Fleet Hamby v. Steven Hammond

821 F.3d 1085, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 7894, 2016 WL 1730532
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedMay 2, 2016
Docket15-35283
StatusPublished
Cited by326 cases

This text of 821 F.3d 1085 (Fleet Hamby v. Steven Hammond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fleet Hamby v. Steven Hammond, 821 F.3d 1085, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 7894, 2016 WL 1730532 (9th Cir. 2016).

Opinions

Opinion by Judge O’SCANNLAIN; Partial Concurrence and Partial Dissent by Judge GOULD. -•

[1088]*1088OPINION

O’SCANNLAIN, Circuit Judge:

We must decide whether, state prison officials can be made to pay damages to a prisoner who claims that they violated his Eighth Amendment rights when they refused to grant his request for hernia surgery.

I

Fleet C. -Hamby is' an inmate at' the Stafford Creek' Corrections Center in Aberdeen, Washington. In April 2012, Ham-by fell off of á ladder while working Ms prison job as an electrician’s ássistant. A prison medical professional diagnosed him as having an umbilical hernia, meaning that a part of his intestine or abdominal fat had pushed through a weak spot in his abdominal wall, causing a bulge in Ms belly. Hamby’s umbilical hernia was described, as “small” and “easily reducible,” which means that Hamby could push the hernia back -into his abdomen by applying manual pressure or by lying down. Ham-by was counseled on how to push the hernia back in if it popped out, and was also given a rib belt designed to keep the hernia in.

About two weeks later, Hamby saw another prison medical professional who. noted that Hamby was in pain and had' some abdominal tenderness and swelling, but could walk around without difficulty. Hamby was prescribed medication — which he was unable to take due to his other medical conditions — and was advised to continue using the rib belt for support.

By the end of 2012, Hamby was seen at least ten times by a handful of prison medical personnel. Hamby reported that flé experienced sharp pains while sleeping, using the bathroom, and when he tried to sit for long periods. In June of that year, Hamby formally requested surgical repair for his hernia. But on July 19, Hamby rated his pain a three out of ten, and when he renewed, his request for surgery in August his request was denied, with prison medical officials telling him that his “condition [would] continue to be monitored as needed by Health Services,” Hamby was examined again on November 16, and his hernia was confirmed to be still “easily reducible.” ' Hamby continued using the hernia belt in addition to a variety of prostate medications.

In March 2013, Hamby was seen by a doctor at a different prison. This doctor reported that Hamby was able to “make it to chow hall and back,” and that he could use the bathroom. Hamby advised the doctor that his umbilical herma “interfered with [his] sleep,” made “sitting down ... difficult,” and generated “random pain.” This doctor advised that surgery was not medically necessary at that time.

,In late August 2013, Hamby’s attorney sent a letter to Dr. G. Steven Hammond, the Chief Medical Officer for the Washington State Department of Corrections; Dr. Sara S. Smith, the Facility Medical Director at the Stafford Creek Corrections Center; and Bernard Warner, the Secretary of the Washington Department of Corrections (“prison officials”), asking them to reconsider Hamby’s need for surgical treatment. Shortly thereafter, prison medical personnel presented Hamby’s case to the prison’s Care Review Committee (“CRC”), a group of medical professionals that decides whether proposed health care treatments are medically necessary under the-prison’s Offender Health Plan.1 Drs. Hammond and Smith were [1089]*1089voting members, with Dr. Hammond also serving as committee ' chair. The CRC considered whether to authorize a surgical consultation, and possible surgical repair* for Hamby’s umbilical hernia. The physician’s assistant who presented the request for Hamby’s surgery described Hamby’s hernia as “easily reducible” and noted that although Hamby was in pain, he had been going to meals and his activities of .daily living were not impaired.2 The CRC denied the request, deeming surgery not medically necessary at that time, and recommended continued monitoring of Ham-by’s condition.

Hamby was subsequently examined by a physician’s assistant who had treated him several times in the past. The physician’s assistant noted that Hamby was attending classes and that his “activities of daily living were unaffected,” and described his hernia ás “minimal,” and recommended monitoring. Hamby was later seen by a Department of Corrections urologist, who likewise opined that surgery was not medically necessary because Hamby “did not have continual pain and was still performing his ADLs without-incident.”

A

Hamby filed this lawsuit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 in January 2014, against Dr. Hammond, Dr. Smith, and Secretary Warner. Hamby sued each in his personal capacity, and -he sued Dr. Hammond and Secretary Warner in their official capacities as well. He claimed that the prison officials exhibited deliberate indifference to his serious medical needs, thereby violate ing his Eighth Amendment right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment. As of May 2014, when he moved for a preliminary injunction, Hamby rated the pain from his umbilical hernia “as a 5 on a scale of. 1-10.” In August -2014, the district court granted Hamby’s motion for a preliminary injunction, ordering the prison officials to refer him to a surgeon for evaluation and to authorize surgical treatment if the surgeon so advised. Hamby received his hoped-for Surgery, and his umbilical hernia was repaired on October 13, 2014.

B

After receiving surgery on his umbilical hernia, Hamby continued to press his case, seeking damages for the pain he allegedly suffered because of the prison officials’ refusal to authorize.surgery prior to litigation. On cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court ruled for the prison officials, holding that they had not in fact been deliberately indifferent.to Ham-by’s serious medical needs — and so they had not violated Hamby’s Eighth Amendment rights, after all — but that even if they had, qualified immunity would shield them from having to pay damages.

c

In addition to the ordeal surrounding, his umbilical hernia, Hamby complains of ailments triggered by a particularly harsh sneeze that left him reeling in October 2012. This sneeze may or may not have caused an inguinal hernia — which occurs in the groin area, when fatty or intestinal tissue pushes through a weak spot in the abdominal wall — but Hamby was never diagnosed as having an inguinal' hernia. Nonetheless, in response, prison medical personnel gave him a jockstrap to reduce the pain.

In 'May 2014, Hamby declared that “[t]he pain from the inguinal hernia had subsided for several months,” although it [1090]*1090had “recently reappeared” and was “intermittent, ranging between O' and 5.” In September 2014 — at the time Hamby moved for summary judgment — he declared that “the pain related to [his] possible inguinal hernia [had] subsided,” and was “currently at a level he can tolerate.” Still, Hamby requested a permanent injunction requiring the prison officials “to diagnose and treat his possible inguinal hernia should the pain associated with that condition once again become intolerable.”

The district court denied Hamby’s request for a permanent injunction and granted summary judgment to the prison officials, ruling that their conduct in response to Hamby’s possible inguinal hernia did not violate Hamby’s rights under the Eighth Amendment. Hamby timely appealed the district court’s decision.

II

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821 F.3d 1085, 2016 U.S. App. LEXIS 7894, 2016 WL 1730532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fleet-hamby-v-steven-hammond-ca9-2016.