Dafinka Stojcevski v. Macomb County, Mich.

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 17, 2020
Docket19-2266
StatusUnpublished

This text of Dafinka Stojcevski v. Macomb County, Mich. (Dafinka Stojcevski v. Macomb County, Mich.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dafinka Stojcevski v. Macomb County, Mich., (6th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

NOT RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION File Name: 20a0539n.06

No. 19-2266

UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FILED Sep 17, 2020 DAFINKA STOJCEVSKI, as personal representative of ) DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk David Stojcevski, deceased, ) ) Plaintiff-Appellee, ) ON APPEAL FROM THE ) UNITED STATES DIS- v. ) TRICT COURT FOR ) THE EASTERN DIS- MACOMB COUNTY, MICHIGAN; WALTER OXLEY; ) TRICT OF MICHIGAN MORGAN COONEY; PAUL HARRISON; JOHN TA- ) LOS; BRIAN PINGILLEY; BRIAN AVERY; STEVEN ) VANEENOO, ) ) Defendants-Appellants. ) )

BEFORE: MOORE, CLAY, and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.

MURPHY, Circuit Judge. After David Stojcevski failed to appear in court for a careless-

driving charge, a Michigan judge ordered him to pay $772 or spend 30 days in jail. As a result,

Stojcevski was booked into the Macomb County Jail on June 11, 2014. Sixteen days later, he died

from a severe prescription-drug withdrawal. During the last two days of Stojcevski’s life, correc-

tions deputies watched him lying on his cell floor naked, convulsing, and without eating or drink-

ing. Although some deputies had previously sought medical assistance for Stojcevski, he received

no medical care over these final two days. According to the district court, a reasonable jury could No. 19-2266, Stojcevski v. Macomb County, et al.

find that the deputies had been deliberately indifferent to Stojcevski’s serious medical needs in

violation of the Eighth Amendment. See Stojcevski v. County of Macomb, 2019 WL 4744432, at

*18–19 (E.D. Mich. Sept. 30, 2019).

In this qualified-immunity appeal, the deputies do not dispute the law: They concede that

clearly established law required them to re-alert medical staff if Stojcevski’s condition had “sig-

nificantly worsened” after he received medical aid. Preyor v. City of Ferndale, 248 F. App’x 636,

644 (6th Cir. 2007). The deputies instead dispute the facts: They argue that they reasonably relied

on medical staff and that the district court wrongly found a genuine issue of material fact over

whether Stojcevski’s condition had significantly worsened. In this interlocutory appeal, however,

we lack appellate jurisdiction to consider the deputies’ evidentiary claim that the record conclu-

sively shows that Stojcevski’s condition had not changed. See Brown v. Chapman, 814 F.3d 436,

445–46 (6th Cir. 2016). We thus dismiss the deputies’ appeal (along with Macomb County’s

appeal) for lack of jurisdiction.

I

A

Taking the evidence in the light most favorable to Stojcevski’s estate, the district court

described the days before his death in detail. See Stojcevski, 2019 WL 4744432, at *2–8. Macomb

County contracted with Correct Care Solutions to provide medical care to inmates, and the jail’s

medical staff worked for this company. During his June 11 booking, Stojcevski met with an intake

nurse. He told the nurse that he had been taking only one prescription medication, methadone.

The nurse initiated an opiate-withdrawal protocol because Stojcevski would not be receiving this

opioid while in jail. See id. at *2. Under the protocol, nurses would visit Stojcevski, take his

vitals, measure his symptoms, and report any red flags like seizures, delirium, or dehydration.

2 No. 19-2266, Stojcevski v. Macomb County, et al.

This protocol required the nurse to alert doctors immediately if Stojcevski also faced a risk

of polysubstance (not just opiate) withdrawal. And, despite what Stojcevski had said, he had been

taking more than just methadone. Yet the nurse did not verify whether Stojcevski had been pre-

scribed other drugs by calling his pharmacy, a lapse that apparently conflicted with the medical

staff’s normal practice. If this practice had been followed, the nurse would have discovered that

Stojcevski had been regularly filling prescriptions for several other drugs, including oxycodone

and two benzodiazepines, Xanax and Klonopin. Benzodiazepine withdrawal can be life-threaten-

ing. Given the failure to discover these other prescriptions, however, the nurse never alerted doc-

tors at the jail of Stojcevski’s risk of any polysubstance withdrawal. See id. at *2–3.

Between June 11 and June 15, nurses visited Stojcevski many times in the jail’s general

population to measure his withdrawal symptoms. The symptoms consistently scored as mild to

nonexistent. Inmates finish this protocol if their symptoms measure no more than mild for 72

hours. On June 15, therefore, a nurse documented that Stojcevski’s opiate-withdrawal protocol

was complete. See id. at *3.

On June 17, however, Stojcevski began exhibiting some withdrawal red flags. That morn-

ing, a corrections deputy reported finding Stojcevski lying “on his back on his bunk blinking his

eyes” and apparently “unable to speak or move.” A nurse took him to the medical director. The

director’s later-recorded notes from this visit stated that he “observed [Stojcevski] fluttering his

eyes in what was certainly not a seizure but what was most likely his poor attempt to feign one.”

The director returned Stojcevski to the general population. That afternoon, another deputy found

Stojcevski hallucinating and “talking to [people] that are not there[.]” This deputy referred

Stojcevski to the mental-health unit. See id. at *4.

3 No. 19-2266, Stojcevski v. Macomb County, et al.

The mental-health unit was monitored by corrections deputies who worked three eight-

hour shifts: a midnight shift, followed by a day shift, followed by an afternoon shift. Deputies

used a “Mental Health Log Book” to record who worked each shift, to document their security

rounds, and to make occasional notes about specific inmates. During each shift, deputies filled

three different positions: the mental health control officer, the mental health runner, and the D-

Block runner. The control officer sat in the Mental Health Duty Station and watched video feeds

from the cells. The mental health runner conducted security rounds every hour by going cell-to-

cell and checking on each inmate’s well-being. The D-Block runner performed the same function,

but for a different portion of the jail. On occasion, though, the D-Block runner would be called to

a cell in the mental-health unit. And when the two runners were not out making rounds, they were

stationed in the Mental Health Duty Station with access to the video monitors.

After Stojcevski was referred to this unit on June 17, he was placed in a cell some six or

seven feet from the Mental Health Duty Station. The control officer in this station could see into

his cell through a window and could monitor him via the video. Stojcevski was placed into the

“high observation green” category, which meant he could wear only a green anti-suicide gown and

possess no blankets or personal items. On his first night, Stojcevski’s seizure-like symptoms and

hallucinatory behaviors continued. Deputy Paul Harrison found Stojcevski “twitching on the

ground” in his cell. Harrison called for nurses. According to their notes, Stojcevski told them that

“all his organs, but 10% of his heart was removed and his arms shre[d]ded a couple days ago[.]”

After checking his vitals, the nurses cleared him. See id. at *4–5.

On June 18, a mental-health professional visited Stojcevski for the first of ten daily mental-

health assessments. During these visits, the professionals spoke with Stojcevski from outside his

cell.

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