Douglass v. Salem Community Hospital

794 N.E.2d 107, 153 Ohio App. 3d 350, 2003 Ohio 4006
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 23, 2003
DocketNo. 2002-CO-07.
StatusPublished
Cited by64 cases

This text of 794 N.E.2d 107 (Douglass v. Salem Community Hospital) 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
Douglass v. Salem Community Hospital, 794 N.E.2d 107, 153 Ohio App. 3d 350, 2003 Ohio 4006 (Ohio Ct. App. 2003).

Opinions

Gene Donofrio, Judge.

{¶ 1} Plaintiffs-appellants, S.K., James and Kathy Pahanish, and F.C., appeal from the judgment of the Columbiana County Common Pleas Court striking the affidavit of appellants’ expert witness and granting summary judgment in favor of defendant-appellee, Salem Community Hospital.

{¶ 2} In 1987, Wagner was hired as the hospital’s assistant director of social services. He had some administrative responsibilities, but also counseled all types of people, from children to adolescents to adults. When Wagner was hired, *354 it was not the hospital’s policy to do reference checks prior to making the offer of employment. Thus, the human resources department did not attempt to conduct a reference check on Wagner until after he was offered employment. When it conducted the reference cheek, the hospital sent out a form letter to some of Wagner’s previous employers as well as to one of his personal references. Some of those references were returned to the hospital. However, Wagner’s immediately previous place of employment, Western Reserve Care System, did not return a reference. It was the hospital’s policy not to follow up on references that were not returned due to the litigious environment surrounding such recommendations. However, Wagner’s immediate supervisor, the hospital’s director of social services, Betsy Williams, called someone at Western Reserve and that person gave her a positive oral recommendation of Wagner. Hospital personnel concede that Wagner would not have been hired if Western Reserve had given a negative reference.

{¶ 3} After Wagner had been employed at the hospital for a few years, Williams began to hear concerns from his coworkers about some of his behavior. For instance, some of those coworkers had expressed how odd it was that Wagner spent such a large amount of his time with the children he was counseling, even outside the hospital environment. Williams confronted Wagner about those concerns and he agreed to limit his visits with patients to hospital hours and one followup visit. She also warned Wagner against getting involved in the family-related activities of his minor patients. Wagner agreed to comply with Williams’s requests and, after speaking with Wagner about those concerns, no one ever informed Williams that Wagner had resumed those activities.

{¶ 4} In November 1991, someone told Williams that they were surprised that Wagner was working for the hospital, considering what had happened at Western Reserve. This raised questions in Williams’s mind. The person did not tell Williams the substance of what happened and she could not find any information to substantiate what little the person had said.

{¶ 5} On January 3, 1992, Wagner submitted a letter of resignation to the hospital to become effective on January 30, 1992. Apparently, Wagner was seeking employment at St. Elizabeth’s Hospital in Youngstown, Ohio. Shortly thereafter, on January 8, 1992, the hospital’s vice-president of human resources, John Lenzi, received a phone call from his counterpart at Western Reserve, Bill Cummings, and Western Reserve’s labor attorney, John Stein. Western Reserve had received a phone call from someone attempting to conduct a reference check on Wagner. Mistakenly believing that the hospital was the potential employer who was actually conducting the reference check, Cummings and Stein called Lenzi to make him aware that while Wagner was employed at Western Reserve there were some problems concerning Wagner’s associations with young children *355 outside the hospital. It appears that in 1987, the police informed Western Reserve that Wagner had been accused of exposing himself and molesting children and those accusations were being investigated at that time. After being asked about this by Western Reserve, Wagner admitted that he was under investigation by the police. As a consequence of Western Reserve’s finding this information out, Wagner resigned his employment on the condition that Western Reserve would state to those conducting reference checks in the future that he had voluntarily resigned.

{¶ 6} After hearing this information, Lenzi called Williams and her immediate supervisor, Karen Kazel, into his office to discuss the situation. Lenzi never told Williams exactly what he was told by Western Reserve, only that Western Reserve called and said the hospital should not hire Wagner. The three decided to make January 10, 1992, Wagner’s last day with the hospital. However, they agreed that Wagner should be paid through January 30, 1992. In order to ensure that Wagner did not successfully rescind his resignation, the position of assistant director of social services was eliminated and those functions were spread among other members of the department. Lenzi also called his counterpart at St. Elizabeth’s about what he had found out. At no time did anyone at the hospital inform Wagner that the hospital had found out the reason he left Western Reserve. It also did not inform either Wagner’s present or former patients of the reason Wagner was no longer employed at the hospital. The hospital did not report its suspicions to any authority. As Kazel and Lenzi both stated, the hospital’s goal was to pay Wagner off and get him out of the hospital as soon as possible.

{¶ 7} In 1989, while Wagner was working at the hospital, F.C.’s father, Eric Douglass, took him to the hospital for counseling. F.C. was seven years old at the time and his parents had just divorced. Eric thought that counseling would help F.C. cope with that divorce. F.C.’s counselor at the hospital was Wagner. After a few sessions, F.C. no longer visited Wagner at the hospital. However, Wagner maintained a continuing relationship with F.C. outside the hospital. He would pick F.C. up and take him and other children on day trips to amusement parks, swimming, and other activities. Eric assumed that this was an extension of the counseling the hospital was providing him. Thus, he never questioned whether this relationship was condoned by the hospital. He never received a bill for the counseling F.C. received either inside or outside the hospital. Eric also never learned that Wagner had quit his employment with the hospital in January 1992.

{¶ 8} In July 1995, Wagner invited 13-year-old F.C. to his house in Youngstown for a weekend stay, the first time F.C. would be spending the night at Wagner’s residence. F.C. asked his 15-year-old cousin, S.K., if he would go as well. S.K. *356 asked his mother, Kathy, if he could go. Kathy was acquainted with Wagner and the hospital’s other social service people through her work in a nursing home. She understood that the visit was to involve Wagner in some professional manner with her son.

{¶ 9} Kathy called Williams to ask her advice on whether S.K. should accompany F.C. to Wagner’s residence. Kathy’s understanding of the conversation was that Williams gave a positive reference about Wagner, that Wagner “would be good.” Williams did not tell Kathy about any suspicions about Wagner or that Wagner was no longer employed at the hospital. Based in part on Williams’s statements, Kathy allowed her son to accompany F.C. to Wagner’s residence for the weekend. That weekend, and over the course of the next few months, Wagner gave the two boys marijuana and beer and either masturbated or performed oral sex on them. He then threatened the boys with harm if they either told anyone what was going on or refused to return for future visits.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
794 N.E.2d 107, 153 Ohio App. 3d 350, 2003 Ohio 4006, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/douglass-v-salem-community-hospital-ohioctapp-2003.