Burke v. Deml

CourtVermont Superior Court
DecidedAugust 13, 2024
Docket23-cv-1303
StatusPublished

This text of Burke v. Deml (Burke v. Deml) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Vermont Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burke v. Deml, (Vt. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

7ermont Superior Court Filed 07/26/24 Orleans Unit

VERMONT SUPERIOR COURT CIVIL DIVISION Orleans Unit Case No. 23-CV-01303 247 Main Street Newport VT 05855 802-334-3305 www.vermontjudiciary.org

ames Burke v Nick Deml et al

ENTRY REGARDING MOTION Title: Motion for Summary Judgment; Motion for Summary Judgment; Motion to Dismiss; Motion to Strike ; ; ; Plaintiffs Cross-Motion for Summary Judgment (Motion: 2; 8; 12; 14) Filer: James Burke; James Burke; Pamela Eaton; Pamela Eaton Filed Date: June 26, 2023; February 13, 2024; March 22, 2024; May 06, 2024

The motion is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART.

PlainuffJames Burke has filed the present action seeking monetary damages and injunctive relief from Defendant Nicholas Deml, Commissioner of the Vermont Department of Corrections. Plaintiff's claims arise from the fact that he was incarcerated at the Tallahatchie County Correctional

Facility ("'TCCF')in Mississippi during the COVID-19 epidemic and contracted the illness for which he claims TCCF, and by extension, Commissioner Deml, are responsible. Plaintiffs central

contention is that the Defendants' policies and actions "failed to medically protect me against their own original and personal COVID-19 infections." Pltf. Stmnt of Mat. Facts at 3 (Apr. 4, 2024)! With this proposition, Plaintiff asserts both negligence and civil rights claims concerning his COVID-19 infection. Plaintiff seeks over $4,000,000 in compensatory and punitive damages. Commissioner Deml opposes this action on and has filed a motion to dismiss and a cross motion for summary judgment. Plaintiff has filed at least three motions for summary judgment that raise

nearly the same facts and issues in each version.

Based on the analysis below, Commissioner Deml's motions to dismiss and for summary

judgment are Granted. Plaintiff Burke's multiple motions for summary judgment are Denied. Commissioner Deml's Motion to Strike is Denied as moot in light of the Court's ruling.

1 As discussed below, Plaintiff's complaint does not specify what policies and actions are to blame and whether such policies and actions were the responsibility of TCCF or Commissioner Deml.

Entry Regarding Motion Page 1 of 13 23-CV-01303 James Burke v Nick Deml et al Background Facts and Undisputed Material Facts

For purposes of the present motions, the Court understands the following facts to be established. Plaintiff Burke is currently incarcerated by the State of Vermont, under the custody and control of the Vermont Department of Correction of which Defendant Nicholas Deml is the titular head. Plaintiff is presently housed at the TCCF in Tutwiler, Mississippi that is operated, staffed, and administered by the third-party CoreCivic, Inc. Vermont inmates are sent to TCCF by virtue of an interstate agreement where the Vermont Department of Corrections contracts with other states and correction facility to house and care for Vermont inmates. 28 V.S.A. §§ 1601–1610.

The State of Vermont sent Plaintiff Burke to TCCF in October 2018, and he was continuously housed at TCCF from that point through the present. As of the date of this Decision, Plaintiff continues to be incarcerated at TCCF. Plaintiff’s tenure in the facility includes the periods between March of 2020 and December of 2022 when the COVID-19 virus spread throughout the United States and the world. The Court takes judicial notice that the spread of this virus during that time left few places unaffected or untouched.

Like the rest of the world, Plaintiff alleges that he was COVID-free at the outset of the pandemic in early 2020 and remained COVID-free up and until he received a testing result in August of 2020 (from a July 2020 test) that indicated he had caught the virus. Plaintiff further claims that he did not test negative for COVID until August 15, 2022. While Plaintiff claims that he was injured during this time that he carried the virus, he does not make any allegation or state any facts about the nature of his injuries or detail what injuries he sustained, apart from carrying the virus.2 Plaintiff has also made no claims about the standard of care that he received at TCCF after contracting the virus, and he has filed no certificate of merit that would be required to accompany a claim of substandard care. 28 V.S.A. § 801 (setting out the Department’s standard of medical care); see also 12 V.S.A. § 1042 (requiring a certificate of merit for any personal injury case resulting from a claim of negligence against a health care provider).

2 To this end, nothing in Plaintiff’s complaint or filings allege anything about the quality of medical care he received

during his infection. His complaint and filings focus on the issue of exposure and infection with the virus, and the Court will not examine issues that have not been pled or properly raised. Amy’s Enterprises v. Sorrell, 174 Vt. 623, 625 (2002).

Entry Regarding Motion Page 2 of 13 23-CV-01303 James Burke v Nick Deml et al Plaintiff’s filings rely a great deal on bald assertions and characterization. They contain several legal statements and assertions.

Plaintiff asserts that he contracted COVID within the Mississippi facility, and the affidavit provided does establish for the purposes of the present motion some evidence to support his contention and show that he tested positive for the disease in the summer of 2020. Plaintiff’s assertion that he continued to have COVID until 2022 is less well-documented or supported. It relies only on his statement, but for purposes of the present motion, the Court will presume that Plaintiff Burke contracted COVID in July 2020 and continued to have the virus in some form or another until August of 2022.

Plaintiff further claims that guards and other employees of the facility came to work knowing that they had COVID. This statement lacks any evidentiary support or basis. There is no evidence that TCCF staff acted or failed to act in a particular manner or what they knew, thought, or felt, which would not be within Plaintiff’s personal knowledge. Plaintiff further alleges that these employees caused inmates, like Plaintiff, to be infected. Again, this is a statement without support or evidence. Finally, Plaintiff alleges that TCCF, and the State of Vermont by extension, failed to adopt more robust protocols and failed to enforce existing protocols. In doing so, Plaintiff neither cites to COVID protocols in place in July 2020 when he apparently contracted the virus, nor to any particular standard or measure against which these standards should be adjudged.

It is not clear from Plaintiff’s pleadings what actions Defendants failed to take or what protocols Defendants adopted or failed to adopt. The Court has not found, either in Plaintiff Burke’s complaint or in any of his filings, any specific allegations that would detail what specific lapses or failures occurred or what policies were not adopted that would have prevented him from contracting the widespread and easily contracted virus.

Plaintiff Burke did not file any grievances during the period where the TCCF staff was managing the facility and dealing with COVID-19 protocols. Burke filed his first grievance about COVID-19 exposure in March of 2023—nearly three years after he claims to have first contracted COVID and nearly a year after he tested negative. He filed the present complaint shortly thereafter.

Plaintiff originally filed his complaint as an appeal under V.R.C.P. 75, a position he repeats in various filings, but he also stated from the outset various claims that fall under either negligence or a private civil rights action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.

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Burke v. Deml, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burke-v-deml-vtsuperct-2024.