Barrows v. Collins

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Arkansas
DecidedNovember 15, 2019
Docket5:18-cv-05195
StatusUnknown

This text of Barrows v. Collins (Barrows v. Collins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barrows v. Collins, (W.D. Ark. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF ARKANSAS FAYETTEVILLE DIVISION

DANNY TRENT BARROWS PLAINTIFF V. CASE NO. 5:18-CV-05195 DEPUTY JEREMY COLLINS (Badge #512); DEPUTY CHARLES GRIMES (Badge #559); DEPUTY CODY REX (Badge #563); DEPUTY COLE SELF (Badge #554); DEPUTY TIM HAWKINS (Badge #557); and DEPUTY DYLAN SIMPSON (Badge #552) □ DEFENDANTS

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER Now before the Court is Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 20). Barrows filed a Response in Opposition to the Motion (Doc. 24), and the matter is now ripe for decision. For the reasons set forth below, the Motion is GRANTED.

. 1. BACKGROUND The claims asserted in this case arose while Plaintiff Danny Trent Barrows was incarcerated in the Washington County Detention Center (“WWCDC”) from September 4, 2018, to September 22, 2018. Barrows names as Defendants Deputies Collins, Grimes, Rex, Self, Hawkins and Simpson. With the exception of Deputy Simpson, Barrows has sued the Defendants in both their individual and official capacities. Deputy Simpson has been sued only in his official capacity. Barrows contends that his constitutional rights were violated when: (1) he was placed in administrative segregation (“A-seg”) without having been charged with a disciplinary infraction or provided with due process; and (2) he was subjected to

unconstitutional conditions of confinement—specifically, jail overcrowding and a leaky toilet in his jail cell—which created a punitive and unsafe environment. On August 15, 2018, Barrows was arrested on various criminal charges. He had fled from police and, in a last-ditch effort to escape, had attempted to jump off a highway bridge. (Doc. 22-2 at 12). Barrows had to be dragged back onto the bridge by police officers. He was then taken to the WCDC and booked. The next day, August 16, 2018, jailers made a note in his file that he was to be placed on suicide watch. (Doc. 22-5 at 1). Barrows indicated to the officers at the time that he wanted to be placed in B-pod. ld. Sergeant Wingate advised Barrows that with his charges, he was sure to be classified as a medium- or maximum-security inmate and not eligible to be housed in B-pod. /d. Barrows testified in his deposition that from the date of his arrest on August 15, 2018, until September 2, 2018, he was in isolation. (Doc. 22-8 at 29, 36). He claims he began suffering from anxiety at this time. /d. at 52. On September 2, Barrows was moved to A-seg where he spent two days in a cell by himself. /d. at36. He was moved to cell P-14 on September 4 with detainees James Johnson, Luis Salazar, and Braden Collins. /d. at 36-37, 45. Around that time, Barrows’s anxiety grew stronger, and he felt claustrophobic in cell P-14 with the three other men. /d. at 52. The cell was designed to house three people, not four. /d. As soon as Barrows was moved to cell P-14, he noticed water leaking around the bottom edge of the toilet.1 (Doc. 22-8 at 39). Specifically, he claimed that water was leaking all the way around the toilet at the point where it was attached to the floor. /d. at

1 The WCDC utilizes a combined sink and toilet unit. (Doc. 22-8 at 59-60). The parties use the terms sink and toilet interchangeably in their briefing.

60. The water was “sludgy” and “slimy” looking, “smelled like sewage,” and drew flies. Id. at 47. Barrows estimated that the toilet leaked at least a “good gallon of water’ a day. Id. at60. Barrows and his cell mates were given a blanket to wrap around the bottom of the toilet to keep the “spilled water and stuff from leaking out all over the middle of the floor.” Id. at 19, 61. Barrows agreed that the blanket “soaked up most of the water.” Id. at 60-61. Barrows testified that he and his cell mates asked several officers to request that maintenance fix the toilet. (Doc. 22-8 at 18). However, no one from maintenance ever came. /d. at 18-19. Barrows testified that he and his cell mates were forced to eat in the cell every day. In addition, one inmate—not Barrows—had to sleep on the floor, and the blanket was soaked and “covered in sewage every day.” Doc. 22-8 at 25. The blanket was only changed about once a week. /d. Barrows testified that on September 6, he and his cell mates asked Deputy Collins, Deputy Grimes, and Deputy Bowman to be moved to a different cell. They also asked the officers to put in a work order for the toilet to be fixed. (Doc. 22-8 at 70). Barrows testified that the following day, they asked four officers on duty whether one person in the cell could be moved to an empty neighboring cell. /d. at 23, 70-71. According to Barrows, Deputy Collins agreed this would be a good idea. /d. Barrows and his cell mates asked Deputy Collins the same question later in the day, but he told them that his shift was ending, and no one would be moved to a different cell. /d. Barrows testified that after that, he and his cell mates asked every officer on duty on almost a daily basis to move an inmate out of P-14. (Doc. 22-8 at 24). Barrows does

not know who was in charge of reviewing inmate classification and housing status in the jail. fd. at 39. On September 9, Barrows submitted his first grievance. In that grievance, he complained that he was being kept in a twenty-three-hour-a-day lock-down cell with only one hour out. (Doc. 22-3 at 12). He also complained that his “hour out” was so early in the day that he could not make personal calls. Id. Barrows pointed out in his grievance that he and three other inmates had been housed for over a week in a three-man cell. Id. He also stated that the toilet was leaking in his cell, which meant that one of his cell mates was forced to sleep on a cramped, wet floor, since there were only three bunks in the cell. /d. Barrows claimed one of his cell mates, Collins, had asked numerous times to be moved. /d. Barrows also asserted that there was an unoccupied cell right beside his overcrowded one. /d. He contended the conditions in his cell amounted to cruel and unusual punishment and asked for a § 1983 form so that he could “follow up on this grievance.” /d. Barrows explained in his deposition that he had not submitted a grievance prior to this one because he knew that in most jails, the jailers required that the prisoner speak with the floor officer about the issue before submitting a formal grievance. (Doc. 22-8 at 48). This, however, was not the policy and practice of the WCDC. /d. On September 11, Barrows’s cell mate Johnson was moved out of the cell after he suffered a seizure and was taken to the hospital. (Doc. 22-8 at 22). Johnson returned to the cell the following day. /d. at 26. Also on September 11, Corporal Mulvaney responded to Barrows’s September 9 grievance. In the response, Corporal Mulvaney

stated that Barrows’s “hour-out” time was generally at around 8:00 a.m., with the exception of September 5, when the “hour out” took place at around noon, and September 8, when it took place around 6:45 a.m. (Doc. 22-3 at 13). Corporal Mulvaney also stated in his response to the grievance that he understood there were no longer four inmates assigned to Barrows’s cell and that maintenance had been notified to address the leaking toilet. /d. Finally, Corporal Mulvaney explained that Barrows had been given an address to use to request § 1983 paperwork. He asked Barrows to state briefly what his complaint was about so that it could be documented, and he also asked Barrows whether any video needed to be saved in connection with the complaint. /d. In reply to Corporal Mulvaney’s written response, Barrows stated that inmate Collins had been moved into the cell on September 4. (Doc. 22-3 at 14). Barrows claimed that the following day, the cell next to P-14 was empty. /d. According to Barrows, he and his cell mates asked several times on September 5 for Collins to be moved. /d.

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Barrows v. Collins, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barrows-v-collins-arwd-2019.