State Ex Rel. Simmons v. Geauga County Department of Emergency Services

722 N.E.2d 1063, 131 Ohio App. 3d 482
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 7, 1998
DocketNo. 97-G-2079.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 722 N.E.2d 1063 (State Ex Rel. Simmons v. Geauga County Department of Emergency Services) 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
State Ex Rel. Simmons v. Geauga County Department of Emergency Services, 722 N.E.2d 1063, 131 Ohio App. 3d 482 (Ohio Ct. App. 1998).

Opinions

Ford, Presiding Judge.

This original action in mandamus is presently before this court for consideration of the parties’ competing motions for summary judgment. Upon reviewing the parties’ respective arguments and evidential materials, we conclude that both relator and respondents have successfully showed that they are entitled to the entry of judgment in their favor as to certain aspects of their respective claims. Accordingly, we ultimately hold that writs of mandamus should be issued in part as to all parties.

I

Relator, George Simmons, is the current duly elected Sheriff of Geauga County, Ohio. Relator has held this position since January 1993.

Respondents consist of various public entities and officials in Geauga County. The three public entities include the Geauga County Board of Commissioners, the Geauga County Department of Emergency Services, and the Thompson Township Board of Trustees. The four public officials are Bud Jordan, the Director of the Geauga County Department of Emergency Services, and the individual members *488 of the Geauga County Board of Commissioners: Jan Novak, William M. Repke, and Neil C. Hofstetter. 1

The subject matter of this action concerns the right to control the operation of the countywide public safety communications system and the E-9-1-1 system of Geauga County. Pursuant to R.C. 307.63(A), such a system generally consists of the facilities, equipment, and services which assist in the immediate exchange of information between various public officials pertaining to police, fire, and emergency medical matters. As set forth in R.C. 4931.40(A), a 9-1-1- system is the mechanism by which an individual citizen of a county can request emergency services.

Prior to 1986, the Geauga County Sheriffs Department employed a low-band radio system to facilitate communications between its dispatchers and its deputies in the field. This particular system was also used for communications between the department and other public agencies in Geauga County. In addition, the department provided dispatch services for certain entities.

In early 1986, the Geauga County Board of Commissioners purchased an 800MHz communications system (“800 system”). This system primarily consisted of a computer control board, radio transmitters, and dispatch consoles. The system essentially worked in the following manner: (1) by speaking into a microphone, a dispatcher would cause a radio signal to be sent from a console to one of six towers in the county; (2) the tower would relay the signal to the computer control board; and (3) acting as the “backbone” of the entire system, the board would “process” the signal and direct it to a portable receiver or a second console.

Following the installation of the 800 system, the Board of County Commissioners entered into a number of “user” agreements with various public entities in the county, including many villages, townships, and fire departments. One of the entities which executed such an agreement was the Geauga County Sheriffs Department. Under the terms of these agreements, the Board of County Commissioners agreed to provide the “user” with access to the 800 system. In return, the user promised to abide by certain guidelines concerning the use of the system.

*489 As part of its specific agreement, the sheriffs department was given two consoles by which to access the 800 system. As it had previously done with the low-band radio system, the department primarily used the 800 system to dispatch its employees and to communicate with other public agencies in the county. The department also continued to provide dispatch services to certain entities, including villages and townships, which did not have their own dispatch center.

Under the initial configuration of the 800 system, any communication between two users of the system could be transmitted through the consoles located at the sheriffs department. However, a communication could also be sent through the console at the Geauga County Emergency Management Agency. Moreover, after the system was upgraded in 1989, it was no longer necessary for the transmission to go through these particular consoles in order for the connection to be made. Therefore, throughout the entire time period in which the 800 system has been used, it has been possible for two users to communicate through the system without benefit of the dispatching services performed by the sheriffs department.

In conjunction with the installation of the 800 system, the Geauga County Board of Commissioners formed an 800 Communications Committee, the primary function of which was to establish the policies governing the use of the 800 system. In turn, the 800 Communications Committee hired an employee, known as the 800 Coordinator, whose duties included (1) providing for the operation and maintenance of the system, (2) overseeing the setup of the equipment at various sites and training the employees of the users, and (3) coordinating the general use of the system.

In addition to the 800 Communications Committee, two other public agencies were created in Geauga County during the early 1990’s to coordinate the use of two separate communications systems. These entities were the E-9-1-1 Committee and the Geauga County Emergency Management Agency. Like the 800 Communications Committee, these entities had their own employees to perform certain duties.

In January 1992, the Geauga County Board of Commissioners gave its approval for the county’s E-9-1-1 system. This system then became operable in November 1994. The system primarily consisted of six Public Safety Answering Points (“PSAP”) located throughout the county. The sheriffs department is responsible for the operation of one PSAP, ie., the sheriffs dispatchers handle emergency calls from townships or other county entities which do not have their own dispatchers. The remaining PSAPs are located in certain villages and townships in the county.

After relator had assumed the position of Geauga County Sheriff in January 1993, his department continued to use the 800 system, ie., not only has the department used the system to dispatch its own employees, but it has also *490 continued to provide dispatch services for other public entities in the county. In conjunction with its use of the 800 system, relator’s department has operated the following informationaVcommunications equipment: (1) one of the six PSAPs in the county’s E-9-1-1 system, (2) a Computer Aided Dispatch system (“CAD”), which is essentially a database in which information concerning prior incidents or dispatch calls are maintained, (3) a terminal of the Law Enforcement Automated Data System (“LEADS”), which gives the department access to other law enforcement databases throughout the country, (4) a separate radio system called the Law Enforcement Emergency Radio Network (“LEERN”), and (5) various telephone and paging systems.

In 1996, the Geauga County Board of Commissioners created a new county agency called the Department of Emergency Services. The primary function of this department was to coordinate the use of all communications systems in Geauga County, ie.,

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Bluebook (online)
722 N.E.2d 1063, 131 Ohio App. 3d 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-simmons-v-geauga-county-department-of-emergency-services-ohioctapp-1998.