Duffey v. Bryant

950 F. Supp. 1168, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 261, 1997 WL 8808
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Georgia
DecidedJanuary 6, 1997
Docket7:95-cv-00087
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 950 F. Supp. 1168 (Duffey v. Bryant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Duffey v. Bryant, 950 F. Supp. 1168, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 261, 1997 WL 8808 (M.D. Ga. 1997).

Opinion

ORDER

OWENS, District Judge.

On July 14, 1998, Rudolph Duffey died naked in a cell in Cook County Jail of chronic malnutrition and dehydration (Answer, ¶ 17). His brother Alvin, acting as administrator of his estate and as representative for his two children, filed this § 1983 action against the county and police officers involved in the arrest and detention. On cross motions for summary judgment, the foremost issue for the court is whether the doctrine of qualified immunity will shield the police officers from liability. Because federal case law in existence at the time compelled the conclusion that their actions constituted deliberate indifference to Rudolph Duffey’s psychological and medical needs, the court finds that the police officers who were responsible for watching over and caring for the jail’s inmates during his detention are not entitled to qualified immunity.

FACTS 1

I. Background and Arrest

Rudolph Duffey, a restaurant manager in his early thirties, was diagnosed with manic depression in August 1992 and was prescribed medication to treat the disorder. Duffey behaved normally as long as he was taking his medicine, but would begin to show symptoms of his manic depression when he stopped taking it.

Around July 4,1993, Duffey began to show signs of not having taken his medicine. His brother, Alvin Duffey, tried to get him to take the medicine, but Duffey refused. Later that night or early the next- morning, Duffey left his father’s house in McDonough, Georgia, in his car. On July 7, 1993, at around 8:30 a.m., Alvin Duffey filed a missing persons report with the Henry County Police Department in which he explained that his brother was a manic depressive in need of his medication. 2

On the evening of July 6, Officer Roy Wheeler of the Cook County Sheriff’s Department was patrolling Interstate 75 south of Adel, Georgia, when he pulled Duffey over for driving approximately 50 miles per hour in the southbound emergency lane. 3 Wheeler asked Duffey for his license, and Duffey *1172 told him that his license had been suspended. Wheeler then called in Duffey’s name and birthdate to Paul Hopson, the Cook County dispatcher, and asked that the information be processed on GCIC, the statewide network of criminal information.

Hopson reported back that Duffey’s license was indeed suspended. Duffey told Wheeler that the ear was his brother’s and that he had borrowed it to get something to eat in McDonough (well over one hundred miles away), causing Wheeler to conclude that Duffey was lost. At that time, Wheeler also noticed that Duffey’s pants were on inside out and wet across the' front (Wheeler, at 7-9).

Officer Wheeler placed Duffey in the back of the patrol car and took him to the Cook County Jad. In the car, Wheeler Spoke with Duffey and says that Duffey acted and responded to questions rationally (Wheeler, at 13). Once they arrived at the jail, Hopson and Wheeler tried to contact Duffey’s family. Although the number and exact outcome of calls made is in dispute, 4 it is clear that the police were not able to reach Duffey’s family that night or at any time during his incarceration. When they asked him if he had ever been hospitalized in the past three years, Duffey told the officers that he had been treated for a salt. deficiency a few months earlier but did not mention his prior psychiatric history (Hopson, at 35).

At some point, Wheeler and Hopson had a discussion wherein they concluded that, judging from the fact that he was lost and his pants were inside out and wet, Duffey was probably suffering from a mental disorder of some kind (Coroner’s Inquest, at 45; Wheeler, at 21). Hopson reported their observations about Duffey to their supervisor, Melissa Duke, who said that she would “check on it” the next day (Hopson, at 35). Officer Wheeler left before Duffey was processed into the jail, and had no further contact with Duffey (Wheeler, at 20).

Hopson testified that while Wheeler was processing Duffey, Magistrate Judge Ronnie Fender happened by the jail to attend to an unrelated matter. Once the officers determined that Duffey’s license had been suspended several times, they requested that a warrant be issued charging him with being a habitual violator. Hopson says that Judge Fender talked with Duffey in another room, and then wrote out the warrant (Hopson, at 66-71). This was the only time Duffey was brought before a judicial officer during the eight days of his incarceration.

II. Supervision of Jail and Aberrant Behavior

Primary responsibility for overseeing the jail rested with Chief Jailer Melissa Duke and with the dispatcher on duty at the time. However, much of the evidence strongly suggests that the daily operations of the jail were performed in large part by its prisoner trusties. For instance, it was the trusties who gave the inmates their two meals a day and who regularly reported any problems or changes that might need attention to the officers on duty (Hopson, at 37-40, 59). Although both Chief Jailer Duke and Dispatcher Hopson testified that their duties included regular walk-throughs of the jail, neither officer remembers seeing any signs that Duffey’s health was deteriorating. Both officers also testified that Sheriff Bryant had in place a policy that inmates were given medical and/or psychiatric care only upon his approval (Duke, at 22, 26-27; Hopson, at 29). The record contains no evidence indicating that Sheriff Bryant entered the jail at all during *1173 the eight day period Duffey was incarcerated.

At the time of Duffey’s arrest, the Cook County Jail had no air conditioning for either prisoners or employees (Hopson, at 58). Duffey was first placed in the drunk tank by himself, then in the “bullpen” with approximately eleven other prisoners. Sometime later, he was moved to his own cell after he began chasing the other prisoners around the bullpen (Coroner’s Inquest, at 8-11). At some point after he was placed in this private cell, Duffey took off all his clothes and threw them, along with his bed linens, out the flap in the door of his cell and into the hall (Coroner’s Inquest, at 18, 20). 5

Duffey also began preaching loudly and barking like a dog. This barking and preaching was heard by the other prisoners and by employees in other parts of the courthouse. On more than one occasion, the courthouse employees complained about the yelling to Sheriff Charles Bryant. Bryant responded by calling the jail to find out who was yelling. Melissa Duke, the Chief Jailer, told him it was Duffey. Duke testified that she cannot recall anything being done as a result of the complaints (Duke, at 57-58).

The trusties who distributed meals to the inmates at the time, Robert Johnson and Lany Inman, told Melissa Duke or Paul Hopson on three different occasions that Duffey had refused to eat. The jail log for July 7 reports that Duffey refused his meal.

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Bluebook (online)
950 F. Supp. 1168, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 261, 1997 WL 8808, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/duffey-v-bryant-gamd-1997.