Hill v. Curcione

657 F.3d 116, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 19007, 2011 WL 4090760
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedSeptember 15, 2011
Docket17-3550
StatusPublished
Cited by2,846 cases

This text of 657 F.3d 116 (Hill v. Curcione) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hill v. Curcione, 657 F.3d 116, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 19007, 2011 WL 4090760 (2d Cir. 2011).

Opinion

MINER, Circuit Judge:

Plaintiff-appellant Mashama Hill appeals pro se from a March 20, 2008 order (the “Order”) dismissing his complaint as against the defendants-appellees Christopher Aikin (named in the complaint as Chris Atkins) and James E. Hohensee, M.D. (named in the complaint as James Hohensee) for failure to state a claim. Pleaded in the complaint against Hohensee and Aikin, medical care providers at the Niagara County Jail (the “Jail”), were claims for deliberate indifference to Hill’s medical needs during his incarceration at the Jail. Hill also appeals from a March 24, 2010 judgment (the “Judgment”) dismissing his claims against the remaining defendants-appellees, Paul Curcione, Jeff Chawer, and Sergeant Tammy Williams, Corrections Officers at the Jail. These claims included allegations of excessive force on the part of the named Corrections Officers during Hill’s confinement at the Jail. Both the Order and the Judgment were entered in the United States District Court for the Western District of New York (Skretny, J.), each supported by a Report and Recommendation by Magistrate Judge Hugh B. Scott. For the reasons that follow, we affirm the Order dismissing the claims against Hohensee and Aikin and affirm the summary judgment dismissing the claim against Williams. We vacate and remand the summary judgment insofar as it dismisses the claims against Curcione and Chawer.

BACKGROUND

1. Injury and, Treatment

Hill alleges that, on March 28, 2007, while confined at the Jail, he “asked to be removed from Pod Two and placed in the block area after having been told that he would have to perform two particular cleaning details, three (3) days in a row by an officer Carissa Allen.” 1 Shortly thereafter, according to Hill, “the Pod was ordered to lock in,” and Curcione and Chawer approached his cell along with other officers and ordered him to prepare to move. After putting on his sneakers, Hill was ordered to approach the cell door, turn around with his back to the door, get on his knees, and put his hands behind his head. The cell door then was opened and Hill was handcuffed. At that time, he alleges, he “was struck in the upper torso [and] head area several times by Officer Curcione.” He was then led out of his cell into the Pod B sallyport, 2 where Curcione *119 and Chawer slammed him against the wall several times. Hill says he then began to resist the officers to prevent being forced to the floor.

With his hands cuffed behind his head and with his torso and arms strapped in by an emergency response belt, Hill ultimately was thrown to the floor face down. He asserts that Curcione and Chawer then “beg[a]n to tighten the handcuffs [and] bind his wrist solely as a means to cause injury.” He avers that he ceased resisting at this point. The officers then bent his legs across one another as Hill remained face down on the floor. At that point, Sergeant Williams, the Tour Supervisor, appeared on the scene. Curcione reported to Williams that Hill had been resistant and force was needed to subdue Hill. When Hill said that Curcione was lying and that the officers had assaulted him, Williams purportedly instructed Hill to “shut up.”

Hill continued to complain that his handcuffs were too tight and alleges that the “Officers put a facemask on [him], causing his breathing to stop, while lifting him from the floor.” He asserts that he then “was carried from Pod 2 sallyport, to the elevator, 'and then down to isolation.” Placed in an empty cell with the handcuffs still on his wrists, Hill claims that he was not seen until the next afternoon by a nurse after complaining to an officer in the Segregation Unit. He was seen by a physician’s assistant two days after the incident, complaining “that his hands were damaged by cuffs and [that he] suffered from extreme pain [and] numbness caused by nerve damage.” An X-ray revealed a broken bone in Hill’s wrist, and a cast was placed on the wrist on April 6, 2007, nine days after the injury occurred.

On April 19, 2007, Aikin, a Nurse Practitioner, confronted Hill with an officer’s report that Hill had been working out doing push-ups and pull-ups during recreation. Aikin, who had provided Motrin pain medication for Hill, was told “that the officer’s allegations were not exact and were an attempt to impede [Hill’s] endeavors in filing a law suit against [Aikin’s] fellow colleagues in that [Hill] had informed him (Officer Tim Blackley) of [Hill’s] intent to do such.” Hill continued to complain of pain, asserting that Motrin was insufficient as pain medication and opined that he should have been “referred for a nerve conduction study.” Hill asserted in his Statement of Facts appended to his complaint that he would soon be placed in the custody of the State Department of Correctional Services, “so the Doctor [and] Nurse Practitioner believe that the Department of Correctional Services should deal with Plaintiffs issues. This is what both defendant Hohensee [and] [Aikin] had expressed verbally to Plaintiff.”

The version of the events leading to Hill’s injury put forward by the Corrections Officer defendants is somewhat different. According to the Officers, the events unfolded as follows: Sergeant Williams, the Tour Supervisor at the Jail on March 28, 2007, received a call from Corrections Officer Carissa Allen that Hill was refusing to perform his cleaning detail and was using vulgar and obscene language toward Allen. After determining that Hill had used abusive language toward Allen in the past and that the conduct was recurring, Williams “decided [Hill] should be written up and moved to punitive segregation for his disruptive behavior.” Accordingly, Sergeant Williams *120 “instructed the Correctional Emergency-Response Team (CERT) Squad leader, Paul Curcione and another CERT member, Jeffrey Chawer, to proceed to plaintiffs cell and escort him to punitive segregation.”

Responding to that instruction, Officer Curcione states that, upon arrival “outside [Hill’s] cell, [he] informed [Hill] that [Hill] was charged with jail rule infractions and ordered him to turn around and put his hands behind his back.” Instead of doing so, Hill began to pack his belongings and, when advised that an officer would pack his belongings for him and again ordered to turn around and place his hands behind his back, Hill “became boisterous and yelled, T will pack my shit.’ ” Fearful that Hill would provide further resistance and aware that Hill was a man approximately 6'5" tall with a weight of approximately 240 pounds, Curcione ordered Hill into a kneeling position.

When Hill went to a kneeling position, Curcione entered the cell with Officer Chawer. The officers met resistance when they attempted to secure Hill’s hands behind his back. Curcione asserts that it was necessary to apply “wrist compliance” to control Hill’s right wrist for placement in the handcuffs. He describes wrist compliance as “manipulating the wrist joint and pressure points to gain control of a resistant inmate. The use of wrist compliance is standard operating procedure and pursuant to training received by a CERT officer.”

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657 F.3d 116, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 19007, 2011 WL 4090760, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hill-v-curcione-ca2-2011.