Scott Gerber v. Stephen Veltri

702 F. App'x 423
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedAugust 17, 2017
Docket16-4062
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 702 F. App'x 423 (Scott Gerber v. Stephen Veltri) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Scott Gerber v. Stephen Veltri, 702 F. App'x 423 (6th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

GRIFFIN, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff Scott Gerber appeals a judgment in favor of defendant Stephen Veltri entered following a non-jury trial on Gerber’s assault and battery claims. 1 Plaintiff, a law professor at Ohio Northern University’s Pettit College of Law (ONU), alleged that defendant, then interim dean, “verbally berated and attacked Mr. Gerber as he grabbed and squeezed Mr. Gerber’s shoulder in a tight and strong fashion” during an encounter in the law school hallway. The district court found that Gerber failed to prove that Veltri assaulted or battered him. Because neither finding of fact was clearly erroneous, and plaintiffs claims of error are without merit, we affirm.

I.

On October 8, 2012, plaintiff Gerber had a tense argument with another professor over a student research assistant. She and Gerber both reported the dispute to associate dean Bryan Ward who, in turn, reported it to defendant Veltri. Later, when Veltri saw plaintiff pass by in the hallway, he attempted to stop Gerber so they could discuss the incident.

Defendant put his left non-dominant hand on Gerber’s right shoulder, saying, “Scott, we need to talk.” He directed Gerber with his other hand toward the nearby faculty lounge. Plaintiff “reacted very suddenly.” “Take your hands off me,” said Gerber. Veltri did so immediately.

Gerber described Veltri’s touch as a “tight and strong” “grab” or “squeeze.” Both parties agree that the physical contact was “quick,” lasting only “[a]s long as it is to put your hand on someone’s shoulder and then saying don’t touch me.” Defendant admitted Gerber did not expressly *426 consent to being touched on the shoulder, but explained that he “did not touch [plaintiff] in a way that most people in ordinary life would feel offensive.” “I think it’s implicit when people talk and they put their hand on. your shoulder, direct you to a seat, that there’s consent.” Veltri said he did not intend to harm, offend, or place Gerber in any fear.

Sensing that plaintiff was “strangely offended” by his gesture, Veltri realized meeting with Gerber alone in the faculty lounge, as he initially planned, “was a bad idea.” Instead, Veltri asked Ward to join them for a discussion in Veltri’s office. There, Veltri asked Gerber about the research assistant issue, while Gerber appeared more concerned with the momentary shoulder squeeze. “You’re not allowed to grab me,” he told Veltri. Veltri insisted he did not grab Gerber, and “just touched” plaintiffs shoulder. Plaintiff claimed defendant “continued to berate” him in front of Ward, but Ward denied that either party raised his voice at the other. Both Ward and Veltri testified that Gerber did not mention that defendant hurt him.

Gerber and Ward then retreated to Ward’s office, where plaintiff “alleged that Professor Veltri had hit him and asked if he could demonstrate to [Ward] what Professor Veltri had done to him.” Ward agreed. He also reenacted Gerber’s demonstration before the district court at the bench trial. Ward described it as “an openhanded hit ... to the shoulder that was certainly not just a tap, but it was not something that was painful at the time.” According to Ward, Gerber did not appear to be in any physical pain, but he was upset with Veltri.

Gerber reported the incident to ONU security that afternoon. Security officer Eleanor Laubis assisted plaintiff in completing a complaint form. Gerber also demonstrated the alleged assault and battery for Laubis, this time by grabbing a door knob with a “tight” and “powerful” squeeze. Laubis examined Gerber’s arm, but found no signs of bruising or trauma. Nevertheless, she concluded—evidently before speaking with Veltri—that defendant had assaulted him. However, because campus security does not make charging decisions, she recommended that Gerber call the campus conduct hotline or the local police.

Plaintiff alleges his interaction with Vel-tri caused him “mental anguish” and “emotional distress.” A few days after the incident, Gerber contacted Dr. William O’Brien, a psychologist who treated Gerber between 2007 and 2009. O’Brien had no availability to treat patients so he referred plaintiff to a colleague, Di\ Carissa Wott. Wott met with Gerber six times between October 26, 2012, and November 27, 2012. Plaintiff told her he had been “negatively impacted by his work environment,” causing him stress, irritability, insomnia, and depression. Wott' diagnosed plaintiff with “mixed anxiety and depression” and adjustment disorder, a condition that causes more intense reactions to stressors “than what we would typically expect.... [in] a normal response.” Practically speaking, this means Gerber has “more difficulties” dealing with the type of ordinary challenges a “normal or reasonable person would be able to cope with in an everyday life”—including his “conflict with ... interim Dean [Veltri].” Although Gerber reported his symptoms had been “longstanding,” Wott concluded the October 8, 2012, encounter with Veltri aggravated his disorder.

Because she treated plaintiff only after October 8, 2012, Wott explained her evaluation was based solely on Gerber’s own description of his symptoms before and after the alleged assault and battery. But Gerber had in fact reported similar diffi *427 culties to O’Brien years earlier. Between 2007 and 2009, O’Brien treated Gerber for stress, anxiety, and “negative encounters” with coworkers. Like Wott, O’Brien taught plaintiff “strategies to manage depression and anxiety associated with conflict.” Wott acknowledged she formed her opinions without reviewing O’Brien’s notes or inquiring about Gerber’s past treatment.

Apart from emotional trauma, Gerber alleges he suffered physical injury to his right shoulder. He first sought treatment with orthopedic surgeon Dr. Michael Muha on October 18, 2013—more than a year after his run-in with Veltri, and ten days after he filed suit in state court. Muha diagnosed Gerber with a “partial thickness rotator cuff tear” and “possibly a component of a labrum tear.” The tear, Muha explained, was not the result of Veltri’s shoulder squeeze, but a preexisting degenerative condition dating back to Gerber’s law school days as a softball player. Defendant’s expert, orthopedic surgeon Dr. Robert Anderson, concurred with Muha’s assessment, agreeing the shoulder grab plaintiff described could not have caused the rotator cuff tear.

Still, Muha concluded it was “reasonable” to think that Veltri’s touching of Gerber’s shoulder could have “exacerbated or provoked” pain related to the preexisting injury. Gerber did not demonstrate Veltri’s “grab” for Muha, as he had done with other witnesses. Muha instead relied on Gerber’s self-reported “history,” and his complaint that his shoulder “was acutely aggravated by this event on a certain day.”

Anderson, by contrast, had reviewed a videotaped deposition of plaintiff demonstrating Veltri’s shoulder grab. He concluded the grab could not have caused, or exacerbated the pain associated with a ro-tator cuff tear. At most, he surmised it “could temporarily exacerbate a previously underlying condition, but not to the extent of a year, or threé years following that grab.” Anderson and Muha also agreed that Gerber, an avid golfer and weight lifter, could have exacerbated his rotator cuff injury during regular physical activity.

II.

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702 F. App'x 423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-gerber-v-stephen-veltri-ca6-2017.