JACKSON L. KISER, Senior District Judge.
Joseph Fleming, a Virginia inmate proceeding pro se, filed a civil rights action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983 and 12132. Plaintiff names as defendants the Virginia Department of Corrections ("VDOC"), five staff of the VDOC (the "VDOC defendants"), and two nurses
Plaintiff is not able to support his body weight and allegedly is unable to walk unassisted because of a "slipped spine" and pinched nerve. Plaintiff is able to stand with assistance albeit with "extreme pain," and he cannot maintain his balance unless he has assistance or something to grab. Consequently, Plaintiff considers himself confined to a wheelchair.
Plaintiff arrived at RNCC in a wheelchair on November 16, 2015. Nobody specifically explained to Plaintiff upon his arrival that metal detectors were used there and that inmates must walk through them. Plaintiff also was not specifically advised that he could seek a medical waiver of that requirement.
During the intake process, defendant Nurse Parks met Plaintiff, who said that he could ambulate short distances with a cane. Nurse Parks told him that he could opt for either a wheelchair or a cane for assistance moving, and Plaintiff opted for a wheelchair. Plaintiff never asked for a medical waiver about the metal detectors.
On November 28, 2015, C/O Lundy ordered Plaintiff to pass through the metal detector before he could continue in his wheelchair to the chow hall. Plaintiff objected, explaining that he had a spinal injury, he could not walk without assistance, and feels pain when walking with assistance. C/O Lundy replied that Plaintiff would not be allowed to exit the building for any reason unless he first walked through the metal detector. Inmate Bolen, who was assigned to help move Plaintiff in the wheelchair, moved the wheelchair to the exit side of the metal detector while Plaintiff held onto the upright edge of the metal detector. With Bolen's help, Plaintiff stumbled, shook, and grunted in pain as he shuffled through the metal detector and back into the wheelchair.
On November 29, 2015, C/O Lundy again ordered Plaintiff to pass through the metal detector before going to the chow hall. Plaintiff again attempted to hold onto the side of the detector while Bolen moved the wheelchair, but Plaintiff fell to the floor once his legs gave out. Plaintiffs right knee struck the floor and became bruised, swollen, inflamed, and painful.
Plaintiff immediately told C/O Lundy that he needed to go to the medical department because of pain in his knee and lower back. C/O Lundy refused to contact the medical department and told Plaintiff to continue to the dining hall. Upon returning from the dining hall, Plaintiff again asked C/O Lundy for medical assistance because the pain had worsened, but C/O Lundy refused and told Plaintiff to return to his cell.
About an hour after returning to his cell, Plaintiff told a nurse doing "rounds" in the pod that he needed medical attention. The nurse told Plaintiff to file an emergency grievance so medical staff could call him to the medical building.
At around lunch on November 29, 2015, Plaintiff allegedly gave defendant C/O Dean an emergency grievance seeking medical care for his pain. Per policy, the receiving officer should pass the emergency grievance to appropriate staff who should answer it within eight hours.
Around dinner time that same day, Plaintiff asked a nurse whether the medical department had received the emergency grievance, and the nurse said no. The nurse examined Plaintiffs knee and noted it was slightly swollen but was without a bruise or abrasion. The nurse also noted that Plaintiff was able to stand with assistance. Per Plaintiffs request, the nurse noted that the doctor should review Plaintiffs eligibility for a waiver for the metal detectors. The swelling was reduced with icing.
Plaintiff had a brief appointment four days later on December 3, 2015. Defendant Nurse Crawford measured Plaintiffs vital signs, the doctor issued the waiver, and Nurse Crawford noted the waiver on Plaintiffs medical record.
Plaintiff faults C/O Lundy for making him walk through the metal detectors and faults C/O Dean for not processing the emergency grievance. Plaintiff faults Clarke, who is the Director of the VDOC; Walrath, who is the Warden of RNCC; and McBride, who is a Unit Manager at RNCC, for promulgating policies requiring Plaintiff to travel through a metal detector. Plaintiff further faults Walrath and McBride for not advising Plaintiff to seek a waiver to bypass the metal detectors. Plaintiff complains that each defendant was deliberately indifferent to his serious medical need and committed willful, wanton, simple, reckless and gross negligence. Plaintiff also complains that each defendant violated the ADA. For example, C/O Lundy is liable under the ADA because he purportedly "conditioned [the] ability to use the dining hall and to eat meals based upon . . . clearing the metal detector, which [Plaintiff] was unable to do because of [his] disability."
Plaintiff seeks damages and an injunction. Plaintiff alleges that, for several months after the fall, he needed medication to reduce knee pain. Plaintiff also alleges he experienced emotional trauma from fearing if the fall aggravated his spinal injury. He seeks an order requiring every warden and head nurse to meet with him upon arrival at any VDOC facility, to exempt him from "any security measure[] or other circumstance[] at the institution [that] may pose a risk of substantial harm to [him] due to his disabilities," and either to exempt him from that circumstance or to transfer him to an "appropriate facility."
A party is entitled to summary judgment if the pleadings, the disclosed materials on file, and any affidavits show that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). Material facts are those necessary to establish the elements of a party's cause of action.
A government official sued in an individual capacity via § 1983 may invoke qualified immunity.
The VDOC is not a proper defendant to claims pursued under § 1983.
To the extent Plaintiff alleges that defendants violated VDOC policies and procedures, such a claim does not state a federal claim.
After viewing the evidence and inferences in Plaintiffs favor, several disputes of material facts preclude qualified immunity and summary judgment in favor of C/O Lundy. One disputed dispositive fact is whether the appearing defendant "C/O A. Lundy" is the correct "C/O Lundy" named in the amended complaint. C/O A. Lundy claims he was not working at RNCC in November 2015, while Plaintiff continues his allegation that C/O A. Lundy indeed is the culpable C/O Lundy. Accordingly, a jury will resolve the credibility of the parties' disparate assertions based on the current record.
Another question of material is about C/O Lundy's alleged deliberate indifference. A jury will have to resolve whether, at a minimum, C/O Lundy recklessly disregarded a substantial risk of danger, either known to him or which would have been apparent to a reasonable person in C/O Lundy's position. Plaintiff presented to C/O Lundy as a wheelchair-bound inmate escorted by inmate caretaker, both circumstances in prison that would indicate Plaintiff had a serious medical issue related to mobility. Plaintiff objected to C/O Lundy's first order to walk through the metal detector and explained his spinal injury, inability to walk without assistance, and pain when walking. As to the second occurrence, C/O Lundy had already seen and heard Plaintiff stumbling and grunting in pain even with Bolen's assistance during the short walk through the metal detector. Yet, C/O Lundy made Plaintiff live these painful experiences even though policy allowed an alternative screening method for wheelchair-bound inmates.
Another question of material fact is the severity and the extent of pain Plaintiff suffered. After the fall, C/O Lundy twice denied Plaintiffs pleas for medical assistance and twice prevented Plaintiff from going to the medical department. Whether the pain Plaintiff allegedly experienced was sufficient for Eighth Amendment purposes is a question to be resolved by a jury.
Plaintiff alleges that C/O Dean interfered with treatment by failing to process the emergency grievance. The emergency grievance allegedly requested emergency medical treatment because of the pain Plaintiff felt in his broken back and swollen knee after C/O Lundy ignored Plaintiffs pleas for medical care. Plaintiff handed the emergency grievance to C/O Dean for processing to the medical department, but the medical department never received it. Consequently, Plaintiff was left to remain in pain until dinner time when he was examined by a nurse. C/O Dean has no recollection of the emergency grievance.
Viewing the inferences in a light most favorable to Plaintiff, disputes of material facts exist whether the emergency grievance existed and whether C/O Dean understood the significance of the emergency grievance and, at a minimum, recklessly disregarded a substantial risk of inflicting continual pain by not processing the grievance to the medical department. As a consequence of this possible interference and delay with treatment, Plaintiff allegedly experienced substantial pain until a nurse evaluated him later that day.
Plaintiff faults Clarke, Walrath, and McBride for promulgating policies requiring Plaintiff to travel through a metal detector and faults Walrath and McBride for not advising him to seek a medical waiver to bypass the metal detectors. Nothing in these allegations suggests that these defendants' alleged omissions constitute deliberate indifference to any "pervasive" and "unreasonable" risk of harm.
During the medical screening upon intake, Nurse Parks noted in the "Current Medical/Dental Problems" section of the Intra-system Transfer Medical Review that Plaintiff required a wheelchair and also had a cane. Nurse Parks informed plaintiff that RNCC regulations allowed him either a wheelchair or a cane, but not both, and he needed to choose one. Plaintiff opted for the wheelchair even though he noted he could ambulate short distances with a cane.
Medical waivers are not addressed in the medical screening process unless the inmate raises a particular issue. Also, Plaintiff did not ask for any medical waiver. Because Plaintiff indicated to Nurse Parks that he could ambulate short distances, there was no discussion about a complete inability to walk or an inability to stand out of the wheelchair.
Even if Plaintiff wanted Nurse Parks to issue the waiver, she could not have done so. The doctor has the exclusive authority to order medical waivers, and thus, Nurse Parks could issue a waiver only upon a doctor's order. Nurse Parks never saw Plaintiff try to stand and walk, did not observe Plaintiff trying to walk through a metal detector, and was not involved with Plaintiffs medical care after the fall. Accordingly, Plaintiff fails to establish Nurse Parks' deliberate indifference to a serious medical need, and she is entitled to summary judgment.
Under Title II of the ADA, a plaintiff must show that: (1) he has a disability; (2) he was either excluded from participation in or denied the benefits of some public entity's services, programs, or activities for which he was otherwise qualified; and (3) such exclusion, denial of benefits, or discrimination was by reason of his disability.
Defendants are entitled to summary judgment for the ADA claims. Plaintiff acknowledges he was not excluded from or denied meals on account of his wheelchair. The requirement to pass through the metal detector was not discriminatory; all inmates, whether aided by wheelchairs or not, were required to undergo a security check, including through the use of a metal detector.
Plaintiffs argument that he was "required to injure himself as a result of his disability in order to go to breakfast" is fallacious. The VDOC already provides a "reasonable modification" of the screening requirement for inmates who have received a medical waiver.
Plaintiff charges all defendants with simple negligence because he fell and received delayed medical care. Simple negligence means "the failure to use the degree of care an ordinary person would exercise to avoid injury to another."
The VDOC is immune from the simple negligence claim. "In the absence of express statutory or constitutional provisions waiving immunity, the Commonwealth and its agencies are immune from liability for the tortious acts or omissions of their agents and employees."
While the Commonwealth has absolute immunity unless it is waived, government employees and officials have qualified immunity depending on the function they perform and the manner of performance.
It is clear the VDOC defendants qualify as governmental employees and are immune to Plaintiffs allegations of simple negligence. Accordingly, the simple negligence claims against the VDOC defendants are barred, and their motion for summary judgment is granted to that extent.
As the moving party, Nurse Parks has the burden of proving immunity is warranted by the evidence.
Plaintiff also accuses all the defendants of gross negligence and also willful and wonton negligence. Gross negligence is negligence which shocks fair-minded people but is less than willful recklessness.
The gross negligence and willful and wonton negligence claims will continue against C/O Lundy and C/O Dean. The disputes of material facts as to the unresolved questions for the Eighth Amendment claims implicate the same unresolved questions about these defendants' alleged negligent conduct causing Plaintiff injuries and suffering.
Nurse Parks is entitled to summary judgment for the gross negligence and willful and wonton negligence claims. When a defendant exercises "some degree" of care for the safety of others, a claim of gross negligence cannot succeed.
As to the other VDOC defendants, Plaintiff fails to offer any evidence based on personal knowledge that Clarke, Walrath, or McBride committed gross negligence or willful and wonton negligence. Plaintiff fails to establish, beyond his mere assertion, that the VDOC defendants had a duty to discuss with him personally the various security policies and techniques used to find contraband. As noted earlier, these defendants' purported rules and policies provided a waiver for inmates who have received a medical waiver, which Plaintiff did not seek until after the fall. There is nothing in the record to infer the Clarke, Walrath, or McBride acted or failed to act with malice or were a proximate cause of any injury. Accordingly, Clarke, Walrath, or McBride's motion for summary judgment is granted to that extent.
For the foregoing reasons, I grant in part and deny in part defendants' motions for summary judgment. The VDOC defendants' motion is denied as to the Eighth Amendment, gross negligence, and willful and wonton negligence claims against C/O Lundy and C/O Dean, and the motion is granted in part as to all other claims. Nurse Parks' motion for summary judgment is denied in part as to simple negligence, and it is granted in part as to all other claims. Nurse Parks and Nurse Crawford may file a motion for summary judgment supported by affidavit(s) within twenty-one days pursuant to Standing Order 2013-6. If they do not file the motion within that time, the Clerk shall set this matter for a jury trial.