Hood v. Itawamba County, Miss.

819 F. Supp. 556, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5647, 1993 WL 137581
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Mississippi
DecidedApril 22, 1993
DocketEC91-302-D-D
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 819 F. Supp. 556 (Hood v. Itawamba County, Miss.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hood v. Itawamba County, Miss., 819 F. Supp. 556, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5647, 1993 WL 137581 (N.D. Miss. 1993).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

DAVIDSON, District Judge.

This is a cause of action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (deprivation of civil rights) in a case set for trial before the undersigned in the near future. The suit is brought by the estate of David Dwayne Hood, a 21 year old man who committed suicide on November 6, 1990, while incarcerated in the Itawamba County jail. Federal question jurisdiction is invoked by the alleged deprivation of the decedent’s Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment rights of the United States Constitution. The complaint alleges that Mr. Leland Taylor, former sheriff of Itawamba County and as a policymaker in his official capacity, deprived the decedent of constitutionally protected rights in the following ways: 1

(1) The failure to adequately train law enforcement officers to recognize the need for and to obtain medical care for arrestees with knpwn suicidal tendencies;
(2) The failure to adopt and implement a policy providing for the safe custodial containment of arrestees known to likely harm themselves or cause harm to others;
(3)The failure to adopt a policy requiring the furnishing of medical care to arrestees with known suicidal tendencies.

In addition to the cause of action based upon § 1983, the estate also asserts a pendent state claim under the Mississippi Wrongful Death Statute, Miss. Code Ann. • § 11-7-13 (Supp.1992). At this point in time, the period for discovery has passed, and the defendant, Itawamba County (hereinafter “county”), has moved for summary judgment as to all claims. After careful consideration of the record and a review of the relevant case law, 2 the court is of the opinion that the county’s motion for summary judgment on the federal claim is well taken, and the same is hereby granted. Since the claims upon which this court has original jurisdiction are being dismissed, the state claims will be dismissed without prejudice so that such claims may be pursued in state court in litigation currently pending. The court reaches this result by application of the case law to the facts of this case. As in all cases, the court begins with the facts which furnish the framework for analysis of the legal issues implicated in this § 1983 lawsuit.

Facts

By all accounts, David Dwayne Hood led an uneventful life as a child and teenager. David’s formative years were spent in Wisconsin, but he moved to Mississippi in 1981 to live with his father’s family following the divorce of his parents. From the time that David moved to Mississippi in 1981 and until his death on November 6,1990, he lived with his paternal grandmother in Fulton, Mississippi. David’s father and stepmother also lived nearby in the vicinity of Fulton. The record reveals that in May of 1986, when David was 17 years old, he was involved in a motorcycle accident which resulted in a head *558 injury. Several medical notations in the record show that David was diagnosed by physicians as having “brain damage” following the May 1986 motorcycle accident. The motorcycle accident earmarked the beginning of David’s problems. From early 1988 until his death in November of 1990, David’s conduct and behavior can best be described as incorrigible. In a span of approximately two and a half (2)4) years, David was arrested nine (9) times. A summary of David’s arrest record appears below.

March 1, 1988 — Disorderly Conduct

August 9, 1988 — Causing a Disturbance

July 6, 1989 — Causing a Disturbance

September 6, 1989 — Public Drunk

February 5, 1990 — Simple Assault

March 22, 1990 — Public Drunk

March 25, 1990 — Contributing to Delinquency of a Minor

June 25, 1990 — D.U.I. & Reckless Driving

November 6, 1990 — Simple Assault

As the arrest record indicates, David’s problems were often associated with alcohol abuse, and the assaults and disturbances usually involved incidents with his grandmother, father and stepmother. In addition to the numerous arrests, there were two other events in David’s life which are noteworthy for the purposes of this case. In March of 1988, David’s grandmother, Pauline Hood, submitted an affidavit and application for commitment for David to the state hospital for mental health located in Whitfield, Mississippi. In the affidaviVapplication, notations were entered that David had threatened to kill himself and had assaulted his grandmother. Other remarks in the application for commitment refer to a violent temper and his motorcycle accident in May of 1986. Following the application for commitment, the Itawamba County Chancery Court issued an Order of Commitment to the state hospital on March 10, 1988. 3 Consequently, David was transported and admitted to the state hospital for evaluation, diagnosis, and treatment. In the deposition testimony of Deputy Sheriff Kenneth Knight, Officer Knight stated that he remembered transporting David to the state hospital. However, Officer Knight also stated that he was unaware of the contents of David’s commitment papers. Furthermore, Sheriff Leland Taylor also testified that he remembered that David was the subject of a commitment proceeding, but he knew nothing of the details or reasons for the commitment. The commitment papers are contained in a sealed envelope and are delivered to the receiving personnel at the hospital. The law enforcement officers responsible for custody and transport see only the “writ of custody” which does not furnish any details regarding the reasons for commitment. 4

Approximately one month after the commitment, David was discharged from the state hospital on April 9, 1988. The certifícate of discharge stated that David no longer posed a substantial threat of physical harm to himself or others and that he could be treated in a less restrictive environment. The release referred David to his local mental health clinic, and he was continued on two medications. 5 In the blank space on the certificate of discharge under the heading, “Diagnosis of Patient,” the following notations were entered, “organic personality syndrome ... closed head injury.”

*559 The second significant event occurred four months later in August of 1988. On August 12, 1988, David’s stepmother, Ms. Tami Hood, filed another application/affidavit for commitment on David. In support of the application, Ms. Hood entered the following remarks:

Respondent threatens to kill self and/or others; goes out all hours of night and roams on other people’s property & sits on their porches; chokes grandmother calls her obscene names in front of others, slaps her around. Respondent is violent and is in immediate need of attention. 6

Again, David’s commitment proceeding followed the usual course, 7

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819 F. Supp. 556, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 5647, 1993 WL 137581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hood-v-itawamba-county-miss-msnd-1993.