Ferguson v. Perry
This text of 593 So. 2d 273 (Ferguson v. Perry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Faye A. FERGUSON, etc., Appellant,
v.
Neil PERRY, Sheriff of St. Johns County, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fifth District.
*274 Henry E. Davis of Roberts & Davis, P.A., Jacksonville, for appellant.
Julius F. Parker, Jr. of Parker, Skelding, Labasky & Corry, Tallahassee, for appellee.
GRIFFIN, Judge.
Faye A. Ferguson, as personal representative of the estate of Herbert Lee Bryant, Sr. ("appellant"), appeals a summary final judgment entered in favor of Neil Perry, Sheriff of St. John's County ("appellee") in a wrongful death action. We reverse.
This suit was filed below against the City of St. Augustine, St. John's County and Neil Perry, Sheriff of St. John's County.[1] Plaintiff's decedent, Herbert Lee Bryant ("Bryant") was a 33-year-old black male who died of a cerebral hemorrhage allegedly due to the failure to provide him with proper medical care while he was in police custody.
Viewed in a light most favorable to appellant, the record contains the following facts. Bryant was stopped by St. Augustine Police Officers Shapiro and McIntyre shortly after midnight on April 19, 1986 for driving his vehicle without his headlights on and for driving in an erratic manner. According to the officers, his clothes were dirty, he was "swaying" on his feet, and the officers smelled a "faint" odor of alcohol on him. No alcohol or drugs were found in his vehicle. Bryant agreed to take a series of field sobriety tests, during which he appeared "very wobbly".
Officer Shapiro concluded that Bryant was under the influence of alcoholic beverages and placed him under arrest for driving while intoxicated. Bryant was transported to the St. Augustine Police Station, where he was given a breathalyzer test which registered a blood/alcohol level of .04.[2] Because of the low alcohol level shown by the breathalyzer, which indicated Bryant was not intoxicated,[3] Officer Shapiro concluded that Bryant was under the influence of illegal drugs. Bryant was *275 asked to give a urine sample, which he agreed to do.
Officer Shapiro's Incident Report indicates that while Bryant was at the St. Augustine Police Department, his condition worsened:
At SAPD, suspect['s] lack of control of faculties became more pronounced; walking into walls, extreme staggering; incoherent speech; passed out. Suspect began sweating profusely; could not sit still; complaint that handcuffs were tight although I could place my thumb between his wrist and the handcuff on each arm.
An Alcohol Influence Report Form filled out by Officer Shapiro contained the following comments concerning Bryant's condition: "staggering inability to understand questions while interviewing him he passed out." The second half of the form which contains questions such as, "Are you ill" and "If so, what's wrong" was left blank, with the notation "unable to answer" written across it in large letters.
Bryant was transported at approximately 2:20 a.m. to the St. John's County Jail, which serves as an intake and housing facility for arrests made within the City of St. Augustine. Officer Shapiro left a General Offense/Incident Report, the Arrest Report and the Alcohol Influence Report at the County Jail. An investigative report completed after Bryant's death by Lieutenant Donna Robertson of the St. John's County Sheriff's Department indicated that Bryant was staggering, his pants were below his hips and his clothing was in disarray. Bryant was able to cooperate with a search, but he began to pass out and had to be helped to a holding cell. According to the report, at this point one of the intake officers questioned in his own mind whether Bryant should be admitted to the jail; he would have taken Bryant's blood pressure had there been a blood pressure cuff available.
As part of the admissions process, the booking officer was required to fill out a Medical Screening Form on each prisoner. The form has two sections the first based on the officer's visual observations and the second based on answers to be given by the prisoner. The first section of Bryant's form indicated he was "barely" conscious, but that he had no symptoms or visible signs suggesting the need for emergency medical care. The form also noted he had no fever and was not carrying any type of medication. The second half of Bryant's screening form was left blank, with the notation "highly intoxicated unable to answer any questions." It reflects Bryant was placed on a fifteen minute watch out of fear he might vomit, aspirate and choke to death.
The officers on duty checked on Bryant a number of times during the night. On several occasions he was observed to be sleeping. Once Bryant was found standing by the wall and, when told to lie down, he staggered back to his mattress. On another occasion, when an officer heard change rolling around in Bryant's pocket and went into his cell to remove it, she found him standing again and had to help him to the mattress. At 6:20 a.m., Bryant asked for some aspirin. One of the officers advised the incoming shift that Bryant was "completely out of it." The officers uniformly described Bryant as being "highly intoxicated."
At approximately 9:00 a.m., Bryant was taken to first appearance before Judge Andreu at the front desk of the jail. At that time, Bryant was described as "incoherent," his eyes "were rolled back in his head" and he "had to be bodily carried out of the cell" by two of the officers. The judge advised that Bryant was too incoherent for first appearance.
Bryant was physically carried back to the holding cell by the two officers and the nurse was called to come in. The nurse saw Bryant between 9:30 and 10 a.m. He was lying on his back on the floor. The nurse got no response from Bryant and could feel no pulse; he merely "grunted" when his name was called and his pants were wet. She advised that Bryant should be transported immediately to the hospital. One officer described Bryant as being in a "zombie-type stage, like he was over relaxed." He required help to get to the *276 police vehicle and he lay down on the seat all the way to the hospital. At the hospital, Bryant was given a number of medications to bring his blood pressure down, but they had no significant effect. By that afternoon, Bryant was apparently lapsing in and out of consciousness.
When Bryant's test results showed blood in his spinal fluid, on April 21, 1986, he was transferred to Jacksonville Memorial Hospital ("Memorial"). His medical workup showed Bryant's condition was as follows:
He was mute, unable to talk. He would open his eyes occasionally, but was combative and weak on his left side. He did not follow commands. His eyes deviated to the right. His pupils were small and poorly reactive. His blood pressure on admission was 240 over 120.
The diagnosis was an intraventricular hemorrhage, which results in bleeding into the fluid cavities in the middle of the brain. Doctors attempted to bring his blood pressure down, but Bryant's condition rapidly deteriorated after his admission to Memorial. Dr. Lohse, who treated him, believes he suffered a second subarachnoid hemorrhage on the evening of April 21. That night he suffered a sudden respiratory arrest and progressed into a deeper level of coma. Although he was resuscitated and placed on a respirator, he died two days later. Dr. Lohse is unable to tell exactly when Bryant suffered his first hemorrhage, but is sure it occurred within a couple of days of his admission to Memorial.
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593 So. 2d 273, 1992 WL 5352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ferguson-v-perry-fladistctapp-1992.