Doug Stewart v. Kettering Health Network

576 F. App'x 518
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 13, 2014
Docket13-4080
StatusUnpublished

This text of 576 F. App'x 518 (Doug Stewart v. Kettering Health Network) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doug Stewart v. Kettering Health Network, 576 F. App'x 518 (6th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff Doug Stewart appeals from a grant of summary judgment to defendants, Kettering Health Network (“KHN”) and Grandview Hospital (“the Hospital”). Stewart v. Kettering Health Network, 954 F.Supp.2d 654 (S.D.Ohio 2013). Plaintiff worked as a police officer at the Hospital, which is located in Dayton, Ohio, and is part of KHN. In February 2011, KHN terminated him for allegedly kicking a restrained psychiatric patient in the head. *519 Plaintiff denies doing so and contends that he was fired because he was — at 59 — the oldest officer on the force. His amended complaint included state and federal claims of age discrimination, retaliation, and a state-law claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress. On appeal, plaintiff focuses exclusively on his federal age discrimination claim.

I.

Plaintiff was hired by the Hospital in 2003 as a security officer. At the time, the chief was Roger Harris; he was replaced in 2009 by David Miller. That fall the Hospital was commissioned as a police department, which required all security officers, including plaintiff, to complete the Ohio Police Officer Training Academy (“OPOTA”). At the time, only plaintiff and one other officer, Jimmie Whittle, had not been certified by the OPOTA.

Miller testified that plaintiff did very well at OPOTA. Miller attended plaintiffs graduation where it was clear that “the guys liked him a lot” and he was selected as class speaker. Despite this success, however, plaintiff alleges that Miller repeatedly told him that he was too old and needed to retire. From February 2010 until his termination on March 2, 2011, plaintiff was the oldest officer on the force. He was also the oldest officer to complete OPOTA training successfully.

On February 22, 2011, plaintiff began his shift at two in the afternoon. He heard that another officer, Marty White, was having trouble with a patient in a padded examination room. Padded rooms were used for patients who might harm themselves or others. This particular individual had arrived after a “pink slip” was issued; this authorizes the staff to hold a patient for up to 72 hours in order to perform a psychiatric evaluation. The patient was visibly upset and swearing loudly-

When plaintiff arrived at the examination room, White was outside. Dr. Robert Hunter, who was nearby, asked the officers to undress the patient and put him into a hospital gown. According to plaintiff, when they attempted to remove his undershirt, the patient punched White “in the side of the temple area.” The patient threw more punches and one caught plaintiff in the neck. The men exchanged blows. White hit the patient “in the nose and busted his nose.” Plaintiff then used his stun-gun to subdue the patient.

During this altercation, Dr. Hunter and Sergeant Jones entered the room. In a subsequent declaration, Dr. Hunter stated that, “[w]hen the situation was under control, and the patient no longer presented a physical threat to anyone, Mr. Stewart kicked the patient in the head.” In the doctor’s view, the kick “appeared to be purely retaliatory.”

Dr. Boyce Fish was also present and signed a declaration stating that “Mr. Stewart’s actions in kicking a restrained patient in the head were entirely unnecessary and unjustified.” However, neither doctor saw fit to mention the kicking incident in their contemporaneous, handwritten notes of the confrontation.

Sergeant Jones notified Lieutenant Spieles of what had occurred. Spieles then informed Chief Miller who, along with Captain Molchan, investigated the incident. Molchan interviewed the doctors, Officer White, and plaintiff. In statements given by Jones and Spieles, both indicated that the doctors disapproved of plaintiff’s actions. For his part, plaintiff denied kicking the patient. Molchan recommended that plaintiff be fired. According to his declaration, he did not consider plaintiffs age in making that decision.

*520 During his deposition, plaintiff recalled a different scenario. He remembered Dr. Hunter placing his foot on the patient’s head in order to avoid contact with either the patient’s blood or spit. Because the patient continued to spit, plaintiff placed his foot, along with Dr. Hunter’s, on the patient’s head. When plaintiff allegedly told Dr. Hunter to remove his foot because the situation was under control, Hunter refused, telling plaintiff, “No. He’s not gonna spit ... on me.” Plaintiff attributes the injuries received by the patient to the punch he received from Officer White. After the altercation, plaintiff recalls the doctors telling him that the situation had been handled well.

Defendants cited use of excessive force as the ground for plaintiffs termination. Plaintiff strongly disagrees and alleges age discrimination was the reason. In his deposition, plaintiff testified that he had endured constant remarks about his age from Chief Miller. When plaintiff approached Miller about possibly applying for a sergeant’s or lieutenant’s position, for instance, Miller told him that he was too old for those duties and that he was looking for younger, better educated men. Miller also told him that he wanted “young bulls,” not “old guys.” According to plaintiff, Miller talked about his age so much that plaintiff heard it in his sleep. In addition, at the OPOTA graduation, plaintiffs wife recalls Molchan and Miller speaking of plaintiff contemptuously as old and embarrassing to the department.

There is no dispute that plaintiff was the oldest officer on the force. During his deposition, Chief Miller conceded that he had discussed retirement with plaintiff, but contended that he had similar conversations with all of his employees. He denied urging plaintiff to retire and rejected the suggestion that he had spoken disparagingly about age — other than to joke that “us old guys got to stick together.”

Lieutenant Andy Sullivan also testified by deposition. He rarely worked the same shift as plaintiff but noted that Miller asked him to “keep an eye on him.” In Sullivan’s view, “it seemed like [plaintiffs] days were numbered.” However, he did not recall any ageist statements made to plaintiff other than “jokes among all of us.” He noted — and it is undisputed — that Miller “wanted young people in there as far as the hiring pattern.” When asked directly, Sullivan stated that he believed Miller wanted plaintiff gone because “he didn’t like his temper, felt like he was short-fused,” not because of his age.

Finally, plaintiff points out that Officer White was not disciplined for his role in the altercation with the patient that led to plaintiffs termination even though he was the person who broke the patient’s nose. White was 86 at the time.

II.

We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo. Tysinger v. Police Dep’t of City of Zanesville, 463 F.3d 569, 572 (6th Cir.2006). A motion for summary judgment should be granted if the moving party demonstrates that there is no genuine dispute of material fact and he is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Id.; Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(a).

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Bluebook (online)
576 F. App'x 518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doug-stewart-v-kettering-health-network-ca6-2014.