COYLE v. MONTGOMERY COUNTY PENNSYLVANIA

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 20, 2023
Docket2:21-cv-04704
StatusUnknown

This text of COYLE v. MONTGOMERY COUNTY PENNSYLVANIA (COYLE v. MONTGOMERY COUNTY PENNSYLVANIA) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
COYLE v. MONTGOMERY COUNTY PENNSYLVANIA, (E.D. Pa. 2023).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

GABRIEL COYLE, : : Plaintiff, : CIVIL ACTION NO. 21-4704 : v. : : MONTGOMERY COUNTY, : PENNSYLVANIA; MONTGOMERY : COUNTY CORRECTIONAL FACILITY; : PRIMECARE MEDICAL, INC.; JOHN : DOE GUARDS 1-5; JOHN DOE PRIME : CARE EMPLOYEES 1-5; PRIMECARE : NURSE OCTAVIER BROWN; : PRIMECARE NURSE JILLIAN : BRIGHTER; PRIMECARE DOCTOR : STEVEN WILBRAHAM; PRIMECARE : NURSE COURTNEY SHAEFFER; : PRIMECARE NURSE MARYAM : ABDALGHANI; PRIMECARE : PHYSICIAN’S ASSISTANT BRIANNA : CULP; PRIMECARE PHYSICIAN’S : ASSISTANT ANGELA NAPOLITANO, : MONTGOMERY EINSTEIN HOSPITAL : JOHN DOE SURGERY TEAM 1-5; and : JOHN DOE GUARD WHITE SHIRT 1, : : Defendants. :

MEMORANDUM OPINION Smith, J. March 20, 2023 The pro se plaintiff, who is proceeding in forma pauperis, alleges that between October and November 2019, he was incarcerated in a Pennsylvania county jail for several weeks while awaiting a probation/parole violation hearing. During this time, the plaintiff claims to have suffered from serious medical issues with his left leg that were initially ignored by the correctional officers and the medical staff, which consisted of employees of a private company that had contracted with the county to provide medical services for its jail. After approximately eleven days of being ignored, he finally saw a nurse who examined him, prescribed him Ibuprofen, and ordered that he be permitted to use a wheelchair. The order for the wheelchair was apparently refused by the corrections officers, as they took the plaintiff’s wheelchair from him. For approximately the next 13 days, the plaintiff had numerous visits with the medical

staff, including a doctor, several nurses, and at least two physician’s assistants. He also was prescribed a higher dose of Ibuprofen for his pain and had lab tests performed on his blood. When those lab tests showed that the plaintiff had a high white blood cell count, which is indicative of an infection, the medical staff prescribed him two antibiotics and a corticosteroid. Despite these measures, the plaintiff alleges that the medical staff failed to sufficiently treat his medical issues, because he was ultimately transported to a hospital where he was treated for a serious infection and other serious conditions relating to that infection. Based on these allegations, the plaintiff asserts three causes of action: two causes of action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for constitutional violations and one state-law tort claim. The first cause of action under section 1983 is against the private company providing medical services at the jail,

certain unidentified employees of that company, and certain unidentified correctional officers, because they were allegedly deliberately indifferent to his serious medical needs when they did not respond to his submissions of medical slips seeking medical attention for pain in his left leg for approximately eleven days and then failed to adequately treat the pain. The unidentified correctional officers also allegedly refused to allow the plaintiff to use a wheelchair. The second cause of action under section 1983 is a municipal liability claim against the county, which allegedly failed to properly train its employees and enforce a policy related to incarcerated individuals’ use of wheelchairs. The plaintiff also alleges that the county lacked certain policies relating to aspects of his medical care, which led to his injuries. The state-law cause of action is for medical malpractice against the private medical provider and several of its employees working at the county jail. Unfortunately, even though the plaintiff commenced this action in late-October 2021, the pleadings are not yet closed due to significant delays attributable only to the plaintiff. Most of the

delay has been due to the plaintiff’s non-responsiveness, some of it was caused by his representation that private counsel was going to represent him in this case, and the most recent delay is due to his personal medical issues. As a result of these delays, it took the plaintiff more than a year to file an amended complaint, which essentially consists of a copy of his original complaint, but with approximately seven new paragraphs and apparently three new defendants: the hospital where he was treated for his infection; unknown “surgery team” members at the hospital; and an unidentified correctional officer known only by his white shirt. In addition, the plaintiff has moved to have the court appoint an attorney to represent him in this case, which is opposed by one group of defendants. The private medical provider and all but one of its employees named as defendants in the

amended complaint have filed a motion to dismiss certain portions of the amended complaint. These defendants seek to have the court dismiss the plaintiff’s section 1983 claim for deliberate indifference to his serious medical needs against the company because he has only included allegations that would, at best, attempt to show vicarious liability, which is an improper basis for liability against a private company providing medical services to a county jail under section 1983. They also seek to have the court dismiss the plaintiff’s medical malpractice claims because, despite him having received notice about his failure to file certificates of merit as early as mid-May 2022, he has never filed certificates of merit in this case. The county has also filed a motion to dismiss the amended complaint. The county seeks to have the court dismiss the plaintiff’s section 1983 municipal liability claim because it believes that he failed to plausibly allege that a policy (or lack of a policy), custom, or failure to train led to any constitutional violations.

After liberally reviewing the amended complaint, the court must grant both sets of motions to dismiss. As explained below, the plaintiff’s section 1983 municipal liability claim against the county and his deliberate-indifference-to-serious-medical-needs claim against the private medical provider require him to plausibly allege that their policies, customs, lack of policies, or lack of training caused his alleged constitutional violations. Here, the plaintiff has not included any factual allegations relating to a policy or custom of the private medical provider and, only appears to seek to impose vicarious liability on this company. In addition, the plaintiff’s allegations against the county are too speculative and conclusory to state a plausible claim for municipal liability against it. Concerning the medical malpractice claims, the plaintiff has been on notice since at least mid-May 2022 that he needed to file certificates of merit and has not yet done so. Since the plaintiff

has not come close to substantially complying with his obligations relating to those certificates of merit, the court must dismiss his medical malpractice claims as well. Regarding the new defendants added in the amended complaint, the court has screened the plaintiff’s allegations relating to those defendants under 28 U.S.C. § 1915(e) and will dismiss those claims because (1) any claims against the hospital or medical staff involved with the plaintiff’s treatment after being transported there from the jail are clearly barred by the statute of limitations and (2) his allegations against the correctional officer with the white shirt do not rise to the level of a constitutional violation.

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Bluebook (online)
COYLE v. MONTGOMERY COUNTY PENNSYLVANIA, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coyle-v-montgomery-county-pennsylvania-paed-2023.