KENT J. DAWSON, Senior District Judge.
There are several motions pending before the Court, all of which arise out of an alleged assault by correctional officers on Plaintiff James Sharkey while he was a pre-trial detainee at the Clark County Detention Center. The Court has twice screened Sharkey's proposed complaints and determined that he has objectively pleaded colorable claims (ECF Nos. 9, 17). Since then, there has been a flurry of filings. First, Sharkey moved to "assert jurisdiction" (ECF No. 20), where he effectively seeks to amend his complaint to add defendants. Next, Defendant NaphCare, Inc. moved to dismiss (ECF No. 23), to which Sharkey responded (ECF No. 29), and NaphCare replied (ECF No. 31). Before the Court could rule on the motion to dismiss, Sharkey moved for summary judgment (ECF No. 36). The Court stayed the briefing on that motion until it could decide NaphCare's pending motion to dismiss. Since then, Sharkey has moved to compel NaphCare to consolidate its motion to dismiss into its future opposition to his motion for summary judgment (ECF No. 42) and has filed two more motions to amend his complaint (ECF No. 51 and ECF No. 43, which the Court construes as a motion to amend). The Court will resolve each motion below.
Sharkey alleges a litany of constitutional deprivations during his time as a pre-trial detainee at the Clark County Detention Center (CCDC). The majority of Sharkey's claims arise from two alleged assaults that Sharkey suffered at the hands of corrections officers and CCDC's response to those assaults.
Sharkey claims that other officers either failed to protect him or even retaliated against him after the assault. Specifically, Sharkey claims that officers in the cafeteria withheld his meals after the assault. And worse, Sharkey alleges that five days after the first assault, he had a disagreement with Special Enforcement Officer Kelsey over Sharkey's phone use that resulted in a second attack.
The alleged assaults left Sharkey bruised, bloodied, and in need of medical care. Clark County contracts with NaphCare, Inc. to provide medical care to inmates housed at CCDC. Sharkey submitted a "kite" request for medical attention at some point before June 18, 2017.
Despite Neville's alleged threats and the other officers' retaliation, Sharkey reported his assault to an Officer Lewis. In response, multiple prison officials "rushed in [to] photograph" Sharkey's injuries.
Sharkey filed this case in early 2018. His first complaint alleged eleven total causes of action against nine different defendants. The Court screened the complaint and dismissed several of the claims and defendants. ECF No. 9. Sharkey pared his first amended complaint to five total causes of action. First, Sharkey alleged a Fourteenth Amendment violation against Officer Neville for excessive force, failure to protect, and failure to investigate. In its screening order, the Court determined that Sharkey's excessive force and failure to protect claims were sufficiently pleaded, but it dismissed his failure to investigate claim because Sharkey cannot dictate the way CCDC investigates prisoner complaints. Screening Order 6, ECF No. 17. Second, Sharkey alleged a similar claim against Officer Kelsey for his alleged assault. The Court's screening order allowed that claim to proceed.
Defendant-officers Mariah Mendoza, Blake Okolovich, Jesse Neville, Kenneth Kelsey, and Sheriff Joseph Lombardo ("county defendants") have answered Sharkey's complaint, and NaphCare has moved to dismiss. Meanwhile, Sharkey has filed several motions including a motion for summary judgment to which the county defendants responded. The Court now turns to those pending motions.
The constitution guarantees indigent parties "meaningful access to the courts."
There are seven motions pending in this case, but only two are potentially dispositive motions: NaphCare's motion to dismiss (ECF No. 23) and Sharkey's motion for summary judgment (ECF No. 36). The Court need not resolve the pending motions in any particular order.
Sharkey brings one Fourteenth Amendment claim against NaphCare and several Doe doctors and nurses. He claims that NaphCare, Inc. and its individual employees were deliberately indifferent to his serious medical needs following the June 13 assault. Importantly, Sharkey does not allege that NaphCare failed to treat him. He argues that NaphCare's treatment was not reasonable considering the seriousness of his injuries. NaphCare moves to dismiss for two reasons. First, it argues that Sharkey did not allege that NaphCare's failure to treat Sharkey was due to any policy, custom, or practice as required by
The Court applies a two-step approach when considering a motion to dismiss. First, it accepts the plaintiff's well-pleaded factual allegations as true. Legal conclusions or mere recitals of the elements of a cause of action, on the other hand, do not receive the assumption of truth.
Here, Sharkey has not adequately pleaded a Fourteenth Amendment violation against NaphCare or its employees. The Fourteenth Amendment guarantees pretrial detainees constitutionally adequate healthcare during their detention.
Sharkey has pleaded this claim against both the individual NaphCare doctors and nurses who treated him as well as against NaphCare itself. The standard for his claim against the individual NaphCare employees is different than the standard for the same claim against NaphCare the entity. In a deliberate indifference claim against an individual, the plaintiff must demonstrate four elements: (1) the defendant made an intentional decision with respect to the plaintiff's conditions of confinement; (2) those conditions subjected the plaintiff to a risk of serious harm; (3) the defendant did not take reasonable measures to abate the risk even though a reasonable official would have taken such measures; and (4) by not taking those measures, defendants caused plaintiff's injuries.
Sharkey has not alleged more than mere negligence against any of the individual NaphCare doctors or nurses. Sharkey does not claim that nurses failed to treat him. He merely argues that their treatment did not happen fast enough or in the way he wanted. Sharkey admits that he received consistent treatment for two weeks following the assault. Compl. at 6E ("the nap care [sic] nursing staff visited several times" for "roughly two weeks"). Sharkey complains that even though the nurses consistently treated him, they did not order further testing to assess the damage to his neck, back, and ribs. However, the constitution does not require doctors or nurses to give inmates every treatment they desire.
Likewise, Sharkey has not pleaded facts to support his claim that NaphCare, Inc. was deliberately indifferent to his medical needs. In a deliberate indifference claim against a municipal entity the plaintiff must demonstrate: (1) that the entity acted under the color of state law and (2) that the entity acted or failed to act according to an official policy or custom and thereby caused the plaintiff's injury.
Sharkey failed to allege that a NaphCare policy or custom caused his injury. To the contrary, Sharkey admits that NaphCare "responded with communication" and collected urine samples after he requested help. Compl. at 6D. The closest Sharkey comes to alleging a NaphCare policy or custom of deliberate indifference is his claim that the NaphCare nurses refused to collect his sample while it appeared to have blood in it, opting instead to wait until it "appeared normal."
Sharkey's latest proposed amendment does not fix the deficiencies in his deliberate indifference claim. The proposed amendment notifies the Court that he suffers from epilepsy and alleges additional damages, but it does not allege a plausible policy or custom that caused his injury. The very last line of the proposed amendment alleges that Sharkey was never seen by a doctor "because of NaphCare Inc. [sic] policy." Proposed Am. Compl. 6G, ECF No. 51-1. However, the mere allegation that NaphCare had a policy that governed when certain patients saw doctors does not show a constitutional violation. Still absent is any allegation that the policy itself deprived Sharkey of his right to adequate medical care. Therefore, Sharkey has not pleaded plausible facts to support his allegation that NaphCare deprived him of his constitutional right to adequate medical care under the Fourteenth Amendment. The Court grants NaphCare's motion to dismiss.
Next is Sharkey's pending motion for summary judgment. Sharkey filed his motion while NaphCare's motion to dismiss was pending, which caused NaphCare to move to stay the briefing schedule. The Court granted that motion and stayed briefing until it could rule on NaphCare's motion to dismiss. The remaining defendants, Officer Mariah Mendoza, Officer Blake Okolovich, Officer Jesse Neville, Officer Kenneth Kelsey, and Sheriff Lombardo ("county defendants"), joined NaphCare's motion to stay. They also responded to Sharkey's motion and asked that the Court deny the motion as premature or, alternatively, to delay decision until the parties could conduct discovery.
The purpose of summary judgment is to avoid unnecessary trials by disposing of factually unsupported claims or defenses.
There is no question that Sharkey's motion is premature. At the time of filing, NaphCare's motion to dismiss was pending. If granted—which the Court did above—Sharkey's summary judgment motion would be moot as it relates to his claims against NaphCare and its employees. As for the county defendants, they barely had a chance to answer Sharkey's complaint before he moved for summary judgment. Unsurprisingly, they deny Sharkey's allegations. They will surely deny Sharkey's allegations throughout discovery and at trial, which creates disputed issues of material fact on each of Sharkey's causes of action. Those factual disputes preclude summary judgment on their own. And more, Sharkey moved to amend his complaint again after filing for summary judgment, casting even more uncertainty over the facts in this case.
Given those issues, the Court cannot allow Sharkey's summary judgment motion to proceed. The question then, is whether the Court should deny Sharkey's motion outright or delay deciding the motion until the parties have engaged in further discovery. The Court finds that denial, not delay, is appropriate here. Having dismissed Sharkey's claim against NaphCare (
Next, Sharkey seeks to "assert jurisdiction" over Clark County and the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department ("Metro") under 42 U.S.C. § 12101, 29 U.S.C. § 794, and 42 U.S.C. § 41705. Each of those statutory provisions defines or otherwise prohibits discrimination on the basis of disability in the public sphere. Sharkey claims he suffers from epilepsy and seems to allege that the County and police department withheld medical attention because of his disability.
It is unclear exactly what Sharkey's motion is requesting. From what the Court can gather, Sharkey is alleging that these defendants violated the Americans with Disabilities Act by denying him medical services based on his disability. However, Sharkey's complaint does not allege that any defendant was aware of his epilepsy or that their knowledge of his condition affected his care. To the contrary, Sharkey's motion to assert jurisdiction conflicts with his admission that he received care while incarcerated, but that the care was inadequate.
Next, Sharkey essentially asks the Court to order NaphCare to rescind its motion to dismiss and consolidate it into an opposition to Sharkey's motion for summary judgment. He claims that consolidation would save time because it would allow the Court to decide the merits of both motions at once. Setting aside the procedural implications that would accompany such an order, the Court need not decide the issue because it is moot. The Court has granted NaphCare's motion to dismiss (
Next, Sharkey moves to join several defendants under Rule 19(a)(2). Rule 19 allows the Court, under certain circumstances, to compel joinder of parties who have refused to join a case. However, each defendant that Sharkey wishes to join are either already defendants (
Sharkey's motion to amend fails for substantially the same reason as his motion to join defendants; the amendment seeks to add parties the Court has already dismissed without curing the reason they were dismissed in the first place. Sharkey's first complaint alleged eleven causes of action against both NaphCare and county defendants. The Court screened that complaint and dismissed all but two of two of Sharkey's claims. Screening Order, ECF No. 9. Sharkey amended his complaint, and the Court allowed Sharkey to proceed on five claims: (1) a Fourteenth Amendment claim against Officer Neville for failure to protect and excessive force; (2) a Fourteenth Amendment claim against Officer Kelsey, Sheriff Lombardo, and Doe defendants for excessive force and failure to protect; (3) a First Amendment free exercise claim against Sheriff Lombardo and Doe Officials; (4) a Fourteenth Amendment conditions-of-confinement claim against Officer Okolovich, Sheriff Lombardo, and Doe Officials; and (5) a Fourteenth Amendment deliberate indifference to medical needs claim against NaphCare and Doe nurses and doctors. The Court dismissed defendants Clark County and the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department without prejudice, and Sharkey's second complaint became the operative complaint in this case.
Sharkey now seeks to restore the state of Nevada and Metro as defendants and to claim damages under the Americans with Disabilities Act. A party may amend its complaint once as a matter of course within 21 days of serving it on the opposing party. Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(a)(1). Once a party has exhausted its amendment as a matter of course, he may not further amend his complaint without consent of the opposing party or leave of the Court. Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(a)(2). Generally, leave to amend is freely given, but the Court may deny amendment if it would unnecessarily delay the case, would cause undue prejudice, would fail to cure the deficiencies of the prior complaint, or would be futile.
The minor changes Sharkey made to his proposed amended complaint do not cure the deficiencies in his original complaint, and even if they did, amendment would be futile. The proposed amendment attempts to revive Sharkey's failure to investigate claim against internal affairs officers that the Court already dismissed with prejudice. Sharkey also attempts to rope Metro back into his complaint, but the Court already dismissed Metro because Sharkey did not allege a specific policy or procedure that it instituted at CCDC. Sharkey's proposed amendment fares no better than his original complaint. Sharkey still fails to identify any policy or custom that Metro instituted at CCDC that violated his constitutional rights. Additionally, granting Sharkey's current motion to amend would cause undue delay. Having granted NaphCare's motion to dismiss, the Court presumes that Sharkey will attempt to again amend his complaint. The Court need not grant this motion to amend, knowing that another will likely follow. In sum, Sharkey does not qualify for amendment as a matter of course, and his proposed amendment does not cure the deficiencies of his original complaint. Therefore, the Court denies his motion to amend.
Finally, Sharkey requests an increase to his photocopy budget. Indigent parties do not have a constitutional right to free and unlimited photocopying.
Sharkey has already exceeded his $100 copy-work limit, and this case is just beginning. In the coming months, Sharkey will presumably seek to amend his complaint once again, and he will likely file another motion for summary judgment after the parties have conducted discovery. Those two filings alone will require him to submit copies of filings to the Court and to the opposing parties. Therefore, Sharkey has shown that an increase in copy-work funds is necessary to allow continued access to the Court, and the Court grants his request for additional photocopy allowance.
However, the Court notes that much of Sharkey's printing to this point has been unnecessary. He seems to have wasted much of his $100 budget needlessly copying documents and submitting them multiple times.
Accordingly, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that Defendant NaphCare, Inc.'s Motion to Dismiss (ECF No. 23) is
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Sharkey's Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 36) is
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Sharkey's Motion to Assert Jurisdiction (ECF No. 20) is
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Sharkey's Motion to Consolidate (ECF No. 42) is
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Sharkey's Motion to Join Defendants under FRCP 19(a)(2) (ECF No. 43) is
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Sharkey's Motion for Leave to Amend his Complaint (ECF No. 51) is
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Sharkey's Motion to Extend Copy Limit (ECF No. 35) is