James D. Stenzel v. Jim Ellis, Jailer, Pat Adams and Lynn F. Jacobs, All Sued in Their Official and Individual Capacities

916 F.2d 423, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 17688, 1990 WL 146538
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedOctober 8, 1990
Docket89-5309
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 916 F.2d 423 (James D. Stenzel v. Jim Ellis, Jailer, Pat Adams and Lynn F. Jacobs, All Sued in Their Official and Individual Capacities) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
James D. Stenzel v. Jim Ellis, Jailer, Pat Adams and Lynn F. Jacobs, All Sued in Their Official and Individual Capacities, 916 F.2d 423, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 17688, 1990 WL 146538 (8th Cir. 1990).

Opinions

BOWMAN, Circuit Judge.

James D. Stenzel brought this lawsuit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1982) seeking damages for alleged Eighth and Fourth Amendment violations as a result of treatment he received at the hands of defendants Jim Ellis, Pat Adams, and Lynn Jacobs, jailers at the Minnehaha County Jail in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. The District Court1 granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment and entered a final judgment in their favor. Stenzel appeals. We affirm.

When reviewing the grant of defendants’ motion for summary judgment, we are required to view the evidence in the light most favorable to plaintiff Stenzel, giving him the benefit of all reasonable inferences. We will affirm only if we find no genuine issues of material fact, and can decide the case on legal grounds alone. White v. Farrier, 849 F.2d 322, 325 (8th Cir.1988). Cognizant of that standard, we recite the following facts that either are uncontested or comport with Stenzel’s version of the incidents that precipitated this [425]*425lawsuit, as recorded in his deposition and affidavit.

In October 1986, Stenzel was arrested and incarcerated in the Minnehaha County Jail in Sioux Falls, South Dakota. On November 20, 1986, he appeared in court and pleaded guilty to a perjury charge and to a charge of failure to appear for sentencing following his first arrest on the perjury charge, when he fled to California “in an attempt to probably evade the law.” Sten-zel Deposition at 17. He was returned to the county jail to await sentencing.

Late on December 4, 1986, or early the next morning, Deputy Jim Ellis was conducting a head count of sleeping prisoners at the jail. Stenzel was sleeping completely covered with a blanket. Ellis told him twice he was to “show some skin,” that is, leave some part of his body visible, or uncover part of his head while sleeping. Stenzel complied but then immediately covered himself again. Stenzel later said, when deposed, that he was sleeping completely covered because the light gave him a headache, the cell was cold, and because “there’s no rule specifically stating that I couldn’t sleep in any manner I choose.” Stenzel Deposition at 22. Nevertheless, Stenzel, who had been in the jail before, also stated that he knew he was violating a jail policy by refusing to “show skin” and that he expected to be written up, found guilty of the violation, and confined to isolation. Stenzel Affidavit at 1.

The third time he was asked to comply with the rule to “show skin,” Stenzel said that he preferred to discuss the infraction the next morning. Sergeant Pat Adams, who now accompanied Ellis, told Stenzel he would be put in isolation if he continued to sleep without “showing skin.” Stenzel refused to uncover and “[mjaybe words were said after that, maybe they weren’t.” Stenzel Deposition at 24. Deputy Lynn Jacobs then joined Ellis and Adams, and the three jailers forcibly removed Stenzel from his bunk, pulled him by his hair, and shoved him to the floor. While Stenzel was face down on the floor, Ellis pulled back a finger of Stenzel’s left hand and Adams had his knee in the small of Stenzel’s back. Stenzel was pulled to his feet and says that, in leaving the cell, “I couldn’t, more or less, stabilize myself, and as a result I was smashed into the bars on the way out.” Stenzel Deposition at 32. En route to isolation, Ellis choked Stenzel to the point that he could not speak. At no time during this part of the incident was Stenzel handcuffed.

Stenzel is six feet, five inches tall and, at the time of the incident, weighed approximately 220 pounds. Despite the cold, he was not wearing a shirt, and his upper body was covered with lotion given him by the jail nurse for treatment of chapped skin. He had his right hand clenched to his chest under his body. Stenzel denies resisting being taken to isolation but, he says, “It would be fair to say that I resisted pain.” Stenzel Deposition at 31.

Once in isolation, Stenzel needed “urgently” to use the toilet, but he “had a problem with using the toilet in front of a woman.” Stenzel Deposition at 35, 36. Each isolation cell was equipped with a camera, and Stenzel knew that women guards could monitor the activities in his cell and that the toilet was within view of the camera. Because he did not want a female guard to observe him using the facilities (although he had no idea at the time who was monitoring his cell), Stenzel dampened toilet tissue and used it to cover the camera lens. Although that gave him the privacy he desired, he did not use the toilet then because he did not believe he would have time before the jailers returned. They did in fact return, and Adams told Stenzel to remove the tissue or he would be bound; Stenzel refused and Jacobs or Adams handcuffed and chained him to his bunk, which had no mattress. Stenzel makes no claim of being beaten during the handcuffing incident: “Basically I just didn’t want to get myself beat up again so I cooperated." Stenzel Deposition at 45.

Stenzel was left chained for the rest of the night. Because he refused to leave the camera lens uncovered, he was not permitted to use the toilet and he urinated in his pants. About ten the next morning, he [426]*426was given clean clothes. Stenzel was unable to eat the food he was offered that morning because of a sore throat that resulted, he believes, from the incident the previous night. Stenzel admits, however, that he did not eat even after his throat was better, for a total of six days, because he was on a hunger strike protesting his confinement in isolation. The day after the incident he was given a disciplinary hearing, found guilty of rules violations, and sentenced to an extended term in isolation. He also saw the jail nurse for the scratches, bruises, and abrasions he had sustained during the struggle the night before, but his injuries required no treatment or continued observation. On December 22, 1986, Stenzel was sentenced on the perjury and failure to appear charges, and was transferred to the South Dakota State Penitentiary.

Stenzel’s original pro se 42 U.S.C. § 1983 complaint was against Adams, Ellis, and several others, and alleged violations of his constitutional rights under various amendments. The District Court dismissed all claims except those against Ellis and Adams, and Jacobs later was added as a defendant by stipulation of the parties. In an amended complaint, the previously dismissed claims and defendants reappeared, and the District Court summarily dismissed them in its order granting the defendants’ motion for summary judgment. Stenzel, who is now represented by appointed counsel, does not appeal that aspect of the order.

On appeal, Stenzel claims that the court erred in dismissing his Eighth Amendment claim, which is based on the circumstances of his removal to isolation and the restraint once there, and his Fourth Amendment claim, which is based on his asserted right to use the toilet in the isolation cell unobserved by women.2 Stenzel asserts that there remain genuine issues of material fact, thus entitling him to a trial. It is Stenzel’s responsibility to make a sufficient showing to establish all the essential elements of his case. If we agree with the District Court that he has failed to do so, the jailers are entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Celotex Corp, v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
916 F.2d 423, 1990 U.S. App. LEXIS 17688, 1990 WL 146538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-d-stenzel-v-jim-ellis-jailer-pat-adams-and-lynn-f-jacobs-all-ca8-1990.