Mullins v. Liberty Twp.

2022 Ohio 4350, 202 N.E.3d 182
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 30, 2022
Docket22 MA 0023
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2022 Ohio 4350 (Mullins v. Liberty Twp.) 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
Mullins v. Liberty Twp., 2022 Ohio 4350, 202 N.E.3d 182 (Ohio Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

[Cite as Mullins v. Liberty Twp., 2022-Ohio-4350.]

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

WILBERT MULLINS ET AL.,

Plaintiffs-Appellants,

v.

LIBERTY TOWNSHIP ET AL.,

Defendants-Appellees.

OPINION AND JUDGMENT ENTRY Case No. 22 MA 0023

Civil Appeal from the Court of Common Pleas of Mahoning County, Ohio Case No. 2021 CV 252

BEFORE: David A. D’Apolito, Cheryl L. Waite, Carol Ann Robb, Judges.

JUDGMENT: Affirmed.

Atty. John A. McNally, III, John A. McNally, III, Co., LPA, 100 East Federal Street, Suite 600, Youngstown, Ohio 44503, for Plaintiffs-Appellants and Atty. Mel L. Lute, Jr., Baker, Dublikar, Beck, Wiley & Mathews, 400 South Main Street, North Canton, Ohio 44720, for Defendants-Appellees.

Dated: November 30, 2022 –2–

D’Apolito, J.

{¶1} Appellants, Wilbert Mullins (“Mullins”) and Sherry C. Mullins (“Sherry”) (collectively “Mullinses”),appeal the entry of summary judgment based on sovereign immunity by the Mahoning County Court of Common Pleas in favor of Appellees, Liberty Township and Liberty Township Police Officer No. 1 John Doe (“John Doe officer”) in this action alleging negligence and loss of consortium. The trial court found that the political subdivision was immune from liability because the police officer, sued in his official capacity, was performing a governmental function when Leo, a certified police canine with the Liberty Township Police Department, jumped on Mullins, causing Mullins to fall to the ground, and allegedly bit him. For the following reasons, the judgment entry of the trial court is affirmed.

FACTS

{¶2} Mullins is a former United States Marine, and a captain and thirty-year veteran of the Youngstown Fire Department. He is 5’11 and weighs 230 pounds. Through his employment with the fire department, Mullins has occasionally worked fire scenes where police canines were present, but never encountered one as a part of his job. {¶3} Mullins testified at his deposition that he has an apprehensiveness around dogs, particularly large dogs, based on “the aggressiveness of them” and “how they – they have to be restrained.” (Deposition of Wilbert Mullins, p. 21.) Mullins further testified that when his neighbors, who own large dogs, walk their dogs along the street toward his property, he “immediately go[es]to [his] backyard or [he] go[es] to the front porch and lock[s] the gate.” (Id., p. 24.) {¶4} Officer David Rankin is a certified canine handler with the Liberty Township Police Department. Liberty Township is located in Trumbull County. While on routine patrol in Liberty Township, with Leo on March 4, 2020, Officer Rankin observed a red truck with a loud exhaust, so he initiated a traffic stop. {¶5} The red truck continued a short distance into the city of Youngstown, which is located in Mahoning County. The red truck stopped on Upland Avenue, roughly two

Case No. 22 MA 0023 –3–

blocks south of Gypsy Lane. Liberty Township Police Officer Robert Altier heard the dispatch call and travelled to the scene to assist Officer Rankin. {¶6} While running the identification information of the driver and the passenger of the red truck, Officer Altier recognized the name of the passenger, Clifford Wright, as an individual with three outstanding felony warrants and an open case in Trumbull County. Officer Altier then observed Wright exit the passenger side of the red truck. {¶7} Although Officer Altier commanded Wright to return to the vehicle, Wright fled up Upland Avenue. Officer Rankin shouted, “[d]og out,” in order to alert Officer Altier that Leo was being released from the cruiser, and Leo exited the police cruiser and began his pursuit of Wright. Leo and Officers Altier and Rankin chased Wright into the backyard of 922 Upland Avenue, where Mullins and Sherry reside. {¶8} In an affidavit filed in support of his opposition brief to the motion for summary judgment, Mullins provided the following summary of events:

In my back yard finishing grilling with my kids. The officer and his dog were chasing a person up my driveway. I told the officer the person went over the fence. He stated something to the dog in a foreign language and the dog attacked me, knocking me down, biting my face. He pulled the dog back by his back legs while I was pushing him off me.

He yelled at me to stay in the damn shed. I could hear him giving the dog commands while I was holding the doors closed from the inside and the dog shaking [sic] the doors of the shed trying to get in. Once I invited him in to tell him what the dog did to my face, he showed no concern for my wellbeing, only stating that the dog had his shots. He never had control of the situation or the dog. I had just took [sic] my daughter in the house 15 minutes prior, thank goodness, cause [sic] she is disabled and in a wheel chair.1

(Affidavit of Wilbert Mullins, ¶ 4.)

1Mullins’s daughter Malissa is non-verbal and in a wheelchair. She is unable to move from her wheelchair to her bed without assistance, and requires assistance with mobility.

Case No. 22 MA 0023 –4–

{¶9} Mullins provided a more detailed account of the events leading to his alleged injuries at his deposition. There is no garage on Mullins’s property. An eight-foot fence surrounds the entire perimeter of the backyard, with a single gate at the top of the driveway. {¶10} Mullins was cleaning the grill and backyard after having prepared a meal for his family including Sherry, their three daughters, and six grandchildren, when he heard multiple sirens coming from the direction of Gypsy Lane. He then observed a Liberty Township police cruiser initiate a traffic stop in front of his residence on Upland Avenue. {¶11} Mullins described the time of day as “kind of twilight.” (Mullins Depo., p. 28.) The backyard was well lit due to a large area light mounted by the door on Mullins’s property, as well as similar fixtures which cast light from the neighboring properties. {¶12} Mullins resumed his tasks and entered a plastic 8’ x 10’ shed on his property where he stored his grilling utensils. While in the shed, which provides a direct vantage point down the driveway, Mullins heard the sound of labored breathing and saw Wright running up his driveway, followed by a police officer, Leo, and a second police officer. Mullins believed that Wright intended to enter the shed, so Mullins “flagged him off.” (Id., p. 34.) Leo was “about halfway up [Mullins’s] driveway” when Mullins confronted Wright at the shed entry. (Id., p. 39.) {¶13} Instead, Wright ran into Mullins’s backyard, climbed over the perimeter fence, and fled down the driveway of the neighboring residence onto Outlook Avenue, the street between Gypsy Lane and Upland Avenue. Leo narrowly missed apprehending Wright as Wright cleared the fence. After Wright disappeared, Leo sat at the base of the fence. {¶14} While standing in the doorway of the shed, Mullins shouted to the officer, “he went over the fence!” Mullins heard the police officer give Leo a command in a foreign language. Then Leo ran the roughly seven feet from the fence to the doorway of the shed then lunged at Mullins. {¶15} Leo’s upper teeth made contact with Mullins’s face above his left eye and Leo’s lower teeth made contact with the roof of Mullins’s mouth. Mullins conceded that his eyeglasses remained not only in tact but also in place during the alleged bite to his face. (Id.)

Case No. 22 MA 0023 –5–

{¶16} Leo’s “whole body” was on Mullins, which caused Mullins to fall backwards into the shed onto various objects located on the floor of the shed. The shed contained “various tools, rakes, shovels, [a] cast iron stove, just regular gardening equipment,” and two adult bikes. (Id., p. 46.) Mullins struck his head on the cast iron stove.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2022 Ohio 4350, 202 N.E.3d 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mullins-v-liberty-twp-ohioctapp-2022.