Choate v. Lockhart

779 F. Supp. 987, 1991 WL 254195
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Arkansas
DecidedNovember 22, 1991
DocketCiv. PB-C-89-174
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 779 F. Supp. 987 (Choate v. Lockhart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Choate v. Lockhart, 779 F. Supp. 987, 1991 WL 254195 (E.D. Ark. 1991).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

GEORGE HOWARD, Jr., District Judge.

Currently pending before the Court are the proposed findings and recommendations of the Magistrate Judge recommending that plaintiff’s case be dismissed. 1 Counsel for the plaintiff registered objections to the recommendations. Pursuant to the holding of the Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit in Branch v. Martin, 886 F.2d 1043 (8th Cir.1989), this Court must conduct a de novo review of the proposed findings and recommendations.

After carefully reviewing the proposed findings and recommendations, as well as the record in its entirety, this Court is persuaded that the evidence establishes that defendants, A.L. Lockhart, R.H. Smith, Delbert Keith and Billy W. McCool, 2 were deliberately indifferent to and demonstrated reckless disregard for plaintiff’s safety when he was directed to perform work on a 45 degree angle plywood roof, without toe boards or scaffoldings installed, when plaintiff, among other things possessed a recognizable infirm right leg. Accordingly, this Court rejects the proposed findings and recommendations of the Magistrate Judge and rules in favor of the plaintiff on the question of liability as hereinafter discussed.

RELEVANT FACTS

Plaintiff, Freddy Wayne Choate, was confined to the Arkansas Department of Correction [Department] on February 12, 1982, which was approximately the second or third time that plaintiff had been incarcerated at the Department. Plaintiff, among other skills, possesses extensive training and experience in the area of carpentry, and, as such, was assigned to the Department’s construction crew sometime during 1983 or 1984. The construction crew makes repairs on buildings and on occasion constructs modest structures on premises of the Department. Plaintiff, when advised of his assignment to the construction crew, consulted with the physician at his unit, the Tucker Unit, and registered a complaint regarding the assignment and disclosed certain health problems he possessed that would render plaintiff unfit for the assignment. Plaintiff was immediately assigned a medical classification that specified that plaintiff should not be required to do any lifting, bending and squatting because of health reasons. Plaintiff was required to have an artificial knee implant on his right leg sometime during 1975. Plaintiff was reassigned “to *989 light maintenance” work and was immediately transferred from the Tucker Unit to the Cummins Unit. However, in 1987, without any advance notice, plaintiff was “told to pack my things that I [plaintiff] was being transferred to the Pine Bluff Unit for construction [assignment].”

Sometime during the early part of 1987, plaintiff's construction unit was assigned the task of constructing “from the ground up”, a garage on premises occupied by Director Lockhart, as a personal residence, but owned by the State of Arkansas and located at the Pine Bluff Diagnostic Unit of the Department.

On April 24, 1987, after the project had been operative for approximately five weeks, plaintiff and five other inmates were directed to perform “decking” on the roof of the structure which was approximately twelve feet above ground.

The area where the “decking” was to be performed was sloped at approximately a 45 degree angle; plaintiff and his associates, fellow inmates assigned to the crew, were required to make use of “a heavy-duty electrical saw” in cutting plywood in performing the decking and other related tasks and, as such, sawdust accumulated on the decking. On several occasions, plaintiff swept the sawdust off of the decking in an effort to reduce “hazardous and dangerous” circumstances.

Relative to the concerns regarding the hazardous conditions that they were exposed to registered by the inmates to their immediate supervisors, on the very morning of the day that plaintiff fell from the roof resulting in physical injuries, the following testimony was received during the evidentiary hearing:

Inmate Kevin Lamley testified as follows:

A. Mr. Keith come in and asked what was wrong. That’s when all this other stuff come up.

Q. What other stuff?
A. About the roof being slick.
Q. Who brought that up?
A. I did.
Q. What did you say?
A. I told him that the roofs too slick to work on.
Q. And what did he say?
A. He. said, ‘Shut up and go back to work.’
Q. And you asked that something be placed there to keep you from sliding off?
A. I said, ‘Something needs to be put on the bottom in case somebody does slide.’

Inmate Ronald Bartlett testified as follows:

Q. Okay. After this accident [plaintiff’s fall from the roof], did you all have to wear safety harnesses when you were up there?
A. Oh well, after the accident occurred, Mr. Smith, along with the Warden, and a few other people came over, and we had to put up some sort of safety boards to prevent people from sliding off the roof, plus we also had to use scaffolding and walk boards.
Q. Okay. But you didn’t have to wear any type of harness or anything like—
A. Well, they — they came out with — it was before the fact that we had to wear safety helmets or sign a waiver refusing to wear them, or being responsible for ourselves if we refused to wear them.

Plaintiff Choate testified as follows:

Q. Okay. And you started sliding from the roof?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. And were you able to stop yourself?
A. No, sir.
Q. Was there any toe board there for you to strike on or to put your feet against or hands against—
A. No.
Q. —to stop yourself?
A. No, sir.
Q. Okay. Now this particular roof that you were working on, was it a flat roof or was it an uneven roof or—
*990 A. About a 45-degree angle.
Q. And, in taking the break, did you get down off the building to take the break?
A. No, sir.
Q. Mr. Choate — Mr. Choate, excuse me, the knee, the right knee, how did it affect you, as far as — or did it affect you, at all, as far as walking on that building — uneven building?
A. Yes, sir, it did.
Q. What did it do?
A. Well, I can’t bend it all the way, and it just — it just give me a lot of trouble.

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Bluebook (online)
779 F. Supp. 987, 1991 WL 254195, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/choate-v-lockhart-ared-1991.