David Allen Sheldon v. C/o Pezley, Richard Rewis Robert Barthomew Maurice Huff Eric Kirbach Denny Manning

49 F.3d 1312, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 4243, 1995 WL 92708
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMarch 6, 1995
Docket94-1374
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 49 F.3d 1312 (David Allen Sheldon v. C/o Pezley, Richard Rewis Robert Barthomew Maurice Huff Eric Kirbach Denny Manning) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
David Allen Sheldon v. C/o Pezley, Richard Rewis Robert Barthomew Maurice Huff Eric Kirbach Denny Manning, 49 F.3d 1312, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 4243, 1995 WL 92708 (8th Cir. 1995).

Opinion

FRIEDMAN, Semor Circuit Judge.

A state prisoner appeals from the decision of the Urnted States District Court for the Southern District of Iowa ** dismissing after trial Ms complaint under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1988) alleging that state correctional officers subjected him to cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the Eighth Amendment. The prisoner contends that the officers used excessive force while returmng him to his cell from the shower and demed him access to medical care. The district court held that the prisoner had not established either of these allegations. We affirm.

I

A. The magistrate judge, before whom the case was tried with the consent of the parties pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 636(c) (1988), made the following findings:

On April 29, 1992, the appellant Sheldon, an inmate at the Iowa State Pemtentiary, refused to leave the shower in cellhouse 220, a maximum security unit. Sheldon believed that he was entitled to more time in the shower. The officer at the shower requested assistance from the Cell Emergency Res'ponse Team (CERT), which is called upon when an inmate refuses to obey a direct order or when assistance is required to remove an inmate from a cell. The incident was videotaped, beginmng with the dispatch *1314 of the CERT to the shower. Like the magistrate judge, we viewed the videotape.

When the CERT, led by the appellee Lt. Rewis and including five other officers, reached the shower, handcuffs were placed on Sheldon’s hands behind his back. A member of the CERT applied a “pain compliance hold,”

which involves bending a person’s wrist in a natural position, with no pressure applied. If the person refuses to comply with an order, then the wrist is bent to cause only sufficient pain to cause the person to comply with the order. All officers testified that at no time was any force applied to Sheldon, as he was complying with all of the orders issued by Lieutenant Rewis or other CERT members.

The CERT then conducted a strip search of Sheldon, who was held first with his head against a corner of the cell and then against a cell wall. A strip search “is standard procedure whenever [the CERT] take[s] an inmate from the shower to his cell.” After the search was completed, the CERT returned Sheldon to his cell. The entire procedure from the time the CERT reached the shower to the return of Sheldon to his cell took approximately 20 minutes. “During this time, Sheldon was screaming in a loud voice, wailing and yelling ‘you’re hurting me.’ ”

After Sheldon was placed in his cell, Lt. Rewis asked him whether he wanted medical attention. When Sheldon said he did, Lt. Rewis twice asked Sheldon to place his arms through the food slot, and again be handcuffed, so that he could be returned to the shower, where a nurse could examine him. The nurse “needed to see Sheldon in a shower cell where there was better light and no plexiglás front to the cell.” Sheldon twice refused to be handcuffed and be returned to the shower, allegedly “because his wrists were in pain, and he believed that handcuffing and further handling by CERT officers would aggravate this injury.”

A nurse who had been called arrived to examine Sheldon. Lt. Rewis told her that “Sheldon had twice refused to come out of the cell for medical treatment.” The nurse did not examine Sheldon, but noted that he could go on sick call at any time. Sheldon was aware that in his cellhouse sick call was available every weekday and weekends in an emergency.

Sheldon went on sick call 12 days later, on May 10, 1992, and made two follow up visits to the infirmary in May and June. Later in June a doctor in the prison health unit saw Sheldon, diagnosed him as having acute and chronic neuritis in his right wrist, and prescribed Motrin three times daily for two weeks. Sheldon had unrestricted access to Tylenol and aspirin on request, but “testified he did not use this nonprescription medication because he did not think it would be effective.”

More than a year later, in July 1993, on the referral of the prison health unit, Dr. Neahring saw Sheldon at the University of Iowa Hospital and Clinic Department of Neurology. Dr. Neahring diagnosed Sheldon as having a right ulnar sensory mononeuropathy, and “recommended using non-steroidal anti-inflammatory medication (such as Motrin or aspirin) for the occasional tingling sensation noted, which is the same treatment Sheldon had been receiving at ISP. Sheldon complains that once a month or so his hand occasionally tingles as if it had fallen asleep. He has no loss of strength or scarring. Sheldon testified that this condition did not exist prior to April 29, 1992.”

B. Sheldon filed a complaint in the district court under 28 U.S.C. § 1343(a)(3) (1988), seeking compensatory and punitive damages from Lt. Rewis and the five CERT members involved. Sheldon alleged that the defendants “engaged in excessive force while removing Plaintiff and escorting him to his cell when they twisted his wrists and ankles. As a result, Plaintiff suffered extreme pain and nerve damage to his hand. Defendants also denied Plaintiff reasonable access to medical care following this assault.” Sheldon further alleged that “Defendants’ conduct was reckless and callously indifferent to Plaintiffs federally protected rights”, and that “the assault by Defendants upon Plaintiff violates the 8th Amendment by subjecting Plaintiff to cruel and unusual punishment, and by subjecting Plaintiff to deliber *1315 ate indifference to Ms serious medical needs.”

After trial, the court held for the defendants. The court found that “excessive force was not applied to Sheldon during the time period he was in the shower or moved down the range and placed in his cell. Sheldon’s dramatic display for the videotape did not bolster his credibility.” The court further found that “Sheldon has failed to establish that any use of force under the circumstances was excessive or applied maliciously and sadistically for the purpose of causing harm, and not applied in a good faith effort to achieve a legitimate purpose”, and that

there was no Eighth Amendment violation because there is a penological justification to the use of pain compliance holds for the safety of the inmate and the officers, and ... there is no showing that Sheldon was exposed to severe pain, or that his discomfort was caused deliberately, as punishment, or mindlessly with indifference to his humanity.

With respect to the officers’ alleged failure to provide Sheldon with medical treatment, the court ruled:

Sheldon alleges that during the cell move on April 29, 1992, Defendant Rewis was deliberately indifferent to Ms need for medical treatment and tacitly authorized the refusal to provide the medical treatment Sheldon requested. It is true that Lieutenant Rewis advised the nurse reporting to the scene that Sheldon had just twice declined medical treatment.

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Bluebook (online)
49 F.3d 1312, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 4243, 1995 WL 92708, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/david-allen-sheldon-v-co-pezley-richard-rewis-robert-barthomew-maurice-ca8-1995.