Brookeside Ambulance, Inc. v. Walker Ambulance Service

678 N.E.2d 248, 112 Ohio App. 3d 150, 1996 Ohio App. LEXIS 2670
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 28, 1996
DocketNo. L-95-096.
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 678 N.E.2d 248 (Brookeside Ambulance, Inc. v. Walker Ambulance Service) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brookeside Ambulance, Inc. v. Walker Ambulance Service, 678 N.E.2d 248, 112 Ohio App. 3d 150, 1996 Ohio App. LEXIS 2670 (Ohio Ct. App. 1996).

Opinion

Handwork, Judge.

This case is on appeal from the March 9, 1995 judgment of the Lucas County Court of Common Pleas, which granted a directed verdict to appellee, Walker Ambulance Service (‘Walker”). On appeal, appellant, Brookeside Ambulance Service, Inc., d.b.a. Rumpf Ambulance Service (“Brookeside”), asserts the following assignments of error:

“I. Trial court erred by striking the testimony of plaintiffs expert witness, James Weber, CPA, with respect to plaintiffs damage.
“II. Trial court erred by granting defendant’s motion for directed verdict with respect to plaintiffs claim of tortious interference.”

*153 Brookeside sued Walker, asserting in its complaint that Walker, with an intent to appropriate Brookeside’s business, tortiously interfered with Brookeside’s business contracts, business relationships, and economic expectancies.

With respect to its relationship with REMSNO (Lucas County’s emergency medical dispatch organization that is now known as Lucas County EMS), Brookeside introduced the following evidence at trial relating to Walker’s alleged actions of run jumping, improperly (under the county dispatch system rules) using day cars for emergency medical transportation, and opening short-term stations next to Brookeside for the sole purpose of cutting off its income.

Several witnesses testified as to the requirements under REMSNO rules regarding dispatching. According to them, REMSNO, now known as Lucas County EMS, dispatches a first responder to the scene of an accident following a 911 call. The first responder, i.e., the fire department rescue squad, assesses the patient and decides if a life-threatening situation exists. If immediate transportation is not necessary, the first responder contacts the dispatcher and requests a private ambulance to transport the patient to the hospital. REMSNO contacts the private ambulance service closest to the scene and asks if it has a car in service. If it does not, the next nearest ambulance service is contacted. Under the REMSNO contract, the ambulance service is required to respond truthfully. Responding falsely and sending a car from another station is known as “run jumping.” Even after REMSNO ceased to exist on December 31, 1991, the ambulance companies agreed to operate under the REMSNO contract. Lucas County EMS continued to operate under the same dispatch system.

Brookeside was incorporated in 1991 to provide basic life support services (non-life-threatening transportation). Donald Kish, Brookeside’s president, estimated that in the summer of 1991, ninety-eight percent of Brookeside’s runs were initiated by 911 calls. The company began with one station and later that year opened a second station, both located in heavy traffic areas that were not close to any competitor stations. Shortly after the second station was opened, Walker opened two new stations close to Brookeside’s stations, thereby cutting Brooke-side’s response area in half. Walker closed these two stations shortly after Brookeside closed its stations. One of Walker’s emergency medical technicians testified that she never saw a night shift enter when she left at midnight from one of these stations. She did not know if the station was open twenty-four hours a day or not. However, at all the other stations, she would see the relief crew entering as she departed. The owner of an ambulance station located near one of Brookeside’s testified that Gary Walker contacted him in the fall of 1991 about renting the station but rejected the owner’s offer to sell the property. Kish calculated that Brookeside lost six hundred seventy-eight runs due to Walker’s blocking stations.

*154 There was some evidence presented that the telephone company had incorrectly listed Brookeside’s telephone number in its directory. However, witnesses testified that arrangements had been made for the forwarding of all calls and that REMSNO, the hospitals, and nursing homes were aware of the correct number. Furthermore, there was evidence that Brookeside did not have a twenty-four-hour dispatcher and that it did not have an answering service until the summer of 1991. A REMSNO dispatcher testified that he could recall not being able to get through to Brookeside.

Two former dispatchers for Walker testified that Walker instructed them to keep track of anything that interfered with Walker taking a run, including the fact that Brookeside took the run. One dispatcher testified that he never falsely indicated to a REMSNO dispatcher that a car was in service when it was not and was not aware of any other Walker dispatcher having done so. However, an emergency medical technician for Walker testified that she had participated in run jumps.

Kish calculated that Walker improperly jumped one thousand seventy-seven runs that would have gone to Brookeside and that the run jumping caused them to lose a considerable amount of profit. However, his calculations were based in part on the log records of Walker. A Walker dispatcher testified that these records were not updated daily to show whether the car dispatched had been moved from the station where it began the day. Consequently, he believed that the records sometimes incorrectly indicated the station from which the car was dispatched.

Kish further calculated that Walker’s action of improperly using day cars caused Brookeside to lose 1,702 runs. Kish interpreted the REMSNO contract as requiring that the ambulance services use a “24-hour car” (one that is in service twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week, fifty-two weeks a year) for emergency calls. However, other witnesses testified that all the ambulance services, including Brookeside, used their day cars (cars not in service one hundred percent of the time) for such purposes.

Kish complained to REMSNO, but no action was ever taken against Walker. A REMSNO director testified that he had received a similar complaint from the Toledo Fire Department against Walker.

With respect to Brookeside’s claim that Walker attempted to persuade certain nursing homes and hospitals to use its services rather than Brookeside’s, Brooke-side introduced the following evidence:

Kish testified that his business with Golden Haven Nursing Home ended abruptly. A charge nurse at the nursing home testified that she always used Brookeside but discontinued doing so after meeting with her supervisor. An *155 employee of Riverside Hospital testified that Villa North Nursing Home attempted to persuade Riverside to use only Walker for transporting its patients, but dropped the issue after Riverside indicated that it had an exclusive contract with Brookeside. The president of Riverside testified that Walker attempted to reopen negotiations for discounted service after the contract with Brookeside had been executed.

Finally, Brookeside alleged that Walker discouraged investment in Brookeside and defamed Brookeside personnel to cause people not to want to use Brookeside. However, there was no evidence presented to prove this claim.

Brookeside presented expert testimony on damages. A question was raised as to the witness’s qualification to testify.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
678 N.E.2d 248, 112 Ohio App. 3d 150, 1996 Ohio App. LEXIS 2670, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brookeside-ambulance-inc-v-walker-ambulance-service-ohioctapp-1996.