[Cite as Colville v. Ohio Dept. of Rehab. & Corr., 2016-Ohio-7954.]
KEVIN WAYNE COLVILLE Case No. 2015-00711
Plaintiff Magistrate Gary Peterson
v. DECISION OF THE MAGISTRATE
OHIO DEPARTMENT OF
REHABILITATION AND CORRECTION
Defendant
{¶1} Plaintiff brought this action alleging negligence. The issues of liability and
damages were bifurcated and the case proceeded to trial on the issue of liability.
{¶2} At all times relevant, plaintiff was an inmate in the custody and control of
defendant at the Pickaway Correctional Institution (PCI). Plaintiff testified that around
noon on February 27, 2015, after returning to the D1 housing unit from the chow hall, he
slipped and fell on a stairway causing injuries. Plaintiff stated that at that time he was
assigned to the D1 housing unit, which is the lower level of the D dormitory. Plaintiff
added that he had been assigned to the housing unit for approximately one month prior
to this incident. Plaintiff explained that D1 is lower than the ground level and that as a
result, in order to enter or exit D1, all 250 inmates are required to either ascend or
descend the 10-12 steps of this particular stairway. Plaintiff further added that there is
no structural overhang for weather protection above the entrance to D1 and no handrail
for use on the stairway.
{¶3} Plaintiff testified that there is a drain at the bottom of the stairway on the
landing. According to plaintiff, water collects at the bottom of the stairway on the
landing due to a slow drain; however, plaintiff acknowledged that prior to February 27,
2015, he never wrote an informal complaint resolution regarding the drainage issue.
Plaintiff asserted that the drain has always caused problems and that people constantly
Case No. 2015-00711 -2- DECISION
complain about the drain. Plaintiff added that in the six months preceding the fall while
he was at PCI, he never noticed anyone perform maintenance work on the drain.
{¶4} Plaintiff testified that it snowed a couple days before he fell. Plaintiff
explained that it subsequently warmed up but that on February 27, 2015, the water
froze due to the cool and clear weather. Plaintiff added that an inmate maintenance
crew usually would clear the stairway of snow, and salt any existing ice, but no one
salted the stairway the day that he fell. Plaintiff testified that on February 27, 2015, the
stairway had an accumulation of snow and ice. Plaintiff described the stairway as slick
and described the landing as a sheet of ice. Plaintiff acknowledged that the snowy and
icy condition of the stairway was unchanged between the time he proceeded to the
chow hall and when he returned.
{¶5} Plaintiff testified that as he returned from the chow hall to D1, he along with
a group of several other inmates, began to descend the stairway. According to plaintiff,
as he was descending the stairway a corrections officer called out causing him to turn in
the direction of the corrections officer. Plaintiff testified that as he continued down the
stairway while looking in the direction of the corrections officer, he slipped and fell to the
bottom of the stairway where he slipped a second time on the landing. Plaintiff stated
that he attempted to brace himself with his right arm but that he heard a “rip” in his arm.
{¶6} Plaintiff reported that after he fell he went to his bed but felt something was
wrong with his arm. Plaintiff removed his coat and discovered that his bicep had moved
to his shoulder. Plaintiff was escorted to the infirmary where he remained for more than
five hours until he was subsequently transported to an outside hospital where he
underwent surgery to repair his torn bicep.
{¶7} Larry Parker, a maintenance superintendent at PCI, testified that he has
been employed by the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Correction (DRC) for 26
years. Prior to working at PCI, Parker worked as the maintenance superintendent at the
Dayton Correctional Institution and as a stationary engineer and maintenance repair
Case No. 2015-00711 -3- DECISION
worker at the Ross Correctional Institution. Parker testified that his duties as a
maintenance superintendent include overseeing all maintenance projects, work orders,
and overall maintenance of the institution. Parker began working at PCI in January
2015.
{¶8} Parker testified that in February 2015, PCI employed five or six maintenance
repair workers. Parker explained that the maintenance repair workers are assigned to
specific buildings and also receive assignments as needed. Parker asserted that the
maintenance repair workers continuously inspect the buildings to which they are
assigned as they perform their daily tasks.
{¶9} Parker testified that work orders are used to inform the maintenance staff
regarding necessary maintenance and that any staff member may submit a
maintenance request either in writing in the form of a work order or through a telephone
call to the maintenance department. Parker explained that a work order is a form that a
staff member completes to report a maintenance issue. The form is then sent to the
maintenance department and assigned to a maintenance worker to perform the work.
Parker asserted that the corrections officers are very active about reporting issues that
need to be fixed.
{¶10} Parker testified that all maintenance requests are logged in a database.
Parker reported that there were no maintenance requests for a drainage issue at the
entryway of D1 during January and February 2015. Parker authenticated a copy of all
such requests for the months of January and February 2015 (Defendant’s Exhibit A).
Parker acknowledged that he did not search the database for maintenance requests
prior to January 2015 and that he has no knowledge of whether any maintenance
repairs occurred on the drain prior to January 2015. Finally, Parker acknowledged that
D1 was built sometime in the early 1900s.
{¶11} In order for plaintiff to prevail upon his claim of negligence, he must prove
by a preponderance of the evidence that defendant owed him a duty, that defendant’s
Case No. 2015-00711 -4- DECISION
acts or omissions resulted in a breach of that duty, and that the breach proximately
caused him injury. Armstrong v. Best Buy Co., Inc., 99 Ohio St.3d 79, 2003-Ohio-2573,
¶ 8, citing Menifee v. Ohio Welding Prods., Inc., 15 Ohio St.3d 75, 77 (1984).
{¶12} In general, a possessor of land has no duty to protect an invitee from
natural accumulations of ice and snow on his property. Brinkman v. Ross, 68 Ohio
St.3d 82, 83 (1993). Implicit in this rule is the rationale that such accumulations are so
open and obvious that invitees can be expected to protect themselves from the danger
they present. Dean v. Dept. of Rehab. & Corr., 10th Dist. Franklin No. 97API12-1614,
1998 Ohio App. LEXIS 4451 (Sept. 24, 1998). Essentially, “an invitee who chooses to
traverse a natural accumulation of ice or snow is generally presumed to have assumed
the risk of his or her action to the degree that no duty exists on the premises owner.” Id.
However, inmates incarcerated in a state penal institution are not afforded the status of
a traditional “invitee” and are not always free, as an invitee would be, to refrain from
traversing the accumulation of ice and snow and so they cannot be said to assume the
risk of doing so. Id; see also May v. Ohio Dept. of Rehab. & Corr., 10th Dist. Franklin
No. 00AP-1327, 2001 Ohio App. LEXIS 2859 (recognizing that an inmate who slipped
and fell on a natural accumulation of ice or snow had no opportunity to refrain from
using the assigned path); Fields v. Ohio Dept. of Rehab. & Corr, Ct. of Cl. No. 2010-
12281 (June 7, 2012). Rather, in the context of the custodial relationship between the
state and its inmates, the state has a duty to exercise reasonable care to prevent
prisoners in its custody from being injured by dangerous conditions about which the
state knows or should know. Moore v. Ohio Dept. of Rehab. & Corr., 89 Ohio App.3d
107, 112 (10th Dist.1993); Cordell v. Ohio Dept. of Rehab. & Corr., 10th Dist. Franklin
No. 08AP-749, 2009-Ohio-1555; McCoy v. Engle, 42 Ohio App.3d 204, 207-208 (10th
Dist.1987); Dean, supra.
{¶13} With regard to notice, “[n]otice may be actual or constructive, the distinction
being the manner in which the notice is obtained rather than the amount of information
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obtained.” Jenkins v. Ohio Dept. of Rehab & Corr., 10th Dist. Franklin No. 12AP-787,
2013-Ohio-5106, ¶ 12; Watson v. Ohio Dept. of Rehab. & Corr., 10th Dist. Franklin No.
11AP-606, 2012-Ohio-1017, ¶ 9. “Whenever the trier of fact is entitled to find from
competent evidence that information was personally communicated to or received by
the party, the notice is actual. Constructive notice is that notice which the law regards
as sufficient to give notice and is regarded as a substitute for actual notice.” Hughes v.
Ohio Dept. of Rehab. & Corr., 10th Dist. Franklin No. 09AP-1052, 2010-Ohio-4736,
¶ 14. “To support an inference of constructive notice, a plaintiff may submit evidence
that the condition existed for such a length of time that the owner or its agent’s failure to
warn against it or remove it resulted from their failure to exercise ordinary care.”
Jenkins at ¶ 12.
{¶14} Upon review of the evidence, the magistrate finds that on February 27,
2015, while descending a stairway to enter the D1 dormitory building at PCI, plaintiff
slipped on an accumulation of ice and snow, fell to the landing, and slipped a second
time as a result of ice that had formed on the landing. Plaintiff sustained injuries as a
result of the fall. Neither the ice on the stairway nor the landing had been salted on
February 27, 2015.
{¶15} The magistrate further finds that plaintiff failed to prove that defendant had
actual or constructive notice that the stairway posed an unreasonable risk of harm to
plaintiff due to ice and snow on the stairway. Plaintiff did not offer evidence that
defendant was aware of the ice and snow on the stairway. Indeed, plaintiff did not
inform anyone that ice had formed on the stairway or landing on February 27, 2015,
even though plaintiff was aware that the stairway was slick and had previously used the
stairway to exit D1 on his way to chow earlier that morning. Furthermore, it was
established that it snowed several days prior to February 27, 2015, followed by a
pattern of warm weather causing the snow to melt. The water then froze on the
stairway and landing of the entryway into D1. Accordingly, the ice and snow
Case No. 2015-00711 -6- DECISION
accumulation on the stairway and landing did not exist for such a length of time to
support a finding that defendant had constructive notice of the condition of the stairway.
{¶16} The magistrate also finds that plaintiff failed to prove that defendant had
actual or constructive notice of a poorly functioning drain such that ice continually
accumulated at the landing. Plaintiff did not present evidence that defendant had actual
knowledge that the drain did not function properly. Indeed, plaintiff failed to testify to
any instance where defendant was made aware that the drain functioned improperly
such that water accumulated on the landing. While plaintiff testified that everyone was
generally aware of the poorly functioning drain and that everyone complained about the
drain, plaintiff acknowledged on cross-examination that he had only resided in D1 for
approximately one month preceding the fall. Plaintiff’s vague testimony regarding a
general knowledge of a poorly functioning drain is insufficient to support a finding of
actual or constructive notice. Additionally, even assuming that the drain did not function
properly, plaintiff only presented evidence that the condition existed for at most one
month preceding his fall—the time period in which plaintiff actually resided in D1. The
magistrate finds that such evidence is not sufficient to support a finding of actual or
constructive notice.
{¶17} Plaintiff does not argue or allege that the poor drainage system created an
unnatural accumulation of ice and snow. Nevertheless, the magistrate finds that plaintiff
failed to present credible evidence that defendant was actively negligent in permitting or
creating an unnatural accumulation of ice and snow. Wiggins v. Moose Lodge #11,
10th Dist. Franklin No. 15AP-896, 2016-Ohio-954.
{¶18} Finally, the magistrate finds that the proximate cause of plaintiff’s fall on the
stairway on February 27, 2015, was his own failure to take reasonable care for his own
safety. Forester v. Ohio Dept. of Rehab. & Corr., 10th Dist. Franklin No. 11AP-366,
2011-Ohio-6296, ¶ 8 (an inmate is required to use reasonable care to ensure his or her
own safety). Indeed, plaintiff acknowledged that he was aware of the condition of the
Case No. 2015-00711 -7- DECISION
stairway; however, plaintiff diverted his attention away from the stairway and in the
direction of a corrections officer while he continued to descend the stairway.
Furthermore, plaintiff did not demonstrate that the hazard entirely precluded his route of
travel. Additionally, plaintiff traversed the stairway multiple times every day and
ascended the stairway shortly before he fell. Accordingly, plaintiff knew of the open and
obvious hazard yet failed to take reasonable care for his own safety. Mayle v. Ohio
Dept. of Rehab. & Corr., 10th Dist. Franklin No. 09AP-541, 2010-Ohio-2774, ¶ 29 (an
inmate’s inability to select his route of travel does not mean the hazard was not an open
and obvious condition); see also Cordell at ¶ 9. Moreover, plaintiff failed to establish
that attendant circumstances served as an exception to the open and obvious doctrine.
A corrections officer calling out is not “so abnormal that it unreasonably increased the
normal risk of a harmful result.” Mayle at ¶ 20, quoting Cummin v. Image Mart, Inc.,
10th Dist. Franklin No. 03AP-1284, 2004-Ohio-2840, ¶ 10. Accordingly, the magistrate
finds that plaintiff’s failure to use reasonable care to ensure his own safety proximately
caused his fall.
{¶19} Based on the foregoing, the magistrate finds that plaintiff failed to prove his
claims by a preponderance of the evidence. Accordingly, judgment is recommended in
favor of defendant.
{¶20} A party may file written objections to the magistrate’s decision within 14
days of the filing of the decision, whether or not the court has adopted the decision
during that 14-day period as permitted by Civ.R. 53(D)(4)(e)(i). If any party timely files
objections, any other party may also file objections not later than ten days after the first
objections are filed. A party shall not assign as error on appeal the court’s adoption of
any factual finding or legal conclusion, whether or not specifically designated as a
finding of fact or
Case No. 2015-00711 -8- DECISION
conclusion of law under Civ.R. 53(D)(3)(a)(ii), unless the party timely and specifically
objects to that factual finding or legal conclusion within 14 days of the filing of the
decision, as required by Civ.R. 53(D)(3)(b).
GARY PETERSON
Magistrate
cc:
Richard F. Swope Timothy M. Miller
6480 East Main Street, Suite 102 Assistant Attorney General
Reynoldsburg, Ohio 43068 150 East Gay Street, 18th Floor
Columbus, Ohio 43215-3130
Filed October 20, 2016
Sent to S.C. Reporter 11/30/16