Cradle v. Superintendent, Correctional Field Unit 7

374 F. Supp. 435, 1973 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14221
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Virginia
DecidedApril 2, 1973
DocketCiv. A. 73-C-72-H, 73-C-73-H
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 374 F. Supp. 435 (Cradle v. Superintendent, Correctional Field Unit 7) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cradle v. Superintendent, Correctional Field Unit 7, 374 F. Supp. 435, 1973 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14221 (W.D. Va. 1973).

Opinion

OPINION and JUDGMENT

DALTON, District Judge.

David L. Cradle, a Virginia state prisoner, brings these two actions pursuant to the provisions of 42 U.S.C. § 1983, 28 U.S.C. § 1343. In Civil Action No. 73-C-72-H he seeks monetary damages, alleging that he was placed in isolation on November 9, 1973, while at Correctional Field Unit # 7, White Post, Virginia and unjustly held for over 48 hours in a cold cell, without writing materials. In Civil Action No. 73-C-73-H he repeats the above allegations, and contends that he lost one of his testicles and has suffered kidney trouble as a result of not receiving proper medical care during the period of his incarceration, for which he requests monetary damages and unspecified injunctive relief.

Respondent R. L. Berry, who was Acting Superintendent at Unit # 7 during November of 1973, has submitted affidavits supporting his motion for summary judgment. He states that on November 7, 1973, petitioner was charged with two violations of institutional rules: refusing to obey a direct order (to report for a head count), and disruptive behavior (abusive language directed at guards). On November 8, 1973, he was charged with interferring with an employee in the performance of his duties. Adjustment Committee Action Reports were written up on each charge, and given to petitioner. On November 9, 1973, respondent referred petitioner to the Unit’s Adjustment Committee. Cradle requested the right to employ an attorney, and was allowed to place telephone calls. Respondent says that he became concerned about Cradle’s behavior and the disruptive influence it was having on other inmates, and deemed it advisable to place petitioner in detention on November 9, 1973, pending the hearing of the Adjustment Committee. While inmates charged with institutional violations should not routinely be placed in detention awaiting such hearings, it is entirely permissible to do so when the circumstances warrant. See the Division Guidelines For Corrections’ Personnel at p. 7. 1 Since petitioner indicated that he wished to employ a private attorney to represent him at the hearing, petitioner’s hearing was postponed for four days. The Division Guidelines (at p. 8) specifically state that once such a continuance has been allowed, the inmate may be kept in detention for the four day continuance period. Respondent has taken care to show that Cradle was kept in a detention status, in that he had all of his personal belongs and was fed three meals daily, and was not subjected to isolation status, as petitioner infers, even though petitioner was actually incarcerated in an isolation area cell. This was necessary, according • to respondent, because Unit # 7 has only four separate cells in which inmates can be individually confined.

The court has examined the isolation area logs 2 of Unit # 7 for the dates of November 9-13, 1973, the period in which Cradle was in detention, and they reveal that his complaint about a cold cell is groundless. The temperature logged in the isolation area ranged from a low of 74° to a high of 85° during that period — with the temperature at 80° or above most of the time. Portable electric heaters and writing materials were available to Cradle upon request, according to respondent, but he did not request either.

Petitioner never had an Adjustment Committee hearing on any of the three *437 charges that were placed against him, for on the morning of November 13, 1973, he was released from detention and sent to Richmond, where he was admitted to the Medical College of Virginia for surgery the next day. He remained there until November 27, 1973, when he was removed to the prison hospital as a result of his disruptive behavior.

Petitioner’s final allegation is that he has lost one of his testicles and suffered kidney trouble because he did not receive timely medical treatment. He states that for four years he had tried to get a proper medical examination in order to determine what was wrong with his testicles, but was unable to do so until 1973.

Respondent has submitted the affidavits of three physicians who have treated Cradle and Cradle’s prison medical records in support of his motion for summary judgment. Petitioner’s medical problem is explained in the affidavit of Dr. M. J. Vernon Smith, a certified urologist, who first saw Cradle on August 28, 1973, when petitioner complained that his right testicle became painful when he did hard work. According to Dr. Smith, at that time, Cradle’s left testicle appeared small and wasted, and was probably non-functional due to “torsion.” He defined torsion as a congenital condition that is usually manifest at or just after puberty, but which can occur at any age, in which a testicle rotates on its suspending cord resulting in blockage of the blood supply and death of the testicle — usually within twelve hours. When Cradle was operated on at the Medical College of Virginia on November 16, 1973, the dead left testicle was removed and a left testicular prosthesis was placed, and the right testicle was fixed to prevent torsion from occurring.

Petitioner’s medical records reveal that he had had problems with his left testicle swelling intermittently since he was thirteen years of age. The earliest record of this problem in his extensive prison medical records is a notation of September 27, 1963. There are other notations in July and August of 1968, when Cradle had testicular swelling and pain, for which he was treated with penicillin and given bed rest. Dr. Smith states that as torsion most commonly occurs in young men between the ages of twelve and sixteen, while Cradle was twenty-three in 1968, the treating physician treated the condition as an infection (epided ymitis), which also occasionally occurs. However, as Dr. Smith found during surgery, plaintiff lost his left testicle due to torsion, which Dr. Smith states probably occurred during this period in 1968.

This court will not express an opinion as to the propriety of petitioner’s treatment in 1968, as such matters as involve medical judgments are ordinarily not questions for judicial review. 3 Even if an institutional physician has been negligent or mistaken in his diagnosis, such an error would not raise a constitutional issue cognizable in a § 1983 action in the absence of some evidence of abuse, mistreatment or denial of essential medical attention. See, e. g., Bishop v. Cox, 320 F.Supp. 1031 (W.D.Va.1970). Petitioner certainly has *438 not been denied medical care 4 As to the alleged lack of success of that care, it does not constitute a constitutional deprivation over which this court has jurisdiction. See, e. g., Wilson v. Slayton (Civil Action 511-72-R) (Mem.Dec.) (E.D.Va. November 13, 1972). According to Dr. Smith, once torsion occurs and a testicle dies, there is nothing that can be done save what was done in this case: surgery for cosmetic reasons, and fixation of the remaining testicle to prevent it from undergoing torsion. Dr.

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427 U.S. 160 (Supreme Court, 1976)

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Bluebook (online)
374 F. Supp. 435, 1973 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cradle-v-superintendent-correctional-field-unit-7-vawd-1973.