Estate of Barnwell Ex Rel. S.C.B. v. Grigsby

681 F. App'x 435
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 3, 2017
DocketCase 16-6027
StatusUnpublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 681 F. App'x 435 (Estate of Barnwell Ex Rel. S.C.B. v. Grigsby) 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
Estate of Barnwell Ex Rel. S.C.B. v. Grigsby, 681 F. App'x 435 (6th Cir. 2017).

Opinion

COOK, Circuit Judge.

After taking eight prescription muscle relaxant pills, Dustin Barnwell lost consciousness for several hours. In the course of attending to Barnwell, police officers *437 and paramedics administered succinylcho-line, a drug that paralyzes the body, including the muscles used to breathe. After a failed intubation attempt, Barnwell died. His estate sued the officers and paramedics, alleging that administering succinyl-choline constituted excessive force, among other legal claims.

The parties dispute a number of facts surrounding Barnwell’s death. Finding those disputes genuine, the district court denied qualified immunity to the officers and paramedics on the excessive-force claim. It also denied qualified immunity on a “state-created-danger” theory of liability. The defendants appealed. Because the defendants’ arguments for qualified immunity on the excessive-force claim rely on their own disputed version of the facts, we DISMISS that portion of their appeal for lack of jurisdiction. But since the district court erred as a matter of law in applying the state-created-danger doctrine, we REVERSE the district court on that aspect of its ruling. We REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I.

A. Factual Background

On November 11, 2011, Barnwell, his fiancée Shasta Lashay Gilmore, and their daughter, S.C.B., left their home to go to Walmart. On the way, Barnwell insisted that they visit his friend, Aaron Sweat, so that he could get several pills of Flexeril, a prescription muscle relaxant. The family arrived at Sweat’s house at around 4:30 or 5:00 p.m., and Sweat gave Barnwell eight Flexeril pills. The family then proceeded to Walmart, where Barnwell started feeling ill. Once they returned home, he began “walking unsteadily]” before collapsing onto their loveseat and passing out. When Gilmore directed S.C.B. to wake her father, he stirred, vomited, and fell back asleep.

By around 8:00 p.m., Barnwell still had not awakened. Concerned that he overdosed, Gilmore called 9-1-1. She told the operator that Barnwell had consumed eight Flexeril pills, and she requested an ambulance. She also said that when she tried to get him up off the couch, he kept “wanting to fight” with her and was “very combative].” During her deposition, Gilmore explained that “[w]henever [she] pulled his legs off the couch to see if [she] could get a response, he just pulled them back really fast.” She surmised that she “miseommunicated” Barnwell’s combativeness to the 9-1-1 operator because her fiancé was not “swinging [at] or biting” her.

Officer Mitch Grigsby and Sergeant Richard Stooksbury of the Roane County Sheriffs Department arrived at Barnwell’s residence before the paramedics. They discovered Barnwell lying unconscious on the loveseat. Gilmore advised them that Barn-well had taken eight Flexeril pñls, and she warned them that he was combative.

The parties dispute what happened next.

Sergeant Stooksbury attested that when he tried to wake Barnwell by shaking his foot, the man “arose and immediately became combative by kicking.” In response, the officers grabbed his arms to hold him down. Despite the two officers’ efforts, however, Barnwell kicked and tried to bite them. The officers also attested that he went in and out of consciousness. Because Barnwell was too difficult to control, the officers took him to the ground and pinned him on the floor.

Around this time, Roane County EMS paramedic David Rancjle arrived. He observed Barnwell continuing to struggle with Sergeant Stooksbury and Officer Grigsby, and he asked the officers to handcuff Barnwell so that he could insert an IV line. The officers cuffed Barnwell.

*438 Gilmore recalls these events differently. After they arrived, the officers were “rough with [Barnwell],” so much so that she asked them to “please stop before [they] kill him.” She recalls that whenever her fiancé tried to sit up, they pushed him back down by his throat and slammed his legs down. She also remembers one of them grabbing Barnwell’s arms and saying, “I’ll break your damn arm.” In her observation, her flaneé was not violently kicking or biting at the officers—in fact, he was mostly unconscious during this period. Eventually, they flipped him off the couch and had him lying on the floor, face-down. Gilmore testified that after the paramedics arrived, one of the officers “looked straight at [her] and said, ‘We’re about to knock him out.’” The officers and paramedics were “talking.” As Randle began to administer medicine through an IV line, one of the officers escorted her out of the house.

Meanwhile, paramedic Randle reports observing that Barnwell’s heart rate was abnormally fast, his breathing irregular, and his blood pressure highly elevated. Randle called for a second paramedic unit. The second unit, including paramedic Robert Cooker, arrived shortly thereafter. Upon learning that Barnwell had likely consumed eight Flexeril pills, the paramedics concluded that he was overdosing and should be taken to a hospital as soon as possible. They also determined that, as a result of Barnwell’s continued combativeness, they needed to administer medications to control his involuntary movements and assist with breathing and heart function.

They decided to initiate Roane County’s Rapid Sequence Paralysis and Intubation Protocol (RSI Protocol). The “Assessments and Indications” call for using the protocol on patients who are “[severely combative” or patients for whom “[all] standard attempts to establish an airway have failed.” To carry out the protocol, they administered succinylcholine, a muscle relaxant that paralyzes muscles in less than a minute, including those used to breathe. After achieving paralysis, Randle and Cooker in-tubated Barnwell—that is, placed a plastic tube in his trachea to open his airway. Unfortunately, however, Barnwell began suffering cardiac issues. While transporting Barnwell to the hospital, Cooker and Randle noticed brown fluid leaching into the intubation tube. They removed the tube and began CPR. Barnwell died at the hospital thirty minutes later.

According to the autopsy report, excited delirium syndrome (EDS) following a Flexeril overdose caused Barnwell’s death. EDS is a rarely observed phenomenon ordinarily associated with cocaine and methamphetamine consumption. Its symptoms include paranoia, disorientation, tachycardia, and hyper-aggression.

But Plaintiffs expert, Dr. Steven Per-laky, considers it highly unlikely that Flex-eril caused Barnwell’s death. After reviewing Barnwell’s medical records and the EMS reports from the evening, Dr. Per-laky concluded that the “succinylcholine delivered to Mr. Barnwell was unnecessary” because Barnwell appeared to have been able to breathe on his own, as evidenced by his “engaging] in acts that required normal breathing” (i.e., kicking at the officers). In Dr. Perlaky’s view, Barn-well “died because the medics did not reverse the consequences of their initial mistake, i.e., paralyzing the lungs of an ably breathing ,.. man” and “they inserted the breathing tube improperly” into Barnwell’s esophagus, not his trachea.

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681 F. App'x 435, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-barnwell-ex-rel-scb-v-grigsby-ca6-2017.