Christopher Barksdale, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 16AP-297 (Ct. of Cl. No. 2014-00645)
IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO TENTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
February 2, 2017
[Cite as Barksdale v. Ohio Dept. of Rehab. & Corr., 2017-Ohio-395.]
(REGULAR CALENDAR)
Rendered on February 2, 2017
On brief: Swope and Swope - Attorneys at Law, and Richard F. Swope, for appellant. Argued: Richard F. Swope.
On brief: Michael DeWine, Attorney General, and Timothy M. Miller, for appellee. Argued: Timothy M. Miller.
APPEAL from the Court of Claims of Ohio
DORRIAN, J.
{1} Plaintiff-appellant, Christopher Barksdale, appeals the March 23, 2016 judgment of the Court of Claims of Ohio which adopted the August 26, 2015 magistrate‘s decision, after trial, in favor of defendant-appellee, Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
I. Facts and Procedural History
{2} On July 16, 2014, appellant refiled a complaint in the Court of Claims. In the complaint, appellant alleged that on or about February 20, 2013, he held a valid bottom bunk restriction and that he was ordered to utilize the top bunk in his cell. That
{3} Appellee filed an answer on August 7, 2014 and asserted, among others, the following defenses:
Fourth Defense: The negligent and/or intentional acts of the [Appellant], or one or more persons for whose conduct [Appellee] is not liable, were the intervening, superseding, and active proximate causes of the injuries and damages alleged in the Complaint.
Fifth Defense: [Appellant‘s] own negligence was the sole proximate or a major contributing cause of the injuries/damages described in the Complaint.
Sixth Defense: [Appellant‘s] own negligence is greater than any negligence by [Appellee], which is specifically denied, and [Appellant] is therefore barred from recovery.
(Answer at 2.)
{4} On March 5, 2015, a magistrate of the Court of Claims conducted a trial on the issue of liability. According to the magistrate‘s decision, appellant testified that prior to entering into appellee‘s custody, he had a pre-existing history of seizures, as well as back problems, a bad knee, a bullet wound in his shoulder, and blurred vision due to blood pressure problems. At some point, appellant was transferred to a new dormitory at the Franklin Medical Center, at which time, although he had a valid1 lower bunk restriction, he was told that he would be placed in the upper bunk because the lower bunks were needed for elderly prisoners and also because his term would be expiring soon. Five days prior to his expected release, appellant was sharing a cell with inmates Russell Pierce, Roy J. Sage, and Dennis White, Sr. On the night of the incident, appellant needed to use the lavatory during the night and attempted to descend a ladder attached to his bunk. At the bottom of the ladder was a chair which appellant used to help him when
{5} At the infirmary, appellant was examined by Barbara Vermilyea, R.N. Nurse Vermilyea told appellant she could have him moved to a lower bunk; however, appellant declined Nurse Vermilyea‘s offer to move him to a lower bunk.
{6} Dr. Sheryl Stephens testified that she issued the lower bunk restriction on January 12, 2012 after seeing documentation of appellant having a seizure diagnosis. The specific order read: “BB/BR x 1 [year] re seizure disorder.” (Appellant‘s Ex. 4.) She did not examine appellant at that time, and several weeks later she was transferred to another facility. Dr. Stephens testified that she ordered the lower bunk restriction pursuant to Protocol No. B-19, “Guidelines for Determination of Medical Restrictions.” Protocol No. B-19 listed several bases for qualifying for lower bunk restrictions; however, Dr. Stephens testified that appellant‘s diagnosed seizure disorder was the “only reason” she issued the lower bunk restriction. (Magistrate‘s Dec. at 7.) According to the magistrate, Dr. Stephens further testified that, in her professional opinion, her review of appellant‘s medical file at the time of trial did not demonstrate that appellant was unable to safely get in and out of an upper bunk at the time of the incident.
{7} After trial, the magistrate issued a decision finding that the harm suffered by appellant was proximately caused by his own negligence in failing to exercise proper care when climbing down from the upper bunk. Specifically, the magistrate found:
[Appellant] stepped down from the ladder without ensuring that he had adequate footing beneath him, and by not taking care to see to it that his foot was firmly on the chair or another supporting surface before he descended any farther, [appellant] failed to exercise reasonable care for his own safety. While [appellant] did describe having knee and back problems which caused him some difficulty at times with ambulating or climbing in and out of his bunk, [appellant] did not present credible evidence to establish a causal relationship between his failure at the time of the incident to safely alight from the bed and any of the medical issues that he contends made it necessary for [appellee] to place him in a lower bunk. Rather, what the evidence shows is that [appellant] was not careful enough and made a misstep as he descended the ladder.
With respect to the alleged negligence on the part of [appellee], the magistrate finds that even if [appellee] owed a duty to place [appellant] in a lower bunk, the risk attending that duty was the risk that [appellant] might suffer a seizure and fall out of bed. As previously stated, however, [appellant‘s] fall was not caused by a seizure, but by his own negligence. Therefore, whether or not [appellee] breached its duty of care by not placing [appellant] in a lower bunk to mitigate the risk of his being harmed by a seizure, any such breach was not the proximate cause of [appellant‘s] injury.
Furthermore, while it was suggested at trial that various medical conditions such as back or knee pain, arthritis, or high blood pressure were all additional reasons why [appellee] had a duty to place [appellant] in a lower bunk, the magistrate finds that the evidence does not support the conclusion that such factors made it unreasonably dangerous for [appellant] to climb in and out of an upper bunk at the time of the accident. * * * And, again, even if [appellant] had proven otherwise, the evidence shows that it was [appellant‘s] own negligence rather than any medical issue that proximately caused the fall.
(Magistrate‘s Dec. at 11-12.)
{8} Appellant filed objections to the magistrate‘s decision and was granted leave to submit videotaped testimony in the form of DVDs from the magistrate‘s trial to the court in lieu of a transcript. Appellee filed a response on January 22, 2016.
{9} On March 23, 2016, the Court of Claims filed a judgment entry overruling appellant‘s objections and adopting the magistrate‘s decision, including the magistrate‘s findings of fact and conclusions of law. Further, the court discussed whether appellee‘s alleged negligence was the proximate cause of appellant‘s injuries. The court observed Dr. Stephen‘s testimony that she issued the restriction because of appellant‘s well-documented seizure disorder:
It follows that the harm she anticipated when she issued the restriction was a fall caused by that disorder. It is undisputed that [appellant] did not suffer from a seizure when he fell from the bunk. The proximate cause of the fall was [appellant‘s] own negligence in failing to use appropriate care while getting out of the bunk. [Appellee], who is not an insurer of inmate safety, only owed [appellant] the duty of ordinary care with regard to the foreseeable risk of a fall
caused by [appellant‘s] seizure disorder. * * * Regardless of [appellee‘s] administrative error of failing to issue him a lower bunk restriction after January 12, 2013, [appellant] failed to meet his burden of proof because the proximate cause of the fall was his own negligence in failing to take care while stepping down from the top bunk. Lastly, in both his objections and during trial, [appellant] states that he suffered from a host of other ailments, including back or knee pain, arthritis, and high blood pressure, and these medical concerns affected his entire physical condition, and, as such, he should have been placed in a lower bunk. Dr. Stephens testified that none of those conditions warranted a lower bunk restriction. Only [appellant‘s] prior documented seizure disorder warranted the restriction. [Appellant] also did not plead a medical claim, and as such, his opinions about his other medical concerns were not corroborated by an independent medical expert.
(Jgmt. Entry at 5-6.)
II. Assignments of Error
{10} Appellant appeals and assigns the following five assignments of error for our review:
[I.] THE MAGISTRATE AND THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN FINDING THE NEGLIGENCE OF PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT WAS THE CAUSE OF HIS FALL.
[II.] THE MAGISTRATE AND THE TRIAL COURT IMPROPERLY CONSTRUED, APPLIED AND IGNORED PROTOCOL B-19, PLAINTIFF‘S EXHIBIT 15, IN HIS DECISION, PLACING THE BLAME ON PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT, WHICH RIGHTLY BELONGED TO DEFENDANT-APPELLEE.
[III.] THE MAGISTRATE AND TRIAL COURT IGNORED THE CRUCIAL FACT THAT DR. STEPHENS’ ORDER MAKING THE BOTTOM BUNK RESTRICTION EFFECTIVE FROM JANUARY 12, 2013 TO JANUARY 12, 2014 WAS IN PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT‘S MEDICAL RECORD AND CIRCULATED, AND IN EFFECT ELIMINATING PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT‘S NEED TO SEEK A RESTRICTION.
[V.] THE DECISIONS OF THE MAGISTRATE AND TRIAL COURT ARE AGAINST THE MANIFEST WEIGHT OF THE EVIDENCE AND CONTRARY TO LAW.
We address appellant‘s assignments of error together because they are interrelated and address the magistrate‘s, and consequently the Court of Claims‘, findings of fact. Appellant‘s assignments of error mirror his objections to the magistrate‘s decision, asserting the Court of Claims erred in adopting the magistrate‘s decision.
III. Discussion
{11} In accordance with
{12} To maintain his ordinary negligence claim, appellant must show: (1) the existence of a duty owed to him by the defendant, (2) a breach of that duty, and (3) injury proximately resulting from that breach. Strother v. Hutchinson, 67 Ohio St.2d 282, 285 (1981). “In the context of a custodial relationship between the state and its prisoners, the
{13} Included in the corrected record of this case is a miscellaneous exhibit: one DVD. The DVD contains a video/audio recording of the trial held before the magistrate in the Court of Claims. The record does not include a transcript.
{14}
(1) [I]t is the obligation of the appellant to ensure that the proceedings the appellant considers necessary for inclusion in the record, however those proceedings were recorded, are transcribed in a form that meets the specifications of
App.R. 9(B)(6) .* * *
(4) If the appellant intends to present an assignment of error on appeal that a finding or conclusion is unsupported by the evidence or is contrary to the weight of the evidence, the appellant shall include in the record a transcript of
proceedings that includes all evidence relevant to the findings or conclusion. * * *
(6)(d) The transcript of proceedings shall be prepared on white paper eight and one-half inches by eleven inches in size with the lines of each page numbered and the pages sequentially numbered[.]
{15} The Court of Claims permitted appellant to submit the video/audio recording in lieu of a transcript upon submission of his objections to the magistrate‘s decision. Such alternative to a transcript is not permitted, however, before an appellate court. The Staff Notes to
The amendments to
App.R. 9 are designed to strike a balance between the trial court‘s autonomy in determining how to record proceedings in the trial court and the appellate court‘s preference for official transcripts in lieu of video recordings transcribed by counsel or counsel‘s assistants. UnderApp.R. 9(A) , trial courts may choose to record proceedings through the use of a stenographic/shorthand reporter, an audio-recording device, and/or a video-recording device, except in capital cases, in which a stenographic/shorthand reporter is required. Regardless of the method of recording the proceedings, a transcript is required for the record on appeal; a videotaped recording of the trial court proceedings is no longer adequate. For parties who cannot afford to have a transcript prepared, existing case law already authorizes the use of a statement of proceedings underApp.R. 9(C) .
{16}
{17} This court has held that where there is no transcript submitted on appeal, “[t]here is a presumption that the trial court proceedings were validly conducted. Absent a complete transcript or an acceptable alternative (such as is described in
{18} In support of his assignments of error, appellant has referred this court to portions of the video/audio recording from the trial as well as to numerous exhibits which are included in the record of the case, including exhibit 15, Guidelines for Determination of Medical Restrictions, Protocol No. B-19. Appellant also argues that failure to abide by a valid medical restriction was negligent because appellant would not have fallen had appellee abided by the order. Nevertheless, without a transcript, this court is bound by the Court of Claims’ finding that “[appellant] failed to meet his burden of proof because the proximate cause of the fall was his own negligence in failing to take care while stepping down from the top bunk.” (Jgmt. Entry at 5.) We are also bound by the court‘s determination to accept Dr. Stephen‘s testimony that “none of [appellant‘s other] conditions warranted a lower bunk restriction.”2 (Jgmt. Entry at 5-6.) Accordingly, we cannot say the Court of Claims abused its discretion in adopting the magistrate‘s decision. Appellant‘s five assignments of error are overruled.
IV. Conclusion
{19} Finding that the Court of Claims did not abuse its discretion in adopting the magistrate‘s decision, we overrule appellant‘s five assignments of error and affirm the judgment of the Court of Claims of Ohio.
Judgment affirmed.
TYACK, P.J., and BROWN, J., concur.
