Lutz v. Hocking Technical College, Unpublished Decision (5-18-1999)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 18, 1999
DocketCase No. 98CA12
StatusUnpublished

This text of Lutz v. Hocking Technical College, Unpublished Decision (5-18-1999) (Lutz v. Hocking Technical College, Unpublished Decision (5-18-1999)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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
Lutz v. Hocking Technical College, Unpublished Decision (5-18-1999), (Ohio Ct. App. 1999).

Opinions

The plaintiff in this case, Jeffrey Lutz, was arrested on multiple criminal charges as the result of a single car accident and subsequent events. After pleading no contest to failure to control his vehicle, Lutz was acquitted of the remaining charges. He subsequently filed a civil action in the Athens County Court of Common Pleas against the arresting officers and their employer, Hocking Technical College. After the trial court denied their motion for summary judgment, the defendants appealed and assigned the following error:

"THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN FAILING TO GRANT DEFENDANTS-APPELLANTS' MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT BASED UPON THE DEFENSES OF QUALIFIED IMMUNITY OR STATUTORY IMMUNITY SET FORTH IN OHIO REVISED CODE CHAPTER 2744."

We affirm in part and reverse in part. The trial court correctly denied R.C. Chapter 2744 immunity to the individual officers. However, the trial court erred in failing to find appellant Hocking Technical College immune from liability on the appellee's state-law causes of action. We also conclude that issues concerning the individual officers' entitlement to qualified immunity on the appellee's federal claims are not properly before us on this appeal.

I. Background
Plaintiff-Appellee Jeffrey Lutz filed a five-count complaint against Hocking Technical College (the "college"), Mark Kollar, Joseph Robinson, and Robert L. Green.1 Appellants Kollar, Robinson, and Green were police officers of the college at the time of the events giving rise to the appellee's complaint. The counts include: (1) assault and battery, (2) false arrest, (3) malicious prosecution, (4) constitutional violations actionable under Section 1983, Title 42, U.S. Code, and (5) employer liability.

These claims are predicated in part on earlier criminal prosecution of the appellee in the Athens County Municipal Court, where appellant Kollar charged the appellee with disorderly conduct, resisting arrest, and failure to control a motor vehicle. The resisting charge was reduced to disorderly conduct and the original disorderly conduct charge was reduced to a minor misdemeanor. The appellee pled no contest to the failure to control his motor vehicle and proceeded with a trial before the court on the remaining charges, whereupon he was acquitted.

Following his acquittal, Mr. Lutz commenced his civil action in the Athens County Court of Common Pleas. The appellants answered the complaint, claiming: (1) qualified immunity, i.e. their conduct was in good faith, upon probable cause, and without malice or in a wanton or reckless manner, (2) statutory immunity, and (3) prosecution upon advice of legal counsel. Following discovery, the appellants filed motions for summary judgment under Civ.R. 56. The motions argued that, upon the facts presented and construed most favorably to the plaintiff-appellee, the appellants' conduct was protected by both qualified immunity and statutory immunity, being in the exercise of a "governmental function" within the purview of Chapter 2744 of the Revised Code. The trial court overruled the appellants' motion except as to the Section 1983, Title 42, U.S. Code claim against the college based on respondeat superior liability, which is not at issue on this appeal. See, generally, Monell v. State Dept. of Social Servs. (1978),436 U.S. 658, 99 S.Ct. 2018, 56 L.Ed.2d 611 (no public entity liability for Section 1983 is available based on respondeatsuperior). The court favored the parties and this court with a ten-page decision and judgment, from which the appellants appeal.

II. Evidence Presented On Summary Judgment.
Appellee is an instructor at the Tri-County Joint Vocational School who went to the Quality Inn after work on March 1, 1996, around 5 p.m. Teachers at the vocational school frequently gathered at the Quality Inn, which is next door to the school, for drinks and socializing on Friday afternoons and evenings. The appellee ate some food at the restaurant and drank four or five beers over a period of several hours. He left the Quality Inn to drive home at around 10:30 p.m. Customers at the inn testified in sworn affidavits that the appellee showed no signs of intoxication at that time. In his deposition testimony, the appellee testified that his truck, which had a frost-covered windshield, skidded on some ice, went left of center, and crashed into a light pole near the vocational school. The collision knocked off the light, caused extensive damage to the truck, and injured the appellee's head. The appellee later discovered he was bleeding.

A pizza delivery driver, who witnessed the single-car accident, approached the appellee's car. The witness noticed the appellee slumped over the steering wheel, detected a strong odor of alcohol, and noted that his speech was slurred. She attended to his bleeding head. Appellee determined that he had no broken bones and claimed he needed no medical attention. He exited the car and went to the vocational school adjacent to the Quality Inn, which was a few hundred yards from the collision site.

The appellee denies that he was unsteady on his feet or that his speech was slurred, and denies that he was under the influence of alcohol at the time of the accident. The appellee opened his classroom with his key and attended to his wound from a first-aid kit in the washroom. He called his wife, Tammy Lutz, and advised her of the accident; she told the appellee that she would come to the school. In an affidavit submitted in opposition to summary judgment, Ms. Lutz testified that the appellee's speech was not slurred during this phone conversation.

Meanwhile, a passing motorist stopped at the Quality Inn to inform the police of the accident. Appellant Kollar, who was on routine patrol for the college, arrived on the scene in response to a call from the Quality Inn. The appellee's car was still smoking. The officer noticed the car, saw the broken windshield, and radioed for medical assistance when advised by the eyewitness of the injury to the appellee and the direction in which he "staggered off." The eyewitness did not inform Officer Kollar of the smell of alcohol she had detected from the appellee; however, because of the late hour and the close proximity of the Quality Inn to the accident, Officer Kollar suspected that the vehicle's driver was possibly under the influence of alcohol. The officer went to the school, where he observed the appellee placing a bandage on his head. This man fit the description of the driver. There is no dispute that the appellee identified himself to the officer as the driver of the truck and that he admitted to consuming beer during the previous several hours. What happened following appellant Kollar's arrival at the appellee's classroom is the subject of sharp dispute.

A. Appellants' Affidavit Testimony
Approximately ten minutes after the appellee left the accident scene, Kollar found the appellee in a classroom at the Tri-County Vocational School. The high school is outside the jurisdiction of Kollar's employer, the Hocking Technical College. The appellee was applying the bandage to his bleeding head. The appellee went to the door, saw the officer, and allowed him to enter. At that point, the appellee claimed he was all right and admitted driving the truck that hit the pole. Kollar claims that the appellee had slurred speech, bloodshot eyes, and a smell of alcohol. Accordingly, Kollar determined that the appellee was under the influence of alcohol.

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Bluebook (online)
Lutz v. Hocking Technical College, Unpublished Decision (5-18-1999), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lutz-v-hocking-technical-college-unpublished-decision-5-18-1999-ohioctapp-1999.