Diller v. Miami Valley Hosp.

2017 Ohio 9051, 102 N.E.3d 520
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 15, 2017
DocketNO. 27342
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2017 Ohio 9051 (Diller v. Miami Valley Hosp.) 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
Diller v. Miami Valley Hosp., 2017 Ohio 9051, 102 N.E.3d 520 (Ohio Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

DONOVAN, J.

*524 {¶ 1} This matter is before the Court on the November 14, 2016 Notice of Appeal of Noelle Diller. Diller appeals from the trial court's "Decision, Order and Entry Sustaining Defendant's Motion to Strike Exhibits to Plaintiff's Memorandum in Opposition to Motion for Summary Judgment and Sustaining Defendant's Motion for Summary Judgment." We hereby affirm the judgment of the trial court.

{¶ 2} Diller filed a Complaint against Miami Valley Hospital ("MVH") on January 5, 2016, alleging "wrongful discrimination for sex discrimination, sexual harassment and retaliation predicated on violations of Sections 4112.02 and 4112.99 of the Ohio Revised Code." The Complaint provides that Diller "began her employment with Defendant MVH in September 2007 as a uniformed officer. In 2012 she was promoted to the position of Parking and Information Systems Security Manager." Diller alleged that she "performed her job in a very satisfactory manner and always received very favorable performance reviews." According to the Complaint, around July 2014, MVH "hired Franklin Davidson as its Director of Campus Police," and Davidson became Diller's supervisor. Shortly after he was hired, Davidson "began to engage in actions believed by [Diller] to constitute sex discrimination and sexual harassment," such as "offensive and inappropriate comments that were sexually charged," according to Diller. The Complaint asserts that Diller reported Davidson's "unlawful conduct to [MVH's] senior management."

{¶ 3} The Complaint asserts that Diller was instructed to observe Davidson and "to continue to bring any concerns forward." Diller alleged that she "learned of a potential sexual harassment incident involving Davidson and a female employee of [MVH] and began to investigate same so she could report back to management." According to the Complaint, once MVH discovered that Diller was investigating "this sexual harassment incident, Davidson and [MVH] began to falsely accuse [Diller] of workplace infractions which eventually lead to her wrongful termination on February 19, 2015."

{¶ 4} MVH answered the Complaint on February 4, 2016, and on September 6, 2016, it filed "Defendant's Motion for Summary Judgment." MVH asserted in its motion that in the course of her employment, Diller reported to Davidson and Jeff James, the Director of Facility Services, and that she was terminated "for compromising the Hospital's security system by reprogramming a security camera for purposes of trying to catch Davidson spending too much time at the Information Desk." According to MVH, "Diller claims that she received an anonymous voicemail message from an unidentified caller who expressed a concern about the amount of time that Davidson was spending at the Information Desk near the employee entrance to the Hospital." MVH argued that Diller "took it upon herself to commandeer the Hospital's security surveillance system to try to catch [Davidson] in the act." Citing Diller's attached deposition, MVH asserted that "Diller was very clear in her testimony that she did not suspect that Davidson was engaging in any misconduct aside from wasting time at the Information Desk. Specifically, she testified that she was not investigating possible sexual harassment by Davidson." MVH asserted that the "alleged anonymous voicemail was never mentioned even when she was confronted about reprogramming the camera, in her statement provided to Human Resources in response to her suspension, or in her lawsuit."

*525 {¶ 5} MVH argued that the camera at issue, "Camera 304," a "Pan Tilt Zoom" device, was in place "to monitor and record activities within the interior employee entrance" to the hospital and lobby area, which includes the Information Desk. MVH asserted that authorized security personnel could move the camera by means of a joystick to focus on specific areas within the camera's range. According to MVH, vagrants commonly loiter near the employee entrance, and the camera "was a critical component of the Hospital's surveillance system." MVH argued that Camera 304 was programmed with a "Home" setting, by means of which the camera would always return, after a short period of time, to focus on the employee entrance. The "Home" setting "was intended to protect the Hospital's employees entering and leaving work, especially given the known presence of vagrants in that area."

{¶ 6} According to MVH, "on January 28, 2015, Diller entered the Security Dispatch [O]ffice and informed the two Dispatchers on duty (Tim Ahrns and Angela Cupp) that she wanted to reposition Camera 304 to focus on the Information Desk," to see if she could catch Davidson "hanging around" there. MVH asserted that Diller "disengaged/unlocked the camera's 'Home' Setting and then used the joystick to move the camera to focus on the Information Desk." MVH argued that Ahrns and Cupp discussed Diller's actions and were uncomfortable with her moving the camera. According to MVH, "Cupp commented that she did not want to be part of Diller's 'petty vendetta' against Davidson," and shortly after Diller left the Security Dispatch Office, Ahrns returned the camera's focus to the employee entrance. The following morning, according to the motion, Diller discovered that the camera's focus had been returned to the employee entrance five minutes after she moved it to the Information Desk the previous afternoon. MVH asserted that Diller advised Ahrns that Ahrns "could move Camera 304 wherever he wanted it," and that Ahrns worked a half day on January 29, 2015 and then was off work until February 3, 2015.

{¶ 7} According to MVH, between January 29 and February 3, 2015, "Diller asked Eric Gagnon (an employee of IPS-one of the Hospital's IT vendors) to go back into the Dispatch Office for her and reprogram Camera 304 to focus on the Information Desk AND to set that as the camera's new 'Home' setting." MVH asserted that Gagnon did so, and when Ahrns returned to work, he discovered that the camera had been "Homed" on the Information Desk. On February 4, 2015, according to MVH, Ahrns asked Diller about the repositioned camera, and she told him that "she would look into it." MVH asserted that on the same day, "Ahrns reported Diller's actions to Corporal Brad Goudy and Sargent [sic] Benjamin Mason of the Hospital's Campus Police Department." MVH asserted that on February 5, 2015, Diller "reprogrammed Camera 304 back to its original 'Home' setting, focused on the employee entrance, where it belonged."

{¶ 8} According to MVH, Diller was suspended on February 6, 2015 "pending an investigation into the reprogramming of the security camera." MVH asserted that "Human Resources and the Security Department conducted an investigation and obtained statements from all witnesses, including Diller. * * * The statement by Diller contradicts her sworn deposition testimony in many respects." MVH asserted that Diller "fails to acknowledge (and implicitly denies) that she did, in fact, move the camera in an attempt to view Davidson at the Information Desk," but that she admitted doing so in her deposition. Further, MVH asserted, in her initial statement Diller claimed that she told *526 Gagnon that she did not want the camera focused on the Information Desk, but in her deposition she admitted that was a false statement. Finally, MVH asserted that Diller was terminated on February 19, 2015 "for compromising the Hospital's security camera surveillance system."

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Bluebook (online)
2017 Ohio 9051, 102 N.E.3d 520, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/diller-v-miami-valley-hosp-ohioctapp-2017.