Gorslene v. Dept. of Transp.

2018 Ohio 4953
CourtOhio Court of Claims
DecidedNovember 30, 2018
Docket2016-00708JD
StatusPublished

This text of 2018 Ohio 4953 (Gorslene v. Dept. of Transp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gorslene v. Dept. of Transp., 2018 Ohio 4953 (Ohio Super. Ct. 2018).

Opinion

[Cite as Gorslene v. Dept. of Transp., 2018-Ohio-4953.]

REX A. GORSLENE, et al. Case No. 2016-00708JD

Plaintiffs Magistrate Robert Van Schoyck

v. DECISION OF THE MAGISTRATE

OHIO DEPARTMENT OF TRANSPORTATION

Defendant

{¶1} Plaintiff, Rex A. Gorslene (hereinafter referred to as Gorslene), brought this action for negligence arising from a September 29, 2014 accident in which a state- owned vehicle operated by Charles Kiner, an employee of defendant, Ohio Department of Transportation (ODOT), backed into and injured him while he was at work on a highway construction project at the intersection of U.S. Route 42 and Section Line Road in Delaware County, which was being rebuilt and was closed to through traffic. Plaintiff, Connie Gorslene, asserts a derivative loss of consortium claim. The issues of liability and damages were bifurcated and the case proceeded to trial on the issue of liability. {¶2} Gorslene testified that at the time of the accident he had been employed with Double Z Construction for about ten years, working mainly as an equipment operator but performing various other kinds of work as well. Gorslene, who stated that he was 49 years old at the time of trial, recounted that he previously worked for Decker Construction and in total had worked in asphalt paving and other construction jobs for more than 25 years. On the day of the accident, Gorslene explained, he had been saw- cutting lines in newly-cured concrete pavement, which is done to prevent cracking. Gorslene stated that a chalk box tool he was using to mark the lines ran out of chalk, so he went to get more chalk from a jug stored in a toolbox in his boss’s truck. Gorslene testified that once he retrieved the jug, he moved away from the truck and knelt with one knee on the ground. As Gorslene explained, it was better to refill the chalk box while Case No. 2016-00708JD -2- DECISION

kneeling on the ground because it was easier to control and more shielded from the wind than if he were standing, it takes two hands to produce chalk from the jug, and he wanted to be far enough away from the truck that no chalk would get on it. {¶3} Gorslene testified that the location where he filled the chalk box was about 5 feet from the side of his boss’s truck. About 6 to 10 feet behind him, Gorslene stated, was the rear end of the state vehicle, which was parked 15 feet from the truck in his estimation. Although most of the workers parked their vehicles near a gas station away from the work zone, his boss and another boss kept their trucks nearby because they had tools on them, Gorslene explained. Gorslene, who stated that he had seen Kiner at many work sites over the years but did not know him personally, recounted that while filling the chalk box he saw Kiner along the section of U.S. Route 42 where the concrete work was going on, to the rear of the state vehicle, and heard a worker direct Kiner to move the vehicle so that it would not get sprayed with a curing compound that was about to be applied to the concrete. According to Gorslene, Kiner subsequently walked past him on the way to the state vehicle and they waved or otherwise acknowledged each other. Gorslene stated that he wore a green vest, a green shirt, and a hard hat. {¶4} The way Gorslene described, there was a lot of activity that day and a dirt access road that construction vehicles were using to reach the site was blocked to the rear of the state vehicle, particularly by the presence of the bosses’ trucks. For that reason, Gorslene felt that if Kiner were to move the state vehicle, the only direction Kiner could go was forward, away from Gorslene. Going that direction, Gorslene stated, he thought Kiner could have moved the state vehicle to the lot by the gas station where the workers parked their vehicles. Gorslene admitted that it is important to be aware of one’s surroundings at a construction site. But, based upon his feeling that the route behind the state vehicle was blocked, combined with he and Kiner having acknowledged each other, Gorslene explained, he saw no reason to move or watch the vehicle. Gorslene testified that he kept filling the chalk box, remaining down on one Case No. 2016-00708JD -3- DECISION

knee with his back to the state vehicle. Gorslene stated that there was a lot of construction noise and he never heard the state vehicle’s engine or exhaust. {¶5} Gorslene recalled that he was still working in the same spot, a minute or two after Kiner passed by, when the rear end of the state vehicle struck his back and momentarily kept backing over him. According to Gorslene, the state vehicle then pulled forward and workers yelled at Kiner to stop, which he did some 60 to 70 feet ahead. Gorslene testified that his hard hat was knocked off and he felt pain in his back and elsewhere. Gorslene recalled having help getting up and being sat down on a curb, and he remembered talking to co-workers Dennis Thacker and Carla Meinberg, but he had no recollection of talking to Kiner. Gorslene testified that paramedics came and gave him a shot to relieve the pain. An Ohio State Highway Patrol trooper also came and took a statement, Gorslene stated. (Joint Exhibit A.) Gorslene stated that an ambulance transported him to a hospital from which he was released later that day. {¶6} Charles Kiner testified that he has been employed with ODOT for 30 years and works as an Area Engineer in the District Six Division of Construction. Kiner explained that his job involves administering construction projects, which at times requires him to visit project sites to oversee the work or address special issues, and when doing so he drives a state-owned Ford Escape. Kiner recalled that he drove the state vehicle to the project site on the day of the accident to generally oversee the progress of the work and to meet a representative from Del-Co Water Company to address an issue with a water line. Kiner testified that he drove to the site via U.S. Route 42 and parked within the highway right-of-way, in the same direction that he arrived. At that time, Kiner recalled, there were no other vehicles in the area where he parked, but workers were pouring concrete pavement 50 to 75 feet ahead. Kiner testified that the project was on an expedited schedule due to the intersection being closed and that there was a lot of activity that day, including not only the concrete paving, but drainage work as well, and he estimated that there were perhaps two dozen Case No. 2016-00708JD -4- DECISION

workers on site. Kiner related that he routinely parks in construction zones and was unaware that most of the workers were parking in a lot near the gas station. {¶7} As Kiner recalled, once he parked the state vehicle he walked to the intersection to view the water line problem and wait for the Del-Co representative. Kiner stated that while he waited he spent time talking to the crew doing the drainage work. After eventually meeting with the Del-Co representative, Kiner testified, he went back to the drainage crew and talked more about their work and issues they were having. Around that time, Kiner related, about two hours after he arrived at the site, his Transportation Manager, Jill Kirby, alerted him that he needed to move the state vehicle because the concrete work had progressed up to the area where it was parked and the workers were about to apply a concrete curing compound and did not want any overspray to get on it. {¶8} Kiner stated that he was ready to leave the site for the day and began making his way back to the state vehicle but got stopped at an old farmhouse by residents who had questions about the project, so it took about 20 minutes to reach the vehicle from when he was asked to move it. As Kiner described, when he got there he saw two large trucks parked nearby that had not been there earlier.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2018 Ohio 4953, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gorslene-v-dept-of-transp-ohioctcl-2018.