Bostic v. City of Cleveland, Unpublished Decision (1-31-2002)
Bostic v. City of Cleveland, Unpublished Decision (1-31-2002)
Opinion of the Court
On September 23, 1998, Cleveland Emergency Medical Services ("EMS") paramedics Thompson and Flores responded to a 911 dispatch to Bostic's home on Crestwood Avenue and, upon arrival, were told by Bostic's sixteen-year-old daughter that a man had struck her in the face. Although she complained of some pain, the paramedics noted no observable injuries but offered to take her to the hospital to document the attack, and she accepted. Bostic, then fifty-one years old, accompanied her daughter in the ambulance to nearby St. Luke's hospital, approximately a half mile from their home. Although there is some dispute over whether City policy required her to accompany her minor daughter in the ambulance, Bostic's presence was at least in accordance with the City's custom of allowing family members to accompany patients. Bostic and her daughter rode in the rear compartment, sitting on a bench seat parallel to the patient's stretcher or gurney area, and running lengthwise along the passenger side of the vehicle. She claimed she notified the paramedics that the seat belt on her side did not work, and that Flores responded that he was aware of that, but did nothing. Flores admitted he knew that both passenger's seat belts were inoperable before they got in the ambulance, but he was not sure whether he or anyone else had reported the problem to the City prior to the accident. Thompson claimed that he did not recall whether the seat belts were operable at the time, but stated that the City's ambulances "always have problems."
As Thompson drove the ambulance on Hulda Avenue at ten to fifteen miles per hour, he suddenly stopped to avoid hitting a dog and Bostic, sitting in the forward portion of the bench, was thrown from her seat. She struck her head and face on a cabinet, fell into the stairwell area used for entering the vehicle on the passenger side, and suffered injuries to her head, mouth, arm, and hip.
In an amended complaint, Bostic alleged that the paramedics' conduct was both negligent and reckless, that the City was liable under bothrespondeat superior theories and as a common carrier, and added a claim for declaratory judgment against the Ohio Department of Human Services ("DHS") concerning that agency's subrogation rights in any compensatory damages she might receive. The City moved for summary judgment on the basis that Thompson and Flores were responding to an emergency call at the time of Bostic's injury, R.C.
The judge granted summary judgment to the City and dismissed DHS's cross-claim because it was predicated on the City's liability.
Bostic's first assignment of error states:
I. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED WHEN IT GRANTED DEFENDANTS' MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT.
We review the grant of summary judgment de novo, using the same standard as the trial judge.1 Bostic argues that the City is liable for its employees' negligence under R.C.
Bostic concedes that when the paramedics were dispatched to her home they had no duty to assess the urgent nature of the call and were responding to an emergency call when they arrived.2 She claims, however, that once the paramedics were able to assess the situation subjectively and determine that her daughter did not require urgent or immediate assistance, the call ceased to be an emergency and the subsequent drive to the hospital was not the completion of an emergency call. We disagree
Although R.C. Chapter 4765 specifically governs the provision of emergency medical services, and R.C.
R.C.
Bostic's common carrier liability argument also fails in light of the immunity granted in R.C. Chapter 2744. She asserts this claim to raise the standard of care to which she is entitled presupposing the City's lack of immunity. The argument is moot, because under R.C.
The final question is whether sufficient evidence exists to find that the paramedics' transport of Bostic in an ambulance they knew was without working seat belts constitutes wanton or willful misconduct. We find such evidence lacking because, even though the knowing disregard of safety considerations is a serious issue, the concept of wanton misconduct requires a showing that the paramedics failed "to exercise any care whatsoever * * * under circumstances in which there is great probability that harm will result * * *."6 The term has also been defined to require "an entire absence of all care for the safety of others and an indifference to consequences."7 Willful misconduct has been defined even more strictly, requiring "an actual intention to injure * * *."8
Although the paramedics were transporting Bostic in a vehicle without the benefits of seat belts, the anticipated trip was short and the ambulance was traveling at a low rate of speed. While the lack of working seat belts increased the risk of harm, the evidence is insufficient to find that it created a risk of great harm, that the risk was unreasonable, or that the paramedics exhibited an "absence of all care * * * and an indifference to consequences." We do not condone traveling without seat belts, nor do we countenance the failure to maintain working seat belts. We find only that, in these circumstances, the paramedics' transport of Bostic in an ambulance without working seat belts did not constitute wanton misconduct. The first assignment of error is overruled.
The second assignment states:
II. THE TRIAL COURT ERRED WHEN IT DENIED THE PARTIES' STIPULATION THAT PLAINTIFF MAY AMEND THE COMPLAINT.
Bostic asserts that the judge wrongfully denied her the right to file an amended complaint by stipulation and, instead, required her to formally move to amend her complaint.9 The record shows, however, that Bostic subsequently moved to amend, the motion was granted, and she has not explained how she was otherwise prejudiced by the alleged error. Because we find no prejudicial error,10 this assignment is overruled.
Judgment affirmed.
It is ordered that appellees recover of appellant their 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 Cuyahoga County Court of Common Pleas 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.
DIANE KARPINSKI, ADM. J., and FRANK D. CELEBREZZE, JR., J., CONCUR.
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