Tufts Carter v. Hymes , 2020 Ohio 3967 ( 2020 )


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  •       [Cite as Tufts Carter v. Hymes, 
    2020-Ohio-3967
    .]
    COURT OF APPEALS OF OHIO
    EIGHTH APPELLATE DISTRICT
    COUNTY OF CUYAHOGA
    DENISE TUFTS CARTER,                                     :
    ADMINISTRATOR,
    :
    Plaintiff-Appellee,                                    No. 108523
    :
    v.
    :
    OFFICER HYMES, ET AL.,
    :
    Defendants-Appellants.
    JOURNAL ENTRY AND OPINION
    JUDGMENT: AFFIRMED IN PART; REVERSED IN PART
    RELEASED AND JOURNALIZED: August 6, 2020
    Civil Appeal from the Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
    Case No. CV-18-892976
    Appearances:
    Friedman & Gilbert, Sarah Gelsomino, Jacqueline Greene,
    and Terry H. Gilbert, for appellee.
    Scott & Winters, and Joseph F. Scott, for appellants.
    MICHELLE J. SHEEHAN, J.:
    Defendants-appellants Officers Adam Hymes and Shane McNea
    appeal from a judgment of the Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas that denied
    their motion for summary judgment in an action filed by plaintiff-appTufellee
    Denise Tufts Carter (“appellee” hereafter) as the administrator of the estate of
    Romero Brown. After a careful review of the record and applicable law, we affirm
    the trial court’s judgment as to McNea but reverse the judgment as to Hymes.
    Background
    In the early morning hours of August 17, 2016, Jonathan Grier drove
    a stolen BMW through a red light at the intersection of East 116th Street and Shaker
    Boulevard. The BMW collided with a vehicle driven by Romero Brown, who died at
    the scene. Sometime before the crash, McNea and Hymes were in a zone car
    following Grier’s vehicle in an attempt to determine if there were warrants
    outstanding for the vehicle after spotting it at a closed gas station around 3:00 a.m.
    McNea drove the zone car, and Hymes was responsible for operating the zone car’s
    computer data unit and for the radio communication with the dispatch radio.
    Grier was charged with aggravated vehicular homicide, attempted
    receiving stolen property, and failing to stop after an accident. He pleaded guilty to
    all three charges and was sentenced to four years of imprisonment. He admitted he
    was high on marijuana on the night of the incident. The toxicology report shows
    Brown himself was also under the influence of marijuana.
    The Cleveland Police Department conducted an investigation of the
    incident and subsequently initiated disciplinary proceedings against both officers in
    February 2017. The two officers were charged with engaging in an unauthorized
    vehicle pursuit in violation of the department’s pursuit policy and being untruthful
    during the interview with the police department Inspection Unit. In March 2017, a
    disciplinary hearing took place before Director of Public Safety Michael McGrath.
    After the hearing, Director McGrath dismissed the charges against both officers for
    insufficient evidence. No discipline was imposed on either officer.1
    A year later, in February 2018, appellee filed the instant action as the
    administrator of the estate of Romero Brown against McNea, Hymes, and Grier,
    asserting three claims: (1) willful, wanton, reckless, and negligent conduct;
    (2) wrongful death pursuant to R.C. 2125.02; and (3) survivorship action pursuant
    to R.C. 2305.21.
    Appellants moved for summary judgment, claiming immunity
    pursuant to R.C. 2744.02. They also claimed their conduct was not the proximate
    cause of the accident leading to Brown’s death and that there was no evidence that
    Brown experienced conscious pain and suffering in support of a survivorship claim.
    The exhibits attached to their motion for summary judgment included the Police
    Field Report for the incident, an expert report, and a radio dispatch tape.
    Appellee opposed the officers’ motion for summary judgment,
    attaching as exhibits the police department’s charging letters issued to the two
    officers, the report of Sergeant Morales from the police department’s Inspection
    Unit, the transcript of the disciplinary hearing against the two officers, the GPS
    maps showing Morales’s notation for the zone car’s speed at different points on
    1 Although the charges were dismissed and the officers were not disciplined for
    their conduct for the incident, both officers received a “Letter of Reinstruction,” which
    instructed the officers that they “should have notified the Communications Control
    Section that the suspect vehicle fled from [them] at a high rate of speed.”
    East 116th Street, the Cleveland Police Department’s Pursuit Policy, and an expert
    report.
    Police Field Report Regarding the Incident
    In the Police Field Report, Hymes provided a written statement
    regarding the incident, which was signed by both Hymes and McNea. It states:
    On 8/17/2016 at 0306 hrs while assigned to z/c 4A36 in company with
    P.O. McNea #779 while patrolling the area we observed a suspicious
    vehicle [FA JMA0715] at E. 116/Kinsman. We got behind it and the
    vehicle continued traveling North on E. 116 at a normal rate of speed.
    As we ran the license plate over channel 4 the vehicle began to pick up
    speed without us attempting any type of traffic stop. While we were
    waiting for radio to give us the license plate information the vehicle
    ran the red light at E. 116 and Shaker and crashed into another vehicle
    [ROMERO]. After clearing the intersection at E. 116 and Buckeye, we
    approached the crash scene and observed two males running from the
    suspect vehicle North West through the field. We immediately
    checked the driver of the victim’s vehicle and notified radio to send
    EMS and fire [truck]. We were unable to get to the victim to perform
    first aid. * * *
    Radio Dispatch Tape
    The radio dispatch tape, attached as an exhibit to appellants’ motion
    for summary judgment, recorded Hymes’s communication with dispatch over the
    radio. He was first heard broadcasting the license plate number of the suspect
    vehicle — which lasted 18 second — and 20 seconds later he was heard reporting the
    crash at the Shaker Boulevard intersection. A total of 38 seconds elapsed between
    the moment Hymes started to broadcast the plate number and the moment Hymes
    reported the incident, and there was 20 seconds of silence between the broadcasting.
    Cleveland Police Department’s Vehicular Pursuit Policy
    Pursuant to the Cleveland Police Department’s vehicle pursuit policy,
    a vehicle pursuit “occurs when there is an active attempt by an officer in an
    authorized emergency vehicle to apprehend a suspect who is attempting to elude the
    police.” Furthermore, officers may initiate a vehicle pursuit when the suspect
    operating the vehicle “refuses to stop at the officer’s direction and flees
    apprehension for an actual or alleged (1) VIOLENT FELONY; or (2) Operating a
    Vehicle Intoxicated (OVI).” In addition, officers in a vehicle pursuit must comply
    with R.C. 4513.21 (“Horns, sirens, and warning devices”).2             Furthermore, the
    pursuing officer has the duty to notify the police department’s Communications
    Control Section that a pursuit is underway and provide the reason for the pursuit,
    the direction of travel, information about the vehicle, and the speeds involved.
    The Police Department’s Internal Investigation: Sergeant Morales’s
    Report
    Sergeant Morales of the Inspection Unit reviewed the radio dispatch
    tape and the officers’ body camera footage and interviewed the two officers.
    2   R.C. 4513.21 states, in pertinent part:
    Every emergency vehicle shall be equipped with a siren, whistle, or bell,
    capable of emitting sound audible under normal conditions from a distance
    of not less than five hundred feet and of a type approved by the director of
    public safety. Such equipment shall not be used except when such vehicle
    is operated in response to an emergency call or is in the immediate pursuit
    of an actual or suspected violator of the law, in which case the driver of the
    emergency vehicle shall sound such equipment when it is necessary to warn
    pedestrians and other drivers of the approach thereof.
    Hymes told Morales in the interview that he and his partner observed
    a suspicious vehicle at a closed gas station at East 116th Street and Kinsman Road.
    They began following the vehicle north bound on East 116th Street and ran the
    license plate. The vehicle then sped away from the officers at a high rate of speed.
    The zone car then attempted to catch up to the auto. He observed the vehicle pass
    through a red light at East 116th Street and Buckeye Road, still traveling at a high
    rate of speed. Because the suspect vehicle was traveling recklessly, the zone car
    “slowed way down” and stopped following it all together. From Buckeye Road, he
    saw the suspect vehicle, still speeding, run the red light at Shaker Boulevard
    and collide with another vehicle. When asked why they did not inform dispatch that
    the vehicle had sped away, Hymes stated that they were waiting for dispatch to give
    them back the information.
    McNea told Morales in the interview that the suspect vehicle sped
    away around Zelma George Recreation Center (around Imperial Avenue) and, when
    it sped away, he did not attempt to catch up to the suspect vehicle. McNea estimated
    he was travelling between 60-70 m.p.h. The officers did not notify dispatch when
    the vehicle fled from them “because it happened so fast.” McNea insisted they were
    not attempting to pursue the suspect vehicle but only attempted to obtain its license
    plate number. McNea also stated the lights and siren were not activated because
    “the suspect auto was too far ahead and they did not have any information on the
    radio at that point.”
    Based on the police department’s “AVL,” which is a data system
    capable of showing a zone car’s speed every ten seconds, Morales prepared a “GPS
    Map-Logs” (plaintiff’s exhibit No. 4). It showed the zone car’s speed at 32 m.p.h. at
    Kinsman Road, which increased to 46 m.p.h. at Soika Avenue, 59 m.p.h. at Parkview
    Avenue, 70 m.p.h. at Harvey Avenue, a block from Buckeye Road, and slowed down
    to 54 m.p.h. at Buckeye Road. The zone car continued at 54 m.p.h. to the crash site
    at Shaker Boulevard. McNea’s body camera, however, shows that after the officers
    arrived at the crash site, McNea was heard saying to another officer at the scene that
    “we came to a complete stop to clear the intersection at Buckeye.”            Morales
    concluded that the officers conducted an unauthorized pursuit of the BMW.
    The Disciplinary Hearing
    Morales testified at the officers’ disciplinary hearing that the officers
    should have disengaged altogether after they obtained the license plate number yet
    they continued to follow the suspect vehicle at a high rate of speed. Morales testified
    that, based on his review of the “AVL,” the zone car hit a top speed of 70 m.p.h. just
    before Buckeye Road. He opined that the officers were conducting a pursuit because
    the zone car was traveling at a high rate of speed following the suspect car. He
    faulted the officers for not informing dispatch that they were pursuing a suspect
    vehicle and also believed the officers were not completely truthful during his
    investigation of the incident.
    The Officers’ Deposition Testimony
    Hymes testified in his deposition that the suspect BMW pulled out of
    the gas station and went north at a normal speed. The officers’ vehicle followed it,
    and there were no vehicles in between. The BMW stopped at the red light at East
    116th Street and Kinsman Road. Their police vehicle stopped as well. Hymes
    attempted to enter the BMW’s Pennsylvania license plate number into the zone car’s
    computer, which was operating slowly. When Hymes was still working on getting
    more information about the plate, the light turned green. Because Hymes did not
    write down the license plate number and it would be easier for him to obtain further
    information regarding the out-of-state license plate through the radio, McNea tried
    to catch up to the BMW so that Hymes could read the license plate number over the
    radio to dispatch. Hymes testified that they wanted to check the BMW for warrants
    because it was a dangerous neighborhood. He testified:
    Once we got the license plate, we slowed down. But we kept it in sight
    waiting for radio to let us know how it came back. [We want to know:]
    [d]id it come back with any warrants or was it wanted anywhere?
    We slowed down and kept it in sight. We observed it run a red light
    at Buckeye and we stayed slow but kept it in sight. We were still
    waiting to hear back from radio. And shortly after we went through
    the intersection of Buckeye, we observed a crash at Shaker.
    McNea testified that he slowed down significantly — with the tires
    screeching — at the red light at the Buckeye intersection. He did not come to a
    complete stop at the intersection but instead proceeded slowly through it after
    “clearing” the intersection. McNea testified that he did not turn on the emergency
    lights and siren because at the time he was still waiting for information on the
    suspect vehicle from dispatch to determine whether they were going to stop the
    vehicle. McNea acknowledged that if an officer is in a vehicle pursuit, the lights and
    siren should have been activated. He testified, however, that he was not in pursuit
    of the BMW because, under the police policy, a pursuit would be allowed only for a
    violent felony and an OVI.
    The Experts
    The officers’ expert William Eschenfelder submitted an affidavit and
    attached his accident reconstruction report. He estimated that at the time of the
    crash, the zone car was approximately 1,000 feet behind the BMW, near the Buckeye
    intersection. Eschenfelder concluded that even if the lights and siren had been
    activated, it would not have alerted Brown to the hazard of the oncoming BMW.
    Plaintiff’s expert, Geoffrey Alpert, was deposed and opined that the actions of
    defendants Hymes and McNea in pursuing a suspicious vehicle at high rates of
    speed, against a red light, and without activating their emergency lights or sirens,
    was reckless, dangerous, and fell below generally accepted standards of policing.
    The trial court concluded that reasonable minds could conclude the
    defendant officers acted in a wanton or reckless manner, their conduct was the
    proximate cause of the accident, and the victim suffered pain and suffering prior to
    unconsciousness.
    This appeal follows. The officers raise two assignments of error. They
    state:
    The trial court erred when it denied Defendants-Appellants’ motion
    for summary judgment on the basis of R.C. 2744.02 immunity.
    The trial court erred when it failed to separately consider Plaintiff-
    Appellee’s claims against each of the Defendants-Appellants.
    Summary Judgment Standard
    Summary judgment is appropriate where: (1) there is no genuine issue
    as to any material fact; (2) the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of
    law; and (3) reasonable minds can come to but one conclusion, and that conclusion
    is adverse to the party against whom the motion for summary judgment is made,
    who is entitled to have the evidence construed most strongly in his or her favor.
    Harless v. Willis Day Warehousing Co., Inc., 
    54 Ohio St.2d 64
    , 66, 
    375 N.E.2d 46
    (1978); Civ.R. 56(C).
    Civ.R. 56(C) states that summary judgment shall be rendered if “the
    pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, written admissions, affidavits,
    transcripts of evidence, and written stipulations of fact, if any, timely filed in the
    action, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the
    moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” We review a trial court's
    grant of summary judgment de novo. Grafton v. Ohio Edison Co., 
    77 Ohio St.3d 102
    , 105, 
    671 N.E.2d 241
     (1996).
    On appeal, appellants only present the issue of immunity for our
    review.3 Under the first assignment of error, they argue the trial court erred when
    it denied their motion for summary judgment on the basis of R.C. 2744.02
    immunity. Under the second assignment of error, Hymes argues that, regardless of
    McNea’s liability, he, as a passenger in the zone car who was responsible for
    communicating with the radio dispatch and operating the computer data unit, did
    not act recklessly and is entitled to immunity. For ease of discussion, we address the
    two assignments of error together.
    Statutory    Political          Subdivision          Immunity          Pursuant         to
    R.C. 2744.03(A)(6)(b)
    Hymes and McNea contend that they are immune from liability under
    R.C. 2744.03(A)(6)(b) and the trial court erred in denying their motion for summary
    judgment. Ohio’s Political Subdivision Tort Liability Act (R.C. Chapter 2744)
    absolves political subdivisions employees, including police officers, of tort liability,
    subject to certain exceptions. Pursuant to R.C. 2744.03(A)(6)(b), an employee of a
    3  Although the appellee’s brief and appellants’ reply brief additionally argue the
    issue of proximate causation, we note that “[a]n appeal from a denial of summary
    judgment based on sovereign immunity is limited to the review of alleged errors in the
    portion of the trial court’s decision that denied the political subdivision the benefit of
    immunity.” Reinhold v. Univ. Hts., 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 100270, 
    2014-Ohio-1837
    ,
    ¶ 21, citing Riscatti v. Prime Properties Ltd. Partnership, 
    137 Ohio St.3d 123
    ,
    
    2013-Ohio-4530
    , 
    998 N.E.2d 437
    , ¶ 20. Our review is limited to the issue of immunity.
    See also CAC Bldg. Properties, L.L.C. v. Cleveland, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga No. 91991,
    
    2009-Ohio-1786
    , ¶ 9, fn. 1, citing under R.C. 2744.02(C) (“An order that denies a political
    subdivision or an employee of a political subdivision the benefit of an alleged immunity
    from liability as provided in this chapter or any other provision of the law is a final
    order.”).
    political subdivision is immune from liability unless the employee’s “acts or
    omissions were with malicious purpose, in bad faith, or in a wanton or reckless
    manner.”    This standard applies to law-enforcement officers as well as other
    employees of political subdivisions. See Fabrey v. McDonald Village Police Dept.,
    
    70 Ohio St.3d 351
    , 356, 
    639 N.E.2d 31
     (1994). Appellee contends the trial court
    properly denied appellants’ motion for summary judgment on immunity grounds
    pursuant to R.C. 2744.03(A)(6)(b) because the circumstances in this case create a
    genuine issue of fact as to whether the officers’ actions were reckless.
    The Ohio Supreme Court has defined reckless conduct as conduct
    “characterized by the conscious disregard of or indifference to a known or obvious
    risk of harm to another that is unreasonable under the circumstances and is
    substantially greater than negligent conduct.” Anderson v. Massillon, 
    134 Ohio St.3d 380
    , 
    2012-Ohio-5711
    , 
    983 N.E.2d 266
    , paragraph four of the syllabus.
    Recklessness “necessarily requires something more than mere negligence.” O’Toole
    v. Denihan, 
    118 Ohio St.3d 374
    , 
    2008-Ohio-2574
    , 
    889 N.E.2d 505
    , ¶ 74, citing
    Fabrey at 356.
    Appellee claims the officers engaged in a vehicle pursuit.          In
    evaluating an officer’s conduct in vehicular pursuit cases, courts have taken into
    consideration factors such as:
    the speed limit of the road, the speed the officer was traveling,
    whether the officer was traveling in the wrong lane, the time of day,
    the weather, the officer’s familiarity with the road, the extent to which
    there were other vehicles on the road, whether the officer attempted
    to pass the pursued vehicle or force it from the road, the nature and
    seriousness of the offense(s) allegedly committed by the suspect,
    whether there was a safer alternative than continuing the pursuit,
    whether the officer admitted to disregarding the consequences of his
    actions, whether the officer’s lights and sirens were activated and
    whether the political subdivision had a pursuit policy and, if so,
    whether that policy was followed.
    Gates v. Leonbruno, 
    2016-Ohio-5627
    , 
    70 N.E.3d 1110
    , ¶ 40 (8th Dist.).
    Analysis
    It is undisputed that when the two officers were patrolling in the area
    of East 116th Street and Kinsman Road in a marked Cleveland police car at
    3:00 a.m., they saw a BMW, which was later confirmed to be a stolen vehicle,
    stopped in a closed gas station near East 116th Street and Kinsman. McNea pulled
    into the gas station to investigate. As he did, the BMW pulled out and headed
    northbound on East 116th Street. The BMW began to speed, and the zone car
    followed it in increasingly high speed, without activating its emergency lights and
    siren. The BMW ran a red light in the intersection of East 116th Street and Buckeye
    Road; the zone car, slowing down at the intersection, proceeded through the red
    light as well. Moments after, the BMW collided with a vehicle driven by Brown at
    the intersection of East 116th Street and Shaker Boulevard.
    The parties dispute as to what occurred between the officers’ zone car
    exiting the gas station to follow the BMW and the latter’s collision with Brown’s
    vehicle. Appellee characterized the officers’ conduct as an unauthorized vehicle
    pursuit in violation of the police department’s pursuit policy. The officers, while
    acknowledging the high rate of speed the zone car was travelling, denied they were
    engaged in a vehicle pursuit.
    In the officers’ account, after the BMW pulled out of the gas station,
    Hymes attempted to input the BMW’s license plate number into the zone car’s
    mobile computer unit to obtain information on the BMW. However, the unit was
    operating slowly, so Hymes decided instead to radio dispatch with the license plate
    number. As the BMW sped up, the zone car followed it to allow Hymes to read the
    license plate number to dispatch. The officers then attempted to keep the BMW in
    sight while waiting for dispatch to report back. The BMW ran the red light at East
    116th Street and Buckeye Road at an excessive speed. The officers slowed down
    before the intersection but proceeded through the red light. As soon as the zone car
    traveled through the intersection, the BMW ran the red light at Shaker Boulevard
    and collided with Brown’s vehicle. The officers explained that the emergency lights
    and siren were not turned on because they were not attempting to stop the suspect
    vehicle but only tried to keep sight of the vehicle while waiting for radio dispatch to
    provide them with further information on the vehicle’s license plate.
    The officers contend that they are immune from liability because their
    conduct did not rise to the level of reckless conduct: the traffic was light; they
    followed the suspect vehicle from a distance; and the zone car slowed down to “clear”
    the intersection before it proceeded through the intersection of East 116th and
    Buckeye Road. They argue there was no evidence to support a finding of wanton or
    reckless conduct as a mere 20 seconds elapsed between the time Hymes finished
    radioing the plate information and the time officers notified dispatch of the collision.
    Appellee claims that both officers acted recklessly in engaging in an
    unauthorized pursuit and failed to activate the zone car’s lights and siren during the
    pursuit. Appellee argues that summary judgment is precluded because a reasonable
    jury could find that both officers acted in conscious disregard or indifference to a
    known risk of harm to other motorists and the indifference is unreasonable under
    the circumstances.
    Based on the record before us, viewing the evidence in the light most
    favorable to appellee, we conclude Hymes’s actions did not rise to the level of
    recklessness. However, issues of fact exist regarding McNea’s conduct in operating
    the zone car and whether a reasonable jury could find his actions were reckless.
    Officer Hymes
    It is undisputed that McNea was in control of the zone car and Hymes
    was responsible for communicating with the radio dispatch and operating the zone
    car’s computer data unit. Hymes first attempted to use the data unit to obtain
    information on the suspect vehicle. Because the unit was running slowly, he decided
    to relate the vehicle’s license number to dispatch instead. In the officers’ account of
    the event, McNea caught up to the BMW to allow Hymes to read the plate number.
    Appellee alleges Hymes asked McNea to do so. Regardless of whether this is true,
    McNea alone controlled the zone car and its speed. As to the emergency lights and
    siren, McNea testified at his deposition that, as the driver of the zone car, he was
    responsible for activating these devices and further that, while a passenger would
    have the ability to operate the lights and siren, “it’s not how we operate.”
    Appellee also argues Hymes acted recklessly when he failed to
    communicate over the radio the fact they were following a suspect vehicle that was
    travelling in excess speed, in violation of the police department’s vehicle pursuit
    policy. The police department’s pursuit policy requires the pursuing officers to
    notify the Communication Control Section that a pursuit is underway. Even if the
    zone car following the suspect vehicle is characterized as a pursuit, the Ohio
    Supreme Court has held that a violation of departmental policy alone does not
    equate to per se recklessness. Argabrite v. Neer, 
    149 Ohio St.3d 349
    , 2016-Ohio-
    8374, 
    75 N.E.3d 161
    , ¶ 21. “Recklessness requires knowledge by the actor that his
    ‘conduct will in all probability result in injury.’” 
    Id.,
     citing O’Toole, 
    118 Ohio St.3d 374
    , 
    2008-Ohio-2574
    , 
    889 N.E.2d 505
    , paragraph three of the syllabus. When
    asked at his interview with Morales why he did not inform dispatch that the vehicle
    was speeding away from the zone car, Hymes explained that he was waiting for the
    radio to return information on the plate number before further communication with
    dispatch. Indeed, the evidence shows that the BMW and Brown’s vehicle collided
    within 20 seconds of Hymes’s completion of broadcasting the BMW’s plate number
    over the radio. His failure to report the status of the zone car during this short period
    of time, even if it were a violation of the departmental policy regarding pursuit, did
    not rise to the level of conscious disregard of or indifference to a known risk that was
    unreasonable under the circumstances.
    Reviewing the evidence in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, we
    conclude that reasonable minds could only conclude that Officer Hymes’s conduct
    as a passenger of the zone car was not reckless and he was entitled to immunity
    under R.C. 2744.03(A)(6). The trial court erred in denying his motion for summary
    judgment on immunity grounds.
    Officer McNea
    Citing the zone car’s speed, appellee characterizes McNea’s conduct
    as engaging in an unauthorized vehicle pursuit. Appellee claims McNea acted
    recklessly and violated the departmental pursuit policy in pursuing the BMW and
    failed to activate the emergency lights and sirens during the pursuit.
    The Cleveland police departmental policy defines a vehicle pursuit as
    “an active attempt by an officer in an authorized emergency vehicle to apprehend a
    suspect who is attempting to elude the police.” Sergeant Morales characterized
    McNea’s operation of the zone car in high speed following the suspect vehicle as a
    pursuit and arguably operated the vehicle at speeds in excess of safe limits relative
    to the conditions. McNea denied he was in pursuit of the suspect vehicle and
    explained that he was only keeping up with the vehicle while waiting for dispatch to
    return information on the suspect vehicle’s plate. As such, there is an issue of fact
    as to whether McNea’s operation of the zone car constituted an unauthorized pursuit
    in violation of departmental policy and in a reckless manner. While a violation of a
    departmental policy enacted for the safety of the public is not per se wanton or
    reckless conduct, it may be relevant to determining the culpability of a course of
    conduct. Anderson, 
    134 Ohio St.3d 380
    , 
    2012-Ohio-5711
    , 
    983 N.E.2d 266
    , at
    paragraph five of the syllabus.
    McNea testified that that he was not in pursuit of the BMW but only
    speeding up to catch up to the vehicle in order to allow Hymes to read its license
    plate. However, it appears from the AVL data that McNea continued to drive in
    excessive speed to follow the suspect vehicle even after Hymes obtained the license
    plate number, reaching a top speed of 70 mph before slowing down at the Buckeye
    Road intersection. While McNea testified that he came to a screeching stop at the
    red light at Buckeye Road, the AVL data shows the zone car’s speed at 54 mph at
    that intersection. He did not activate the emergency lights and siren to warn the
    other motorists of a speeding police vehicle following a fleeing vehicle, whether or
    not it is characterized as a pursuit.
    Whether a political subdivision employee acted in a wanton or
    reckless manner under R.C. 2744.03(A)(6)(b) is generally a question of fact for the
    jury. Fabrey, 70 Ohio St.3d at 356, 
    639 N.E.2d 31
    ; Miller v. Hace, 8th Dist.
    Cuyahoga No. 102500, 
    2015-Ohio-3591
    , ¶ 17. See also Reynolds v. Oakwood, 
    38 Ohio App.3d 125
    , 127, 
    528 N.E.2d 578
     (2d Dist.1987) (the line between reckless
    conduct and ordinary negligence is often a fine one depending on the particular facts
    of a case and therefore it is generally recognized that such issue is for the jury to
    decide). Given the state of the evidence regarding Officer McNea’s conduct, we
    conclude his following a suspect vehicle at a high speed, coupled with his lack of use
    of the emergency lights and siren to warn the other motorists, created a genuine
    issue of material fact as to whether his conduct was reckless. 
    Id.
     at paragraph two
    of the syllabus (although the use of the emergency lights and siren is a significant
    factor on the issue of whether the police officer acted in a willful or wanton manner,
    it is to be considered in conjunction with all the other circumstances). See also
    Hardesty v. Alcantara, 
    2015-Ohio-4591
    , 
    48 N.E.3d 127
    , ¶ 49 (8th Dist.) (the trial
    court properly found that genuine issues of material fact remained regarding
    whether an officer’s actions during a pursuit of a suspect vehicle were wanton and
    reckless under R.C. 2744.03(A)(6)(b).)       Viewing the evidence in a light most
    favorable to the appellee, reasonable minds could disagree on whether Officer
    McNea acted in a reckless manner in his operation of the zone car under the
    circumstances of this case, and therefore, the trial court properly declined to invade
    the province of the jury and deferred to the jury for a resolution of this issue.
    The first assignment of error is sustained as to Officer Hymes and
    overruled as to Officer McNea. The second assignment of error is sustained.
    The trial court’s judgment as to Officer McNea is affirmed.          Its
    judgment as to Officer Hymes is reversed. The case is remanded to the trial court
    for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    It is ordered that appellant McNea and appellee share the costs herein taxed.
    The court finds there were reasonable grounds for this appeal.
    It is ordered that a special mandate issue out of this court directing the
    common pleas 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.
    _____________________________
    MICHELLE J. SHEEHAN, JUDGE
    EILEEN A. GALLAGHER, J., CONCURS;
    MARY J. BOYLE, P.J., CONCURS IN PART AND DISSENTS IN PART (WITH
    SEPARATE OPINION ATTACHED)
    MARY J. BOYLE, P.J., CONCURRING IN PART AND DISSENTING IN PART:
    I agree with the majority to affirm the trial court’s denial of summary
    judgment to defendant-appellant, Officer Shane McNea. I disagree, however, that
    we should reverse the trial court’s denial of summary judgment to defendant-
    appellant, Officer Adam Hymes. I would affirm the trial court’s decision in its
    entirety. I therefore concur in part and dissent in part.
    I. Procedural History and Factual Background
    In February 2018, plaintiff-appellee, Denise Tufts Carter, as the
    administrator of the estate of Romero Brown, filed an action against defendants
    alleging claims of wanton and reckless conduct, wrongful death, and survivorship.
    She also brought claims against Jonathan Grier, who was driving the vehicle that
    ran a red light at the intersection of East 116th Street and Shaker Boulevard, crashing
    into a vehicle driven by Brown, who died at the scene.
    In March 2019, Officers McNea and Hymes moved for summary
    judgment. Tufts Carter opposed. The following facts come from the opposing
    summary judgment motions.
    In the early morning hours of August 17, 2016, Officers McNea and
    Hymes were on routine patrol in a marked police car. Their shift began at 9:00 p.m.
    and ended at 7:0o a.m. Officer McNea was driving, and Officer Hymes was the
    passenger. Officer Hymes explained in his deposition that as the passenger, he was
    responsible for all radio communications and completing the paperwork required
    for their shift.
    Around 3:00 a.m., the officers were driving near East 116th Street and
    Kinsman Road in Cleveland, Ohio, when they noticed a grey BMW parked at a gas
    station. They believed the car to be suspicious because the gas station was closed
    and there were no other cars in the parking lot. The officers began to pull into the
    gas station to investigate, but as they did, the driver of the BMW, later identified to
    be Grier, pulled out and headed north on East 116th Street. The officers followed.
    The officers stated that the BMW stopped at a red light on East 116th
    Street at Kinsman Road, and when it did, they pulled immediately behind it. Officer
    Hymes began to run the license plate at the red light and noticed that the vehicle had
    a Pennsylvania license plate. According to Officer Hymes, there were a few “drop
    down screens” in the mobile data unit that you had to access before you could enter
    an out-of-state license plate so he was unable to enter the plate number into the
    mobile system before the light turned green. He also stated that the mobile data
    unit appeared to be “slow or frozen.”
    When the light turned green, the BMW continued driving north on
    East 116th Street. The officers followed. Officer Hymes had not written the BMW’s
    license plate down, so he was still trying to read the plate number. According to
    Officer McNea, they drove behind the BMW at a “normal rate of speed” until the
    BMW sped away from them. Officer McNea stated that just as the BMW began to
    accelerate and speed away, Officer Hymes was able to read the license plate number
    to a dispatch operator.
    According to Officer Hymes, however, the BMW “began to accelerate”
    when the light turned green at the intersection of East 116th Street and Kinsman
    Road. Officer Hymes testified in his deposition that he “had Officer McNea attempt
    to catch up to the vehicle so we could get the license plate and run it over the radio.”
    Officer Hymes stated that he radioed dispatch with the BMW’s license plate number
    while they were near a recreation center located at East 116th Street and Parkview
    Avenue.
    The officers followed the BMW to keep it within their line of sight until
    they heard back from dispatch regarding information on the license plate. Officer
    McNea stated that while following the BMW, they saw it run a red light at the
    intersection of East 116th Street and Buckeye Road. By the time the officers had
    almost reached the intersection of East 116th Street and Buckeye Road, they saw the
    BMW run another red light at Shaker Boulevard and crash into Brown’s vehicle.
    Officer McNea stated in his deposition that when they saw the crash,
    he turned the zone car’s overhead lights on, but he could not recall if he turned the
    sirens on as well. Officer McNea explained that he turned the zone car’s overhead
    lights on to alert the public to proceed with caution around the scene of the accident.
    Officer McNea agreed in his deposition that once the BMW was speeding, he could
    have turned on his overhead lights and sirens and initiated a traffic stop.
    Officer Hymes wrote in the police report that they followed the
    suspect vehicle on East 116th Street “at a normal rate of speed.” He stated in the
    report that as “we ran the license plate” to dispatch, “the vehicle began to pick up
    speed without us attempting any type of traffic stop.” He further stated, “While we
    were waiting for radio to give us the license plate information, the vehicle ran the
    red light at E. 116 and Shaker and crashed into another vehicle [ROMERO]. After
    clearing the intersection at E. 116 and Buckeye, we approached the crash scene[.]”
    Officer McNea signed the incident report that Officer Hymes wrote.
    Sergeant Michael Morales of the Cleveland Police Department
    Inspections Unit reviewed the incident. He reviewed the radio dispatch recordings
    and the body camera footage from both officers. He also interviewed Officers
    McNea and Hymes.
    In his administrative interview, Officer McNea stated that when he
    reached the red light at Buckeye Road, he slowed down and almost came to a
    complete stop to “clear the intersection.” After he made sure it was safe to do so, he
    slowly “rolled” through the intersection. Officer McNea denied that he tried to catch
    up to the BMW even though he admitted he got up to “60 to 70 m.p.h.” while
    following the vehicle. Officer McNea stated that he did not call dispatch to tell them
    that the BMW had sped away from them at a high rate of speed because “it happened
    so fast.” When asked if he was familiar with the department’s pursuit policy, Officer
    McNea said that he was but that they “weren’t on a pursuit.”
    Officer Hymes stated in his administrative interview that when the
    light changed green at East 116th Street and Kinsman Drive, the BMW accelerated
    and began to pull away from their zone car. According to Officer Hymes, they
    accelerated to try to catch up to it so he could call the license plate in to dispatch.
    After he called in the license plate, he said that is when the BMW took off at a high
    rate of speed. Officer Hymes stated that when the saw the BMW take off, they
    “immediately slowed way down” and “stopped following the BMW altogether.”
    When asked why they did not tell dispatch that the vehicle took off at a high rate of
    speed, Officer Hymes explained that they did not have a chance to do so and because
    they were waiting for dispatch to get back to them about the license plate. Officer
    Hymes said they were travelling above the speed limit, but he did not know how fast
    they were going. When told they got up to 70 m.p.h., Officer Hymes responded that
    they were “trying to catch up to get the plate.” Officer Hymes also stated that they
    got “down to 15 m.p.h. around Buckeye” Road. He said that he felt they slowed “way
    down at Buckeye.” After the crash, they learned the BMW was stolen.
    Sergeant Morales reported that both officers’ body camera recordings
    show that they did not stop their zone car at Buckeye Road and that they proceeded
    through the intersection at Buckeye Road travelling at a high rate of speed. Officer
    McNea can be heard telling another officer on his body camera footage that he came
    to a complete stop at the intersection of East 116th Street and Buckeye Road.
    Sergeant Morales prepared GPS map logs, which showed tracking
    from the officer’s zone car that captured its speed every ten seconds. When the
    officers began following the BMW just after the intersection of East 116th and
    Kinsman Drive, they were travelling at 32 m.p.h. Ten seconds later, at Soika Avenue,
    they were travelling 46 m.p.h. Ten seconds after Soika Avenue, they were travelling
    59 m.p.h. And ten seconds after that, they were travelling 70 m.p.h. just after
    passing Harvey Avenue, which is the street just before Buckeye Road. Finally, just
    after passing Buckeye Road, they were travelling at 54 m.p.h. and continued
    travelling at that speed almost until they reached the crash at Shaker Boulevard.
    According to the radio dispatch recording, Officer Hymes’s report of
    the license plate number lasted 18 seconds. Twenty seconds later, Officer Hymes
    reported the crash. Thus, approximately 38 seconds passed from the time Officer
    Hymes first called dispatch until he reported the crash.
    The Cleveland Police Department’s “Vehicle Pursuits” policy defines
    “vehicular pursuit” as “an active attempt by an officer in an authorized emergency
    vehicle to apprehend a suspect who is attempting to elude the police.” The policy
    states that officers may initiate a vehicle pursuit when the suspect operating the
    vehicle refuses to stop at the officer’s direction and flees apprehension for a violent
    felony or operating a vehicle while intoxicated. The officers are also required to
    “immediately notify” the Communications Control Section that “a pursuit is
    underway” and “provide the reason for the pursuit, direction of travel, description
    of the vehicle, license plate number, number of occupants, and the speeds involved.”
    Sergeant Morales concluded that Officers McNea and Hymes
    conducted an unauthorized pursuit of the BMW. He also found that they were
    untruthful in the investigation. Sergeant Morales recommended disciplinary action
    be taken against the officers for violating Cleveland Police Department’s Vehicle
    Pursuit Policy and Emergency Response Driving Policy. Sergeant Morales further
    recommended that the officers be disciplined for not telling the truth and for
    unethical conduct in violation of the department’s Manual of Rules and Regulations
    and Manual for Rules of Conduct.
    In February 2017, the city of Cleveland held a predisciplinary hearing
    against the officers. After the hearing, the city’s Director of Public Safety Michael
    McGrath dismissed the charges against Officers McNea and Hymes. Although the
    charges were dismissed, both officers received a “Letter of Reinstruction,” informing
    them that they should have notified the Communications Control Section that the
    suspect vehicle fled from them at a high rate of speed.
    An expert for Tufts Carter, Geoffrey Alpert, opined that Officers
    McNea and Hymers were involved in a “de-facto pursuit,” which was against the
    police department’s vehicle pursuit policy because Grier had not committed a
    violent felony or operated a vehicle while intoxicated. Further, the policy states that
    the police officers have a duty to notify the department’s Communications Control
    Center when they are pursuing a vehicle and to provide reasons for the pursuit, the
    direction of travel, information about the vehicle, and the speeds involved, which
    Officers McNea and Hymes failed to do. Alpert also concluded that Officer McNea
    drove the police car recklessly through the red light at the intersection of East 116th
    Street and Buckeye Road without their overhead lights and sirens activated and that
    both officers were untruthful in their reporting of what occurred. Alpert further
    concluded that the officers’ actions in pursuing the BMW at high rates of speed
    without their lights and sirens activated were “reckless, dangerous, and fell below
    generally accepted standards of policing.”
    The police officer’s expert, William Eschenfelder, opined that the zone
    car was approximately 1,000 feet away from the crash when it occurred.
    Eschenfelder stated that because the offers were so far away from the intersection,
    even if the officers had activated their overhead lights and sirens, the lights and
    sirens would not have alerted Brown that the BMW was speeding through the
    intersection.
    The trial court denied Officers McNea and Hymes’s summary
    judgment motion, and they appealed, asserting that they are entitled to immunity
    under R.C. 2744.03(A)(6)(b) as a matter of law.
    II. Summary Judgment Standard
    We review an appeal from summary judgment under a de novo
    standard. Baiko v. Mays, 
    140 Ohio App.3d 1
    , 10, 
    746 N.E.2d 618
     (8th Dist.2000).
    Accordingly, we afford no deference to the trial court’s decision and independently
    review the record to determine whether summary judgment is appropriate.
    Northeast Ohio Apartment Assn. v. Cuyahoga Cty. Bd. of Commrs., 
    121 Ohio App.3d 188
    , 192, 
    699 N.E.2d 534
     (8th Dist.1997).
    Civ.R. 56(C) provides that before summary judgment may be granted,
    a court must determine that (1) there are no genuine issues of material fact
    remaining to be litigated, (2) the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of
    law, and (3) it appears from the evidence that reasonable minds can come to but one
    conclusion, and viewing the evidence most strongly in favor of the nonmoving party,
    that conclusion is adverse to the nonmoving party. State ex rel. Duganitz v. Ohio
    Adult Parole Auth., 
    77 Ohio St.3d 190
    , 191, 
    672 N.E.2d 654
     (1996).
    The moving party carries an initial burden of setting forth specific
    facts which demonstrate his or her entitlement to summary judgment. Dresher v.
    Burt, 
    75 Ohio St.3d 280
    , 292-293, 
    662 N.E.2d 264
     (1996). If the movant fails to
    meet this burden, summary judgment is not appropriate, but if the movant does
    meet this burden, summary judgment will be appropriate only if the nonmovant fails
    to establish the existence of a genuine issue of material fact. Id. at 293.
    III. Immunity for an Employee of a Political Subdivision
    Police officers are political subdivision employees.            Fabrey v.
    McDonald Village Police Dept., 
    70 Ohio St.3d 351
    , 356, 
    639 N.E.2d 31
     (1994).
    Employees of a political subdivision are immune from liability unless “[t]he
    employee’s acts or omissions were with malicious purpose, in bad faith, or in a
    wanton or reckless manner[.]” R.C. 2744.03(A)(6)(b).
    In this case, Tufts Carter does not assert that Officers McNea and
    Hymes acted with malicious purpose or in bad faith. Thus, the only issue in this
    appeal is whether there are genuine issues of material fact remaining as to whether
    the officers’ acts or omissions were wanton or reckless.
    In Anderson v. Massillon, 
    134 Ohio St.3d 380
    , 
    2012-Ohio-5711
    , 
    983 N.E.2d 266
    , the Ohio Supreme Court set forth the meaning of the terms wanton and
    reckless conduct. The Supreme Court held:
    Wanton misconduct is the failure to exercise any care toward those to
    whom a duty of care is owed in circumstances in which there is great
    probability that harm will result. (Hawkins v. Ivy, 
    50 Ohio St.2d 114
    ,
    
    363 N.E.2d 367
     (1977), approved and followed.)
    Reckless conduct is characterized by the conscious disregard of or
    indifference to a known or obvious risk of harm to another that is
    unreasonable under the circumstances and is substantially greater
    than negligent conduct. (2 Restatement of the Law 2d, Torts, Section
    500 (1965), adopted.)
    Anderson at paragraphs two and three of the syllabus.
    The officers argue that they are immune from liability because there
    was no evidence that they were wanton and reckless. Officer Hymes maintains that
    he simply relayed information over the police dispatch radio in accordance with his
    duties as the passenger in the zone car. Officer Hymes further contends that he
    could not have been reckless because only a “mere 20 seconds elapsed between the
    time [he] first finished relaying the information and Hymes’s subsequent broadcast
    to notify dispatch that the BMW had been involved in an accident.”
    With respect to Officer McNea, he contends that he did not actively
    pursue the BMW as defined by Cleveland’s departmental pursuit policy, which states
    that pursuit is “an active attempt by an officer in an authorized emergency vehicle
    to apprehend a suspect who is attempting to elude the police.” He further contends
    that the vehicle only got up to 70 m.p.h., traffic conditions were light, and he
    followed the vehicle from a distance of about 1,000 feet. He also asserts that he
    slowed the zone car as he neared the intersection of East 116th Street and Buckeye
    Road to “clear” the intersection. Officer McNea maintains that “[t]here is simply no
    evidence to support a finding of wanton and reckless behavior in the 20 seconds that
    elapsed between the time the officers radioed the license information to dispatch
    and the time the officers subsequently notified dispatch that the suspect vehicle had
    been involved in a collision.”
    Both officers rely heavily on the fact that only 20 seconds elapsed from
    the time they called in the license plate and the time of the crash. However, they
    followed the BMW for over 38 seconds before the crash (because they followed it for
    a short time before Officer Hymes was able to call in the license plate). And in those
    38-plus seconds, Officer McNea drove from a stopped position to 70 m.p.h. when he
    “followed” the BMW, without activating the zone car’s overhead lights and sirens.
    Although there was evidence that traffic was light, the speed limit was only 25 m.p.h.
    on East 116th Street. Further, the officers did not have reasonable suspicion or
    probable cause to initiate a traffic stop when they first began following the BMW out
    of the gas station, but they certainly did when the BMW violated several traffic laws.
    These factors create genuine issues of material fact as to whether the officers were
    wanton and reckless.
    Further, Officer Hymes, as the passenger officer in the zone car, was
    in charge of communications. Reasonable minds could differ as to whether Officer
    Hymes should have followed the department’s pursuit policy and notified the
    communications center that the BMW sped away from them at a high rate of speed
    and informed the communications center that their zone car also reached speeds of
    70 m.p.h. when they were “following” the BMW. Although violation of departmental
    policies and procedures does not amount to per se reckless and wanton conduct, it
    “may be relevant to determine the culpability of a course of conduct.” Anderson,
    
    134 Ohio St.3d 380
    , 
    2012-Ohio-5711
    , 
    983 N.E.2d 266
    , at paragraph five of the
    syllabus. Further, despite the fact that Officer McNea testified at his deposition that
    he was in charge of activating the overhead lights and sirens in the zone car because
    he was driving, reasonable minds could differ as to whether Officer Hymes was
    wanton or reckless in failing to activate the lights and sirens when their vehicle
    reached very high speed while following the BMW in a 25 m.p.h. speed zone.
    The officers cite to Gates v. Leonbruno, 8th Dist. Cuyahoga
    No. 103738, 
    2016-Ohio-5627
    , in support of their argument that they are immune
    from liability. They claim that in Gates, this court held that the officer’s conduct was
    not wanton and reckless when the officer travelled at speeds over 100 m.p.h., traffic
    was light, and the officer remained 800 to 1,000 feet behind the suspect vehicle.
    Although Officers McNea and Hymes are correct that we found the officer in Gates
    to be immune from liability, Gates is distinguishable. The pursuit in Gates occurred
    on the highway, where the speed limit is much higher than it was in the present case.
    Further, the officer in Gates activated his overhead lights and sirens when he began
    the pursuit of the fleeing vehicle and immediately reported the pursuit to dispatch.
    Officers McNea and Hymes further cite to Shalkhauser v. Medina,
    
    148 Ohio App.3d 41
    , 
    772 N.E.2d 129
     (9th Dist.2002), in support of their argument
    that they are immune from liability. They argue that the court in Shalkhauser held
    that the officer was immune from liability despite the pursuit of a vehicle because
    traffic was light and the evidence showed that the officer slowed for stop signs and
    railroad crossings.    Again, Shalkhauser is distinguishable.        The officer in
    Shalkhauser activated his overhead lights and sirens at the beginning of the pursuit,
    just after seeing the vehicle veer left of center and learning that the owner of the
    vehicle had an outstanding arrest warrant. Further,
    [t]he Medina Police Department had a fresh pursuit policy in effect at
    the time of the pursuit. In compliance with this policy, Officer Getto
    established radio communications with his shift commanding officer,
    Sergeant Horton. Also pursuant to the policy, Sergeant Horton
    assumed a supervisory role over the pursuit via radio communications
    with Officer Getto. Other members of the Medina Police Department
    joined Officer Getto in the pursuit of Leach in response to Sergeant
    Horton’s request, and county sheriff’s officers also rendered
    assistance.
    Id. at ¶ 4.
    Thus, Shalkhauser does not support Officers McNea’s and Hymes’s
    position that they are immune from liability. Moreover, unlike the officer in
    Shalkhauser who slowed for stop signs and railroad crossings, the evidence
    regarding whether Officer McNea sufficiently slowed the zone car through a red light
    at East 116th and Buckeye Road is in dispute.
    Accordingly, it is my view that Tufts Carter presented evidence that
    established genuine issues of material fact with respect to both Officers McNea and
    Hymes. I would therefore affirm the trial court’s denial of summary judgment to the
    officers.