Patrick v. State

11 Misc. 3d 296, 806 N.Y.S.2d 849
CourtNew York Court of Claims
DecidedDecember 5, 2005
DocketClaim No. 106599
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 11 Misc. 3d 296 (Patrick v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Patrick v. State, 11 Misc. 3d 296, 806 N.Y.S.2d 849 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2005).

Opinion

[297]*297OPINION OF THE COURT

Thomas H. Scuccimarra, J.

Joann Patrick and William W. Patrick, the claimants herein, are the administrators of the estate of William C. Patrick, their son, known as Billy, who died on September 8, 2001 while in the custody of defendant’s agents, the New York State Taconic Developmental Disabilities Services Office (hereafter Taconic DDSO) of the Office of Mental Retardation and Developmental Disabilities (hereafter OMRDD). Claimants allege that their son died because staff members at the Verbank Group Home operated by Taconic DDSO used excessive force to restrain him in his room, were inadequately trained in restrictive physical intervention techniques, and negligently failed to maintain records that would have alerted staff to the possible harmful consequences to decedent of the use of physical intervention as a restraint mechanism. Trial of the matter commenced on March 22, 2005, and continued in June 2005. This decision relates only to the issue of liability.

Findings of Fact

On September 8, 2001, Billy Patrick, claimants’ son, was 35 years old and had been a resident at the Verbank Group Home for approximately four years. He had been diagnosed as brain damaged since birth and suffered from developmental disabilities. Two developmental aides, Raymond Morse and Shelia Avinger,2 cared for the 10 residents at the home, as did another staff member named Kenny who was not present on that date. Morse and Avinger were working the 3:30 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. shift that evening.

It was unclear exactly what kind of training the aides had received prior to their service at the home, although Morse did mention some training he had attended in June 2001 relative to SCIP-R techniques,3 a curriculum taught to those working with individuals receiving services through the OMRDD. There was no indication that either aide was certified in SCIP-R techniques or the more advanced specialized and restrictive techniques.

Additionally, each aide told different versions of the events that transpired that evening, and the story told by each in any event was in conflict. For the most part, however, the court [298]*298found that these conflicts were more the product of the aides’ own distress over what occurred, rather than deliberate attempts to veil the truth.

During dinner, which took place between 5:00 p.m. and 5:30 p.m., Billy asked Morse to sit next to him and he did. After the residents — or “consumers” as they are called by staff — had eaten supper, one of them named Eddie came to Morse, who was in the office on the ground floor, and told him that Billy Patrick and another resident named Donald were having a “problem.” Mr. Morse went upstairs to the consumers’ rooms on the second floor to investigate. It was his understanding that some type of altercation — whether verbal or physical or both— was ongoing and needed immediate attention.

When Morse got to the second floor, he met Donald, the individual with whom Billy was supposedly having the problem, in the hallway. In a statement given to the Dutchess County Sheriff’s Department describing what happened next, Morse reported that Donald said to him that Billy was “bothering him.” (Exhibit 8.) At trial, Morse indicated that Donald told him that Billy was in the room but did not elaborate further, nor did Morse question him further.

Without knocking at the open door or otherwise announcing himself, Morse entered Billy’s room, and saw Billy sitting on the bed. When Morse asked Billy “if something was going on, if something was bothering him,” at trial Morse indicated that Billy responded first by saying something about “him and Donald had an altercation.” (T at 67.)4 When reminded of prior deposition testimony taken June 4, 2004 Morse corrected himself and said that rather than saying anything in response to Morse’s inquiry as to “what’s wrong,” Billy responded by coming off the bed and flailing at Mr. Morse. This appears consistent with what he reported to the Dutchess County Sheriffs Department on the day of the incident. (Exhibit 8.)

As drawn and described by Morse, Billy’s room was approximately 10 feet by 12 feet and contained two beds, two dressers and two windows. (See exhibit E.) Upon entering the room, Donald’s bed was immediately in front of the door, and his dresser was against the right wall. Billy’s bed was to the left against the other wall. That wall had a window as well. Billy’s dresser, and an additional window, were between Billy’s bed and Donald’s bed.

[299]*299Morse testified that when he entered the room, Billy got up from the bed where he had been sitting and, “mov[ing] a little faster than usual,” walked toward the window between the beds. (T at 75.) He was raising his left fist and arm toward the window. Mr. Morse said he was aware of Billy’s prior history of breaking windows. Morse said: “I got between him and the window so he wouldn’t put his arm through it and hurt himself.” (T at 76.) Morse grabbed his arms — crisscrossing them — to set him on the bed. After Billy sat down on the bed, Morse released his arms. (T at 79.)

While Morse stood and Billy sat, he continued to ask Billy what was wrong, and at trial Morse did not recall Billy responding. Morse was then reminded that, according to his deposition testimony, Billy was saying: “I want to talk to Kenny” — referring to the other aide not present on that day.

When Shelia Avinger came in the room shortly thereafter, Morse said he had “probably moved off to the right side” to give Billy a little room. (T at 86.) Seeing Avinger, Morse said, Billy immediately jumped off the bed, went over to her with his arms raised, looking like he was going to assault her. Morse then “used a SCIP technique” by “wrapping] his arms.” (T at 87.) Asked to describe what that entailed, Morse said that he came behind Billy, pushed his arms in front of him, and grabbed his wrists.

Morse said:

“I brought him back a little bit and then he slid down onto the floor ... He was struggling a little bit ... we were between [the] two beds [on the floor] and he goes down onto his stomach and he starts swinging his arms, so you don’t want him to hurt himself, trying to hit like the bottom of the bed. So I took and proceeded to take and try to regroup his arms . . . He was laying on the floor now . . . He was on his stomach.” (T at 88-89.)

Once they were on the floor, with Billy laying on his stomach, Morse said he was off to Billy’s left side, trying to regrab Billy’s arms, which had been released when Billy went down. Billy appeared to still be struggling “a little bit” as they went down to the ground. Thus while Morse had initially released him, in order to see if Billy was going to stop after the release, Morse explained that he placed himself “at an angle on him” — between the middle of Billy’s back and up — in an effort to control Billy’s hands.

[300]*300In the meantime, Avinger was trying to hold Billy’s legs to stop him from kicking.

Although Morse did not see it, he recalled that at some point Billy bit his left arm. At trial, he could not really say how he knew that Billy bit his own arm, but thought that maybe “Shelia said that he was biting his arm.” (T at 95.) At the time, Morse was at an angle over the top of Billy, with some of his own upper torso over the back of Billy’s upper torso, and Avinger was holding on to Billy’s legs.

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Related

William D. Maldovan v. County of Erie
New York Court of Appeals, 2022
Romero v. State
33 Misc. 3d 599 (New York State Court of Claims, 2011)
Cohen v. State
17 Misc. 3d 843 (New York State Court of Claims, 2007)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
11 Misc. 3d 296, 806 N.Y.S.2d 849, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/patrick-v-state-nyclaimsct-2005.