A.A. v. Otsego Local Schools Board of Education

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Ohio
DecidedSeptember 18, 2020
Docket3:15-cv-01747
StatusUnknown

This text of A.A. v. Otsego Local Schools Board of Education (A.A. v. Otsego Local Schools Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Ohio primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A.A. v. Otsego Local Schools Board of Education, (N.D. Ohio 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO WESTERN DIVISION

A.A., et al., Case No. 3:15-cv-1747

Plaintiffs, v. MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

Otsego Local Schools Board of Education, et al.,

Defendants.

I. INTRODUCTION A.A., a minor child, and his mother, Mirela Demirovic, allege Defendant Brian Ruckstuhl, a deputy with the Wood County, Ohio Sheriff’s Office who was assigned as a School Resource Officer at the Otsego Local School District, used improper force during an incident involving A.A. on October 8, 2014, when A.A. was in fourth grade. I previously dismissed claims against the Otsego Local Schools Board of Education, Wood County, and the Wood County Sheriff’s Office, (Doc. No. 27), and some of the claims against Ruckstuhl. (Doc. No. 32; Doc. No. 34). Further, Alen Demirovic, Mirela’s husband, also has dismissed his claims. (Doc. No. 53). The remaining claims are for: (a) violation of A.A.’s Fourth and Fourteenth Amendment rights pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983; (b) assault and battery; (c) negligent infliction of emotional distress; (d) intentional infliction of emotional distress; (e) false arrest; (f) false imprisonment; (g) child endangerment, in violation of Ohio Revised Code § 2919.22(b), through negligence per se. (Doc. No. 15; Doc. No. 32). Ruckstuhl has moved for summary judgment on all remaining claims. (Doc. No. 80). Plaintiffs filed a brief in opposition, (Doc. No. 91), and Ruckstuhl filed a brief in reply. (Doc. No. 92). For the reasons state below, I grant Ruckstuhl’s motion in part and deny it in part. II. BACKGROUND The parties agree that on October 8, 2014, A.A. was sitting at a table in his elementary school cafeteria when he failed to comply with instructions from Principal Betsey Murry for all

students to quiet down before dismissal for recess. A.A. suffers from hearing loss due to several early-childhood surgeries and asserts he did not comply with Murry’s instructions because he did not hear them. Murry came to A.A.’s table and told him he needed to go to her office while the other students went to recess. A.A. largely ignored Murry, other than to tell her he would not go down to the office. (Murry Dep., Doc. No. 85 at 25); (A.A. Dep., Doc. No. 83 at 35). The parties’ versions of events then begin to diverge. Murry asserts A.A. threw his lunchbox and then crawled under the lunchroom table when Murry instructed A.A. to retrieve it. (Doc. No. 85 at 26). A.A. denies having a lunchbox with him on October 8, much less throwing one, or crawling under a table. (Doc. No. 83 at 34-35). Murry then asked Ruckstuhl, who was talking to other students in the cafeteria, to come over and talk to A.A. about going to Murry’s office. A.A. was upset with Murry, (Doc. No. 83 at 36), and Murry believed A.A. might respond better to Ruckstuhl. (Doc. No. 85 at 27-28). A.A. acknowledges he was upset but asserts all he said in response to Murry and Ruckstuhl’s

attempts to convince him to go to the office was “no.” (Doc. No. 83 at 36). Murry remembers A.A. as being angry and yelling that he hated the principal. (Doc. No. 85 at 28). Ruckstuhl recalls A.A. offering “a constant rant,” and that when A.A. finally got up from the lunch table to go to the principal’s office, A.A. began loudly and profanely yelling that he hated the school and the principal. (Ruckstuhl Dep., Doc. No. 86 at 45). According to Ruckstuhl, A.A. “made a comment about if he had a knife, he wanted to stab [Murry].” (Id.). A.A. denies saying anything other than no. (Doc. No. 83 at 38-39). After talking in the cafeteria for a while – Ruckstuhl estimates the discussion lasted “for ten plus minutes” – A.A. got up and walked to the school office. (Doc. No. 86 at 46-47); (see also Doc. No. 83 at 38-39). A.A. sat down in a chair near the door of the outer office area. There were two other students and two secretaries in the office. Ruckstuhl did not believe A.A. had a weapon in his

possession but was concerned A.A. would grab a pencil, pen, or coffee mug off of a nearby desk and attempt to use those items as weapons. (Doc. No. 86 at 51-52). Ruckstuhl kept his eye on A.A. while he went to talk with Murry about where she wanted A.A. to sit. (Id. at 50-53). Murry informed Ruckstuhl she wanted A.A. to sit in her office rather than in the outer office area. Ruckstuhl returned to the outer office area to talk with A.A. and attempted to convince A.A. to walk down to Murry’s office. Ruckstuhl told A.A. Ruckstuhl would have to physically move A.A. to Murry’s office if A.A. did not go voluntarily. (Doc. No. 86 at 60). After several minutes, A.A. stood up and moved to another chair. (Doc. No. 83 at 40). Ruckstuhl recalls A.A. wrapping his arms and legs around the frame of the chair and refusing to move, (Doc. No. 86 at 63), though A.A. denies doing so and claims he only refused to comply. (Doc. No. 83 at 43). Ruckstuhl then moved closer to the chair to remove A.A. from the chair and move him to Murry’s office. On the day of this incident, A.A. was nine years old. He was 4 feet, 5 inches tall, and weighed 79 pounds, 2 ounces. (Doc. No. 84-2 at 42). Ruckstuhl was 48 years old, 5 feet, 10

inches tall, and approximately 205-210 pounds. (Doc. No. 86 at 4). Ruckstuhl states that, after A.A. refused to stand up and walk to Murry’s office, Ruckstuhl spent several minutes trying to remove A.A.’s arms from the chair arms and trying to get A.A. out of the chair. (Doc. No. 86 at 65-70). He then picked up A.A. around his waist or armpits and carried him down the hall. (Id. at 70-71). Ruckstuhl was only able to carry A.A. a short distance at a time before he would need to set A.A. down and then lift him again. (Id. at 71-72). Murry recalls Ruckstuhl carrying A.A. down the hall with A.A.’s back to Ruckstuhl’s chest, and that A.A.’s arms and legs were free and flailing around. (Doc. No. 85 at 32). A.A. disputes Ruckstuhl and Murry’s description. He asserts Ruckstuhl grabbed each of his wrists, picked him up out of the chair, and carried him down the 30-foot long hallway with his feet approximately a foot off the ground.1 (Doc. No. 83 at 48-49). Once in Murry’s office, Ruckstuhl set

A.A. down and A.A. attempted to run out of the office as Ruckstuhl closed the door. (Id. at 50). A.A. claims Ruckstuhl pushed him to the ground and put his knee in A.A.’s back to keep him from getting up. (Id. at 50-52). Ruckstuhl then gave Murry his cell phone to record what was happening. (Id. at 58). A.A. states that, as he laid face-down on the ground, he kept putting his hands underneath his stomach to prevent Ruckstuhl from handcuffing him. (Id. at 59). According to A.A., this continued for 10 to 15 minutes before Ruckstuhl succeeded in placing the handcuffs on him. (Id.). Ruckstuhl asserts A.A. hit him with A.A.’s soft-sided lunch box as Ruckstuhl carried A.A. down the hall and that A.A. hit and kicked him after Ruckstuhl got A.A. into Murry’s office. (Doc. No. 86 at 76-77). Ruckstuhl closed the door to the office and recalls handcuffing A.A. within a minute or two of closing the door. (Id. at 78-80). Murry also estimates Ruckstuhl had handcuffed A.A. approximately one minute after they entered the office. (Doc. No. 85 at 34-35). Ruckstuhl denies placing his knee on A.A. at any point. (Doc. No. 86 at 80-82). He indicates he handed Murry

his cell phone immediately after handcuffing A.A. (Id. at 86). Ruckstuhl attempted to calm A.A.

1 There were security cameras in the outer office area which recorded much of this incident. (Doc. No. 85 at 45-47). The system is designed to remove recordings after seven days. Murry indicated she did not alert anyone to preserve the recordings because she did not anticipate the incident would become the subject of litigation. (Id.).

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A.A. v. Otsego Local Schools Board of Education, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aa-v-otsego-local-schools-board-of-education-ohnd-2020.