Harriman v. Hancock County

627 F.3d 22, 78 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 415, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 24838, 2010 WL 4923541
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedDecember 6, 2010
Docket09-2284
StatusPublished
Cited by120 cases

This text of 627 F.3d 22 (Harriman v. Hancock County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harriman v. Hancock County, 627 F.3d 22, 78 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 415, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 24838, 2010 WL 4923541 (1st Cir. 2010).

Opinion

HOWARD, Circuit Judge.

This civil rights action involves competing accounts of an arrestee’s weekend stay in Maine’s Hancock County Jail. Plaintiff David Harriman, although he remembers virtually nothing that occurred over the entire weekend, contends that one or more correctional officers beat him until he sustained a lasting brain injury. Defendants Hancock County, its sheriff and several correctional officers assert that Harriman *25 fell on his head. Harriman appeals the district court’s preclusion of two affidavits and entry of summary judgment in defendants’ favor. After careful review, we affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

We recount the facts in the light most favorable to Harriman as the party opposing summary judgment. Statchen v. Palmer, 623 F.3d 15, 16 (1st Cir.2010).

A. The Weekend

On a Friday evening in October 2006, Maine State Trooper Gregory Mitchell responded to a disturbance at the Blue Hill Hospital involving a disorderly emergency room patient later identified as Harriman. After a short game of cat-and-mouse- — ■ Harriman fled the hospital on foot before Mitchell arrived but returned on account of foul weather — Mitchell found Harriman back in the emergency room. Harriman appeared to be drunk. 1 Because Harriman was prohibited from consuming alcohol in connection with a previous infraction, Mitchell arrested him. 2

Mitchell escorted Harriman outside to the police cruiser and searched him. Harriman launched a stream of epithets against Mitchell, including threats to Mitchell and his children. As Mitchell guided Harriman into the cruiser, Harriman resisted and fell to the ground, pulling Mitchell down with him. Mitchell got back on his feet and hoisted Harriman up and into the cruiser. 3 Once in the cruiser, Harriman spit at Mitchell and then fell asleep.

At about 8 p.m., the pair arrived at the jail. Mitchell escorted Harriman into the intoxilyzer room. 4 Harriman leveled several new expletives against Mitchell, and struggled against Mitchell’s hold until correctional officers Ryan Haines and Michael Pileski arrived to take custody. Mitchell then went to the adjacent booking room to complete the necessary paperwork regarding the evening’s events.

What happened next is the subject of some dispute. According to the defendants, Haines and Pileski escorted Harriman directly to the nurse’s station where Haines asked him several questions in order to evaluate whether he was a suicide risk. Harriman did not respond. In accordance with jail protocol, Harriman was determined to be a suicide risk until he could respond in a manner that showed otherwise. With some assistance from Haines, Harriman changed into an anti-suicide smock. 5 At about 8:30 p.m., Haines and Pileski moved Harriman to HD-1, which is a holding cell further inside the jail and adjacent to the jail’s control room. Correctional officers began *26 monitoring Harriman at successive fifteen-minute intervals. Harriman then lay down and went to sleep.

A little after 10 p.m., Sergeant Heather Sullivan, from her position in or around the control room, heard Harriman “yelling” and “hollering” in his cell. When Sullivan looked over, she saw Harriman “banging around” his cell naked; she also noticed blood on the bridge of his nose. Sullivan radioed Haines and instructed him to investigate. Harriman greeted Haines with shouted expletives and, from behind the glass partition, drew his fist back as though he would punch Haines. Sullivan soon arrived outside Harriman’s cell. While she and Haines were deciding on a course of action, they both heard a loud “thump” or “thud” from inside Harriman’s cell. Although neither Sullivan nor Haines saw what happened in Harriman’s cell, Pileski and another correctional officer, Crystal Hobbs, from their vantage point in the control room, saw Harriman fall to the floor in a leftward motion. Pile-ski further saw Harriman strike his head as he fell against the lefthand concrete wall of his cell.

Haines entered the cell and saw Harriman lying on the floor in his own urine, apparently unconscious. Harriman then had what appeared to be two seizures, each lasting a matter of seconds. At Sullivan’s request, Hobbs called an ambulance from the control room at about 10:20 p.m. The ambulance arrived within several minutes and took Harriman to the hospital. Haines accompanied Harriman in the ambulance and stayed with him at the hospital until relieved by another correctional officer later that evening.

Harriman remembers next to nothing about his jail stay. From his arrest on Friday until he woke up at home on Monday or Tuesday night, Harriman remembers only the following: “a lot of hollering”; “echoes from hollering”; “flashes of light”; “somebody saying he’s had enough or I think that’s enough or maybe even that’s enough”; “seeing my wife’s cousin [Foster Kane, another jail detainee] but just barely”; “somebody telling me that they were going to take me to Augusta”; and “the smell ... [of] urine mixed with cleaning fluid.”

Given his anamnestic difficulties, Harriman relies on Mitchell’s deposition testimony and affidavits from two other witnesses to contradict the defendants’ version of events.

Mitchell testified at deposition that he spent roughly an hour in the booking room finishing up paperwork after transferring custody of Harriman to Haines and Pile-ski. When Mitchell exited the booking room at about 9 p.m., he noticed Harriman through a glass partition in a room known as secure holding, not in HD-1, which was further inside the jail. According to Mitchell, Harriman appeared to be unaccompanied and was wearing civilian clothes.

Foster Kane, the detainee who Harriman vaguely remembers seeing, stated in an affidavit that, from his cell near the booking room, he “heard yelling and screaming and loud thuds of someone hitting a wall.” He further stated that the “commotion went on for approximately 45 minutes before I saw the correctional officers dragging David Harriman into my cell block.” And, “David had two black eyes, a cut on his nose, and a cut on his forehead over his right eye.”

Jenny Sheriff, the emergency medical technician who responded to the jail’s call for an ambulance, stated in an affidavit that she “picked Mr. Harriman up in [secure holding].” Sheriff noticed dried blood on Harriman’s nose, and was “certain that I did not receive the call to respond to the *27 Jail immediately after the injuries occurred.” She also stated that Harriman was naked and that there was “no robe or suicide smock in his cell.”

The rest of the weekend is materially undisputed. Harriman returned from the hospital early Saturday morning. He spent the next two days in jail. On Monday, he appeared before a judge who set bail. Later that day, a family member bailed him out and drove him home. The next thing Harriman remembers is waking up at home on Monday or Tuesday night.

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627 F.3d 22, 78 Fed. R. Serv. 3d 415, 2010 U.S. App. LEXIS 24838, 2010 WL 4923541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harriman-v-hancock-county-ca1-2010.