[Cite as Payne v. Ohio Dept. of Rehab. & Corr., 2017-Ohio-7155.]
SCOTT PAYNE Case No. 2015-00953
Plaintiff Magistrate Robert Van Schoyck
v. DECISION OF THE MAGISTRATE
OHIO DEPARTMENT OF
REHABILITATION AND CORRECTION,
et al.
Defendants
{¶1} Plaintiff, an inmate in the custody and control of defendant, Ohio
Department of Rehabilitation and Correction (ODRC), brought this action for negligence.
According to the complaint, an agent or employee of ODRC negligently drove a truck
away from a loading dock while plaintiff was unloading the truck in the course of a work
assignment, and, as a result, plaintiff fell and sustained injury. As set forth in the order
issued on January 18, 2017, the parties stipulated that for purposes of plaintiff’s claim of
negligence ODRC breached a duty of care owed to plaintiff and proximately caused
plaintiff some harm. The case proceeded to trial on the issue of damages to determine
the nature and extent of the harm proximately caused by ODRC’s negligence.
{¶2} At trial, plaintiff testified that for about three years leading up to the accident
he worked for an Ohio Penal Industries operation at the Grafton Correctional Institution
(GCI), where he is incarcerated. Plaintiff stated that while on the job on May 16, 2014,
he was directed to help a corrections officer unload a delivery truck at a loading dock.
Plaintiff related that before he and the corrections officer were finished unloading the
truck, another officer got in the cab of the truck and started to drive away, causing
plaintiff and the officer he was working with to fall off the back of the truck and onto the
pavement at the foot of the dock.
Case No. 2015-00953 -2- DECISION
{¶3} According to plaintiff, a metal dock plate on the back of the truck had been
held down over the precipice of the dock while the truck was being unloaded, but as the
truck pulled away from the dock the plate sprang upward. By plaintiff’s description, the
dock plate struck and injured him on his right side as he started to fall, making the fall
more awkward, and when he landed on the pavement about five-and-a-half feet below
the truck bed, the corrections officer whom he had been helping fell on top of him.
Plaintiff testified that he felt shaken up and scared to move, and his right side ached all
over where the dock plate struck him on the right elbow, midsection/back, hip, and lower
leg.
{¶4} Plaintiff stated that he felt like he was in shock but was able to get up and
walk slowly under his own power with the corrections officer to the shift office to see a
supervisor, and then they walked to the infirmary to be examined by a nurse. Plaintiff
recounted that he described his symptoms to the nurse, including pain all over the right
side and bruising in the midsection, and that the nurse examined and treated him with a
bandage and prepared a Medical Exam Report. (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 3.) At that point,
plaintiff testified, he was released from the infirmary and returned to his dormitory.
{¶5} According to plaintiff, due to persistent soreness and pain on his right side
and back, as well as a wound on his right elbow, a nurse practitioner followed up with
him. The nurse practitioner gave him Tylenol and instructed him to apply ice to the
affected areas, plaintiff testified. But, plaintiff related that he continued to experience
stiffness and persistent aching pain in his right hip, leg, and back. Plaintiff stated that
he eventually saw Dr. Todd Houglan for an appointment. Plaintiff recalled that Dr.
Houglan gave him a trigger point injection in his back and prescribed medications which
he cannot remember, but which were ineffective at relieving his pain and some of which
made him sick. Plaintiff testified that he continued to see Dr. Houglan several more
times, and that now he sees Dr. Janice Douglas, who replaced Dr. Houglan at GCI.
{¶6} Plaintiff stated that stretching exercises were prescribed for him and that he
showed up to any scheduled physical therapy appointments, but that he was physically
Case No. 2015-00953 -3- DECISION
unable to perform all the exercises, and he denied any suggestion that he refused to
participate. Plaintiff stated that he has continued to receive trigger point injections in his
back approximately every 90 days. Plaintiff also testified that he took any prescribed
medications as directed, including over-the-counter ibuprofen and Tylenol that he was
instructed to purchase at the commissary. According to plaintiff, however, medication
does not help and the trigger point injections only calm the pain somewhat for no more
than about 30 days at a time. Otherwise, plaintiff testified, he has never been able to
obtain any relief at all. Plaintiff stated that he has requested to see a neurologist or
other specialist many times, but has never been able to do so.
{¶7} Plaintiff testified that the nature and severity of the pain varies to some
extent, but in general the back throbs and the hip pain is of a sharper nature, and
overall on a scale of 1 to 10, the pain is generally about a 10. According to plaintiff, who
is now 47 years old, he did not have problems with his back and hip before the accident.
Plaintiff stated that since the accident, however, he has had to depend on assistance
from other inmates with lifting heavy objects, he cannot participate in recreation, he
cannot sit for long periods of time, and he cannot walk as well as he used to. Plaintiff
explained that he suffered a fall sometime after the accident and consequently began
using a walking cane, which he had with him at trial, and he also wore a back brace
over top of his shirt at trial. Plaintiff testified that he has a “bottom bunk” restriction and
has another restriction limiting him to “light duty” work, such as his current job which
requires him to clean the microwave in his housing unit. Plaintiff also testified that he
lives on an upper range and has a hard time going up the stairs.
{¶8} Dr. Todd Houglan testified that after working in private practice for several
years he took a job in 2010 as Chief Medical Officer at GCI, where he treated patients
and oversaw the medical department. Dr. Houglan recounted that he stayed in that role
for nearly six years before transferring to the Lorain Correctional Institution (LorCI).
Dr. Houglan testified that he cannot remember specifically when he first saw plaintiff,
Case No. 2015-00953 -4- DECISION
but that he remembers treating plaintiff and he gave testimony pertaining to medical
records documenting plaintiff’s care and treatment.
{¶9} Dr. Houglan testified about a report from x-rays that were taken at ODRC’s
Franklin Medical Center on May 22, 2014, six days after the accident. (Defendants’
Exhibit D.) The report, Dr. Houglan explained, shows that x-rays were taken of both the
right hip and the lumbar spine. The report for the right hip documented that there were
no significant abnormalities and that the soft tissue was unremarkable, Dr. Houglan
stated. As for the lumbar spine, Dr. Houglan stated that mild to moderate degenerative
changes were noted, most significantly at the L-4/L-5 and L-5/S-1 levels of the spine,
and that this finding is consistent with degenerative disc disease, representing natural
wear and tear over time of the discs between vertebrae. Regarding the finding of no
significant acute osseous abnormality, Dr. Houglan explained that such an abnormality
would represent an acute problem with a bony structure, such as a vertebral fracture,
which happens suddenly rather than over time. Dr. Houglan also stated that a report
from x-rays of the lumbar spine and thoracic spine taken four years earlier, in 2010,
noted mild degenerative changes as well, including narrowing at the L-5/S-1 level.
(Defendants’ Exhibit C.)
{¶10} From progress notes dated June 13, 2014, Dr. Houglan testified that when
he saw plaintiff on that date he administered a trigger point injection into the area
of pain in the lower back. (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1, p. 143; Defendants’ Exhibit A, p. 143.)
Dr. Houglan explained that plaintiff was injected with Kenalog, a corticosteroid, to
reduce inflammation, and that as plaintiff’s back pain persisted he continued to provide
these injections approximately every three months. Dr. Houglan also prescribed a
three-week dose of the muscle relaxant Flexeril, he stated, because when back pain
persists over time there can be muscle spasms. Additionally, Dr. Houglan stated that
he advised plaintiff to perform stretching exercises for his back to increase mobility and
reduce pain, and that plaintiff would have been given a handout with instructions that
were standardly issued when a patient complained of back pain.
Case No. 2015-00953 -5- DECISION
{¶11} Dr. Houglan testified that progress notes show he saw plaintiff again
on August 6, 2014. (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1, p. 143; Defendants’ Exhibit A, p. 143.)
Dr. Houglan stated that plaintiff reported to him that the lower back pain had improved
but still ached on the right side down into the hip, especially when he sat for an
extended period, but would improve with activity. By Dr. Houglan’s account, plaintiff
was using a walking cane and the muscles on either side of the spine in the lower
region of the back were sensitive to the touch, but otherwise he observed a full range of
motion in the lower spine and his findings were normal. Dr. Houglan testified that he
prescribed Prednisone and gave plaintiff an injection of Toradol to reduce inflammation,
and ordered another set of x-rays. Dr. Houglan also testified that he checked the
records of plaintiff’s commissary purchases during the appointment and found that
plaintiff was not purchasing Tylenol as he had been instructed.
{¶12} Dr. Houglan related that progress notes from September 19, 2014,
document another appointment for plaintiff’s complaints of low back pain. (Plaintiff’s
Exhibit 1, p. 142.) According to the notes, plaintiff reported that the anti-inflammatories
provided some temporary relief. Dr. Houglan stated that he found some pain upon
touching the lower right back, but that all reflexes were normal, and that he went over
the most recent x-ray results with plaintiff, which again showed mild to moderate
changes associated with degenerative disc disease. By Dr. Houglan’s description,
plaintiff did not seem to be malingering and had an antalgic gait even when he was not
under close observation, but his limp was “more theatrical” when he knew that he was
being observed. According to Dr. Houglan, he observes patients when they walk down
the hall and enter the exam room and also watches them when they leave because it is
not uncommon for the patients’ presentation to be different when they know they are
being watched. Nonetheless, Dr. Houglan stated that from what he can recall over time,
plaintiff more or less maintained an antalgic gait that was consistent with his complaints
of low back and hip pain. Dr. Houglan testified that he gave plaintiff another injection of
Case No. 2015-00953 -6- DECISION
Toradol, as well as a prescription for a different anti-inflammatory, Relafen, and he
instructed plaintiff to continue buying over-the-counter Tylenol in the commissary.
{¶13} On October 7, 2014, plaintiff received another trigger point injection of
Kenalog in the right lumbar paraspinal muscles and was instructed to continue using
Tylenol and perform stretching exercises, Dr. Houglan stated. (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1, p.
60; Defendants’ Exhibit A, p. 60.) When he saw plaintiff again on December 1, 2014,
Dr. Houglan stated, plaintiff reported that achy low back pain was still present, rating it
at a 10 out of 10, but that the trigger point injections were helping some. (Plaintiff’s
Exhibit 1, p. 60; Defendants’ Exhibit A, p. 60.) Dr. Houglan testified that he found pain
to the touch in the lower right paraspinal muscles, and that plaintiff had a slow antalgic
gait. Dr. Houglan also testified that he wrote he might request an MRI for the lumbar
spine. Dr. Houglan stated that he saw plaintiff a few days later, on December 7, 2014,
and recorded giving a trigger point injection of Kenalog in the left lumbar area,
continuing the prescription for Relafen, and telling plaintiff to continue taking Tylenol and
stretching. (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1, p. 58; Defendants’ Exhibit A, p. 58.) Progress notes
from December 23, 2014, correspond to another trigger point injection of Kenalog in the
right lumbar area, Dr. Houglan stated, and he noted that again plaintiff was instructed to
take Tylenol and perform stretching exercises. (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1, p. 58; Defendants’
Exhibit A, p. 58.)
{¶14} About six months later, Dr. Houglan stated, plaintiff was sent out for an MRI
of the lumbar spine, taken at Franklin Medical Center on June 12, 2015. Dr. Houglan
testified that the MRI report noted some compression on both sides of the spine where
the nerve pathways exit the spine, which can be a symptom of degenerative disc
disease, and a bulging disc was noted at the L-4/L-5 level. (Defendants’ Exhibit E.)
Overall, Dr. Houglan explained, the report demonstrates degenerative changes at
several levels of the lumbar spine, most prominently at the L-4/L-5 and L-5/S-1 levels,
which corresponds to the area where plaintiff complained of pain. Dr. Houglan related
that from looking at the report, one cannot know how long the changes in the spine
Case No. 2015-00953 -7- DECISION
have been present, and that he is not aware of any prior MRI with which to compare.
According to Dr. Houglan, compared to the 2014 x-rays this MRI showed more stenosis,
or narrowing, and is consistent with continuing degenerative changes, but the additional
level of detail provided by an MRI versus an x-ray could account for the difference.
{¶15} The following month, on July 15, 2015, plaintiff was sent to Franklin
Medical Center for an electromyograph (EMG), the results of which were normal, Dr.
Houglan stated. (Defendants’ Exhibit B.) Dr. Houglan testified that the EMG tested the
nerve function in the area where plaintiff was feeling pain, but that the results
demonstrated no nerve damage or neuropathy from the back into the right lower
extremity. Based upon the normal findings from the EMG, Dr. Houglan explained,
sending plaintiff out for a neurology consult was not indicated.
{¶16} Dr. Houglan testified that progress notes from July 20, 2015, show that he
saw plaintiff on that date to follow up about the EMG results. (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1, p. 84;
Defendants’ Exhibit A, p. 84.) As Dr. Houglan related, his assessment noted low back
pain with degenerative disc disease, and his plan included discontinuing Relafen in
favor of a similar drug, Mobic, in the hope that plaintiff would respond to it better.
Dr. Houglan also related that he again recommended stretching exercises. Another
note from the next day, July 21, 2015, shows that plaintiff came back to receive another
trigger point injection of Kenalog in the right paraspinal muscle, Dr. Houglan stated, and
that stretching and Tylenol were again recommended. (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 6.)
{¶17} Dr. Houglan stated that he saw plaintiff several months later, on March 1,
2016, and that from his progress note it appears plaintiff complained of “severe back
pain” and requested another trigger point injection, which was scheduled for about two
weeks out. (Defendants’ Exhibit F.) As Dr. Houglan described, his progress notes from
March 15, 2016, show that he administered a trigger point injection of Kenalog in the
right paraspinal lumbar area at that visit. (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 2, p. 300; Defendants’
Exhibit G.) And, Dr. Houglan noted, he went over the MRI and EMG results with plaintiff
again and discussed how they revealed degenerative disc disease but no radiculopathy
Case No. 2015-00953 -8- DECISION
into the lower right extremity; additionally, plaintiff reported that the Mobic he had been
taking took the edge off the pain but did not last all day, and although plaintiff reported
buying Tylenol as instructed, Dr. Houglan noted that his review of plaintiff’s commissary
purchases for the last four months showed no Tylenol purchases. In his assessment,
Dr. Houglan used the general term “lumbago” to identify plaintiff’s condition.
{¶18} From another progress note dated August 17, 2016, Dr. Houglan stated
that plaintiff came in for a visit at that time complaining of continued low back pain.
(Plaintiff’s Exhibit 2, p. 282; Defendants’ Exhibit H.) Dr. Houglan noted that plaintiff
reported buying “lots of Tylenol in commissary” but that his review of the commissary
records showed only two purchases of 100-count bottles in the last three months.
Dr. Houglan also noted the aforementioned normal EMG results and the MRI showing
narrowing at the L-4/L-5 and L-5/S-1 levels. As Dr. Houglan stated, he requested a
consultation with an orthopedic specialist to see if they could find anything to give
plaintiff relief, but he explained that the request would have to go through a collegial
review process where other practitioners review the case and decide whether to
proceed with that plan of care. Dr. Houglan stated that this visit marked the end of his
treatment with plaintiff because soon afterward he began working at LorCI. Overall,
according to Dr. Houglan the record of his interaction with plaintiff in the progress notes
suggested that plaintiff derived some incomplete, temporary relief from the care
provided by him through August 2016.
{¶19} Dr. Janice Douglas testified that after many years in practice, including
nearly 30 years on the faculty of Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine,
in April 2016 she transitioned into a contract role providing medical care at two state
correctional institutions, and in August 2016 she began working exclusively at GCI,
where she took over as the Chief Medical Officer. Dr. Douglas stated that she has seen
plaintiff for appointments several times in the months since she started working at GCI.
{¶20} From progress notes dated September 16, 2016, Dr. Douglas testified that
she saw plaintiff on that date to follow up with him on the results of a repeat EMG.
Case No. 2015-00953 -9- DECISION
(Plaintiff’s Exhibit 2, p. 274-275.) As Dr. Douglas described, the report from the EMG,
which was performed at Franklin Medical Center on September 14, 2016, and focused
on the right lower extremity where plaintiff complained of pain, showed normal results.
(Plaintiff’s Exhibit 2, p. 237-238.) Dr. Douglas stated that she noted plaintiff’s complaint
of chronic back pain from a fall, but also that the EMG did not return any evidence of
nerve damage, and she wrote that a nurse would give plaintiff a set of standard
instructions for back exercises. Dr. Douglas also stated that while a progress note from
a nurse one day later, on September 17, 2016, indicated that plaintiff refused to do his
back exercises, she did not know about it and never spoke to plaintiff about it.
(Plaintiff’s Exhibit 2, p. 273.)
{¶21} Dr. Douglas related that progress notes from October 14, 2016, show that
she gave plaintiff two trigger point injections of Kenalog that day, in the right outer hip
and in the right lumbosacral area, and that plaintiff tolerated the procedure well.
(Plaintiff’s Exhibit 2, p. 266-267.) According to Dr. Douglas, trigger point injections are
usually not painful, but depending on the patient there can occasionally be some pain.
Dr. Douglas stated that she diagnosed plaintiff with severe sciatica, which she explained
is a general term for nerve and muscle inflammation of the lumbosacral area, and that
this was the reason for her prescribing Kenalog. Dr. Douglas testified that her treatment
of plaintiff is based upon the symptoms that he presents, and with regard to the history
of those symptoms Dr. Douglas recalled plaintiff telling her that he had back problems
prior to injuring his back in a fall, and that the fall exacerbated those preexisting
symptoms.
{¶22} Progress notes from January 23, 2017, document another visit on that
date, Dr. Douglas stated. (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 2, pp. 244-247.) As Dr. Douglas wrote, the
appointment was to follow up on the results of an MRI of the lumbosacral spine that had
been recently performed at Franklin Medical Center, but as it turned out the results were
not yet available. Dr. Douglas noted, however, that plaintiff “has some improvement of
lower back pain with the las[t] injections & is having no problems today.”
Case No. 2015-00953 -10- DECISION
{¶23} According to Dr. Douglas, progress notes from February 13, 2017, indicate
that this was the last time she saw plaintiff prior to trial, and that the nature of the
appointment was to go over the results from the recent MRI of the lumbosacral spine.
(Plaintiff’s Exhibit 2, pp. 242-243.) As Dr. Douglas explained, the report from the MRI
performed on January 19, 2017, showed no changes from the previous MRI.
(Defendants’ Exhibit I.) Dr. Douglas testified that structural abnormalities resulting from
inflammation can be detected in an MRI, and that even though no such findings were
made in the MRI, it has been her objective finding that there is inflammation fairly
localized to a particular area in the right lumbosacral area and that is why she has
continued to prescribe trigger point injections.
{¶24} Nurse Practitioner Katherine Beltz testified that she has worked at GCI
since 2015 and has seen plaintiff for appointments on at least two occasions for
complaints about back pain. Beltz stated that according to medical records prepared by
her, she examined plaintiff on September 18, 2015, for a complaint of low back pain,
which plaintiff rated at an 8 out of 10, secondary to sleeping on the floor of the
segregation unit, and she noted that he ambulated with a shuffled gait and a walking
cane. (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1, p. 139.) According to the note, Beltz stated, plaintiff
requested another round of trigger point injections, which she wrote would be
scheduled. Beltz also stated that medical records prepared by her show that she saw
plaintiff on December 29, 2016, for complaints of increasing back and hip pain, and as a
result of the appointment she requested another MRI to evaluate any worsening of his
previously diagnosed degenerative disc disease, and she also made a note that plaintiff
was supposed to receive his next trigger point injection the following month. (Plaintiff’s
Exhibit 2, p. 255-256.)
{¶25} Nurse Practitioner Linda Hancock testified that she has worked at GCI
since 2010 and that she recalls seeing plaintiff for appointments at least two or three
times. Hancock related that medical records prepared by her show that she saw
plaintiff for an appointment on April 13, 2015, for a complaint of lower back pain that he
Case No. 2015-00953 -11- DECISION
attributed to the accident. (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1, p. 140.) According to the note, Hancock
stated, plaintiff told her that the trigger point injections did not provide relief for very
long, and he was taking Relafen twice daily, as well as Tylenol. The note indicates that
plaintiff was wearing a back brace and walking with a cane slowly but without distress,
and that resistance testing of his right leg showed it was weak, she stated. Hancock
stated that she also wrote that plaintiff told her the pain was radiating from the right hip
all the way down to the right foot. As Hancock stated, her note reflects that plaintiff had
been approved for an MRI at that time, and that her plan for him included continuing the
Relafen and following up with a doctor to get another round of trigger point injections.
{¶26} Hancock testified that another record prepared by her corresponds to a
March 24, 2016 appointment that plaintiff had due to his being on a “chronic care”
caseload for hypertension, and that at this appointment it was noted that plaintiff was
taking Relafen and Tylenol and was under stress due to back pain; it was noted that he
was limping and that there was weakness in the right leg also. (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 2,
pp. 297-299.) Hancock testified that she also prepared another record corresponding to
a routine May 23, 2016 chronic care appointment for hypertension in which notations
mention plaintiff having pressure-like low back pain but having a steady gait with a
cane, and that he was taking Relafen and receiving trigger point injections. (Plaintiff’s
Exhibit 2, pp. 287-290.) Hancock also testified that another record prepared by her
corresponds to a chronic care appointment for hypertension on November 23, 2016,
noting low back pain. (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 2, pp. 261-263.)
{¶27} “In order to sustain an action for negligence, a plaintiff must show the
existence of a duty owing from the defendant to the plaintiff or injured party, a breach of
that duty, and that the breach was the proximate cause of resulting damages.” Sparre
v. Ohio Dept. of Transp., 10th Dist. Franklin No. 12AP-381, 2013-Ohio-4153, ¶ 9. “‘It is
axiomatic that every plaintiff bears the burden of proving the nature and extent of his
damages in order to be entitled to compensation.’” Jayashree Restaurants, LLC v. DDR
PTC Outparcel LLC , 10th Dist. Franklin No. 16AP-186, 2016-Ohio-5498, ¶ 13, quoting
Case No. 2015-00953 -12- DECISION
Akro-Plastics v. Drake Indus., 115 Ohio App.3d 221, 226 (11th Dist.1996). “As a
general rule, the appropriate measure of damages in a tort action is the amount which
will compensate and make the plaintiff whole.” N. Coast Premier Soccer, LLC v. Ohio
Dept. of Transp., 10th Dist. Franklin No. 12AP-589, 2013-Ohio-1677, ¶ 17. “[D]amages
must be shown with reasonable certainty and may not be based upon mere speculation
or conjecture * * *.” Rakich v. Anthem Blue Cross & Blue Shield, 172 Ohio App.3d 523,
2007-Ohio-3739, ¶ 20 (10th Dist.).
{¶28} Upon review, the magistrate makes the following findings. When the truck
that plaintiff was helping to unload pulled away from the loading dock, plaintiff began to
fall out of the back of the truck toward the concrete pavement about five and a half feet
below. In the process of falling, the right side of plaintiff’s body struck a metal dock
plate that had been engaged between the truck and dock, injuring plaintiff’s right side
and causing plaintiff to fall more awkwardly. When plaintiff landed on the pavement, the
corrections officer with whom he had been working landed on top of him. Plaintiff got up
under his own power and slowly walked with the corrections officer to the shift office and
then the infirmary. As plaintiff reported to the nurse who examined him in the infirmary,
he felt pain in his right hip and leg and in his left elbow, and the nurse noted that the
right hip may have sustained a muscle/tissue bruise. Plaintiff was bandaged by the
nurse, whose treatment plan included ibuprofen, a muscle rub, and applying ice to the
affected areas, and plaintiff then returned to his dormitory.
{¶29} Due to persistent soreness and pain in the right side and back, as well as a
wound on the elbow, plaintiff obtained a follow-up appointment with a nurse practitioner,
who instructed him to take Tylenol and to apply ice. Plaintiff also underwent x-rays of
the right hip and lumbar spine on May 22, 2014, which showed signs of degenerative
disc disease in the lumbar spine, but no acute injury. Stiffness and aching pain
persisted, however, in the right hip, leg, and back, so plaintiff obtained an appointment
with Dr. Houglan on June 13, 2014, at which time plaintiff was given a trigger point
injection of Kenalog in the area of pain in the back, and plaintiff was also prescribed a
Case No. 2015-00953 -13- DECISION
muscle relaxant. Plaintiff also began using a walking cane and a back brace during the
summer of 2014, but only after falling in a separate accident.
{¶30} By August 6, 2014, plaintiff reported some improvement to Dr. Houglan,
and another round of x-rays were taken on August 14, 2014, which again were
consistent with degenerative disc disease. Plaintiff saw Dr. Houglan a few more times
over the remainder of 2014, and other than trying some different anti-inflammatory
medications, the treatment substantially remained the same, being that plaintiff
continued to receive trigger point injections about every 90 days, he was instructed to
perform back exercises and stretches, and he was instructed to take over-the-counter
Tylenol.
{¶31} Copies of Health Services Request forms or other written communications
which plaintiff submitted to the medical department to seek attention include about 11
examples in 2014 of plaintiff seeking care for his lower back or hip pain, but only five
more examples after 2014, the last one dated July 9, 2015. (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1.) And,
after 2014 plaintiff’s visits with Dr. Houglan were less frequent. Although plaintiff
continues having appointments with nurses with some frequency, this is at least in part
because he is scheduled for recurring chronic care appointments for an unrelated
condition.
{¶32} In the summer of 2015, plaintiff underwent an EMG which showed no nerve
damage and he underwent an MRI which was consistent with degenerative disc
disease. After Dr. Douglas replaced Dr. Houglan as the Chief Medical Officer in August
2016, plaintiff underwent another EMG in September 2016 which again produced
normal results, and he underwent another MRI in January 2017, the results of which
were essentially unchanged from the previous MRI. Similar to Dr. Houglan’s plan of
care, up to the time of trial Dr. Douglas continued to provide trigger point injections for
plaintiff’s complaints of inflammatory pain in the lower back, particularly on the right
side, and she continued to instruct plaintiff to perform back exercises and stretches.
Case No. 2015-00953 -14- DECISION
{¶33} Although plaintiff attributes essentially all his back and hip pain symptoms
to the accident, whether on the theory that the accident aggravated his preexisting
degenerative disc disease or otherwise, for what would amount at this point to a chronic
disabling injury, and asserted in closing that he is entitled to damages upwards of
$300,000, plaintiff did not provide corroborating expert witness testimony and the
evidence presented at trial fails to substantiate that the accident proximately caused
such significant damages.
{¶34} “Although a claimant may establish proximate cause through circumstantial
evidence, ‘there must be evidence of circumstances which will establish with some
degree of certainty that the alleged negligent acts caused the injury.’” Mills v. Best W.
Springdale, 10th Dist. Franklin No. 08AP-1022, 2009-Ohio-2901, ¶ 20, quoting
Woodworth v. New York Cent. RR. Co., 149 Ohio St. 543, 549 (1948). “It is well-
established that when only speculation and conjecture is presented to establish
proximate causation, the negligence claim has failed as a matter of law.” Harris v. Ohio
Dept. of Rehab. & Corr., 10th Dist. Franklin No. 13AP-466, 2013-Ohio-5714, ¶ 15.
“Generally, where an issue involves a question of scientific inquiry that is not within the
knowledge of a layperson, expert testimony is required.” Id. at ¶ 16, citing Stacey v.
Carnegie-Illinois Steel Corp., 156 Ohio St. 205 (1951). “Where complicated medical
problems are at issue, testimony from a qualified expert is necessary to establish a
proximate causal relationship between the incident and the injury.” Tunks v. Chrysler
Group LLC, 6th Dist. Lucas No. L-12-1297, 2013-Ohio-5183, ¶ 18.
{¶35} The symptoms that plaintiff ascribes to the accident are largely subjective
in nature, concerning pain emanating internally from his lower back and right hip.
Generally, where subjective, soft-tissue injuries are alleged, it is beyond the scope of
common knowledge to establish a causal connection and thus requires expert
testimony. Argie v. Three Little Pigs, Ltd., 10th Dist. Franklin No. 11AP-437, 2012-Ohio-
667, ¶ 15. In this case, though, which included testimony from several treating doctors
and nurses and numerous medical records, defendants conceded in their closing
Case No. 2015-00953 -15- DECISION
argument that plaintiff likely suffered some soft-tissue type of injury from the fall and is
entitled to some damages. Indeed, it is understandable given the circumstances here
that plaintiff’s awkward fall from the back of the truck onto the concrete pavement would
have resulted in some temporary aches and pains. But without providing expert
testimony to explain and support his theory, plaintiff goes much farther in arguing that
the accident caused him to somehow sustain what amounts to a debilitating, long-term
injury.
{¶36} The extensive damages claimed by plaintiff are all the more speculative
due to the fact that his symptoms are generally consistent with degenerative disc
disease, a naturally-occurring progressive condition which had already caused
deteriorative changes at multiple levels of plaintiff’s spine at least four years prior to the
accident. Whether or not plaintiff acknowledges having any pre-existing back pain, it
was clearly shown that low back pain is associated with degenerative disc disease, and
Dr. Douglas credibly testified to her recollection of plaintiff telling her that he did have
back problems before the accident. Additionally, while an August 14, 2014 x-ray was
reported to show an osseous deformity “likely related to [a] remote fracture” at the L-2/L-
3 level of the spine, there was no suggestion at trial that this was caused by the
accident nor was there any other explanatory testimony about this evidence which may
suggest some earlier back injury, thus adding another layer of complexity when it comes
to discerning the etiology of plaintiff’s back problems. (Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1, p. 164.) Also
adding to the difficulty in determining the cause of plaintiff’s harm is the fact that he
testified that he fell in a separate incident sometime after the accident and only then
began to use a cane, which begs the question whether this other fall has any causal
connection to plaintiff’s long-term symptoms.
{¶37} Nevertheless, after careful consideration of the evidence, including
numerous medical records and the testimony of treating doctors and nurses, plaintiff
plainly suffered acute pain in his right hip and side, as well as a wound on his left elbow,
immediately after striking the dock plate and falling from the truck onto the concrete
Case No. 2015-00953 -16- DECISION
pavement. Although there was no acute injury to the back noted in the Medical Exam
Report made out by the nurse who examined plaintiff after the accident, it does appear
more likely than not that plaintiff did sustain some significant strain or other soft-tissue
type of injury in the lower back region, particularly on the right side, which manifested in
pain soon afterward.
{¶38} From the totality of the evidence, it appears that plaintiff was slow to
recover and that the accident proximately caused plaintiff aches and pains for a few
months. Plaintiff obtained some relief for his pain, however, through the treatment that
he received and his condition was documented to have improved less than three
months after the accident. It is probable that plaintiff substantially recovered by the
latter part of 2014, as suggested by the diminishing frequency in his requests for
medical attention.
{¶39} It is true that into 2015 plaintiff submitted a few more such requests, and
also that plaintiff’s medical records reflect him consistently rating his pain between 8
and 10 on a scale of 1 to 10 over the long term, and that according to plaintiff he has
had almost no relief since the accident and his pain generally remains a 10 out of 10.
However, the evidence tends to suggest that plaintiff has exaggerated the extent of his
symptoms over the long term. Plaintiff did not give the appearance at trial of an
individual suffering from the utterly extraordinary level of pain that one would actually
experience at the top end of the 1 to 10 scale, and it was an exaggeration to say that his
pain was at that level. Along the lines of exaggerated symptoms, and consistent with
plaintiff’s probable improvement in the months after the accident, Dr. Houglan noted that
plaintiff was more “theatrical” in limping than what his symptoms would otherwise
suggest on September 19, 2014, and, again on March 6, 2015, it was noted that plaintiff
exhibited a “somewhat exaggerated” appearance. The greater weight of the evidence
tends to show that plaintiff’s condition has not been as consistently poor as he claims
and that he has obtained some relief through his care and treatment, more than was
acknowledged at trial.
Case No. 2015-00953 -17- DECISION
{¶40} Some pain has obviously persisted in plaintiff’s lower back or hip over the
long term, but it requires speculation or conjecture to causally relate those symptoms to
the accident. Plaintiff did not report any injury to his back when he was examined
shortly after the accident, nor did the nurse document observing any obvious injury.
Despite subsequent x-rays, MRIs, and EMGs the only diagnosed, objective ailment
established from those diagnostic procedures corresponding to the area of pain was
degenerative disc disease. The medical testimony established that the symptoms of
which he has complained over the long term are consistent with his degenerative disc
disease. The evidence adduced at trial did not establish any separate diagnosis of
nerve damage or a fracture or other injury to the spine or hip that can be causally
related to the accident.
{¶41} The medical testimony explained that diagnostic testing performed in 2010
for an unrelated medical issue established that plaintiff already had degenerative disc
disease at least four years before the accident. While plaintiff argued that post-accident
MRI imaging showed more damage than was revealed in earlier x-rays, Dr. Houglan’s
testimony established that an MRI simply shows more detail than an x-ray and that any
degradation of the spine may have been natural. The medical testimony characterized
degenerative disc disease as a natural process that worsens over time, and to that end
x-rays in 2010 noted mild degenerative changes but x-rays in 2014 noted mild to
moderate degeneration, and the progress notes from plaintiff’s medical file noted
“increasing” and “worsening” pain being reported by plaintiff in late 2016 and early 2017,
as one might expect to see over time in an individual with degenerative disc disease.
(Plaintiff’s Exhibit 2, pp. 250, 255.)
{¶42} Plaintiff argued that the accident may have caused an aggravation or
acceleration of his degenerative disc disease which resulted in long-term harm, but
plaintiff did not provide expert testimony to that effect and the treating physicians who
testified at trial did not opine within a reasonable degree of medical probability that this
is what occurred. The absence of expert testimony generally precludes recovery where
Case No. 2015-00953 -18- DECISION
injuries are “internal and elusive” in nature, and not “sufficiently observable,
understandable and comprehensible by the trier of fact.” Wright v. Columbus, 10th Dist.
Franklin No. 05AP-432, 2006-Ohio-759, ¶ 19; see also Choate v. Tranet, Inc., 12th Dist.
Warren No. CA2003-11-112, 2004-Ohio-3537, ¶ 17, quoting Stacey v. Carnegie-Illinois
Steel Corp., 156 Ohio St. 205 (1951), syllabus (“Because the cause of lower back pain
is not within the scope of common knowledge, ‘medical testimony is essential.’”). This
argument by plaintiff concerns internal, complex facets of the human body which are not
sufficiently understandable by a layperson. To find that plaintiff’s long-term symptoms
represent an acceleration or aggravation of degenerative disc disease caused by the
accident, or to differentiate any such long-term symptoms from degenerative disc
disease and attribute them in some other fashion to the accident would be speculative
in the absence of expert testimony.
{¶43} Even if it were possible that the accident aggravated or accelerated
plaintiff’s degenerative disc disease, plaintiff’s burden was to “establish a probability and
not a mere possibility of such causal connection.” State ex rel. Hawkes v. Indus.
Comm., 10th Dist. Franklin No. 05AP-47, 2005-Ohio-5995, ¶ 4. The treating doctors
who testified did not express any such opinion within a reasonable degree of medical
probability. While the doctors testified that they documented plaintiff’s complaints in
which he himself attributed his long-term symptoms to the accident and that they have
treated him according to their objective findings and plaintiff’s subjective complaints,
they did not give testimony sufficient to causally relate plaintiff’s long-term symptoms to
the accident.
{¶44} Looking at the ways in which plaintiff was harmed by the accident, the
soreness and pain that he suffered for a few months was significant and had a negative
effect upon his quality of life. While plaintiff offered some testimony about having to
take a more menial job in the prison after the accident, he did not establish an
entitlement to recover for lost wages. Plaintiff also did not prove an entitlement to
recover for any medical expenses.
Case No. 2015-00953 -19- DECISION
{¶45} Based upon the foregoing, for the past pain and suffering associated with
the injuries caused to plaintiff as a result of the state’s negligence, plaintiff is entitled to
damages from defendants in the amount of $12,000, plus the $25 filing fee, for a total
award of $12,025. Accordingly, it is recommended that judgment be entered for plaintiff
in that amount.
{¶46} 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 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).
ROBERT VAN SCHOYCK
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 July 17, 2017
Sent to S.C. Reporter 8/9/17