Cunningham v. Johnson

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Illinois
DecidedJanuary 11, 2024
Docket3:21-cv-00451
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Cunningham v. Johnson, (S.D. Ill. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS

TIMOTHY J. CUNNINGHAM SR., ) #R05718, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) v. ) Case No. 21-cv-451-RJD ) DEREK JOHNSON, ) ) Defendant. )

ORDER DALY, Magistrate Judge: Plaintiff Timothy Cunningham, an inmate of the Illinois Department of Corrections (“IDOC”), filed the instant lawsuit pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging deprivations of his constitutional rights at Lawrence Correctional Center (“Lawrence”). Plaintiff alleges that on March 31, 2019, Defendant Johnson dismissed Plaintiff’s ADA attendant, carelessly rammed Plaintiff into a door frame while pushing his wheelchair, and then denied him medical treatment for his neck injury. (Doc. 1, pp. 18-19). After the threshold review, Plaintiff was allowed to proceed on the following claims: Count One: First Amendment retaliation claim against Johnson for denying Plaintiff access to medical care on March 31, 2019, in retaliation for Plaintiff filing a lawsuit against Johnson.

Count Three: Eighth Amendment deliberate indifference to serious medical needs claims against Johnson for denying Plaintiff access to medical treatment for a neck injury on March 31, 2019.

(Doc. 10). Defendant filed a motion for summary judgment (Doc. 23) that is now before the Court. Plaintiff did not file a response. For the reasons set forth below, Defendant’s motion is Page 1 of 14 GRANTED. Factual Background At all times relevant to the complaint, Plaintiff was an inmate within the IDOC and was housed at Lawrence. (Timothy Cunningham’s Deposition, Doc. 24, p. 22). Plaintiff was in a wheelchair and had an ADA attendant. (Id.¸ pp. 22-23). At all relevant times, Defendant

Johnson was a correctional officer at Lawrence and did not provide any medical treatment to inmates. (Id., pp. 22-24). In 2016, Plaintiff filed a complaint against IDOC and several correctional officers, tilted Cunningham v. Bridwell et al., case number 16-CV-1360-MJR. (See Doc. 24, pp. 24, 36; Cunningham v. Bridwell et al., No. 16-CV-1360-MJR, Doc. 1). Plaintiff asserted, inter alia, a First Amendment claim of retaliation against Defendant Johnson and other correctional officers for allegedly denying Plaintiff ice distribution between June 19, 2015, and October 22, 2015, conducting compliance checks, and cutting short meal time in retaliation for Plaintiff filing grievances. (Id.). In 2017, an order was entered severing Plaintiff’s several claims into five separate actions and dismissing Johnson and other defendants from the original

action. (Cunningham v. Bridwell et al., No. 16-CV-1360-MJR, Doc. 10). Plaintiff’s retaliation claims against Johnson and other correctional officers were severed into Cunningham v. Falmier et al., case number No. 17-CV-126-RJD. (See Id.; Doc. 1, p. 19). Based on public record, Johnson remained a party in the severed case until he was dismissed with prejudice on July 8, 2021. (See Cunningham v. Falmier, No. 17-CV-126-RJD, Doc. 160). On March 31, 2019, Plaintiff was in the waiting area of Lawrence Health Care Unit (“HCU”) along with his ADA attendant, awaiting an insulin delivery. (Doc. 24, pp. 23-24). Johnson, who was the guard at the HCU, called Plaintiff for a pat down before the insulin delivery. (Id.). Johnson dismissed Plaintiff’s ADA attendant and began to push Plaintiff in the wheelchair Page 2 of 14 in the HCU. (Id.). While pushing Plaintiff in the wheelchair, Johnson “rammed [Plaintiff] into a steel door frame.” (Id., p. 24). At that time, Plaintiff “didn’t realize that [he] injured [his] neck.” (Id.). Plaintiff told Johnson, “[w]ow, that hurt,” while “rubbing [his] neck.” (Id., p. 26). Plaintiff believed the neck pain would go away and thought it was something minor. (Id.). Immediately thereafter, Plaintiff saw a nurse in order to receive his insulin. (Id., pp. 27-28). He

did not discuss any neck pain with the nurse because he “hop[ed] that the pain would subside and that [he] would be okay.” (Id., p. 28). He thought receiving his insulin shot was “more important than rubbing [his] neck and having what [he] considered at the time . . . a minor pain.” (Id.). After receiving his insulin shot, Plaintiff was escorted back to the waiting room of the healthcare unit. (Id., p. 28). “[D]uring that time, [Plaintiff] was rubbing [his] neck and trying to flex it and get it to stop hurting.” (Id., p. 29.) While Plaintiff was in the waiting room, Johnson would periodically come to the door to call the next person in line to see the medical staff. (Id.). At one point, Plaintiff told Johnson: “I need to see the nurse.· There is something wrong,” to which Johnson responded, “[y]ou’re not going to see the nurse.”· (Id.). Plaintiff also mentioned his prior

suit against Johnson, telling him, “You can’t do that because I’m suing you,” to which Defendant responded, “[n]o, I’ve been dismissed from that.” (Id., pp. 37-38). Once all inmates received their insulin shots, they were sent to the chow hall. (Id., pp. 29-30). While at the chow hall, Plaintiff “talked to the lieutenant and [] told him what happened and the fact that [] Johnson would not allow [him] to see the nurse.” (Id.). The lieutenant sent Plaintiff back to the HCU, where he saw a nurse. (Id., p. 29). In the HCU, Plaintiff was prescribed ice and ibuprofen but was not referred to a doctor. (Id., pp. 30-31). He returned to the housing unit and put ice on his neck, which “didn’t help” with his pain. (Id.). The next day, Plaintiff put in a nurse sick call slip to see a nurse. (Id.). Plaintiff Page 3 of 14 testified that placing a nurse sick call was the proper procedure in order to be seen at the HCU, and he did not do so until the day after his alleged injury. (Id., p. 33). Plaintiff was thereafter seen by a doctor who ordered him x-rays. (Id., pp. 31-32). He was further prescribed tramadol and a muscle relaxer and was sent to a neurologist who prescribed him exercises. (Id., at 31, 34-35). He testified that his injury “was a muscular/tendon/nerve problem that was caused by being . . .

dragged into the door frame”; it was “described by a doctor at one point as a whiplash type of injury” or “something similar to whiplash.” (Id., pp. 25-26). Plaintiff testified that the pain in his neck ultimately resolved. (Id., p. 31). He is still experiencing “periodic stiffness and pain,” which, however, resolves when he is doing his prescribed exercises. (Id., p. 42). There is no medical record connecting Plaintiff’s neck pain with the incident on March 31, 2019. (Id., p. 31). Plaintiff further testified that he believed Johnson’s conduct on March 31, 2019, was in retaliation for the prior suit he filed “in approximately 2015”. (Id., pp. 23, 36-37). He testified that Johnson “had been either dismissed or overlooked by the court and had escaped the prosecution in that case,” but Plaintiff “got him back in just before he rammed [Plaintiff] into the

door frame.” (Id., pp. 36-37). Based on public records, on March 31, 2019, Johnson was still a defendant in Plaintiff’s prior action and was dismissed with prejudice on July 8, 2021. See Cunningham v. Falmier, No. 17-CV-126-RJD, Doc. 160). In a Sworn Affidavit submitted in support of the Complaint, inmate Charles Fletcher attested that on March 31, 2019, he was at the HCU, where he received a shakedown from Johnson. (Doc. 1, p. 25). At that time, Plaintiff was already at the Accu-Check station alone in his wheelchair, and his [ADA] attendant [] Allen [] had returned to the waiting area after pushing” Plaintiff in the HCU. (Id.). Fletcher saw “Johnson grab the handles of [Plaintiff’s] wheelchair recklessly and plow him into the right-side door jamb of the Lab room doorway” in the HCU. Page 4 of 14 (Id.).

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Cunningham v. Johnson, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cunningham-v-johnson-ilsd-2024.