Griffin v. Twin Valley Psychiatric Sys., Unpublished Decision (12-23-2003)

2003 Ohio 7024
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 23, 2003
DocketNo. 02AP-744.
StatusUnpublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 2003 Ohio 7024 (Griffin v. Twin Valley Psychiatric Sys., Unpublished Decision (12-23-2003)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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
Griffin v. Twin Valley Psychiatric Sys., Unpublished Decision (12-23-2003), 2003 Ohio 7024 (Ohio Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION
{¶ 1} Plaintiffs-appellants, Sue Griffin, Debra Bope, Roger Myers, Reid Stevens, Mark Campolito, Ruth Canter, Amber Stanton, Benjamin Stanton, Kira Stanton and Greg Stanton, appeal from a judgment of the Ohio Court of Claims, finding in favor of defendant-appellee, Twin Valley Psychiatric Systems (formerly known as Central Ohio Psychiatric Hospital "COPH"), on appellants' negligence action.

{¶ 2} On January 24, 2001, appellants filed a negligence, wrongful death and survivorship action against appellee. The complaint alleged that appellee, through its staff, negligently treated and discharged a former psychiatric patient, Jerry Hessler, who committed multiple murders and caused other physical injury to a number of individuals on November 19, 1995, four months after his release from appellee's facility on July 20, 1995.

{¶ 3} The case came before the Court of Claims for a bench trial on the issue of appellee's liability for the actions of Hessler. At trial, appellants withdrew their claim that appellee failed to warn potential victims, and proceeded with the theory that appellee negligently treated and discharged Hessler, and that such negligence proximately caused the patient's violent acts.

{¶ 4} The Court of Claims rendered a decision on June 5, 2002, including findings of fact and conclusions of law, summarized as follows: On May 10, 1995, Carlene Hessler, the mother of Jerry Hessler, consulted Pamela Craycraft, a licensed independent social worker at the Columbus Area Community Mental Health Center ("CACMHC"), regarding her son's violent activities toward herself and others. As a probate pre-screen clinician, Craycraft interviewed and evaluated Hessler on May 11, 1995, and recommended psychiatric hospitalization. Craycraft also arranged for Hessler to be examined by Dr. Basobas, CACMHC's admitting psychiatrist.

{¶ 5} With Craycraft's assistance, the patient's mother initiated proceedings in the Franklin County Probate Court for her son's involuntary commitment, using a form affidavit containing statutory commitment allegations that her son represented a "substantial risk of physical harm to others" as manifested by evidence of recent violent behavior or threats, and that her son would benefit from treatment in a hospital for his mental illness, and needed such treatment as evidenced by behavior creating "a grave and imminent risk to substantial rights of others or himself."

{¶ 6} On the probate court questionnaire, Hessler's mother reported that her son had a lengthy history of psychiatric treatment, including three prior in-patient hospitalizations beginning in 1983. Collectively, these documents reported that Hessler had recently assaulted his mother and damaged her home, possessed multiple firearms, and stalked a former girlfriend, threatening to kill her and her husband

{¶ 7} A probate court referee issued a temporary order of detention on May 11, 1995, directing the Franklin County Sheriff to take the patient into custody and "to transport him to the Franklin County Alcohol, Drug Addiction and Mental Health Services Board and/or Columbus Area Mental Health Ctr. and/or Central Ohio Psychiatric Hospital then and there to abide the order of this Court in the premises." The sheriff delivered Hessler to appellee on the evening of May 11, 1995, where an attending physician, Dr. Padma Tandon, evaluated him and admitted him in the early morning hours of May 12.

{¶ 8} The probate court scheduled a hearing regarding Hessler's involuntary commitment, and appointed counsel to represent him. The court also designated Dr. Robert Turton as a "Court doctor" to conduct an examination of Hessler.

{¶ 9} During Hessler's admission, appellee's personnel received and reviewed probate court materials regarding the patient, including Craycraft's pre-screen intake and progress reports, reports from a social worker and the CACMHC psychiatrist, photographs of damage the patient caused to his mother's home, and a probate "pickup" form, stating that the patient could present a dangerous situation because he may be in possession of guns.

{¶ 10} Following Dr. Turton's interview and evaluation of Hessler on May 16, a probate court referee conducted the scheduled hearing on May 17, 1995. The referee found, by clear and convincing evidence, that the patient was "a mentally ill person subject to hospitalization by Court order as defined by Ohio R.C. Sections 5122.01(B)2, 3, 4," for which "the least restrictive alternative available consistent with treatment goals is inpatient hospitalization." The referee issued a judicial entry of commitment ordering the patient "committed for a period not to exceed 90 days" to the Franklin County Alcohol, Drug Addiction and Mental Health Services ("ADAMH") Board with placement with appellee.

{¶ 11} Hessler remained a patient with appellee almost ten weeks, from May 12, 1995, through July 20, 1995, at which time the hospital discharged him for further outpatient aftercare. During the 69 days Hessler remained under appellee's direct supervision, his hospital treatment team included Dr. Tandon, a psychiatrist, Sharda Mehta, a psychologist, Eydie LeDay-Smith, a social worker, Bryce Sullivan, a group psychotherapist, Dianne Sprague, an activity therapist, and various nursing personnel.

{¶ 12} During his hospitalization, Hessler's attending psychiatrist reviewed his earlier in-patient record for that hospital, which summarized records for his in-patient psychiatric treatment at two other hospitals. Within the first two weeks of Hessler's admission to appellee, appellee's staff conducted a psychiatric examination, a psychological evaluation, a social work assessment, a nursing assessment and an adjunctive therapy assessment. The staff prepared a treatment plan with a stated goal: "Patient will be able to control the explosive outbursts and will no longer be threatening."

{¶ 13} The hospital treatment team initially accepted the provisional diagnosis of bipolar disorder, received from CACMHC psychiatrist Dr. Basobas, as a "working diagnosis" until hospital personnel could make their own diagnosis. The hospital's attending psychiatrist subsequently diagnosed Hessler's condition as a delusional mental disease with an intermittent explosive personality disorder.

{¶ 14} Within a few days of Hessler's admission, the Netcare Agency ("Netcare") acted as the ADAMH Board's duly authorized agent to determine that, following Hessler's discharge from appellee's facility, the North Community Counseling Center (hereafter "The Bridge") would provide this patient's outpatient aftercare with a designated case manager.

{¶ 15} On May 22, 1995, John Paree, one of The Bridge's social workers, interviewed Hessler and reviewed his records to initiate procedures for the patient's eventual release to The Bridge's outpatient care. The Bridge assigned Lisa Johnson as the agency's case manager for this patient. Johnson first met with Hessler at appellee's facility on June 1, 1995, seven weeks before his discharge. Thereafter, Johnson repeatedly met with this patient, participated in regular meetings with appellee's treatment team, had complete access to Hessler's records, made entries on those hospital records and copied portions of the records for her use in aftercare duties. Johnson was aware of Hessler's violent history and she believed that he was dangerous, expressing fear about her prospective service as his case manager.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2003 Ohio 7024, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griffin-v-twin-valley-psychiatric-sys-unpublished-decision-12-23-2003-ohioctapp-2003.