Pool v. Ohio Dept. of Rehab. & Corr.

2017 Ohio 823
CourtOhio Court of Claims
DecidedFebruary 3, 2017
Docket2015-00587
StatusPublished

This text of 2017 Ohio 823 (Pool v. Ohio Dept. of Rehab. & Corr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pool v. Ohio Dept. of Rehab. & Corr., 2017 Ohio 823 (Ohio Super. Ct. 2017).

Opinion

[Cite as Pool v. Ohio Dept. of Rehab. & Corr., 2017-Ohio-823.]

JARVIS POOL Case No. 2015-00587

Plaintiff Magistrate Robert Van Schoyck

v. DECISION OF THE MAGISTRATE

OHIO DEPARTMENT OF REHABILITATION AND CORRECTION

Defendant

{¶1} Plaintiff was at all times relevant an inmate in the custody and control of defendant at the Grafton Correctional Institution (GCI). Plaintiff’s amended complaint sets forth several causes of action arising out of an incident in which an employee of defendant at GCI, Corrections Officer Ashley Burger, allegedly used excessive force upon plaintiff on June 30, 2014. As set forth in the court’s entry of November 25, 2015, plaintiff’s claims for civil rights violations and injunctive relief were dismissed without prejudice, his claims for intentional and negligent infliction of emotional distress were dismissed, and his claims of assault, battery, and negligence remained for trial. The case proceeded to trial on those remaining claims before the undersigned magistrate. {¶2} At trial, plaintiff testified that following a routine count of inmates on the afternoon of June 30, 2014, his cellmate, an older man named Davis, left their two-man cell for a period of time to undergo a diabetic check-up. Plaintiff stated that once Davis left, he sat down to use the toilet located inside the cell. As plaintiff recalled, Corrections Officer Burger was making security rounds through the housing unit when she stopped at the cell and ordered him to open the door. Plaintiff stated that he had only been transferred to GCI four days earlier and had never seen Burger before. Plaintiff stated that he refused to comply with Burger’s directive, telling her instead that he was using the toilet. According to plaintiff, there was a window through which Burger Case No. 2015-00587 -2- DECISION

could have looked and had a partial view of him sitting on the toilet. Plaintiff testified that Burger repeated her order several times without giving him any reason why, but he remained on the toilet and would not open the door. Plaintiff related that Burger then unlocked the door, entered the cell, and asked him what he was smoking. According to plaintiff, he told Burger that he was not smoking anything but that he was burning an oil lamp. Plaintiff testified that he owned several different oils and cannot recall which one it was that he was burning. {¶3} It was plaintiff’s testimony that Burger then stood in front of him for two or three minutes, watching him and not saying a word as he sat on the toilet. Plaintiff stated that his underwear and shorts were pulled down below his knees and that he was wearing a shirt and shower shoes. Plaintiff recounted that he eventually flushed the toilet at some point while remaining seated, even though he was not done using the toilet. According to plaintiff, as soon as he flushed the toilet Burger charged at him while he was still seated and pushed his left shoulder into the sink, but he remained on the toilet seat. Plaintiff stated that Burger proceeded to pull him by the shoulder and repeatedly kick him in the shins to try to get him off the toilet. Although plaintiff testified that he was not belligerent and never put up any sort of resistance to Burger’s efforts, it was also his testimony that he remained on the toilet seat for one to two minutes while Burger was trying to forcibly remove him. Plaintiff testified that Burger ultimately pulled him off the toilet and pushed him across the room and placed him against the wall. Plaintiff stated that he pulled his pants up with one hand as Burger was pulling him off the toilet, and that he had tissue paper in the other hand. According to plaintiff, Burger had not given him any directive beforehand to get against the wall. {¶4} Plaintiff testified that Burger frisked him while he was against the wall and then she directed him to exit the cell. Plaintiff related that Burger followed him out and placed him in handcuffs outside the cell, and Burger then proceeded to “lock down” the unit, i.e. ordering the other inmates to get inside their cells. Plaintiff stated that Burger Case No. 2015-00587 -3- DECISION

had activated her “man down” alarm somewhere in the course of events, and by the time he was being handcuffed there were other officers responding to the scene. Plaintiff related that after Burger handcuffed him, Corrections Officer Ryan Tepus grabbed the cuffs and directed him to sit down on a bench, and thereafter Tepus went in and searched the cell. {¶5} According to plaintiff, the handcuffs were too tight, causing his wrists to swell and bleed, and he complained to a Corrections Officer Costello and a Corrections Officer Murphy that his wrists hurt. After wearing the handcuffs for about 10 to 15 minutes, plaintiff stated, he was escorted to the infirmary and seen by a nurse. Plaintiff recalled telling the nurse that his wrists and his left shoulder hurt, but that he did not receive any medical treatment. Plaintiff stated that he was then escorted to the Special Management Unit (SMU). {¶6} Regarding the search of the cell by Tepus, plaintiff testified that a hollow deodorant container identified by Tepus as containing a green leafy substance or residue did not belong to him. Plaintiff, who admitted that his prison term arises from three separate drug trafficking offenses and that he also had a prior felony drug trafficking offense, testified that he was not smoking or otherwise in possession of marijuana at the time of this incident. Nevertheless, plaintiff testified that prison authorities gave him a drug screening afterward, with the result being that he was cited with a rules infraction for his urine testing positive for marijuana. {¶7} Later that day while he was still in the SMU, plaintiff stated, another staff member who had no involvement in the earlier events gave him a form known as an Inmate Use of Force Statement in which he was supposed to provide a written account of what happened. (Defendant’s Exhibit A.) Plaintiff testified that the version of events he provided in this form was not entirely accurate, such as stating that he got up from the toilet, pulled his pants up, and opened the door in compliance with Burger’s directive, and that the only force used by Burger was pushing him against the wall. Case No. 2015-00587 -4- DECISION

According to plaintiff, he actually remained on the toilet with his pants down when Burger opened the door, she saw him partially nude, and she used significantly more force against him than he indicated in this form. Plaintiff’s explanation for not initially providing the version of events that he testified to at trial was that he was afraid of being charged with some sort of rules infraction for sexual misconduct based upon his being partially nude in front of a woman, and he was also afraid of being retaliated against for being in a physical altercation with a woman. {¶8} Similarly, plaintiff testified that he later prepared two Informal Complaint Resolution (ICR) forms to lodge his dissatisfaction with what had occurred, explaining that he wrote one first and then wrote another version after he received Conduct Reports prepared by Burger and Tepus, charging him with institutional rules infractions. (Defendant’s Exhibits B & C.) Plaintiff stated that the ICRs also contain inaccuracies akin to what he wrote in the Inmate Use of Force Statement, and again plaintiff explained that he did so for fear of being retaliated against or being accused of sexual misconduct. {¶9} Plaintiff testified that defendant transferred him to the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility (SOCF) the following day, July 1, 2014. Plaintiff stated that he was continuing to experience pain in his left shoulder and back as a result of the incident, and that he reported his injuries to a nurse who examined him once he arrived at SOCF, but that he did not receive any treatment.

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Related

Brown v. Dept. of Rehab. & Corr.
2014 Ohio 1810 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2014)
Ensman v. Dept of Rehab. Corr., Unpublished Decision (12-21-2006)
2006 Ohio 6788 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2006)

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Bluebook (online)
2017 Ohio 823, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pool-v-ohio-dept-of-rehab-corr-ohioctcl-2017.