Michael Colpitts v. W.B. Mason Co., Inc. ( 2020 )


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  • May 29, 2020
    Supreme Court
    No. 2018-337-Appeal.
    (PC 18-1584)
    Michael Colpitts               :
    v.                      :
    W.B. Mason Co., Inc.               :
    NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before
    publication in the Rhode Island Reporter. Readers are requested to
    notify the Opinion Analyst, Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 250
    Benefit Street, Providence, Rhode Island 02903, at Telephone 222-
    3258 of any typographical or other formal errors in order that
    corrections may be made before the opinion is published.
    Supreme Court
    No. 2018-337-Appeal.
    (PC 18-1584)
    Michael Colpitts                  :
    v.                        :
    W.B. Mason Co., Inc.                :
    Present: Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Flaherty, Robinson, and Indeglia, JJ.
    OPINION
    Justice Robinson, for the Court.            The plaintiff, Michael Colpitts, appeals from a
    November 8, 2018 judgment of the Providence County Superior Court in favor of the defendant,
    W.B. Mason Co., Inc. (W.B. Mason). The plaintiff alleged that W.B. Mason had violated the
    Rhode Island employer drug testing statute, G.L. 1956 § 28-6.5-1(a)(1), 1 when, on March 5,
    2018, his employer required him to take a drug test, purportedly without reasonable grounds, and
    ultimately terminated him for his refusal to do so. On appeal, the plaintiff contends that the issue
    is whether or not the trial justice erred in “finding that WB Mason Co[.], Inc. had reasonable
    grounds [pursuant to § 28-6.5-1(a)(1)] to believe, based on specific aspects of [Mr. Colpitts’s]
    performance and specific documented observations, concerning Michael Colpitts[’s] appearance,
    behavior and speech, that he might have been under the influence of a controlled substance.”
    1
    General Laws 1956 § 28-6.5-1(a)(1) provides as follows:
    “Employers may require that an employee submit to a drug test
    if * * * [t]he employer has reasonable grounds to believe based on
    specific aspects of the employee’s job performance and specific
    contemporaneous documented observations, concerning the
    employee’s appearance, behavior or speech that the employee may
    be under the influence of a controlled substance, which may be
    impairing his or her ability to perform his or her job * * *.”
    -1-
    This case came before the Supreme Court for oral argument pursuant to an order
    directing the parties to appear and show cause why the issues raised in this appeal should not be
    summarily decided. After examining the written and oral submissions of the parties and after a
    thorough review of the record, we are of the opinion that cause has not been shown and that this
    appeal may be resolved without further briefing or argument.
    For the reasons set forth in this opinion, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court.
    I
    Facts and Travel
    On March 9, 2018, Mr. Colpitts filed a verified complaint in Superior Court against W.B.
    Mason alleging that he had been a “supply driver” for W.B. Mason and that, on March 5, 2018,
    he suffered an injury to his right hand in the course of effecting a delivery as part of his work for
    W.B. Mason. The complaint alleged that he then returned to his worksite and reported the injury
    to his supervisor, Christopher Santos. The complaint further alleged that Mr. Colpitts “was not
    under the influence of drugs, intoxicating liquors, or any controlled substance which might have
    impaired his ability to perform his job.” It added that W.B. Mason and its agents had no
    reasonable grounds, pursuant to § 28-6.5-1, to believe that Mr. Colpitts was under the influence
    of any controlled substance.
    According to the complaint, W.B. Mason “wrongfully demand[ed]” that Mr. Colpitts
    undergo drug and alcohol testing. The complaint alleged that, on March 5, 2018, W.B. Mason
    suspended Mr. Colpitts and ultimately discharged him on March 8, 2018. It further alleged that
    W.B. Mason’s actions were in violation of portions of chapter 6.5 of title 28 of the General
    Laws. Mr. Colpitts sought to be reinstated and to receive back pay, in addition to attorneys’ fees
    and costs as well as punitive damages.
    -2-
    The matter was eventually scheduled for a consolidated hearing to address both
    preliminary relief and the merits. That hearing was conducted on August 16, 2018. We relate
    below the salient aspects of what transpired at the hearing.
    A
    The Testimony of Michael Colpitts
    Mr. Colpitts testified that he was employed by W.B. Mason as a “supply delivery driver,”
    starting in 2015. He added that he had “work[ed] continuously” at that position from July of
    2015 until March of 2018.
    With respect to his personal circumstances, Mr. Colpitts testified that he was a disabled
    veteran, having served in the United States Army. It was further his testimony that, in the course
    of that service, he was injured in Afghanistan and was subsequently honorably discharged from
    military service in April of 2013. He added that he received disability benefits from the Veterans
    Administration for injuries which he had sustained to his spine, knees, and left hip, as well as for
    Post Traumatic Stress Disorder. It was his testimony that, as a result of those injuries, he applied
    for and received a medical marijuana card in Rhode Island; he added that he began using
    marijuana therapeutically in 2017. However, it was his further testimony that he never used
    marijuana “on the clock or on the job” and that he was never “under the effects of marijuana”
    during the course of his employment.
    It was Mr. Colpitts’s testimony that, on the day in question, March 5, 2018, he injured his
    arm and back in the course of making his deliveries. He stated that he was unable to “finish that
    day” due to “shooting pains, extreme pain,” which he characterized as being at the level of “10
    out of 10.” He further testified that, after suffering the injury, he drove back to the W.B. Mason
    warehouse. It was his testimony that, once back at the warehouse, he located Christopher
    -3-
    Santos, his supervisor. He stated that, when he found Mr. Santos, he “joked with him” and said:
    “‘Are you ready to fill this out?’” It was Mr. Colpitts’s testimony that Mr. Santos “didn’t know
    what [he] was talking about” and that he therefore provided an explanation about his injury. Mr.
    Colpitts testified that he asked to leave to obtain medical treatment; he then stated the following
    with respect to Mr. Santos’s response to that request: “There wasn’t really much of a response.
    He said, ‘We have to fill this out and talk to the boss’ or something like that, ‘first.’” He stated
    that Mr. Santos then left him for a period of between ten and fifteen minutes.
    According to Mr. Colpitts’s testimony, Mr. Santos returned with Mike Bonito, the branch
    manager. He stated that the men asked him how he was feeling and that he told them that he was
    in “lots of pain.” He added that they “just kept questioning me” as to “when it happened, how it
    happened” and asked him “weird questions * * *.” He stated that they then took him into a room
    and “started interrogating” him, telling him that he was under the influence. Mr. Colpitts
    testified that he responded that he was not under the influence, but rather was just in a lot of pain.
    It was then Mr. Colpitts’s testimony that Mr. Bonito told him that he believed that he “‘might be
    impaired, and we want to get you tested.’” He added that, in response, he “got quite angry.”
    Mr. Colpitts then testified with respect to the pain he was experiencing on the day in
    question, stating that he “felt like [he] was going to throw up the pain was so bad.” He stated
    that he would “take a few seconds every now and then and kind of just swallow and try not to
    throw up.” He added that his back was “killing” him and that he was “trying to crack it, kept
    bending over, basically trying to find relief * * *.”
    Mr. Colpitts testified that he did ultimately go to a facility called “Concentra” for medical
    care. He added that he was driven there in Mr. Santos’s car. It was Mr. Colpitts’s testimony
    that, during that car ride, he told Mr. Santos that he had a medical marijuana license and that he
    -4-
    “couldn’t take a drug test because it would prove that [he] was -- [he] had smoked
    marijuana * * *.” He added that he had no way to “prove that [he] didn’t smoke marijuana
    within a certain amount of time, because it stays in your system.” He testified that, once at
    Concentra, he was asked to take a “urinalysis drug test” and a breathalyzer. He stated that he
    refused to take the drug test but did take the breathalyzer, the results of which were “[n]egative.”
    He testified that, after he had received medical attention, Mr. Santos told him to “go home and
    rest.” Mr. Colpitts then testified that he met with Mr. Santos, Mr. Bonito, and one “Joanna
    Lowney” at W.B. Mason on March 8, 2018. He stated that, at that meeting, Ms. Lowney told
    him: “‘You violated our fleet policy, so we have to terminate your employment * * *.’”
    Mr. Colpitts conceded on cross-examination that he had not told W.B. Mason “anything
    at all” about his 2017 application for a medical marijuana license. Mr. Colpitts further conceded
    on cross-examination that, during his exchange with Mr. Santos and Mr. Bonito at the W.B.
    Mason warehouse, he did “stutter[ ] at times * * *.” He added that he told them that he might
    “puke because of heartburn” and that he had “forgotten to take” his heartburn pills. He further
    conceded that he had sworn “excessively” when speaking to Mr. Bonito.
    B
    The Testimony of Christopher Santos
    Christopher Santos testified that he was the “warehouse manager” for the W.B. Mason
    facility in Cranston. It was his testimony that, prior to the incident in question, he had a “good
    working relationship” with Mr. Colpitts. He stated during his testimony that, on March 5, 2018,
    he did not receive any notice from Mr. Colpitts that he would be returning to the warehouse in
    the middle of the day. He further stated that Mr. Colpitts was suddenly “standing there.” He
    added that Mr. Colpitts then said to him: “‘Are you ready to fill this out?’” He added that he did
    -5-
    not understand what Mr. Colpitts meant. Mr. Santos testified that Mr. Colpitts then described
    how he had been injured. He stated that Mr. Colpitts “kept clenching over, he kept bending over
    or putting his hands on his knees, bending over at the time.” He described Mr. Colpitts’s
    behavior as “weird * * *.”
    Mr. Santos testified that he tried “to get more information, because it was unclear as to
    what happened. He was jumping all over the place;” he added that it was “very off * * * the
    whole description of the incident.” It was Mr. Santos’s testimony that he then assisted Mr.
    Colpitts with filling out an injury report. According to Mr. Santos, he next “sought counsel”
    from “H.R. representative” “Joanne Lowney” because he “had a suspicion that [Mr. Colpitts]
    wasn’t right, that something was going on.” He testified that Ms. Lowney told him to “seek
    another opinion of somebody else that was in the warehouse * * *.” He stated that he then
    located Mike Bonito.
    It was Mr. Santos’s further testimony that Mr. Bonito then spoke with Mr. Colpitts, after
    which Mr. Bonito and Mr. Santos agreed that “something wasn’t quite right * * *.” According to
    Mr. Santos, the two men then spoke with Mr. Colpitts together, during which conversation Mr.
    Bonito told Mr. Colpitts: “‘For your own safety we’d like to have you go over and get a drug test
    to make sure you’re all right, get your injury checked out, make sure you’re all right.’” In
    describing this exchange, Mr. Santos characterized the following as “unusual” behavior by Mr.
    Colpitts:
    “He was very excessive with the ‘F’ word, which is not uncommon
    in the warehouse, but when you are talking to the branch manager
    [Mr. Bonito], it’s very out of the ordinary, first of all. When [Mr.
    Colpitts] was describing the incident when he first came back he
    was just all over the place describing -- he didn’t know which hand
    it was, didn’t know how he went back in the truck. It was all over
    the place. He wasn’t making complete sentences. It was very, very
    odd * * *.”
    -6-
    Mr. Santos added that Mr. Colpitts “kept staggering, going back and forth, bending over,
    constantly bending over saying, ‘I’m f***ed up.’ He constantly would say that.” He further
    testified that, when bending over, Mr. Colpitts said: “‘I need to catch my breath’” and “‘I was
    going to puke * * *.’”
    Mr. Santos next testified that, after Mr. Colpitts was asked to undergo a drug test, he “got
    very agitated” and told Mr. Santos and Mr. Bonito that he was ‘“just going to go back to work’”
    and was ‘“fine.’” Mr. Santos added that he and Mr. Bonito told Mr. Colpitts he could not go
    back to work and that he then accompanied Mr. Colpitts to Concentra. It was Mr. Santos’s
    testimony that, during the drive, Mr. Colpitts showed him his medical marijuana card and told
    him that that was the reason he could not take a drug test.
    On cross-examination, Mr. Santos acknowledged that Mr. Colpitts did tell him that he
    thought his wrist was broken. He also stated that he did not believe that he had noticed any
    redness in Mr. Colpitts’s eyes. It was further his testimony on cross-examination that one of the
    reasons he was concerned about Mr. Colpitts on March 5 was the fact that Mr. Colpitts had not
    called the warehouse to report his injury before simply returning to the warehouse. When
    directly asked on cross-examination if Mr. Colpitts’s behavior indicated drug use, Mr. Santos
    stated: “It indicated to me that something wasn’t quite right with him.” He added that it “could
    have been pain, it could have been something else;” “he possibly could have been on something
    that day.”
    C
    The Testimony of Michael Bonito
    Michael Bonito testified that he was the branch manager at W.B. Mason’s Cranston
    facility. It was his testimony that, on March 5, 2018, Mr. Santos detailed to him his concerns
    -7-
    with respect to Mr. Colpitts’s behavior. He testified that he then spoke to Mr. Colpitts, whose
    explanation of his injury was “a bit distorted.” He elaborated as follows: “I was having a hard
    time following the explanation relative to his arm * * *.”         He testified that it was his
    understanding that Mr. Colpitts had injured his wrist. He then stated that Mr. Colpitts seemed
    “relatively relaxed for somebody that was in agonizing pain.” According to Mr. Bonito, Mr.
    Colpitts was “overly relaxed with his use of language.” Mr. Bonito further testified: “That is
    what caught me off guard the most was that it was just a barrage of ‘F’ bombs, but not in an
    angry or chaotic way that you may be if you had just hurt yourself.” He stated that his
    conversation with Mr. Colpitts lasted a “few minutes * * *.”
    According to Mr. Bonito’s testimony, he left the room in which he had been conversing
    with Mr. Colpitts but later returned, along with Mr. Santos, to continue speaking to Mr. Colpitts.
    It was his testimony that he asked Mr. Colpitts if everything was “okay” and received a response
    that was a “bit disjointed” relative to Mr. Colpitts’s concerns about his job and his being in the
    process of buying a house. With respect to his observations about Mr. Colpitts’s physical
    movements, Mr. Bonito stated that at one point Mr. Colpitts “abruptly started to make a
    swallowing -- like he was trying to swallow, and then he bent down almost in a linebacker
    position where his hands were down by his knees sort of hunched down, and I thought that was
    odd to me.” He added that Mr. Colpitts then apologized and stated that he thought he was going
    to “puke” and that he felt that way when he forgot to take his heartburn medication.
    It was Mr. Bonito’s testimony that he then told Mr. Colpitts that he would like him to get
    a drug test while at Concentra. He added that Mr. Colpitts “got irate” and stated that he was
    “fine” and would return to work. Mr. Bonito testified that he did not see any evidence that Mr.
    -8-
    Colpitts was in extreme pain that day. On cross-examination, Mr. Bonito acknowledged that he
    did not notice that Mr. Colpitts’s eyes were dilated and did not recall if his eyes were red.
    On October 5, 2018, after the close of the trial, the trial justice rendered a bench decision,
    concluding that Mr. Santos and Mr. Bonito had reasonable grounds to believe that Mr. Colpitts
    was under the influence of a controlled substance. On November 8, 2018, judgment entered
    denying Mr. Colpitts’s request for a preliminary injunction and entering judgment on the merits
    for W.B. Mason. Mr. Colpitts appealed.2
    II
    Standard of Review
    This Court “give[s] great weight to the factual findings of a trial justice sitting without a
    jury in a civil matter, and we will not disturb such findings unless they are clearly erroneous or
    unless the trial justice misconceived or overlooked material evidence or unless the decision fails
    to do substantial justice between the parties.” Banville v. Brennan, 
    84 A.3d 424
    , 429-30 (R.I.
    2014) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also Arnold v. Arnold, 
    187 A.3d 299
    , 310 (R.I.
    2018); Arnold Road Realty Associates, LLC v. Tiogue Fire District, 
    873 A.2d 119
    , 126 (R.I.
    2005). The reason for according such a substantial amount of deference to the credibility
    determinations of the trial justice is “the fact that [he or she] has actually observed the human
    drama that is part and parcel of every trial and * * * has had an opportunity to appraise witness
    demeanor and to take into account other realities that cannot be grasped from a reading of a cold
    record.” Banville, 84 A.3d at 430 (internal quotation marks omitted); see also B.S. International
    2
    The plaintiff filed a premature notice of appeal of the October 5, 2018 bench decision on
    October 19, 2018, before the November 8, 2018 judgment entered. However, this Court will
    treat the premature appeal as if it had been timely filed. See Terzian v. Lombardi, 
    180 A.3d 555
    ,
    557 n.4 (R.I. 2018); see also Goddard v. APG Security-RI, LLC, 
    134 A.3d 173
    , 175 (R.I. 2016).
    -9-
    Ltd. v. JMAM, LLC, 
    13 A.3d 1057
    , 1062 (R.I. 2011); In re Dissolution of Anderson, Zangari &
    Bossian, 
    888 A.2d 973
    , 975 (R.I. 2006).
    We will also apply “a deferential standard of review to the trial justice’s resolution of
    mixed questions of law and fact, as well as the inferences and conclusions drawn from the
    testimony and evidence * * *.” Banville, 84 A.3d at 430 (internal quotation marks omitted).
    However, we “review[ ] a trial justice’s conclusions on questions of law de novo.” Arnold, 187
    A.3d at 311 (internal quotation marks omitted).
    III
    Analysis
    A
    The Trial Justice’s Decision
    The trial justice began her bench decision on October 5, 2018 by detailing the basic facts
    and arguments at issue. With respect to the testimony regarding the events of March 5, the trial
    justice concluded that she found all of the witnesses to be credible and did not find that anyone
    had been attempting to mislead the court. She then proceeded to determine whether or not,
    pursuant to § 28-6.5-1(a)(1), W.B. Mason had reasonable grounds on March 5, 2018 to believe
    that Mr. Colpitts was under the influence of a controlled substance.
    The trial justice specifically stated that she had “struggled” with the case because some of
    Mr. Colpitts’s “bizarre” behavior “could be consistent with someone who is under the influence
    of a controlled substance,” but she added that “[i]t could also be consistent with someone who
    had just experienced an extremely painful injury.”          However, she then concluded that
    “reasonable grounds [do not] have to be the only grounds;” she stated that “[s]ure, it could be
    - 10 -
    consistent with pain, but it also could be consistent with drug use.” In her words, “just because
    there’s competing explanations doesn’t mean that their request was unreasonable.”
    The trial justice then stated as follows:
    “[Mr. Santos and Mr. Bonito] talked about the fact that [Mr.
    Colpitts] would call in frequently and, yet, despite suffering this
    jarring injury as was described to me, there wasn’t a single phone
    call. They described him walking into the warehouse, and without
    a piece of paper, any explanation, approaching Mr. Santos and
    saying, ‘Well, are you going to fill the paperwork out?’ And, by
    Mr. Colpitts’s own admission, it was like in a joking fashion.”
    The trial justice also specifically noted Mr. Colpitts’s “incoherent recitation,” “volatile
    behavior,” and “the use of profanity” before ultimately concluding as follows:
    “I think all of this together -- keep in mind the low
    standard, just a reasonable ground. Is that reasonable? It suggests
    to me that it is. It wasn’t baseless. They didn’t come out of left
    field with this. They observed his appearance, his behavior, and his
    speech and thought[,] * * * [i]n the vernacular, that something was
    off. So, I can’t say that their request was unreasonable.”
    In the end, the trial justice found in favor of W.B. Mason and denied Mr. Colpitts any of
    the remedies which he was seeking.3
    B
    Discussion
    Mr. Colpitts contends on appeal that there was “absolutely no evidence that [he] was
    under the influence of any drug, and specifically under the influence of marijuana.” He states
    that Mr. Santos and Mr. Bonito did not testify that he “stumble[d], walk[ed]
    unsteadily, * * * exhibit[ed] any other traits of intoxication[,] * * * [or] that his speech was
    3
    We note that the trial justice also referenced the principle that “when someone does come
    to the Court seeking assistance, they do, in fact, need to come with clean hands * * *.” She was
    referring to what were, as Mr. Colpitts conceded on cross-examination, inaccuracies in the
    answers he had provided at the medical examination which he was required to take in order to
    drive the particular truck he drove for W.B. Mason.
    - 11 -
    slurred.” According to Mr. Colpitts, the fact that he was acting “out of character” does not
    satisfy § 28-6.5-1(a)(1). He argues that the use of obscenities is “not an indicia of drug use,” nor
    is arriving back at the warehouse without calling beforehand. He further avers that “walk[ing] in
    circles and bend[ing] down” were indications of pain, not drug use. Finally, he states that
    “[t]here was no articulated evidence upon which a reasonable person could have believed that
    [he] was under the influence of a controlled substance.”
    W.B. Mason contends that “[s]ubstantial testimonial evidence supported the court’s
    determination” in this case.4
    In assessing the contentions of the parties on appeal, it is our view that we are confronted
    with a mixed question of law and fact. “A mixed question of law and fact is one in which the
    rule of law is undisputed, and the issue is whether the facts satisfy the statutory standard.”
    Johnston v. Poulin, 
    844 A.2d 707
    , 714 (R.I. 2004) (internal quotation marks omitted). The
    language of § 28-6.5-1(a)(1) is undisputed as it relates to this case, and we are merely concerned
    with whether or not the facts satisfy the standard articulated in that statute. Therefore, we accord
    deference to the trial justice’s findings and conclusions. See Banville, 84 A.3d at 429-30.
    Section 28-6.5-1(a)(1) is a part of the employer drug testing statute, and it provides as
    follows:
    4
    W.B. Mason also raises an issue with respect to the possible preemption of § 28-6.5-
    1(a)(1) by federal law. That issue was raised below, and the trial justice addressed it thoroughly
    in her bench decision. She ultimately found that there was no preemption. Mr. Colpitts does not
    raise any issue as to preemption on appeal. W.B. Mason contends on appeal that the trial justice
    erred in finding that there was no preemption in this case. However, that issue is not properly
    before the Court because W.B. Mason opted not to file a cross-appeal. See Miller v.
    Metropolitan Property and Casualty Insurance Company, 
    88 A.3d 1157
    , 1162 n.8 (R.I. 2014)
    (“A cross appeal is not necessary when the appellee simply wants to defend the judgment
    obtained below, even if it is on grounds different from those on which the judgment was based.
    However, if the prevailing party in the trial court wishes to overturn one of the lower court’s
    rulings below, a cross appeal must be filed.”) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    - 12 -
    “Employers may require that an employee submit to a drug test
    if * * * [t]he employer has reasonable grounds to believe based on
    specific aspects of the employee’s job performance and specific
    contemporaneous documented observations, concerning the
    employee’s appearance, behavior or speech that the employee may
    be under the influence of a controlled substance, which may be
    impairing his or her ability to perform his or her job * * *.”
    (Emphasis added.)
    Accordingly, this Court is confronted with the question of whether or not the trial justice abused
    her discretion in concluding that, based on the testimony at trial, Mr. Santos and Mr. Bonito had
    reasonable grounds to believe that Mr. Colpitts was under the influence of a controlled substance
    on March 5, 2018 and, therefore, to require that he take a drug test.
    After a thorough review of the testimony and the decision of the trial justice, we are
    unable to say that the trial justice abused her discretion in this case. Mr. Santos testified at length
    with respect to the “odd” behavior of Mr. Colpitts on March 5; and Mr. Bonito’s testimony was
    largely consistent with that of Mr. Santos. Mr. Santos testified as to the failure of Mr. Colpitts to
    call in to the warehouse after his injury despite it being his habit to do so. Mr. Santos and Mr.
    Bonito both testified to Mr. Colpitts being unable to clearly articulate what had occurred when he
    sustained his injury. They further testified to his bending over, repeated use of obscenities,
    staggering, and saying that he was going to “puke.” What is more, Mr. Santos testified to his
    belief on that day that Mr. Colpitts “could have been on something.”              It is clear that the
    testimony of Mr. Santos and Mr. Bonito was based on contemporaneous observations concerning
    Mr. Colpitts’s appearance, behavior, and speech.          See § 28-6.5-1(a)(1).      The trial justice
    expressly relied on the testimony of Mr. Santos and Mr. Bonito in holding that they had
    reasonable grounds to believe that Mr. Colpitts was under the influence of a controlled substance
    on March 5 and that, therefore, they were authorized to require that he undergo a drug test. In
    our judgment, the trial justice clearly did not abuse her discretion in so concluding.
    - 13 -
    On appeal, Mr. Colpitts takes issue with the trial justice’s interpretation of the testimony.
    He argues that the behavior that was characterized as being “odd” was not indicative of drug use.
    He points out that no one testified that he stumbled or slurred his words or walked unsteadily.
    However, it appears to be Mr. Colpitts’s implied contention that the behavior observed by the
    employer must lead ineluctably to the conclusion that the employee is under the influence of a
    controlled substance and not to any other conclusion. He further impliedly contends that only
    those physical symptoms that are typically associated with the use of a controlled substance
    would suffice to establish reasonable grounds to believe he was under the influence. We are
    unable to agree.
    We note that the trial justice herself stated that she “struggled” with the case due to the
    fact that there was more than one available inference that could have been drawn from Mr.
    Colpitts’s behavior. It is true that Mr. Colpitts’s behavior may have appeared to different
    observers as being indicative of his being in pain. Indeed, Mr. Santos admitted on cross-
    examination that “it could have been pain * * *.”       However, as the trial justice ultimately
    recognized, that does not mean that said behavior was not also possibly indicative of the
    employee being under the influence of a controlled substance. The employee’s behavior does
    not need to be such that it could lead to only a conclusion that he or she is under the influence of
    a controlled substance. The statute at issue clearly and unambiguously does not require actual
    knowledge that the employee is definitely under the influence, nor that the employee manifest the
    specific symptoms usually associated with being under the influence; the statute requires only
    that there be reasonable grounds to believe that the employee is under the influence of a
    controlled substance. See Planned Environments Management Corp. v. Robert, 
    966 A.2d 117
    ,
    121 (R.I. 2009) (“[W]e adhere to the principle that when the language of a statute is clear and
    - 14 -
    unambiguous, this Court must interpret the statute literally and must give the words of the statute
    their plain and ordinary meanings.”) (internal quotation marks omitted). Mr. Santos and Mr.
    Bonito are not medical professionals, and neither of them should have been expected to
    distinguish between symptoms of pain and indicia of being under the influence. The statute
    certainly does not require that the employer possess that degree of medical sophistication.
    There were ample facts in this case on the basis of which the trial justice could have
    reached the conclusion that reasonable grounds existed on March 5 for the request that Mr.
    Colpitts take a drug test.        See Black’s Law Dictionary 1518 (11th ed. 2019) (defining
    “reasonable”     as    “[f]air,     proper,     or       moderate   under   the    circumstances;
    sensible[;] * * * [a]ccording to reason”). Accordingly, giving the trial justice the deference to
    which she is entitled when passing on a mixed question of law and fact, we are unable to
    perceive any error in this case. The trial justice made findings of fact and made her legal
    determination based on those findings of fact. She did not abuse her discretion.
    We are not unsympathetic to the physical and non-physical toll that Mr. Colpitts’s service
    in the United States Army has taken on him. But we are restricted to dealing with the facts as
    they have been presented to us, and we have arrived at our decision within the bounds of the law.
    IV
    Conclusion
    For the reasons set forth herein, we affirm the judgment of the Superior Court. The
    record may be remanded to that tribunal.
    - 15 -
    STATE OF RHODE ISLAND AND                                  PROVIDENCE PLANTATIONS
    SUPREME COURT – CLERK’S OFFICE
    OPINION COVER SHEET
    Title of Case                        Michael Colpitts v. W.B. Mason Co., Inc.
    No. 2018-337-Appeal.
    Case Number
    (PC 18-1584)
    Date Opinion Filed                   May 29, 2020
    Suttell, C.J., Goldberg, Flaherty, Robinson, and
    Justices
    Indeglia, JJ.
    Written By                           Associate Justice William P. Robinson III
    Source of Appeal                     Providence County Superior Court
    Judicial Officer From Lower Court    Associate Justice Maureen B. Keough
    For Plaintiff:
    Bernard Patrick Healy, Esq.
    Attorney(s) on Appeal
    For Defendant:
    Andrew B. Prescott, Esq.
    SU-CMS-02A (revised June 2016)