Jackson v. Huppert , 2012 Ohio 2934 ( 2012 )


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  • [Cite as Jackson v. Huppert, 
    2012-Ohio-2934
    .]
    Court of Appeals of Ohio
    EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA
    JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION
    No. 97764
    CORNELIA JACKSON, ADMINISTRATOR
    PLAINTIFF-APPELLANT
    vs.
    STEFAN HUPPERT
    DEFENDANT-APPELLEE
    JUDGMENT:
    AFFIRMED
    Civil Appeal from the
    Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
    Case No. CV-750623
    BEFORE:          Blackmon, A.J., Jones, J., and Keough, J.
    RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED:                      June 28, 2012
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT
    David A. Bressman
    Law Office of David A. Bressman
    4230 Tuller Road
    Suite 101
    Dublin, Ohio 43017
    Michael D. Falleur
    1625 Bethel Road
    Suite 205
    Columbus, Ohio 43220
    Kimberly S. Wells
    P.O. Box 701
    Blacklick, Ohio 43004
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE
    Shawn W. Schlesinger
    Koeth, Rice & Leo Co., L.P.A.
    1280 West Third St., 3rd Floor
    Cleveland, Ohio 44113
    PATRICIA ANN BLACKMON, A.J.:
    {¶1} Appellant Cornelia Jackson, Administrator, (“Jackson”) appeals the trial
    court’s granting summary judgment in favor of appellee Stefan Huppert. Jackson assigns
    the following two errors for our review:
    I. Ohio Law, and public policy, do not allow the defendant to assist
    Rochelle Hooks in committing suicide.        The trial court’s decision
    granting defendant’s motion for summary judgment allows for one to
    assist another in ending a life without liability. In this case, defendant
    owed a duty to Rochelle Hooks to not assist her in committing suicide
    because he knew that such was her intention, he provided her with
    counseling about it, and then drove Rochelle to Edgewater Park where
    she died. The law and facts are such that the case should have been
    heard by a jury.
    II. The trial court incorrectly granted defendant’s motion to strike
    certain exhibits attached in plaintiff’s reply to the motion for summary
    judgment when each exhibit was admissible.
    Facts
    {¶2} On September 7, 2007, Rochelle Hooks (“Hooks”) was pronounced dead
    after committing suicide by drowning herself at Edgewater Park the evening before. She
    was 36 years old.
    {¶3} In 2000, Hooks was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis (“MS”). Because of
    the symptoms of MS, Hooks became increasingly disabled. In 2005, she could not walk
    without a walker. In 2007, her condition worsened to the point she could no longer
    supervise and care for her teenage sons, who went to live with Hooks’s mother, Cornelia
    Jackson. Hooks never said she was depressed, but her family could tell that she was
    depressed at times.     Her medical records also indicated she was suffering from
    depression.
    {¶4} Huppert first met Hooks on August 28, 2007, which was ten days prior to her
    suicide.   He worked as a driver for Diversified Transportation, which provides
    transportation for disabled people to and from medical appointments. Huppert was also
    an ordained Lutheran minister who worked as a substitute pastor.
    {¶5} On August 28, 2007 and September 3, 2007, Huppert drove Hooks to and
    from her physical therapy appointments. Huppert stated that although Hooks walked
    slowly, she was able to walk down the front stairs with her walker. While driving Hooks
    to and from her medical appointments, Huppert and Hooks engaged in casual
    conversations about Hooks’s health and family. During the first transport, Hooks was in
    a lot of pain after her therapy and told Huppert that a couple of times in the past she had
    thought about ending her life.     She also expressed excitement, however, regarding
    upcoming events with her teenage sons. Therefore, Huppert believed Hooks’s suicidal
    thoughts were past feelings. Hooks also discussed the isolation she felt from her family
    and sadness over the fact that her mother had to raise Hooks’s sons because Hooks was
    unable to care for them.
    {¶6} The second time that Huppert transported Hooks, she expressed fear of being
    placed in a nursing home. She was told that she could no longer live in her Section 8
    rental home because her sons no longer lived with her. She, however, seemed “more
    upbeat” on the way home from her appointment. Hooks told Huppert that she liked
    talking to him because she felt he did not judge her and asked him for his telephone
    number. Huppert gave it to her because he felt bad that she did not seem to be receiving
    emotional support from her family. According to Huppert, he never offered Hooks
    spiritual counseling, but merely listened to her.
    {¶7} On September 6, 2007, Huppert worked the 8:30 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. shift at
    Diversified Transportation. At around 12:30 p.m. Huppert received a call from Hooks.
    She asked if Huppert would come over after work to talk. Huppert agreed because he
    felt sorry for her.
    {¶8} After his shift ended, Huppert drove his private car to Hooks’s house.
    Shortly after he arrived, Hooks stated she wanted to go for a drive to the lake to “get
    some lake air.” The hour prior to them leaving, Hooks made a sandwich for herself and
    received treatment from her home health aide. According to Huppert, there was nothing
    about her behavior that would alert him to her pending suicide. In fact, even Hooks’s
    mother testified that she had spoken with Hooks on the telephone that day around 4:30
    p.m., and Hooks had expressed excitement about seeing her sons play football the next
    day.
    {¶9} Around 7:15 p.m., Huppert and Hooks arrived at Edgewater Park. Huppert
    parked near the pier so that Hooks would not have far to walk. They sat for the next
    hour on a bench on the pier. They mostly talked about Hooks’s sons and how proud of
    them she was. Hooks also expressed disappointment regarding the fact her sons lived
    with her mother. According to Huppert, Hooks did not mention that she wanted to
    commit suicide.
    {¶10} At approximately 8:10 p.m., Huppert received a call on his cellular phone,
    which he had left in his car parked a short distance away. He walked to the car and
    talked on the phone with a co-worker for a few minutes and used his asthma inhaler.
    When Huppert turned around to return to Hooks, he saw her walking with her walker
    towards the edge of the pier, which was a short distance from the bench. Because of
    how Hooks was positioned, leaning towards the edge of the pier, Huppert stated that it
    appeared that she was planning on going into the water. Huppert immediately tried to
    stop Hooks from entering the water by grabbing her wrist, but Hooks responded “Don’t
    try and stop me. I have to do this.” Hooks yanked her wrist away and swung her walker
    towards him as she entered the water. She did not resurface and because of the distance
    from the pier to the water, Huppert could not reach her. Huppert immediately called 911.
    Eventually the Coast Guard responded to the scene and removed Hooks’s body from the
    lake. She was removed from life support the following day.
    {¶11} Jackson refused to believe that her daughter committed suicide. Because of
    Jackson’s continued complaints to the police that her daughter did not commit suicide, the
    police asked Huppert to take a polygraph test. He agreed to take the test and passed.
    Criminal charges have never been filed against Huppert.
    {¶12} On March 10, 2011, Jackson filed a complaint against Huppert alleging a
    claim for wrongful death. 1 Huppert answered the complaint and filed a motion for
    summary judgment, which Jackson opposed.          The trial court granted the summary
    judgment without opinion.
    Motion for Summary Judgment
    {¶13} In her first assigned error, Jackson argues the trial court erred by granting
    summary judgment in favor of Huppert.
    {¶14} We review an appeal from summary judgment under a de novo standard of
    review. Baiko v. Mays, 
    140 Ohio App.3d 1
    , 
    746 N.E.2d 618
     (8th Dist.2000), citing
    Smiddy v. The Wedding Party, Inc., 
    30 Ohio St.3d 35
    , 
    506 N.E.2d 212
     (1987); N.E. Ohio
    Apt. Assn. v. Cuyahoga Cty. Bd. of Commrs., 
    121 Ohio App.3d 188
    , 
    699 N.E.2d 534
     (8th
    Dist.1997).   Accordingly, we afford no deference to the trial court’s decision and
    independently review the record to determine whether summary judgment is appropriate.
    Under Civ.R. 56, summary judgment is appropriate when: (1) no genuine issue as to any
    material fact exists, (2) the party moving for summary judgment is entitled to judgment as
    1
    Jackson had originally filed a complaint on September 8, 2009. Following
    discovery, however, she voluntarily dismissed her complaint without prejudiced on
    April 5, 2010.
    a matter of law, and (3) viewing the evidence most strongly in favor of the non-moving
    party, reasonable minds can reach only one conclusion that is adverse to the non-moving
    party.
    {¶15}   Jackson contends that summary judgment was improperly granted to
    Huppert because he had a special relationship with Hooks; therefore, as a matter of law,
    he had a duty to prevent Hooks from harming herself.
    {¶16} To maintain a wrongful death action on a theory of negligence, a plaintiff
    must show three elements: a duty owed to the decedent, a breach of that duty, and
    proximate causation between the breach of duty and the death.            Littleton v. Good
    Samaritan Hosp. & Health Ctr., 
    39 Ohio St.3d 86
    , 92, 
    529 N.E.2d 449
     (1988), citing
    Bennison v. Stillpass Transit Co., 
    5 Ohio St.2d 122
    , 
    214 N.E.2d 213
    , paragraph one of the
    syllabus (1966). Generally, under Ohio Law there is no duty to act to prevent harm to a
    person.     Littleton at 92.   An exception to this general rule arises when a special
    relationship exists between the actor and the person. 
    Id.
     “Such a ‘special relationship’
    exists when one takes charge of a person whom he knows or should know is likely to
    cause bodily harm to others [or self] if not controlled.” 
    Id.
     An example of a “special
    relationship” is the parent-child relationship, where a parent may be held liable in certain
    situations for the minor child’s wrongful act. Huston v. Konieczny, 
    52 Ohio St.3d 214
    ,
    
    556 N.E.2d 505
     (1990). Medical providers may also have a “special relationship” with
    their patients. Douglass v. Salem Comm. Hosp., 
    153 Ohio App.3d 350
    , 
    794 N.E.2d 107
    (7th Dist.2003).
    {¶17} No special relationship existed between Huppert and Hooks at the time of
    the incident. That night, Huppert was not driving Hooks to a medical appointment.
    Instead, Huppert was off-duty when he met with Hooks as a social friend. Although
    Hooks had medical problems there was no evidence that she suffered from any mental
    infirmities.   She was a fully functional adult except for the physical symptoms she
    suffered from the MS.     Because there was no special relationship beyond friendship
    between Hooks and Huppert, Huppert did not have a duty to protect Hooks from harming
    herself.
    {¶18} Even if there was a special relationship, there is no evidence that Huppert
    aided Hooks in committing suicide. Although Huppert took Hooks to Edgewater Park,
    he stated Hooks was the one who chose to go to the lake. She told Huppert that she
    wanted to go to the lake to get “some lake air.” She did not mention her intention to
    commit suicide. Hooks walked unassisted to the edge of the pier while Huppert was
    standing beside his car with his back turned. When he saw what she was about to do, he
    ran towards her and attempted to grab her wrist, but Hooks twisted away and told him “to
    leave her alone” and that “she had to do this.” When Hooks went into the water, she
    never resurfaced, and due to the distance from the pier to the water below, Huppert could
    not reach her. He immediately called 911. Therefore, the evidence indicates that when
    Hooks’s intentions became clear to Huppert, he attempted to stop her from succeeding.
    {¶19} There was also no evidence that Huppert could have foreseen Hooks’s
    suicide. In Thomas v. Parma, 
    88 Ohio App.3d 523
    , 
    624 N.E.2d 337
     (8th Dist.1993), a
    prisoner committed suicide while in police custody, resulting in the family suing the city.
    After reviewing the facts, we held that there was “no evidence in the record that the
    officers had any reason to believe that the decedent posed a risk of suicide. Since the
    suicide was not foreseeable, we view it as an intervening force for which appellees cannot
    be held responsible.” Id. at 531.
    {¶20}    Likewise,    in   Schoenfield   v.   Navarre,   
    164 Ohio App.3d 571
    ,
    
    2005-Ohio-6407
    , 
    843 N.E.2d 234
     (6th Dist.), a prisoner committed suicide while in
    custody. In affirming summary judgment in favor of the defendant, the Sixth District
    observed that prior to the suicide the prisoner was upset because of marital problems; but
    he appeared calm and rational and did not exhibit any signs he intended to harm himself.
    The court held that “although [the prisoner’s] suicide was very tragic, nothing in the
    record demonstrates obvious signs of what his intentions were or that the police failed to
    act appropriately under the circumstances presented.” Id. at 578.
    {¶21} Here, Hooks had previously told Huppert that she had thoughts of suicide in
    the past; she never told Huppert that she had present thoughts of committing suicide.
    Also, after mentioning her past intentions, Hooks mentioned her excitement regarding
    future events with her sons. In fact, while Huppert sat with Hooks on the pier, Hooks
    expressed excitement regarding watching her son play football the next day. Thus, while
    Hooks’s suicide is tragic, there is no evidence that Huppert could have anticipated her
    intention to end her life.
    {¶22} Jackson also contends that Huppert had provided officers with conflicting
    facts regarding what had occurred. However, this information is contained in the police
    reports, which were stricken from the record. Additionally, the inconsistencies are not
    sufficiently material to have changed the outcome of the trial court’s decision.
    Accordingly, Jackson’s first assigned error is overruled.
    Motion to Strike Exhibits
    {¶23} In her second assigned error, Jackson argues the trial court erred by granting
    Huppert’s motion to strike exhibits attached to her motion in opposition to summary
    judgment. The stricken exhibits included unauthenticated police reports, an affidavit and
    email from the Coroner, Erica Armstrong, Huppert’s pro se answer from the first case,
    and an unauthenticated map and directions.
    {¶24} A trial court’s decision to grant or deny a motion to strike is within its sound
    discretion and will not be overturned on appeal unless the trial court abused its discretion.
    Abernethy v. Abernethy, 8th Dist. No. 81675, 
    2003-Ohio-1528
    , at ¶ 7.
    {¶25} Civ.R. 56(C) provides an exclusive list of materials that a trial court may
    consider when deciding a motion for summary judgment.                 Those materials are
    “pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, written admissions, affidavits,
    transcripts of evidence, and written stipulations of fact.” Civ.R. 56(C). The court may
    consider documents that are not expressly mentioned in Civ.R. 56(C) if those documents
    are accompanied by a personal certification that they are genuine and are incorporated by
    reference in a properly framed affidavit pursuant to Civ.R. 56(E). Drawl v. Cornicelli,
    
    124 Ohio App.3d 562
    , 569, 
    706 N.E.2d 849
     (11th Dist.1997), citing Martin v. Cent. Ohio
    Trans. Auth., 
    70 Ohio App.3d 83
    , 89, 
    590 N.E.2d 411
     (10th Dist.1990).
    {¶26} The trial court did not abuse its discretion by striking the police reports
    because they are not listed as documents to be considered under Civ.R. 56(C). The
    police reports could have been admissible if they were properly authenticated by an
    affidavit.   However, because Jackson failed to file an affidavit the reports were
    unauthenticated and not admissible. See Stevenson v. Prettyman, 
    193 Ohio App.3d 234
    ,
    
    2011-Ohio-718
    , 
    951 N.E.2d 794
    , ¶ 25-28 (8th Dist.).
    {¶27} The trial court did not abuse its discretion by striking the coroner’s affidavit
    and email. The trial court had ordered expert reports to be produced no later than
    September 6, 2011. Jackson did not submit an expert report from the coroner. Instead,
    on November 1, 2011, she attached to her motion in opposition to summary judgment, an
    email exchange between the coroner and Jackson’s counsel. Such an email exchange is
    not an expert report. The coroner only responded to questions asked of her and did not
    detail how she came to her conclusions. Moreover, in the email, the coroner failed to
    state opinions to a reasonable degree of probability. Stinson v. England, 
    69 Ohio St.3d 451
    , 
    1994-Ohio-35
    , 
    633 N.E.2d 532
    , paragraph one of syllabus. The coroner’s affidavit
    only detailed the coroner’s qualifications, which is irrelevant once the email was stricken.
    {¶28} The trial court did not abuse its discretion by striking Huppert’s pro se
    answer to Jackson’s prior complaint because Jackson voluntarily dismissed the complaint
    without prejudice.    Once the original complaint was voluntarily dismissed without
    prejudice, it was as if the case was never filed.    Lewis v. Fairview Hosp., 
    156 Ohio App.3d 387
    , 
    2004-Ohio-1108
    , 
    806 N.E.2d 185
     (8th Dist.) Moreover, prior to the case
    being dismissed without prejudice, the trial court permitted Huppert to file an amended
    answer.   An amended pleading acts as a substitute or replacement of the original
    pleading. Widder & Widder v. Kutnick, 
    113 Ohio App.3d 616
    , 622, 
    681 N.E.2d 977
     (8th
    Dist.1996).
    {¶29} The trial court also properly struck the unauthenticated map and directions.
    These are not materials that are authorized under Civ.R. 56(C) to be considered in
    determining a motion for summary judgment; therefore, it was necessary that they be
    authenticated by affidavit.
    {¶30} Jackson also contends that Huppert’s counsel stipulated to the authenticity
    of the exhibits; however, there is no evidence of such a stipulation in the record. Even if
    the court erred in striking the exhibits, no prejudicial harm occurred. Jackson intended to
    include the police reports to show that Huppert gave inconsistent statements. However,
    none of the reports were written statements by Huppert, but were written by the officers.
    Also, the discrepancies were so minor that they would not have changed the outcome of
    the court’s decision.
    {¶31} Likewise, the inclusion of the coroner’s email would not have changed the
    outcome. Although the coroner did conclude that Hooks’s death was from “violence of
    an undetermined origin,” she explained that meant Hooks’s death was not from natural
    causes. She stated that she did not have sufficient information to classify the death as
    either homicide, accident, or suicide.     The map and directions played no central role
    regarding the issues before the trial court; therefore, their exclusion also did not affect the
    trial court’s decision. Accordingly, Jackson’s second assigned error is overruled.
    {¶32} Judgment affirmed.
    It is ordered that appellee recover from appellant his costs herein taxed.
    The court finds there were reasonable grounds for this appeal.
    It is ordered that a special mandate be sent to said court to carry this judgment into
    execution.
    A certified copy of this entry shall constitute the mandate pursuant to Rule 27 of
    the Rules of Appellate Procedure.
    PATRICIA ANN BLACKMON, ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE
    LARRY A. JONES, SR., J., and
    KATHLEEN ANN KEOUGH, J., CONCUR
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 97764

Citation Numbers: 2012 Ohio 2934

Judges: Blackmon

Filed Date: 6/28/2012

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021