Hugh Joseph, Administrator of the Estate of Mark Joseph, A/K/A Larry Jones v. David Brierton, Warden, Stateville Correctional Center, Defendants

739 F.2d 1244
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 7, 1984
Docket83-2033
StatusPublished
Cited by61 cases

This text of 739 F.2d 1244 (Hugh Joseph, Administrator of the Estate of Mark Joseph, A/K/A Larry Jones v. David Brierton, Warden, Stateville Correctional Center, Defendants) 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
Hugh Joseph, Administrator of the Estate of Mark Joseph, A/K/A Larry Jones v. David Brierton, Warden, Stateville Correctional Center, Defendants, 739 F.2d 1244 (7th Cir. 1984).

Opinion

POSNER, Circuit Judge.

This is a suit for damages under 42 U.SiC. § 1983. It was brought by the administrator of the estate of a prisoner who died while in the hospital unit of Illinois’ Stateville prison, against the warden and other officials of Stateville, charging that the prisoner (the plaintiff's son) suffered and died as a result of the inhumane conditions and inadequate medical care in the unit. The defendants won a jury verdict, and the plaintiff has appealed.

Mark Joseph, age 18, was in another prison in the state system when on December 2, 1975, he suffered a mental breakdown and was transferred to the hospital unit at Stateville. There he behaved in an increasingly bizarre fashion. He seems to have wedged himself against the radiator in his cell, and sustained second- and third-degree burns. He kept tearing off his clothes and racing about uncontrollably. He spread his own feces all over his cell and on his body, hair, and mouth, shouting all the while that he was Moses and Christ, and the son of Abraham Lincoln. After a week of such carryings on he suddenly collapsed, and was dead within minutes of cardiac arrest apparently induced by acute psychosis. The prison phoned his father and told him that Mark had committed suicide, and a confirmatory telegram was sent the next day; but the defendants admit that Mark did not commit suicide.

Although it is admitted that one of the guards punched Mark in the face in the course of his wild careenings, and although the plaintiff suggests that someone, perhaps even a guard, may have held Mark against the radiator, it is really not the plaintiff’s theory of the case that Mark was the victim of intentional misconduct. The theory is that the defendants exhibited a willful indifference to his welfare by allowing him to live in bestial conditions for the week before his death and by neglecting an obviously serious mental illness, thus causing or hastening his death.

Although medical (including psychiatric) malpractice is not actionable under section 1983 as a form of cruel and unusual punishment, willful neglect is, see Estelle v. Gamble, 429 U.S. 97, 104, 97 S.Ct. 285, 291, 50 L.Ed.2d 251 (1976), and it was a jury question whether the defendants’ conduct, which was certainly neglectful, was so far neglectful as to be willful. See Wood v. Worachek, 618 F.2d 1225, 1233 (7th Cir.1980). But the plaintiff argues that he did not have a fair chance with the jury, because of errors in the trial.

The most serious error alleged grows out of remarks made by the defendants’ lawyer, an assistant state attorney general, in his closing argument to the jury. By way of background it should be noted that the defendants were very concerned to keep from the jury the fact that the State of Illinois indemnifies its employees for any judgments entered against them in suits growing out of their employment. The defendants’ counsel therefore asked the judge before the trial began to order the plaintiff’s counsel not to mention that the defendants would be indemnified if they lost. The judge granted the motion, even forbidding the plaintiff’s counsel to identify the defendants’ counsel (or co-counsel) as a member of the attorney general’s staff. Yet in the closing argument, the defendants’ counsel, with a passion that fairly breathes through the transcript, made much of the financial impact that a judgment against the defendants would have on them. He told the jury that a verdict for the plaintiff would send the following message to correctional officers all over the United States: “We are going to hire you. We are going to give you staff; not enough. We are going to give you medical help; not enough. We can’t afford it. We are going to give you a limited budget. Do what you can with it. We know it’s not the best. We don’t have enough money. But when something goes wrong, you are responsible, don’t look to us. That is the message that they will get. And when you *1247 give them that message, you won’t have psychiatrists, you won’t have nurses — We can go back to the eighteenth century and lock that door and leave those people ____” He adjured them not to render a compromise verdict. “If you do that, that will be a terrible, terrible injustice. You will have destroyed these men, because when you go into the jury room you are taking in there, their good names, their reputations, their careers.” He described his adversary’s position as, “Let’s saddle these five men [the defendants] with $1.8 million [the amount that the plaintiff had asked for in the complaint].” He said: “the average working man makes about $24,000 a year. Let’s keep this in perspective. Now that might be a little high. But the average working man who makes $24,-000 a year would have to work for the next 75 years to earn the amount of money that Mr. Murphy [the plaintiff’s counsel] is asking you to saddle these people with____ [T]his individual, this mythical working man, would have to work for 750 years to earn the amount of money that he is asking to make these people responsible for.” He added: “Now although I don’t think that these individuals should be required to pay anything, because they didn’t do anything wrong, it is my duty as their attorney to speak to the issue of damages. I would like you to remember that when you go into the jury room, as to what is fair. $1.8 million. Mark Joseph was a convicted felon by the time he was eighteen years old. He had no income. He didn’t support anyone. Mr. Murphy wants you to saddle these individuals with $1.8 million. That’s not fair.”

The plaintiff’s counsel did not object to these remarks when made; if he had done so, he would (as the district judge later noted) have been violating the order forbidding him to mention that the defendants would be indemnified if they lost the case. In addition, an objection would have highlighted this part of the defendants’ closing argument in the jurors’ minds. Werner v. Upjohn Co., 628 F.2d 848, 854 (4th Cir.1980). Counsel was therefore entitled to postpone his objection to the end of the closing arguments, see Lange v. Schultz, 627 F.2d 122, 127 (8th Cir.1980), as he did; and in response the judge proposed to add the following instruction, and did: “If you decide on liability in this case and therefore turn to the question of damages, do not concern yourself with the defendants’ ability to pay. If there is a judgment that problem will be addressed later. A judgment, if any, should reflect your decision as to the appropriate amount of damages to be awarded to the plaintiff, Mr. Hugh Joseph as administrator of his son’s estate and that’s all.”

But the curative instruction was, as the plaintiff’s counsel complained to the judge, inadequate even if not understood literally. (Read literally it requires the jurors to disregard the defendants’ ability to pay when they calculate damages but not necessarily when they decide whether the defendants are liable.) Telling a jury not to think about something may simply rivet the jurors’ attention to it.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Kim v. Maha, Inc.
N.D. Illinois, 2024
Tucker v. Lally
N.D. Illinois, 2020
Troy Banister v. Craig Burton
Seventh Circuit, 2011
Banister v. Burton
636 F.3d 828 (Seventh Circuit, 2011)
Paine v. Johnson
689 F. Supp. 2d 1027 (N.D. Illinois, 2010)
Browning v. Pennerton
633 F. Supp. 2d 415 (E.D. Kentucky, 2009)
Thompson v. County of Cook
428 F. Supp. 2d 807 (N.D. Illinois, 2006)
Hodge v. Babel
815 A.2d 910 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2003)
Sanville, Martha v. McCaughtry, Gary
266 F.3d 724 (Seventh Circuit, 2001)
Sanville v. Mccaughtry
266 F.3d 724 (Seventh Circuit, 2001)
Darnell Cooper and Anthony Davis v. Michael Casey
97 F.3d 914 (Seventh Circuit, 1996)
Smith v. Farley
873 F. Supp. 1199 (N.D. Indiana, 1994)
Lentomyynti Oy v. Medivac, Inc.
997 F.2d 364 (Seventh Circuit, 1993)
Lentomyynti Oy v. Medivac, Incorporated
997 F.2d 364 (Seventh Circuit, 1993)
Ross T. Moylan v. The Meadow Club, Inc.
979 F.2d 1246 (Seventh Circuit, 1992)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
739 F.2d 1244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hugh-joseph-administrator-of-the-estate-of-mark-joseph-aka-larry-jones-ca7-1984.