Stanley v. City of Miamisburg, Unpublished Decision (1-28-2000)

CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 28, 2000
DocketC.A. Case No. 17912. T.C. Case No. 98-1648.
StatusUnpublished

This text of Stanley v. City of Miamisburg, Unpublished Decision (1-28-2000) (Stanley v. City of Miamisburg, Unpublished Decision (1-28-2000)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law.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
Stanley v. City of Miamisburg, Unpublished Decision (1-28-2000), (Ohio Ct. App. 2000).

Opinion

OPINION
This case arises out of an action by a former police officer and his wife against the city of Miamisburg and several of his superiors with the city for numerous claims, including a whistleblower claim, defamation, intentional and negligent infliction of emotional distress, employer intentional tort, assault and battery, and loss of consortium. Plaintiff-Appellant David A. Stanley ("Stanley") and his wife filed the original complaint in this matter on November 8, 1996. Thereafter, Defendants jointly filed a motion for summary judgment. On October 20, 1997, the trial court sustained in part and overruled in part Defendants' motion. Specifically, the court sustained the motion as to the whistleblower, common law retaliatory discharge, defamation, intentional tort and negligent infliction of emotional distress claims; and overruled the motion as to the intentional infliction of emotional distress, assault and battery, and Mrs. Stanley's loss of consortium claims. Later, the trial court clarified its decision in response to cross-motions to reconsider by also dismissing the intentional infliction of emotional distress claim against Defendants Baker and Mitchell. This original case was voluntarily dismissed by Stanley in May of 1998 and refiled a week later.

In the new case, Stanley made all of the same claims he had made in his previous complaint. In addition, he made two more allegations which were not mentioned in the first case: (1) Defendants forced him to retire in retaliation, and (2) Defendants continued to retaliate against him from the date of retirement to the present. Shortly thereafter, Defendants filed a joint motion to dismiss all claims that had been dismissed in the October 20, 1997 summary judgment decision and the January 12, 1998 reconsideration decision. The trial court subsequently dismissed all previously rejected claims. Stanley appeals from the trial court's decisions sustaining Defendants' motions for summary judgment and reconsideration in the original case and the motion to dismiss in the present case raising the following assignments of error:

The Trial Court Erred by Sustaining Defendant's Motion for Summary Judgment in Connection with Plaintiff[']s Whistle Blowers [sic] Claim.

The Trial Court Erred by Sustaining Defendan't [sic] Motion for Summary Judgment in Connection with Plaintiff[']s Claim for Defamation.

The Trial Court Erred by Sustaining Defendant [sic] Motion for Summary Judgment in Connection with Plaintiff[']s Claims for Intentional Torts Against the Defendant, City.

The Trial Court Erred by Sustaining Defendant's Motion for Reconsideration in Connection with Defendant, Baker.

The Trial Court Erred in Sustaining Defendant's Motion to Dismiss.

The pertinent facts of this case are as follows. Stanley was employed by the city of Miamisburg as a police officer from January of 1989 until September 25, 1996. During his employment with the city, Stanley was involved in two separate automobile accidents which caused severe injury. The first was an off-duty accident in October of 1993 in which he injured his hip and pelvis. Following this accident, Stanley was out of work until March of 1994, when he returned on light duty status. He ultimately returned to full duty status on July 31, 1995. Then, on November 14, 1995, Stanley was involved in an on-duty accident that resulted in injury to his back and re-injury to his hip and pelvis. Thereafter, Stanley was on leave, first paid and then unpaid, until he took a medical retirement on September 25, 1996.

During his employment with the city of Miamisburg, Stanley claims he witnessed several criminal abuses within the department and reported these to his superiors, Defendants Tom Schenck, Chief of Police, Captain Aubrey Baker, and Officer William Mitchell. Additionally, he contends that he reported these abuses to the City Manager, John Weithofer, and the Assistant City Manager, David Collinsworth, both also named as Defendants. Stanley confirmed in his deposition that all reports he made to these individuals were strictly verbal until a letter written to Collinsworth on August 9, 1996. This was the first time Stanley submitted any written complaints.

Stanley alleges that in response to these verbal reports made to his superiors, he received unfair treatment as retaliation. In his original complaint, Stanley alleged this retaliation included but was not limited to "transferring and reassigning Plaintiff; withholding from Plaintiff benefits to which Plaintiff was otherwise entitled and reducing the Plaintiff in position." Additionally, in his August 9, 1996 letter to David Collinsworth, Stanley detailed several of these incidents including: 1) threatened disciplinary action for engaging in extramarital activities which turned out to be with his wife; 2) threatened disciplinary action and investigations by the IRS for purchasing a new sports car and a new home; 3) refusal of benefits following an on-duty accident in 1995 resulting in removal from community-oriented police assignment; 4) confrontation with Chief Schenck over opened personal mail which resulted in Schenck striking Stanley with a door; 5) notification by Chief Schenck and Captain Baker on several occasions that he was not well liked and his chances for advancement were slim or nonexistent; 6) discrimination based on his disability including attempts to prevent him from taking a promotional exam. Further details were outlined in Mrs. Stanley's August 26, 1996 letter to Miamisburg City Council: 1) refusal to honor and interference with workers' compensation benefits; 2) denial of participation in several special projects that Stanley was allegedly more qualified for than those who were chosen; 3) requiring Stanley to attend court, training and depositions while heavily medicated on disability leave.

In a separate section of his original complaint, Stanley also maintained that he was forced by the city to take a medical retirement. However, he alleged the direct reason for the medical retirement was the city's failure to accommodate his disability. In his deposition, Stanley alluded that the failure to accommodate his disability by only allowing his return to street patrol was a retaliatory act. Nevertheless, Stanley did not specifically classify his retirement as a retaliatory act until his memorandum in response to Defendants' motion for summary judgment and his refiled complaint following the voluntary dismissal.

Stanley has also been involved in several other proceedings regarding his injuries in which he was required to testify as to his disability status. In his lawsuit against his insurance company resulting from the October 1993 accident, he testified that he was "not capable of performing the basic duties of a police officer." Further, in his testimony before the Police and Fireman's Pension Fund, he stated that he "would not be able to resume career as a police officer in any capacity." Moreover, several doctors testified that Stanley's injuries prevented him from performing the duties of a police officer.

I
In Stanley's first assignment of error, he alleges that the trial court erred in granting summary judgment on his whistleblower claim. In this regard, the trial court found that none of the claimed acts of retaliation occurred within the 180-day statutory period, and judicial estoppel prevented Stanley from claiming his discharge was retaliatory. Additionally, Defendants argued and the trial court briefly mentioned that Stanley submitted no written reports regarding the whistleblowing activities until after the alleged acts of retaliation.

According to Civ. R.

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Bluebook (online)
Stanley v. City of Miamisburg, Unpublished Decision (1-28-2000), Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanley-v-city-of-miamisburg-unpublished-decision-1-28-2000-ohioctapp-2000.