ClickCease

ย OHIO (513) 434-6698

|

KENTUCKY (859) 251-3591

Police Officer At-Fault for Car Accident -Injured By Police

Attorney Justin Lee Lawrence

WRITTEN BY

LAST UPDATED

September 18, 2025

Key Takeaways

  • Police officers in Ohio can be held civilly liable for injuries to third parties if their conduct is โ€œwanton or reckless,โ€ a lower standard than the previous โ€œextreme and outrageousโ€ threshold.
  • Breaking departmental procedures alone does not automatically prove recklessness; there must be evidence of malicious intent, bad faith, or conscious disregard of known risks.
  • The Ohio Supreme Court affirmed qualified immunity for the officers in this case, but the ruling makes it easier for plaintiffs to recover damages if they can demonstrate a known risk was disregarded.
  • Injuries resulting from police actions, including high-speed chases, may still be eligible for compensation, and consulting an experienced personal injury attorney is important to evaluate claims.

The Ohio Supreme Court held that when police officers are performing their duty, they can be held civilly liable for damages to a 3rd party if their conduct is โ€œwanton or recklessโ€ in nature. By adopting this standard, the court rejected the no-proximate cause test applied in several lower courts throughout Ohio. The no-proximate cause test required officers to have an extreme and outrageous manner to be held civilly liable for damages.

Legally, the different standard is significant. Recklessness is legally defined as a conscious disregard of a known risk, whereas extreme and outrageous is legally defined as grievous and grossly offensive to an average person. By adopting the lower standard, the Ohio Supreme Court has made it easier to hold law enforcement accountable for damages, because the plaintiff, the one bringing a suit, only has to prove a police officerโ€™s conduct disregarded a known risk rather than acted grossly offensive to an average person within the circumstances. However, despite the lower standard, the Ohio Supreme Court held the police officers in the current case did not act recklessly and were entitled to qualified immunity. The facts and reasoning of the case are as follows.

What Caused Ohioโ€™s Supreme Court to Decide Whether Cops Could Be Liable for Injuring Others?

After committing a robbery, Andrew Barnhart was involved in a high-speed chase with 5 officers from the Miami Township Police Department and the Montgomery County Sheriffโ€™s Department. During the chase, Mr. Barnhartโ€™s vehicle collided head-on withย Pamela Argabrite. The accident killed Mr. Barnhart, but caused series injury to Ms. Argabrite. Following the accident, Ms. Argabrite brought suit against the 5 officers claiming their negligence in the chase led to the head-on collision and her injuries.

The Ohio appellate courts faced two questions. First, were the police officers entitled to qualified immunity, therefore, could not be sued for actions that occurred in performance of their duties? Second, if the officers did not have qualified immunity, were the officers the proximate cause, casually linked, of the accident?

The appellate court did not answer the first question, rather decided the officers were not the proximate cause of the injury. The appellate court held police officers that pursued a suspect are not the proximate cause of injury to a third party unless the officerโ€™s conduct was โ€œextreme and outrageous.โ€

The Ohio Supreme Courtโ€™s Analysis:

Public officials, including police officers, are immune from civil liability unless their actions, or failure to act, were with a โ€œmalicious purpose, in bad faith, or in a wanton or reckless manner.โ€ Theย Ohio Supreme Courtย found that when the lower courts applied the no-proximate cause test they had used a higher standard of โ€œextreme and outrageousโ€ to evaluate the officerโ€™s conduct. Therefore, the Ohio Supreme Court reviewed the case material de nova, as if for the first time, applying the lower standard to the police officers behavior.

In reviewing the facts, the Ohio Supreme Court found the police officers had broken protocol and procedure in pursuing the high-speed chase. However, breeching departmental procedures were not conclusive evidence to establish the officers acted in a wanton or reckless manner. Instead, it was necessary to demonstrate the officers had acted with a โ€œmalicious purpose, in bad faith, or in a wanton or reckless mannerโ€ during the high-speed chase. Every officer was found to have behaved reasonably in performing his or her duties during the high-speed chase.

In determining if breeching departmental procedure was reckless, the court noted police officers, unlike other public officials, are required to act and perform their duties in violent and dangerously situations. Additionally, the court noted that under Ohio law police officers have a unique statutory duty that requires them to arrest and detain criminal suspects. Failure to comply with the statute can result in police officers facing criminal charges.

Although for different reasons, the Ohio Supreme Court affirmed the appellate courts ruling. This case was decided as a matter of law, meaning the evidence was never presented to a jury.

Justice Lanzinger Concurrence
Agreeing in judgment only, Justice Lanzinger argued the inquiry into the level of the public officials actions was futile, because the court only needed to determine if the public officialโ€™s actions were above โ€œmere negligence.โ€ If a public officialโ€™s actions were beyond negligence, more than carless, then sovereign immunity does not apply. In this case, Justice Lanzinger agrees that the officerโ€™s conduct and failure to follow protocol was merely negligent.

Justice Kennedyโ€™s Concurrence
Justice Kennedy concurred in judgment only, because she felt that the no-proximate cause test should have been applied and was not inconsistent with the qualified immunity standard. Justice Kennedy reasoned that the Ohio General Assembly amended the qualified immunity statute several times, and in doing so lower courts began to apply the no-proximate cause test. Since the application of the no-proximate cause test, the General Assembly has taken no action to correct or change the law. Therefore, the court should leave any changes to the legislature and the no-proximate cause standard should govern police officers conduct in pursuit, but all other civil liability for police officers would be governed by the qualified immunity standard.

Justice Pfieferโ€™s Dissent
In his dissenting opinion, Justice Pfiefer argued that there were enough facts to allow the case to be heard before a jury. Justice Pfiefer, suggested that there were other ways the police officers could have brought Mr. Barnhart to justice without engaging in a high-speed chase, therefore, whether the police officers had acted recklessly should have been a decision for a jury.

Justice Oโ€™Neill Concurring in part and Dissenting in part
Justice Oโ€™Neill agreed with the court in their application of the law, that officersโ€™ are immune from liability unless they โ€œact maliciously, in bad faith, or in a wanton or reckless manner.โ€ However, Justice Oโ€™Neill disagrees with the courts decision as an issue of law and believes the case should have been tried before a jury.

Application
The Ohio Supreme Courtโ€™s ruling makes it easier for the average individual to recover if injured by a police officer performing their duties. Lower courts will now provide relief for plaintiffs who are able to prove a police officerโ€™s conduct โ€œdisregarded a known risk,โ€ rather than having to prove the officerโ€™s conduct was โ€œextreme and outrageous.โ€ However, by the Court granting immunity in this case, the Court is signally a police officer will need to disregard a specific known risk, for example, if an officer does X it may result in injury Y, not merely a general risk, such as not following protocol may injury someone. The difference between the two scenarios can be very fact specific, and it may be best to consult an attorney to determine if your injury will meet Ohioโ€™s new standard.

Contact Our Car Accident Attorneys Today

Have you been injured in a car wreck in Ohio? Even if it is a result of a police chase, you may still have a right to recover for your injuries. Our team is working Hard for the Working Class, and we want to help you! Our Cincinnati personal injury attorneys at Lawrence & Associates Accident and Injury Lawyers, LLC ย are here to listen to your story, answer your questions, and fight for the justice and results you deserve. There are no fees unless we win your case. Take the first step toward peace of mindโ€”reach out now. Call (513) 434-6698 or complete visit our contact page for a free consultation.

categories
recent uploads
what our clients say