later, the same two students
    got into another altercation, and one of the students seriously wounded the other with
    a knife.    On that day, a substitute bus driver with no knowledge of the prior
    altercation was driving the bus. 
    Id. at 77,
    130 S.E.2d at 27.
    The victim filed claims in the Industrial Commission pursuant to N.C. Gen.
    Stat. § 143-300.1 alleging negligence on the part of the two bus drivers as well as by
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    MARTINEZ V. WAKE CTY. BD. OF EDUC.
    Opinion of the Court
    the school principal for failing to have a bus monitor present on the date of the
    stabbing. 
    Id. at 79-80,
    130 S.E.2d at 29. The Commission determined that “the
    plaintiff did not suffer any damages by any negligent act or omission of the defendant
    County Board of Education, nor were the damages suffered by the plaintiff reasonably
    foreseeable by the said Board of Education.” 
    Id. at 77,
    130 S.E.2d at 27.
    On appeal, our Supreme Court affirmed the Commission’s decision. In ruling
    that the plaintiff could not prevail on her claims arising from the alleged negligence
    of the school principal, the Court stated as follows:
    An award against a county board of education under the
    provisions of the Tort Claims Act may not be predicated on
    the negligent act or omission of a school principal or the
    county board of education, but if an award is made it must
    be based on the negligent act or omission of the driver of a
    public school bus who was employed at the time by the
    county or city administrative unit of which such board was
    the governing body.
    
    Id. at 77,
    130 S.E.2d at 28 (emphasis added).
    With regard to the victim’s claims of bus driver negligence, the Court
    determined that the evidence was “insufficient to support a finding that the negligent
    acts or omissions of . . . the drivers of the school bus involved, on the occasions
    complained of, were the proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injuries.” 
    Id. at 80,
    130
    S.E.2d at 29. The Court then reiterated that allegations of negligence on the part of
    other employees cannot be brought in the Industrial Commission:
    [A]s heretofore pointed out, the Tort Claims Act does not
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    MARTINEZ V. WAKE CTY. BD. OF EDUC.
    Opinion of the Court
    authorize a recovery against a county board of education
    for the negligent act or omissions of its agents, servants
    and employees except for a claim based upon a negligent act
    or omission of a driver of a school bus employed by the
    board from which recovery is sought.
    A county board of education, unless it has duly waived
    immunity from tort liability . . . , is not liable in a tort
    action or proceeding involving a tort except such liability
    as may be established under our Tort Claims Act.
    
    Id. at 79,
    130 S.E.2d at 29 (emphasis added and citation and quotation marks
    omitted).
    Thus, the only logical reading of Huff is that the types of administrative
    negligence claims at issue in the present appeal cannot be brought in the Industrial
    Commission under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 143-300.1. To the contrary, Huff makes clear
    that only the limited types of claims expressly referenced in the statutory text may
    be brought under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 143-300.1.
    Plaintiffs contend, however, that the Supreme Court’s ruling in Huff was
    modified by its later decision in Newgent v. Buncombe County Board of Education,
    
    114 N.C. App. 407
    , 
    442 S.E.2d 158
    (1994) (Orr, J., dissenting), rev’d per curiam for
    reasons stated in dissent, 
    340 N.C. 100
    , 
    455 S.E.2d 157
    (1995). In Newgent, an
    elementary school student was struck and killed by an automobile while crossing a
    busy highway in order to reach his bus stop. 
    Id. at 410,
    442 S.E.2d at 160. Prior to
    the accident, the school bus driver assigned to the child’s route would “drive by . . . the
    side on which the deceased child lived, traveling in a southerly direction. She would
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    MARTINEZ V. WAKE CTY. BD. OF EDUC.
    Opinion of the Court
    turn the school bus around and travel the same route in a [n]ortherly direction” before
    picking up the child on the side of the highway opposite where he lived. 
    Id. The administrator
    of the child’s estate filed a claim under the Tort Claims Act
    against the local school board in the Industrial Commission alleging that the bus
    driver had been negligent in “failing to inform the principal and decedent’s parents
    of facts [she] observed and alternative routes [she] should have taken while operating
    the bus in the course of her employment.” 
    Id. No theory
    of negligence was asserted
    against any school board employee other than the driver. The panel majority in this
    Court held that the Commission lacked jurisdiction over this claim because the bus
    driver could not “be considered to have been operating the bus at the time of the
    negligent acts complained of[.]” 
    Id. at 409,
    442 S.E.2d at 159.
    In a dissenting opinion ultimately adopted by our Supreme Court, however,
    then-Judge Orr determined that the Commission did possess jurisdiction. 
    Id. Judge Orr
    explained his reasoning as follows:
    [A]t the time [the bus driver] was operating the bus in the
    course of her employment, she saw the decedent, an
    elementary aged child, cross the busy road twice on his
    own, and she could allegedly see that the bus stop was in
    an area of limited visibility for a pedestrian. Further, while
    she was operating the bus in the course of her employment,
    every morning [she] would drive by Frisbee Road in a
    southerly direction. If [she] had picked up decedent while
    she was traveling in a southerly direction instead of
    turning the bus around and picking him up while she was
    driving the bus in a northerly direction, decedent would not
    have had to cross the highway and thus be exposed to the
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    MARTINEZ V. WAKE CTY. BD. OF EDUC.
    Opinion of the Court
    danger of crossing the highway.
    The alleged acts and omissions of failing to inform the
    principal and decedent’s parents arose out of events that
    occurred while [the bus driver] was operating the bus in
    the course of her employment. . . . While the majority
    relies on the language of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 143-300.1
    requiring that the driver be operating the public school bus
    “at the time of the alleged negligent act or omission” to
    defeat plaintiff’s claim based on a lack of jurisdiction, I find
    the affidavit sufficient to set out facts arising from the
    actual operation of the school bus[.]
    
    Id. at 411-12,
    442 S.E.2d at 160-61. Judge Orr further stated his belief that the
    legislature did not intend for N.C. Gen. Stat. § 143-300.1 “to preclude the Industrial
    Commission from hearing tort claims wherein certain alleged negligent acts or
    omissions arose out of, and were inseparably connected to, events occurring at the
    time a school bus driver was operating the bus in the course of her employment.” 
    Id. at 409,
    442 S.E.2d at 159.
    Thus, Newgent broadened the circumstances under which a school bus driver
    could be held liable under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 143-300.1. However, the fatal flaw in
    Plaintiffs’ argument is that Newgent did not involve claims premised upon a theory
    of negligence against any school board employee other than the bus driver herself.
    Accordingly, it did not authorize — or, for that matter, even address — the type of
    administrative negligence claims foreclosed by Huff and at issue in the present
    appeal.
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    MARTINEZ V. WAKE CTY. BD. OF EDUC.
    Opinion of the Court
    This Court has applied the principles set out in Newgent in two published
    decisions. Stein involved the failure of a school bus driver and bus monitor to report
    a conversation the bus monitor overheard on a school bus in which two juveniles with
    behavioral disabilities discussed a plan to commit armed robbery and murder. 
    Stein, 168 N.C. App. at 245
    , 608 S.E.2d at 82. Although the bus monitor informed the bus
    driver of the conversation, neither the driver nor the monitor informed anyone else
    associated with the school system of the juveniles’ statements. One week later, the
    two juveniles participated in a crime in which two persons were robbed and shot. 
    Id. at 245-46,
    608 S.E.2d at 82.
    The victims filed suit in superior court against the Asheville City Board of
    Education alleging that the bus driver and monitor were negligent in failing to report
    the conversation they had overheard. 
    Id. at 251,
    608 S.E.2d at 86. The trial court
    dismissed the claims, holding that they were required to have been brought in the
    Industrial Commission. In affirming the trial court’s ruling, we stated as follows:
    Plaintiffs argue that the statute does not apply because
    their claims do not arise as a result of any mechanical or
    other defect in the bus caused by a negligent act or
    omission of the driver.
    The plain language of the statute, however, makes it
    applicable not only to mechanical defects affecting the bus,
    but also claims arising “as a result of any alleged negligent
    act or omission” of a driver or monitor.
    ....
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    MARTINEZ V. WAKE CTY. BD. OF EDUC.
    Opinion of the Court
    Huff, Newgent, and our review of other cases involving N.C.
    Gen. Stat. § 143-300.1 establish that the Industrial
    Commission possesses jurisdiction over plaintiffs’ claims
    against the Asheville Board.
    
    Id. at 250,
    608 S.E.2d at 85 (citation omitted). Notably, no administrative negligence
    claims were asserted by the plaintiffs in Stein.
    The second published case from this Court applying Newgent is Stacy v.
    Merrill, 
    191 N.C. App. 131
    , 
    664 S.E.2d 565
    (2008). In Stacy, an elementary school
    student riding his bicycle home from school lost control and fell into the path of a
    moving school bus, resulting in his death. 
    Id. at 132,
    664 S.E.2d at 566. The child’s
    father filed a civil action against the Alamance-Burlington Board of Education and
    several of its administrators in superior court. The complaint alleged, in pertinent
    part, the following negligent acts:
    (1) designing a pedestrian, bicycle and vehicular traffic
    plan with no clearly marked pedestrian or bicycle lanes,
    with no fence, sidewalk, curb or other structure to separate
    pedestrian and bicycle traffic and vehicular traffic; (2)
    failing to supervise the elementary school children leaving
    the school campus; (3) failing to supervise or provide
    adequate training of bus drivers . . . ; (4) failing to provide
    a reasonably safe exit route for the students at Andrews
    Elementary; (5) failing to ensure a safe, alternate means of
    travel between home and school for students who were not
    provided transportation by defendants; and (6) failing to
    teach children who were not provided transportation the
    safe manner in which to walk, ride, and travel in order to
    avoid injury and/or death.
    
    Id. at 133,
    664 S.E.2d at 566.
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    MARTINEZ V. WAKE CTY. BD. OF EDUC.
    Opinion of the Court
    On the same day that the plaintiff filed the lawsuit in superior court, he also
    filed an action under the Tort Claims Act in the Industrial Commission. 
    Id. at 133,
    664 S.E.2d at 566-67. In that proceeding, he alleged that the child’s death was the
    result of negligence on the part of the school bus driver. 
    Id. at 133,
    664 S.E.2d at 567.
    In the lawsuit filed in superior court, the trial court dismissed the plaintiff’s
    claims for lack of jurisdiction. On appeal, this Court upheld that ruling. 
    Id. at 134,
    664 S.E.2d at 567. Citing Newgent, we summarily stated — without any mention of
    Huff or any explanation of how administrative negligence claims could be
    encompassed within the narrow language of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 143-300.1 — that
    “[u]nder the facts alleged in their amended complaint, plaintiffs’ claims are
    inseparably connected to events occurring at the time a school bus driver was
    operating the bus in the course of his employment, and thus fall within the scope of
    N.C. Gen. Stat. 143-300.1.” 
    Id. at 136,
    664 S.E.2d at 568 (citation, quotation marks,
    and brackets omitted).3
    Having reviewed the relevant case law, we now apply the principles contained
    therein to the present case. All of the parties to this appeal submit that confusion
    exists within the bench and bar as to the proper scope of the Industrial Commission’s
    jurisdiction over administrative negligence claims in connection with the operation
    3   We further held in the alternative that even assuming arguendo the Industrial Commission
    did not have exclusive jurisdiction, the board had not purchased liability insurance covering the
    plaintiff’s claims and, therefore, the board’s governmental immunity had not been waived.
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    MARTINEZ V. WAKE CTY. BD. OF EDUC.
    Opinion of the Court
    of school buses. We believe the source of this confusion is that our decision in Stacy
    cannot be reconciled with the Supreme Court’s ruling in Huff. Quite simply, Huff
    makes clear that the Industrial Commission lacks jurisdiction over any claims other
    than those falling within the express language of N.C. Gen. Stat. § 143-300.1,
    meaning that the types of administrative claims asserted by Plaintiffs here cannot be
    brought in the Industrial Commission under the Tort Claims Act. Stacy, however,
    reaches the opposite result.
    As a general proposition, “[w]here a panel of the Court of Appeals has decided
    the same issue, albeit in a different case, a subsequent panel of the same court is
    bound by that precedent, unless it has been overturned by a higher court.” In re Civil
    Penalty, 
    324 N.C. 373
    , 384, 
    379 S.E.2d 30
    , 37 (1989); see also State v. Jones, 
    358 N.C. 473
    , 487, 
    598 S.E.2d 125
    , 134 (2004) (“While . . . a panel of the Court of Appeals may
    disagree with, or even find error in, an opinion by a prior panel and may duly note its
    disagreement or point out that error in its opinion, the panel is bound by that prior
    decision until it is overturned by a higher court.”).
    However, it is equally clear that “this Court has no authority to reverse
    existing Supreme Court precedent.” Respess v. Respess, 
    232 N.C. App. 611
    , 625, 
    754 S.E.2d 691
    , 701 (2014); see also Mahoney v. Ronnie’s Rd. Serv., 
    122 N.C. App. 150
    ,
    153, 
    468 S.E.2d 279
    , 281 (1996) (“[I]t is elementary that we are bound by the rulings
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    MARTINEZ V. WAKE CTY. BD. OF EDUC.
    Opinion of the Court
    of our Supreme Court[.]” (citation omitted)), aff’d per curiam, 
    345 N.C. 631
    , 
    481 S.E.2d 85
    (1997).
    In Respess, we declined to follow a prior decision of this Court where the
    decision “directly conflicts with prior holdings of . . . our Supreme Court and therefore
    does not control our decision in the instant case.” 
    Respess, 232 N.C. App. at 625
    , 754
    S.E.2d at 700-01; see State v. Jones, __ N.C. App. __, __, 
    802 S.E.2d 518
    , 523 (2017)
    (“We have examined [two Court of Appeals decisions] and conclude that these cases
    fail to follow the binding precedent established by [our Supreme Court], and as a
    result, do not control the outcome in the present case.”); see also Cannon v. Miller,
    
    313 N.C. 324
    , 
    327 S.E.2d 888
    (1985) (holding that this Court lacks authority to
    overrule decisions of our Supreme Court and possesses a “responsibility to follow
    those decisions, until otherwise ordered by the Supreme Court”). Based on those
    cases, it is clear that where a prior ruling of this Court is in conflict with binding
    Supreme Court precedent, we must follow the decision of the Supreme Court rather
    than that of our own Court.
    Accordingly, we are compelled to follow Huff instead of Stacy because Huff is
    a decision from our Supreme Court that has never been overruled. The only way that
    the holding in Huff would not be binding upon us would be if Newgent constituted a
    change in the law on this issue by the Supreme Court, thereby expressly or implicitly
    overruling Huff. However, that is not the case. As discussed above, Newgent dealt
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    MARTINEZ V. WAKE CTY. BD. OF EDUC.
    Opinion of the Court
    solely with the issue of bus driver negligence. The alleged negligent acts or omissions
    in Newgent that arose out of and were inseparably connected to the operation of the
    bus at the time of the accident were on the part of the driver herself. Administrative
    negligence claims simply were not at issue in Newgent.
    Thus, while Newgent had the effect of broadening the extent to which a school
    board may be found liable in the Industrial Commission under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 143-
    300.1 based on a theory of bus driver negligence, it had no effect on the entirely
    separate question of where administrative negligence claims filed in conjunction with
    the operation of a school bus must be brought. Based on Huff, these claims can only
    be asserted in superior court — assuming that the board has waived its governmental
    immunity through the purchase of liability insurance.
    Because it is clear that Huff mandates our reversal of the Industrial
    Commission’s order denying the Board’s motion to dismiss, our analysis could end
    there. However, we take this opportunity to explain why this result faithfully applies
    the language actually used by the General Assembly in N.C. Gen. Stat. § 143-300.1.
    As noted above, in construing a statute courts must look first to the plain
    meaning of the statutory language. See Sharpe v. Worland, 
    137 N.C. App. 82
    , 85, 
    527 S.E.2d 75
    , 77 (“We preface our analysis by noting that statutory interpretation begins
    with the plain meaning of the words of the statute. Where the plain meaning of the
    statute is clear, no further analysis is required. Where the plain meaning is unclear,
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    MARTINEZ V. WAKE CTY. BD. OF EDUC.
    Opinion of the Court
    legislative intent controls.” (internal citations omitted)), disc. review denied, 
    352 N.C. 150
    , 
    542 S.E.2d 228
    (2000).
    N.C. Gen. Stat. § 143-300.1 sets out the exclusive circumstances under which
    the Industrial Commission possesses jurisdiction to hear claims against local boards
    of education arising from the operation of a school bus. Based on its clear text, the
    statute confers jurisdiction upon the Industrial Commission over claims alleging two
    discrete theories of negligence: (1) claims that arise as the result of a mechanical
    defect based on the negligence of maintenance personnel; and (2) claims that arise
    “as a result of any alleged negligent act or omission of the driver, transportation
    safety assistant, or monitor of a public school bus[.]” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 143-300.1(a).
    Nowhere in this statutory language is there any indication that claims based on
    separate theories of negligence relating to administrative matters such as the design
    of bus routes or staffing decisions within the school system are meant to be included
    therein.
    Reading N.C. Gen. Stat. § 143-300.1 to nevertheless encompass such claims
    would require this Court to judicially rewrite the statute — a power that courts
    clearly lack. See Orange Cty. ex rel. Byrd v. Byrd, 
    129 N.C. App. 818
    , 822, 
    501 S.E.2d 109
    , 112 (1998) (“Where there is no contention that the actions of the legislature
    violate constitutional safeguards, we are not free to either ignore or amend legislative
    enactments because when the language of a statute is clear and unambiguous, the
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    MARTINEZ V. WAKE CTY. BD. OF EDUC.
    Opinion of the Court
    courts must give it its plain meaning.” (citation omitted)). Indeed, this Court has
    previously stated that “the wording . . . in G.S. 143-300.1 particularly, is clear and
    unambiguous.” 
    Smith, 68 N.C. App. at 545
    , 316 S.E.2d at 111.
    Plaintiffs and amicus curiae make various policy arguments in support of their
    contention that the administrative negligence claims at issue should be adjudicated
    in the Industrial Commission based primarily on their concerns about the potentially
    preclusive effect of governmental immunity on their ability to bring such claims in
    superior court. But such policy decisions are solely within the purview of the General
    Assembly. See, e.g., Rhyne v. K-Mart Corp., 
    358 N.C. 160
    , 169, 
    594 S.E.2d 1
    , 8 (2004)
    (“The General Assembly is the policy-making agency because it is a far more
    appropriate forum than the courts for implementing policy-based changes to our
    laws.” (quotation marks omitted)); Shera v. N.C. State Univ. Veterinary Teaching
    Hosp., 
    219 N.C. App. 117
    , 126-27, 
    723 S.E.2d 352
    , 358 (2012) (holding that “this Court
    is not in the position to expand the law” and that “the numerous policy considerations
    presented by the issue raised in this case . . . [are] more appropriately addressed to
    our Legislature”); see also Jones v. City of Durham, 
    183 N.C. App. 57
    , 64, 
    643 S.E.2d 631
    , 636 (2007) (“Any change in [the governmental immunity] doctrine should come
    from the General Assembly.” (citation, quotation marks, and brackets omitted)).
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    MARTINEZ V. WAKE CTY. BD. OF EDUC.
    Opinion of the Court
    Therefore, we conclude that the Industrial Commission lacked jurisdiction to
    hear Plaintiffs’ administrative negligence claims.     Accordingly, we hold that the
    Commission erred in denying the Board’s motion to dismiss those claims.
    Conclusion
    For the reasons stated above, we reverse the 20 January 2017 order of the
    Industrial Commission and remand for proceedings not inconsistent with this
    opinion.
    REVERSED AND REMANDED.
    Judges CALABRIA and TYSON concur.
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