Clemons v. Zahtz

CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Illinois
DecidedSeptember 1, 2021
Docket3:20-cv-50330
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Clemons v. Zahtz, (N.D. Ill. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS WESTERN DIVISION

Armand M. Clemons, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) Case No. 3:20-cv-50330 v. ) ) Magistrate Judge Lisa A. Jensen Dr. Merrill Zahtz, ) ) Defendant. )

REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION

For the following reasons, it is this Court’s report and recommendation that Defendant’s request for dismissal of the third amended complaint be granted and that Plaintiff’s claims be dismissed without prejudice for failure to exhaust available administrative remedies. Any objection to this report and recommendation must be filed by September 15, 2021. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 72(b). Failure to object may constitute a waiver of objections on appeal. See Provident Bank v. Manor Steel Corp., 882 F.2d 258, 260-61 (7th Cir. 1989).

BACKGROUND

I. Procedural History

Plaintiff Armand M. Clemons,1 now an inmate at Logan Correctional Center, filed a pro se civil rights action in August 2020 pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Dkt. 1. Plaintiff raised claims about multiple events that occurred at several institutions. As relevant here, Plaintiff alleged that following an attack in June 2018 at Dixon Correctional Center (“Dixon”), a nurse refused to provide treatment for her wrist injury. A Dixon correctional officer and a nurse also denied her request to see a doctor. When Plaintiff was transferred to Robinson Correctional Center (“Robinson”), she received an x-ray that revealed her wrist was fractured. After her transfer back to Dixon in April 2019, Dr. Merrill Zahtz, the Medical Director at Dixon, failed to provide adequate medical treatment for her wrist injury. The district court dismissed Plaintiff’s complaint without prejudice for improper joinder of claims. Dkt. 14.

In her amended complaint, Plaintiff again alleged, in part, that following an inmate attack in June 2018 a nurse refused her medical treatment. Dkt. 15. Like the first complaint, Plaintiff’s only mention of Dr. Zahtz was in relation to his treatment for her wrist injury in April 2019. The district court again dismissed Plaintiff’s amended complaint for improper joinder of claims. Dkt. 17.

1 Plaintiff’s preferred pronouns are she/her. See Dkt. 7. In her second amended complaint, Plaintiff narrowed her claims and named only Wexford and Dr. Zahtz as defendants. Dkt. 18. Plaintiff alleged that on June 12, 2018, she was attacked by another inmate. Plaintiff was taken to see a nurse and complained of wrist and hand pain. The nurse would not treat her injury. The nurse told Plaintiff that her wrist was only bruised and denied her request to see Dr. Zahtz. Plaintiff was placed in segregation for the next two weeks until she was transferred to another facility. While in segregation, Plaintiff’s requests for pain medication and an x-ray from the nurses were denied. Plaintiff sent Dr. Zahtz several “slips” seeking medical treatment for her wrist, but Dr. Zahtz refused to look at her wrist in segregation. Dkt. 18 at 8. Following Plaintiff’s transfer to Robinson, she continued to complain about severe pain. On September 13, 2018, Plaintiff received an x-ray and was told her left wrist was fractured. Plaintiff was later transferred back to Dixon in April 2019. For the next several months, the nurses and Dr. Zahtz refused to provide Plaintiff with medical treatment for her wrist injury.

After screening Plaintiff’s second amended complaint, the district court allowed her to proceed with a deliberate indifference claim against Dr. Zahtz. Dkt. 20. The district court noted, however, that while Plaintiff’s complaint mentioned several nurses in the recitation of facts, she did not name them as defendants. Dkt. 20 at n.1. Accordingly, the district court stated that to proceed against these nurses Plaintiff would need to identify them and name them in an amended pleading.

In February 2021, this Court recruited counsel for Plaintiff, and counsel filed a third amended complaint naming only Dr. Zahtz. Dkts. 33, 44. In this complaint, Plaintiff alleges that immediately following the inmate attack on June 12, 2018, a nurse that was supervised by Dr. Zahtz examined Plaintiff’s injury and diagnosed her with a bruised left wrist. Plaintiff was then placed in segregation. Over the next two weeks, Plaintiff continued to experience pain and suffering and sought medical treatment from Dr. Zahtz. Dr. Zahtz “did not treat Plaintiff’s left wrist and continued to diagnose Plaintiff with a bruised left wrist.” Dkt. 44 at 3.

Plaintiff was then transferred to Robinson, where she was examined by Dr. Clifford Johnson, Jr. on September 13, 2018 and was diagnosed with a left wrist fracture. Dr. Johnson ordered a CT scan of Plaintiff’s wrist so that surgical plans could be made. Plaintiff alleges that at no time prior to September 13, 2018 did she know that she suffered from a fractured left wrist. When Plaintiff was transferred back to Dixon, Dr. Zahtz did not order or approve surgery for Plaintiff’s left wrist despite knowing that she suffered a fractured wrist and required surgery. In November 2020, Dr. Zahtz ultimately approved Plaintiff’s wrist surgery, which she received in March 2021. Accordingly, Plaintiff alleges that Dr. Zahtz was deliberately indifferent to her serious medical condition, her requests for treatment, and Dr. Johnson’s diagnosis and medical plan. Plaintiff also alleges that Dr. Zahtz provided inadequate medical treatment when he failed to diagnose and continued to misdiagnose Plaintiff’s left wrist fracture, failed to properly treat her left wrist fracture, and failed to refer her to a medical specialist for treatment.

Defendant Dr. Zahtz answered and asserted the affirmative defense of failure to exhaust administrative remedies. The parties completed limited discovery and submitted briefing on that issue. See Dkts. 49, 51. On August 4, 2021, this Court conducted an evidentiary hearing pursuant to Pavey v. Conley, 544 F.3d 739 (7th Cir. 2008). The parties introduced several exhibits at the hearing, see Dkt. 48,2 and called two witnesses, Plaintiff and Debbie Knauer, Chairperson for the Administrative Review Board (“ARB”).

II. Pavey Hearing

At the hearing, Plaintiff testified that she sustained an injury to her left wrist on June 12, 2018, when she was attacked by another inmate. After the attack, Plaintiff was taken to the health care unit where a nurse looked at her wrist. Plaintiff complained about pain, asked for an x-ray, and asked to see the doctor. However, the nurse told her nothing was wrong, her wrist was only bruised, and did now allow Plaintiff to see Dr. Zahtz. Plaintiff was taken directly to segregation.

Plaintiff was in segregation from June 12, 2018 until June 27, 2018, when she was transferred to Robinson. Plaintiff explained that while in segregation, Dr. Zahtz would come once or twice a week to make his rounds and see other inmates. Plaintiff first testified that there were “multiple times” where she showed Dr. Zahtz her wrist and he told her nothing was wrong. However, when later asked by defense counsel if she saw Dr. Zahtz in segregation, she testified that Dr. Zahtz only looked at her wrist once through the chuckhole of her cell door.

Plaintiff testified that the nurses came to segregation every day.

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Bluebook (online)
Clemons v. Zahtz, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clemons-v-zahtz-ilnd-2021.