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

2016 Ohio 8328
CourtOhio Court of Claims
DecidedNovember 16, 2016
Docket2014-00845
StatusPublished

This text of 2016 Ohio 8328 (Skorvanek 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
Skorvanek v. Ohio Dept. of Rehab. & Corr., 2016 Ohio 8328 (Ohio Super. Ct. 2016).

Opinion

[Cite as Skorvanek v. Ohio Dept. of Rehab. & Corr., 2016-Ohio-8328.]

JOHN M. SKORVANEK Case No. 2014-00845

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 Pickaway Correctional Institution (PCI). Plaintiff brings this action claiming that defendant was negligent in failing to prevent an attack upon him by another inmate, Scott Creech, on November 12, 2013. The issues of liability and damages were bifurcated and the case proceeded to trial on the issue of liability. {¶2} Plaintiff testified at trial that he arrived at PCI in December 2011, serving a prison term for drug and alcohol-related offenses. (Plaintiff also acknowledged that more recently he served another prison term in Kentucky for a drug-related offense.) Plaintiff, who explained that he was paralyzed in an automobile accident, testified that when he came to PCI he was placed in the Frazier Health Center, a nursing facility for disabled or chronically ill offenders. {¶3} Plaintiff related that when he came to Frazier Health Center, he recognized Creech because many years earlier, around 1989, they were both incarcerated at the Allen Correctional Institution. Plaintiff stated that he and Creech, who were placed just two or three beds apart from one another, made small talk and reminisced about playing softball at Allen, and plaintiff came to learn that Creech had arrived at Frazier Health Center just a few days before he did. Throughout most of the time that they lived in the facility, plaintiff stated, he and Creech were on friendly terms and regularly socialized, Case No. 2014-00845 -2- DECISION

having only minor disagreements at times about what to watch on television. Plaintiff recalled that he often brought coffee to Creech and that they played chess together a couple of times. According to plaintiff, very few of the other inmates would talk to Creech, and plaintiff took some pity on him. By plaintiff’s description, Creech would talk about other inmates in a disparaging or hostile manner from time to time, and plaintiff stated that he intervened to diffuse a couple of situations where Creech was especially upset, but plaintiff stated that he never knew of Creech to physically act out on his frustrations or dislike of others. {¶4} Plaintiff testified, though, that as time went on Creech became more antisocial. Plaintiff recalled that Creech grew despondent over the fact that defendant would not provide him with a knee replacement. Plaintiff also recalled that Creech, who is white, expressed racist sentiments and increasingly wanted to be moved to a different bed because he wanted to get away from the inmate in the next bed over, a black inmate named Hines. Plaintiff stated that in addition to having a walker and a wheelchair, Creech had a metal cane, and there were times when Creech would tap on the cane and remark how it could be used as a weapon. But, plaintiff admitted that he never told any staff members what Creech said about the cane. {¶5} Plaintiff testified that Creech eventually told him he was thinking about doing some harm to Hines. Plaintiff stated that he was concerned enough about the conflict between Creech and Hines that he mentioned it to the nursing staff and suggested that one of the inmates be moved to another bed. Plaintiff’s recollection was that Hines ended up going to another medical facility in Columbus by the time the incident at issue in this case occurred. {¶6} By plaintiff’s description, Creech became more withdrawn and barely said anything, and he did not make much sense when he did speak. Plaintiff remembered Creech telling him that he thought the nurses were talking about him. Plaintiff testified that another inmate, Donnie Waldroop, informed him in October or November 2013 that Case No. 2014-00845 -3- DECISION

Creech said something to the effect that he thought plaintiff was having him followed or surveilled, and that he was thinking about harming plaintiff. Plaintiff stated that Creech completely stopped talking to him about 15 days before the attack, but plaintiff stated that it did not concern him much. As plaintiff stated, Creech never personally threatened him, and in spite of what Waldroop told him, he was not in fear that Creech would actually attempt to harm him. Testifying about Creech and the eventual attack, plaintiff “never thought his actions would lead to this.” Plaintiff admitted that he never told any of the staff about what he heard from Waldroop, nor could he recall telling any of the staff that Creech had stopped speaking to him. Plaintiff also acknowledged that he never told the unit manager of any concerns about Creech, nor did he ever submit any written complaint or correspondence to any staff members about Creech. {¶7} Describing the incident, plaintiff testified that a little after 7:00 a.m. on November 12, 2013, he was asleep in bed, lying on his back, and his mouth was open. Plaintiff stated that he was suddenly awakened by a burning sensation in his throat and face, and he was so startled that he thought the building had been struck by a plane. Plaintiff testified that when he rolled over and tried to get up, he received a blow to the forehead. According to plaintiff, he could barely see at first due to the burning sensation in his eyes, but once he was able to open his eyes he observed Creech standing beside the bed and he heard a nurse yell “Creech, put that down.” {¶8} Surveillance video shows that Creech had filled a mug with water and microwaved it for approximately four minutes, and then Creech rolled his wheelchair over to plaintiff’s bed and suddenly poured the water in plaintiff’s mouth and face before striking plaintiff in the head with a cane. (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 9.) {¶9} Plaintiff recalled staff rushing to the scene and Creech being restrained. Plaintiff testified that ice packs were placed on him at first, and then he was wheeled out to a nursing station, where his clothes were removed. Plaintiff described feeling the Case No. 2014-00845 -4- DECISION

skin around his neck peel away when the clothes were removed. Plaintiff stated that an ambulance transported him to the Ohio State University Medical Center for treatment. {¶10} Inmate Donnie Waldroop testified by way of deposition.1 (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 11.) Waldroop, who knew Creech only by the nickname Squeaker, stated that he remembered when plaintiff and Creech arrived at Frazier Health Center around the same time as one another, and to him it seemed like they socialized a lot and were good friends. Waldroop remembered that there was one time when Creech told him “he was going to get” plaintiff, and Waldroop got the impression that Creech may have become jealous about how many friends plaintiff had made. Waldroop also recalled plaintiff telling him about a month before the incident that he thought Creech was “up to something,” acting weird, and turning away from plaintiff. But, according to Waldroop, no one took Creech very seriously and he was not aware of anyone ever telling staff of any concerns about Creech. Plus, as Waldroop explained, he understood that plaintiff and Creech had known one another for many years. Waldroop also stated that from his own interactions with Creech, such as one time when Creech gave him a Bible as a gift, he thought Creech was a decent person. Reflecting on what ultimately happened, Waldroop testified that from everything he knew he “would never have dreamed of it happening.” {¶11} Waldroop stated that he was lying awake in bed, next to plaintiff’s bed, when he saw Creech roll his wheelchair from the microwave toward the beds. Waldroop related that he thought nothing of it, as inmates used the microwave all the time to heat water for making coffee.

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Related

Jenkins v. Ohio Dept. of Rehab. & Corr.
2013 Ohio 5106 (Ohio Court of Appeals, 2013)

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Bluebook (online)
2016 Ohio 8328, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skorvanek-v-ohio-dept-of-rehab-corr-ohioctcl-2016.