Danny Williams v. Donald Barrow

559 F. App'x 979
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedMay 5, 2014
Docket13-11735
StatusUnpublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 559 F. App'x 979 (Danny Williams v. Donald Barrow) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Danny Williams v. Donald Barrow, 559 F. App'x 979 (11th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Danny Williams, a Georgia state prisoner proceeding pro se, appeals the dismissal of claims he asserted in a civil rights complaint under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.

I.

Danny Williams entered the prison system in 1997. 1 Soon after that, he began to experience pain in his shoulder, neck, and back. A 2005 MRI revealed that he suffered from various abnormalities that required surgery, which Williams’ treating physician recommended. Prison officials delayed the surgery, seeking a second opinion, which they received from Dr. Paul King in 2008. Dr. King also recommended surgery. Williams did not receive the surgery at that time, and his condition worsened.

In November 2009 Williams was transferred to Dooly State Prison (Dooly). While there, he told Dr. Vinod Sachdeva and Warden Sheila Oubre of his condition and requested surgery. His request was unsuccessful. Sometime that following year, Williams told Dr. Sachdeva and Warden Oubre that he was experiencing body numbness, poor balance, difficulty standing, an inability to hold things in his hands, and inadvertent falling. In June 2010 Williams was sent back to Dr. King for an emergency MRI, and prison officials agreed to schedule his surgery. Between then and the end of July, which is when he underwent surgery, Williams was assigned to “general population” at Dooly, which he alleges was inappropriate. He stumbled into people and things, could not go to meals, and could not care for himself or perform other basic tasks. Despite his difficulty walking, Williams was assigned to an upstairs cell. Williams told Warden *982 Oubre about the difficulty posed by his medical conditions but nothing changed.

Dr. King performed surgery on Williams on July 30, 2010. He ordered physical and occupational therapy to facilitate Williams’ rehabilitation, and Williams was transferred to Georgia State Prison (GSP) to recover. Upon arrival, Dr. Dean Broome, a physician at GSP, told Williams that he would receive physical therapy but not occupational therapy. Williams remained at GSP for three months and received one or two physical therapy sessions each week. Williams told Dr. Broome that his condition was worsening and his pain increasing, but Dr. Broome decreased the amount of Williams’ pain medicine, eventually discontinuing it. Dr. Broome then transferred Williams back to Dooly even though Williams’ physical therapist had ordered an additional six weeks of therapy.

Upon returning to Dooly, Williams’ repeated requests that Dr. Sachdeva and Warden Oubre provide the treatment he claimed to need were denied. Because Dr. King, the physician who. had performed surgery on Williams, was no longer working with the prison system, Dr. Sachdeva sent Williams to another doctor, Dr. Edward Mendoza, at the Augusta State Medical Prison for his post-surgery follow-up appointment. Williams alleges that Dr. Mendoza “refused to do anything, on several occasions,” despite the fact that Williams had informed him of his worsening condition and need for continued therapy. Williams continued to suffer from numbness and pain.

In September 2011 Williams was transferred to Washington State Prison. 2 His wife visited him at that facility on September 24, 2011. Williams claims that while she was there, Warden Donald Barrow and Lieutenant Gail Oliphant falsely accused him of receiving contraband from her and swallowing it. As a result, his wife was removed from his visitation list indefinitely. Williams’ wife contacted officials at the Department of Corrections, including Director of Facility Operations Randy Tillman, and she and Williams offered to provide sworn affidavits about the visitation incident, to have no-contact visits, and to undergo strip searches before visits. However, Tillman and Warden Barrow continued to deny them visitation.

Williams filed the lawsuit that led to this appeal in October 2011, asserting various claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. He alleged that five of the defendants, Warden Oubre and Drs. King, Sachdeva, Mendoza, and Broome were deliberately indifferent to his medical needs in violation of the Eighth Amendment. He also contended that he has a “liberty interest in visitation with [his] wife” and that Director Tillman, Warden Barrow, and Lieutenant Oliphant interfered with that right by removing his wife from his visitation list. Williams generally alleged that he had been discriminated against on the basis of race, in violation of the Equal Protection Clause. Finally, he claimed that the poor treatment he received at the hands of prison officials violated the First Amendment because it was done in retaliation for his filing grievances and lawsuits against prison staff. Williams asserted that he would have filed more grievances if not for his fear of further retaliation.

The defendants filed a motion to dismiss Williams’ complaint under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6). They argued that the complaint should be dismissed because, among other things, it failed to *983 state a claim against any defendant, ran afoul of the Prison Litigation Reform Act’s (PLRA’s) “three-strike” provision, 28 U.S.C. § 1915(g), and because Williams had not exhausted his administrative remedies as required by the PLRA, 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a).

The magistrate judge recommended that the defendants’ motion to dismiss be granted, and the district court agreed for the most part. It determined that Williams’ Eighth Amendment claim was precluded as to all defendants except for Dr. Broome because he failed to exhaust administrative remedies. 3 Williams had filed a formal grievance in connection with the treatment he • received from Dr. Broome, but the court was not convinced that he had ever received a response to that grievance. Because of the confusion surrounding that claim, the court declined to dismiss it for failure to exhaust administrative remedies and instead dismissed it on the ground that Williams had failed to state a claim of deliberate indifference against Dr. Broome. The court also dismissed on failure-to-exhaust grounds Williams’ due process and retaliation claims against Lieutenant Oliphant, Randy Tillman, and Warden Barrow in connection with the removal of Williams’ wife from his visitation list.

Williams appeals the district court’s decision, contending that the court erred in three main ways. First, he argues that the district court should not have dismissed his deliberate indifference claim against Dr. Broome because Williams sufficiently alleged the elements of that claim. Second, he argues that the court should not have dismissed his deliberate indifference claims against Warden Oubre, Dr. Sachdeva, and Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
559 F. App'x 979, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/danny-williams-v-donald-barrow-ca11-2014.