Harold E. Sivard, Jr. v. Pulaski County, Pulaski County Sheriff's Department, Charlotte Ward, Individually and in Her Official Capacity

959 F.2d 662, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 5780, 1992 WL 63201
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedApril 1, 1992
Docket91-1208
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 959 F.2d 662 (Harold E. Sivard, Jr. v. Pulaski County, Pulaski County Sheriff's Department, Charlotte Ward, Individually and in Her Official Capacity) 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
Harold E. Sivard, Jr. v. Pulaski County, Pulaski County Sheriff's Department, Charlotte Ward, Individually and in Her Official Capacity, 959 F.2d 662, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 5780, 1992 WL 63201 (7th Cir. 1992).

Opinion

WISDOM, Senior Circuit Judge.

The plaintiff-appellant sued Pulaski County, Indiana, its sheriff, and a local doctor for unconstitutional detention and personal injuries suffered while in prison. The district court dismissed the suit on a motion for summary judgment. Unlike the trial court, we read the complaint to state a claim for unconstitutional detention. We find, however, that unanswered questions of material fact remain as to that claim and the defendants’ defense against it. The claim was therefore inappropriate for summary judgment, and we reverse. As to the summary judgment on all other allegations *664 in the plaintiff’s complaint, we agree with the trial court, and affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

Harold Sivard was arrested by Pulaski County police officers on February 2, 1987 for committing battery. He was held in jail without being charged before a judicial officer, until February 19, 1987 — 17 days later. Trial was set for April 2, 1987. At some point during Sivard’s detention, county officials learned that he was wanted in Massachusetts on a kidnapping charge. A Massachusetts grand jury had indicted Si-vard for this crime in December 1986, but Massachusetts did not issue an arrest warrant for him until March 3, 1987 — more than one month after Sivard’s Indiana arrest.

Around 2:00 a.m. on March 24, 1987, Sivard helped prevent a fellow prisoner, Darryl Lewis, from hanging himself. Lewis had used his suicide note to obscure the view of the observation camera directed at his cell. Sivard suffered a back injury while supporting Lewis (who was hanging from the bars of his cell). No one came to help Sivard or Lewis for 30 minutes. Si-vard informed prison officials of his injury that night; a doctor came to see him by noon. Sivard waived his rights against extradition, and was released to Massachusetts on March 27,1987. Indiana dismissed the battery charge on April 2, 1987.

Sivard filed this lawsuit on May 3, 1989. Sivard originally brought a diversity suit (under state law only) against Pulaski County, the County Sheriff’s Department, County Sheriff Charlotte Ward-Tillitt (both individually and in her official capacity), and Dr. John Doe (later identified as Rex Allman, M.D.) for: wrongful detention between February 2 and March 27, 1987 (he was not charged until February 19, 1987); negligent and willful failure to provide him with timely medical care; and Dr. Allman’s misdiagnosis of his back injury, which required surgery and resulted in his permanent disability.

Sivard’s case cleared several difficult obstacles. The most threatening was the district court’s well-reasoned (and unchallenged) decision to grant a motion to dismiss Sivard’s state law cause of action because he had not provided the defendants with timely notice under the Indiana Tort Claims Act. The district court allowed Sivard to amend his pleadings several times. Without altering the wrongful acts alleged, Sivard stated that his lawsuit arose under § 1983 2 and characterized it in language appropriate to that law. The defendants once again moved for dismissal or summary judgment; Sivard filed no response to that motion. The trial court finally granted summary judgment against Sivard, holding that:

1) Sivard had no claim for wrongful detention, because he was arrested with probable cause;
2) There was no wrongful detention in the delay before the extradition hearing (held on March 24, 1987);
3) Although Sivard’s Fourth Amendment rights may have been violated by the 17-day delay between his arrest and his being taken before a judicial officer, he had not made that argument in his complaint, or alleged that any of the defendants were responsible for the delay; and
4) His claims for inadequate supervision and care, delayed medical treatment, and Dr. Allman’s alleged malpractice are negligence claims for which the U.S. Constitution, and § 1983, provide no remedy.

Sivard appeals from that summary judgment.

II. DISCUSSION

A. Unconstitutional Detention

We review de novo a district court’s grant of summary judgment, applying the same standards as that court. We will affirm that judgment if the record shows “that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of *665 law”. 3 In this case, the pleadings and the facts before us establish that genuine issues of material fact do remain, and that Sivard may even be entitled to a judgment in his favor as a matter of law, on his claims for unconstitutional detention. The district court offered three reasons for granting summary judgment against Si-vard on his unconstitutional detention claim. The first is inapplicable; the second contains unanswered questions of material fact and was thus inappropriate for summary judgment; and the third requires an excessively narrow reading of Sivard’s complaint, and was thus based on a legal error.

1. Probable Cause

The district court apparently accepted the defendants’ argument that Sivard could make out no claim for wrongful detention because his arrest, though made without a warrant, was based on probable cause. We do not disagree with the general proposition that a warrantless arrest does not support a claim under § 1983 if the arresting police had probable cause. 4 That general rule, however, does not preclude all § 1983 actions for wrongful detentions that follow constitutional arrests. Sivard’s case is based not on the terms of his arrest, but on the terms of his detention after that arrest. If the trial court relied on this argument to support its summary judgment, it erred.

2. Pre-Extradition Detention: February 2-March 27

The district court also agreed with the defendants that their nearly eight-week detention of Sivard could not be wrongful because they detained him pursuant to the Uniform Criminal Extradition Act. 5 It is possible that such a lengthy detention, unjustified by Sivard’s arrest for battery, might have been justified if carried out in response to a request from Massachusetts for Sivard’s extradition. It is undisputed that Massachusetts had indicted Sivard two months before his arrest in Indiana, and that Massachusetts issued an arrest warrant for Sivard one month after his arrest in Indiana. What remains unknown is when Pulaski County and its officials learned of the charges against Sivard in Massachusetts. A detention while awaiting extradition cannot be justified as such until the detaining state is aware of the other state’s desire to try the detainee for another crime. If the defendants explain, and defend, their lengthy detention of Si-vard as pre-extradition detention, they must show that they actually held him with the knowledge that he was wanted in another state. They have not done this.

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Bluebook (online)
959 F.2d 662, 1992 U.S. App. LEXIS 5780, 1992 WL 63201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harold-e-sivard-jr-v-pulaski-county-pulaski-county-sheriffs-ca7-1992.