Kelly v. Solomon

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 15, 2020
Docket3:17-cv-00311
StatusUnknown

This text of Kelly v. Solomon (Kelly v. Solomon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kelly v. Solomon, (W.D.N.C. 2020).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT WESTERN DISTRICT OF NORTH CAROLINA CHARLOTTE DIVISION 3:17-cv-311-FDW

WILLIE T. KELLY, JR., ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) vs. ) ORDER ) GEORGE T. SOLOMON, et al., ) ) Defendants. ) __________________________________________)

THIS MATTER comes before the Court on Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment, (Doc. No. 71), and on pro se Plaintiff’s “Motion to Alter Amend the Judgment & Deposition Before Action or Pending Appeal & Rule 27 Motion to Strike [Doc. 62-63] Motion to Stay [Doc. 14, Doc. 42, Doc. 55-56, 60,” (Doc. No. 66). I. BACKGROUND Pro se incarcerated Plaintiff’s Amended Complaint, (Doc. No. 15), passed initial review on claims of the use of excessive force/failure to intervene against Defendants Codi Laur and Kevin Ingram, deliberate indifference to a serious medical need against Kenneth Beaver, Alan Deese, John Herring, Ingram, Jeffrey Krantz,1 Chris Hatley,2 Gregory Hayes3 and Nurse William, and retaliation against Hayes, Ingram, Krantz, Hatley, Laur, Scott McFaulds, and Gregory Swink. See (Doc. No. 18). Summary judgment was previously granted in favor of Defendant Hayes, (Doc. Nos. 42, 59).

1 Defendant “Kenz” in the Amended Complaint. 2 Defendant “Hately” in the Amended Complaint. 3 Defendant “Haynes” in the Amended Complaint. (1) Amended Complaint (Doc. No. 15) Plaintiff alleges that he uses a wheelchair and cane, that he needed hip replacement surgery that he ultimately received, and that his wrist was injured in 2013. On February 13, 2017, Defendants Herring and Beaver allowed Defendant Deese to take Plaintiff’s doctor-ordered wheelchair when he had just come back from a bone specialist in Raleigh. Defendant Deese knew

that Plaintiff’s wheelchair was damaged on February 13, 2017 so that it would not roll straight. It was replaced on March 22, 2017. This inflicted emotional pain and increased pain. On March 8, 2017, there was a violent incident between gang members in the housing dorm. Plaintiff commented that, if officers were where they supposed to be on the floor, these incidents would not happen. Defendant Ingram overheard Plaintiff’s comment. Defendant Ingram took Plaintiff’s cane and, when Plaintiff asked Defendant Laur to be cuffed in front, Laur hit Plaintiff so hard he pushed Plaintiff onto the bed and Plaintiff defecated himself. Defendants Ingram and Krantz escorted Plaintiff to segregation without a wheelchair or cane with his hands cuffed behind him while knowing his wrist had been injured in 2013. As a result, Plaintiff’s hip

gave out which reinjured him. Staff let go of Plaintiff while Plaintiff was shackled and he hit his right upper eye and caused a knot on his forehead for which he received six stitches at Anson hospital. Upon Plaintiff’s return from Anson Hospital after the March 8 incident, Defendant Hatley put Plaintiff in a suicide cell for five days without blood pressure medication. Dr. Hayes never saw Plaintiff because Hayes altered his medical record. Hayes stopped Plaintiff’s pain medication and Plaintiff broke out in a serious rash on his legs, and his blood pressure was high due to an incident on Anson. Plaintiff appears to allege that, after his hip replacement surgery, Nurse William reduced his pain medication without a doctor’s approval. Plaintiff alleges that Defendants Ingram and Krantz subjected him to violence on March 8, 2017, in retaliation for his comment about officers not being at their posts. After Plaintiff returned from Anson Hospital following the March 8 incident, Defendant Hatley retaliated by placing Plaintiff in a suicide cell for five days without blood pressure medication, property, or legal mail. Defendants Ingram, Laur, and McFauld retaliated against Plaintiff by informing inmates about Plaintiff’s crime, which resulted in him having to be placed in a holding cage which, in turn,

inflicted emotional distress. After Plaintiff was scheduled for hip surgery on October 21, 2017, Defendant Swink retaliated by intentionally violating his due process classification assignment because Plaintiff had written a grievance complaining about interference with mail procedures. Plaintiff seeks declaratory judgment, injunctive relief, compensatory and punitive damages, court costs, attorney’s fees, a jury trial, and any additional relief that the Court deems just, proper and equitable. (2) Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. No. 71) Defendants Beaver, Deese, Hatley, Herring, Ingram, Krantz, Laur, McFaulds, Swink, and Williams seek summary judgment. They accept the facts as set forth in the Court’s Order on initial

review of the Amended Complaint, (Doc. No. 18). Defendants argue that “Nurse William” is not a proper defendant to this lawsuit because no such defendant was named in the caption of the Amended Complaint or was served or waived service, and Disciplinary Hearing Officer A. Williams was dismissed in the Order on initial review. Defendants argue that Defendant Swink should be granted summary judgment because Plaintiff failed to exhaust his administrative remedies as to the retaliation claim against Swink. With regards to Plaintiff’s claims of excessive force, Defendants argue that Laur and Ingram should be granted summary judgment because there is no evidence to support the subjective component of the excessive force inquiry. The allegation that Defendant Ingram took away Plaintiff’s cane and pushed him to his bed are insufficient because, when a lockdown is underway and an inmate is refusing to obey orders, is aggressive and combative and is being restrained, it is standard procedure to take away anything like a cane that could be used as a weapon. With regards to pushing, nothing in the Amended Complaint suggests that pushing Plaintiff to the bed was excessive. Staff are trained to place an inmate on a flat surface, which the

bed is, and it would also cushion any fall. There is no allegation that Plaintiff hit the bedframe or was otherwise injured as a result of being placed on the bed. With regards to staff letting Plaintiff go while he was shackled, resulting in a laceration over his eye, this allegation is insufficient to state a claim against any Defendant. Plaintiff does not specify which staff member let him fall or explain when and where this incident occurred and the allegation amounts to simple negligence and not the knowing disregard of a serious risk of injury. With regards to Laur, the Defendants who were in Plaintiff’s cell declare that they did not see any use of force other than minimal hands-on techniques to control Plaintiff, nor did they observe any sign that Plaintiff defected himself. No knot on Plaintiff’s head or any other injury is

mentioned in the medical notes from March 8, 2017 other than the laceration over his eye that was mentioned and treated, and the evidence reveals that the laceration occurred after Plaintiff was escorted to Richmond Unit. There is no evidence other than Plaintiff’s statements that there was an injury, defecation, or hitting. Plaintiff’s allegations do not make sense in light of the evidence and he has not set forth more than a scintilla of evidence, which does not create a genuine dispute of material fact. If there was no use of excessive force by Laur, Defendant Ingram cannot be liable for failure to intervene. The only potential allegation of excessive force is Laur’s alleged strike to Plaintiff’s head which, according to the allegations, would have been quick and Ingram would not have had a reasonable opportunity to intervene. With regards to Plaintiff’s claims of deliberate indifference to a serious medical need, the claims against Defendants Deese, Herring, and Beaver should be dismissed because the need for a wheelchair is not obvious to a lay person.

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Bluebook (online)
Kelly v. Solomon, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelly-v-solomon-ncwd-2020.