Keith CRABBS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. Zach SCOTT, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 17-3854
United States Court of Appeals, Sixth Circuit.
Decided and Filed: January 22, 2018
880 F.3d 292
Before: NORRIS, SUTTON, and DONALD, Circuit Judges.
ON BRIEF: Michael Garth Moore, LAW OFFICES OF MICHAEL GARTH MOORE, Columbus, Ohio, for Appellant. Nick A. Soulas, Jr., FRANKLIN COUNTY PROSECUTOR‘S OFFICE, Columbus, Ohio, for Appellee.
OPINION
SUTTON, Circuit Judge.
Keith Crabbs filed a
I.
In December 2010, Keith Crabbs surrendered to the Franklin County Sheriff on charges of voluntary manslaughter. After spending a night in jail, the court released him on bond. Keith‘s trial did not begin until March 2012.
Two days into the trial, the court revoked Keith‘s bond after he arrived late and quarreled with a witness outside of the courthouse. Ohio law requires county sheriffs to collect a DNA specimen of anybody “arrested on or after July 1, 2011, for a felony offense.”
Keith filed a
II.
“If a party dies and the claim is not extinguished, the court may order substitution of the proper party.”
To determine whether
No federal statute or rule says anything about the survivorship of
In addition to the causes of action which survive at common law, causes of action for mesne profits, or injuries to the person or property, or for deceit or fraud, also shall survive; and such actions may be brought notwithstanding the death of the person entitled or liable thereto.
Wilson v. Garcia, 471 U.S. 261 (1985), offers guidance in answering the question. At issue was how to characterize
First, the characterization of
Second, all
Third,
For these reasons, the Wilson Court held that all
Owens v. Okure, 488 U.S. 235 (1989), applied a similar approach in a 9-0 decision. It addressed a common scenario in which a State provides one statute of limitations for intentional torts and a residual limitations period for other personal injuries. Id. at 236. Invoking the virtues of uniformity, administrability, and predictability, Owens held that all
Since these decisions, Congress has gone further in the direction of uniformity. It has provided a single, 4-year federal statute of limitations for all civil rights actions, thereby preempting all state rules.
Even so, Wilson and Owens tell us what we need to know to resolve this case. Neither decision cabined its rationale to state statutes of limitation. And if survivorship statutes are not siblings of time-bar statutes, they are at least cousins. Together they seek to balance repose and finality with the substantive policies served by enforcement of the cause of action. See Dobbs’ Law of Torts §§ 241 (Statutes of Limitation: Foundational Principles and Rationales), 372 (Wrongful Death and Survival Actions) (2d ed. 2017).
In reaching this conclusion, we agree with the Seventh Circuit. It held that characterizing all
Pulling all of this together, let‘s review the bidding:
Sheriff Scott offers a fair response. He maintains that, under the Ohio survivorship statute, personal injury actions must arise from physical harm. Because Keith‘s cheek-swab claim arose from an invasion of his privacy, not physical harm, death extinguished the claim and the district
The Ohio Supreme Court, the authoritative voice on Ohio law, has never established a physical injury requirement under the Ohio survivorship statute. And the language of the statute, “injury to the person,” does not suggest such a requirement. This language normally requires the invasion only of a personal, not a physical, right and thus permits claims premised on psychological harm. See Injury, Black‘s Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014) (defining “personal injury” among other things as “[a]ny invasion of a personal right, including mental suffering“); Restatement (Second) of Torts § 7 (defining “injury” as “the invasion of any legally protected interest of another“).
Many State High Courts have rejected a physical-harm requirement in the context of survivorship (and similar) laws that contained identical or nearly identical language. See, e.g., Gressman v. State, 323 P.3d 998, 1006-07 (Utah 2013); Harrison v. Loyal Protective Life Ins. Co., 379 Mass. 212, 396 N.E.2d 987, 989-90 (1979); Gray v. Wallace, 319 S.W.2d 582, 584-85 (Mo. 1958); White v. Safe Deposit & Tr. Co., 140 Md. 593, 118 A. 77, 80 (1922). In Bennett, the Seventh Circuit case, the court preserved a procedural due process claim as “injury to the person” under the Illinois Survival Act, which is about as ephemeral as constitutional injuries come. Bennett, 827 F.2d at 65, 68;
The decisions of Ohio‘s lower courts face in two directions. Some cases impose a physical injury requirement in interpreting “injuries to the person.” Witcher v. Fairlawn, 113 Ohio App.3d 214, 680 N.E.2d 713, 715 (1996); Vill. of Oakwood v. Makar, 11 Ohio App.3d 46, 463 N.E.2d 61, 64-65 (1983). But other cases say that this language encompasses “psychic injury” including sexual harassment and intentional infliction of emotional distress. Bowman v. Parma Bd. of Educ., 44 Ohio App.3d 169, 542 N.E.2d 663, 670-71 (1988); Kelly v. Greene, No. 66359, 1994 WL 547767, at *2-3 (Ohio Ct. App. Oct. 6, 1994). These Janus-faced intermediate court decisions offer no basis for thinking that the Ohio Supreme Court would reject our approach.
On top of all this, Wilson and Owens underscored the need for a simple and administrable characterization of
We recognize that our decision parts way with a prior unpublished decision of this court, Tinney v. Richland Cty., 678 Fed.Appx. 362 (6th Cir. 2017). It held that a
For these reasons, we reverse and remand to the district court for further proceedings.
