McCullough v. Youngstown School Dist.

2019 Ohio 3965
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 19, 2019
Docket18 MA 0075
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 2019 Ohio 3965 (McCullough v. Youngstown School Dist.) 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
McCullough v. Youngstown School Dist., 2019 Ohio 3965 (Ohio Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

[Cite as McCullough v. Youngstown School Dist., 2019-Ohio-3965.]

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO SEVENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT MAHONING COUNTY

MAXIMUS MCCULLOUGH et al.,

Plaintiffs-Appellees,

v.

YOUNGSTOWN CITY SCHOOL DISTRICT et al.,

Defendants-Appellant.

OPINION AND JUDGMENT ENTRY Case No. 18 MA 0075

Civil Appeal from the Court of Common Pleas of Mahoning County, Ohio Case No. 2015 CV 2000

BEFORE: Carol Ann Robb, Cheryl L. Waite, Judges and Arlene Singer, Judge of the Sixth District Court of Appeals, Sitting by Assignment.

JUDGMENT: Reversed.

Atty. Kevin Lomupo, Gilardi, Oliver & Lomupo, 223 Fourth Avenue, 10th Floor, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15222 and Atty. Paul W. Flowers, Atty. Louis E. Grube, Paul W. Flowers Co., L.P.A., Terminal Tower, Suite 1910, 50 Public Square, Cleveland, Ohio 44113 for Plaintiffs-Appellees and –2–

Atty. John Rasmussen, 6060 Rockside Woods Blvd., Suite 131, Independence, Ohio 44131 for Defendants-Appellant.

Dated: September 19, 2019

Robb, J.

{¶1} Defendant-Appellant Youngstown City School District (“the District”) appeals the decision of the Mahoning County Common Pleas Court denying its motion for summary judgment, thereby denying the District immunity in the lawsuit filed by Plaintiff-Appellee Maximum McCullough, individually and as administrator of the Estate of Faith McCullough et al. (“the Plaintiff”). This case involves the death of a high school student who decided to roll down a hillside at the District’s East High School. When the student stood up, she stumbled across the sidewalk and grass strip and fell into a public road and under the back wheels of a passing school bus. {¶2} As to the Plaintiff’s claim concerning the failure to prohibit student access to the school’s hillside, we agree with the District’s contention that this was a government function and the physical defect exception to immunity did not apply. As to the Plaintiff’s other claim for negligent operation of a motor vehicle, we agree with the District’s argument that the school bus driver was not negligent as no duty to the student was breached. For the following reasons, the trial court’s judgment is reversed, and summary judgment is granted to the District. STATEMENT OF THE CASE {¶3} In November 2014, fourteen-year-old Faith McCullough (“the student”) and her brother received permission from their parents to start walking home from East High School, the school they attended. They were not bused as they lived nearby. After their mother stopped escorting them, they started taking a shortcut across the football field and down a grass-covered and terraced hill overlooking East High Avenue, a public street. Between the bottom of the hill and the curb of the street was a sidewalk and then a strip of grass. {¶4} At deposition, the student’s brother testified the first time he and his sister rolled down the hill was the day before the accident. He observed other students using the shortcut, but he never observed anyone else rolling down the hill. He said they threw

Case No. 18 MA 0075 –3–

their belongings to a terraced flat spot between two parts of the hill, rolled to them, and repeated the procedure. After school the next day (November 12, 2014), her brother said she rolled down the hill in its entirety. He retrieved her belongings from the first terrace and waited for her at the bottom of the hill. {¶5} A school bus driven by an employee of the District had just turned onto the public road from the school’s access road after picking up students at East High School. The driver saw the student rolling down the hill. The bus stopped because the traffic in front of the bus stopped. When the traffic resumed moving, the bus driver did not immediately proceed forward as she was concerned the student could roll into the street. (Depo. 54, 60). {¶6} The student stopped rolling at the bottom of the hill near the interior edge of the sidewalk where her brother was waiting. As the student stood with her brother’s assistance, the driver released the brake and allowed the bus to proceed down the hill. The student stood facing away from the bus. As the front camera on the bus approached her position, she can be seen on video stumbling toward the road. Her brother saw her stumble toward the road and said he could tell from her facial expression that she was dizzy. The student fell under the rear wheels of the passing bus, suffered a head injury, and died at the scene. {¶7} A neighbor ran to the student’s house to summon the father who immediately drove to the scene. The father testified at deposition that his daughter squeezed his hand as she died in the roadway where he found her. He also testified the football team has used the hill for exercise and the hillside was terraced as a result of prior complaints that the hill was dangerous. {¶8} On July 30, 2015, a lawsuit was filed against the District by the father, individually and as the administrator of the student’s estate, and by the student’s brother. The complaint encompassed causes of action for wrongful death and survival, alleging the District was negligent (through its agents and employees) by failing to prohibit the student’s access to the hillside and negligently driving the bus (listing various alleged failures, including driver training). The individual plaintiffs sought recovery for negligent infliction of emotional distress based on the brother witnessing the accident and the father

Case No. 18 MA 0075 –4–

arriving at the scene within minutes. The bus driver was not named as a defendant. The District’s answer raised various defenses including immunity. {¶9} On December 26, 2016, the District filed a motion for summary judgment. In addition to the depositions of the father and the brother, the depositions of the bus driver and a trooper were filed. The bus driver received her CDL training and license in 2006 and was a substitute bus driver for the District until obtaining her full-time position in 2012. She acknowledged children can be unpredictable and impulsive. She said she was trained to be vigilant for children who could dart into the street; she was to stop and watch if she had concerns and to use the horn if she thought an inattentive child may enter the street. (Depo. 23-24). The bus driver explained that on the day before the accident, she was driving past the hill when she noticed the student start to roll down it. (Depo. 39-41, 50). According to her deposition testimony, she transmitted a radio announcement about the issue, which she believed would be heard by other bus drivers and the bus garage and would be passed along to (or heard by) the school principal or security. (Depo. 43-45). {¶10} On the day of the accident, the bus driver saw the student rolling down the hill again. As traffic moved forward, the bus driver waited before releasing the brake to ensure the student would not roll into the street. (Depo. 53-54, 70). She saw the student’s brother help her up and hold her hand (as depicted in the video). (Depo. 63, 67). The bus driver testified she never thought the student would enter the street once she had stopped rolling, reached the sidewalk, and stood up; she believed the student “was safely on the sidewalk.” (Depo. 69-70, 74). {¶11} After the bus driver released the brake and the bus proceeded forward, the driver moved somewhat left within her lane for “precautionary reasons.” (Depo. 73-74). Students on the bus were yelling at the student from the window, and the bus driver told them to stop. (Depo. 64, 69-70). As the front of the bus approached the student’s position, the video from the front of the bus shows the student stepping backward from the side of the sidewalk near the bottom of the hill into the center of the sidewalk and then into the grass strip bordering the street.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2019 Ohio 3965, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccullough-v-youngstown-school-dist-ohioctapp-2019.