Firas Ayoubi v. Thomas Dart

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedFebruary 2, 2018
Docket17-1561
StatusUnpublished

This text of Firas Ayoubi v. Thomas Dart (Firas Ayoubi v. Thomas Dart) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Firas Ayoubi v. Thomas Dart, (7th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

NONPRECEDENTIAL DISPOSITION To be cited only in accordance with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit Chicago, Illinois 60604

Submitted February 1, 2018 * Decided February 2, 2018

Before

DIANE P. WOOD, Chief Judge

MICHAEL S. KANNE, Circuit Judge

AMY C. BARRETT, Circuit Judge

No. 17-1561

FIRAS M. AYOUBI, Appeal from the United States District Plaintiff-Appellant, Court for the Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.

v. No. 13 C 8983

THOMAS J. DART, et al., Charles R. Norgle, Defendants-Appellees. Judge.

ORDER

Firas Ayoubi sued Cook County jail officials and medical providers under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, claiming that they violated his due process rights by inadequately quarantining inmates who, he says, gave him influenza. After discovery, the district court granted the defendants’ summary judgment motion. Because Ayoubi did not produce evidence from which a reasonable jury could conclude that any defendant was deliberately indifferent to any serious health risks that he faced, we affirm.

* We have agreed to decide this case without oral argument because the briefs and record adequately present the facts and legal arguments, and oral argument would not significantly aid the court. FED. R. APP. P. 34(a)(2)(C). No. 17-1561 Page 2

For purposes of this appeal, we rely only on the evidence in the summary judgment record, viewed in the light most favorable to Ayoubi as the non-movant. See Estate of Simpson v. Gorbett, 863 F.3d 740, 745 (7th Cir. 2017). Cermak Health Services provides medical care to detainees of the Cook County Department of Corrections. Cermak’s disease-containment policy prescribes special measures for so-called “isolation patients” and “quarantine patients.” Neither type of patient has necessarily been diagnosed with a particular illness; rather, an isolation patient has shown signs or symptoms of an “influenza-like illness,” while a quarantine patient has shown no symptoms but nonetheless has recently been the cellmate of a symptomatic detainee.

When feasible, the policy requires isolation patients to be housed in predesignated isolation cells. When there is a shortage of these cells, general population cells may be designated as temporary isolation cells. The same goes for quarantine cells. Isolation patients may share a cell only with other isolation patients; quarantine patients, only with other quarantine patients. Still, the policy permits these patients and general population detainees alike to use a shared dayroom, albeit not at the same time. Patients are advised to wear surgical masks in the dayroom.

At all times relevant to this appeal Ayoubi was a pretrial detainee in the Cook County Jail. (He is now a prisoner at Pinckneyville Correctional Center.) While Ayoubi was housed on the first floor of what the parties call Division 5, Tier 2A of the jail, five cells on the second floor of that tier were designated as either quarantine or isolation cells—two quarantine and three isolation. From December 27, 2012, until January 2, 2013 (about a week), between three and six patients were assigned to those second-floor cells. Ayoubi testified in a deposition that he saw the patients coughing, but he does not provide any other evidence of their symptoms.

The closest Ayoubi said he came to interacting with these patients was watching them through the uncovered “chuckhole” in the solid steel door to his cell. He testified that he saw, from within his cell, various patients not wearing masks over their mouths while using the shared dayroom phone, and that he did not see anyone clean the dayroom and its objects with sanitizing wipes after patient use.

Ayoubi claims that the patients’ presence led him to develop flu-like symptoms sometime in early January 2013, though he received no diagnosis. He testified that these symptoms included a persistent and painful cough, dizziness, immobility, and a fever No. 17-1561 Page 3

with chills and sweating; he says he recovered in roughly two weeks. He does not claim that he was denied treatment after the symptoms’ onset.

The theory of Ayoubi’s § 1983 suit is that Cook County jail officials and Cermak employees violated due process by displaying deliberate indifference to a substantial risk that temporarily housing patients near him (and letting them use the dayroom) would make him seriously ill. Under the supplemental jurisdiction furnished by 28 U.S.C. § 1367, he added state-law claims for negligence. As defendants he named Cook County and six other people (each in both a personal and an official capacity): (1) Thomas Dart, the Sheriff of Cook County; (2) John Murphy, Acting Executive Director of the Cook County Department of Corrections; (3) Tyrone Everhart, Superintendent of Division 5 at the jail; (4) Erica Queen, the jail’s Superintendent of Records and Receiving; (5) Connie Mennella, who was then the Interim Medical Director for Cermak; and (6) Marghoob Khan, an attending physician in Division 5. Ayoubi had not spoken to any defendant; he based his claims against them solely on their job titles and duties within the Department of Corrections.

During discovery, Ayoubi filed several motions to compel, asserting generally that the defendants were being evasive in their responses to his discovery requests. The district court denied each without prejudice and, noting that his requests were largely overbroad, asked Ayoubi to specify which requests he thought were not being honored.

Based on affidavits, Ayoubi’s deposition testimony, and various jail records, the defendants moved for summary judgment. Ayoubi asked for more time to complete discovery, but the district court denied this request, explaining that Ayoubi had failed to comply with its instruction to highlight specifically what kinds of information he believed additional discovery might yield. The district court concluded that Ayoubi’s symptoms were insufficiently serious for liability under the Fourteenth Amendment, and thus that all his constitutional claims failed as a matter of law. With the federal claims denied, the court declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over any state-law claim.

Ayoubi mainly disputes on appeal the resolution of his constitutional claims. To resolve this dispute, we need not opine on whether influenza is a serious condition in the abstract, whether Ayoubi or any other patient really had influenza, or whether Ayoubi’s symptoms were actually and proximately caused by the quarantine policies he challenges here. Nor do we need to resolve the parties’ background disagreement about whether Ayoubi exhausted his administrative remedies under 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a); in No. 17-1561 Page 4

the district court, the defendants did not demand a hearing on that topic under Pavey v. Conley, 544 F.3d 739 (7th Cir. 2008), and there is no need to reach that issue when the grant of summary judgment was otherwise proper.

Because Ayoubi was a pretrial detainee, his claims involve the Fourteenth Amendment’s guarantee of due process rather than the Eighth Amendment’s right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment. See Smith v. Dart, 803 F.3d 304, 310 (7th Cir. 2015).

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Firas Ayoubi v. Thomas Dart, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/firas-ayoubi-v-thomas-dart-ca7-2018.