Makdessi v. Fox

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Virginia
DecidedMarch 27, 2024
Docket7:23-cv-00051
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Makdessi v. Fox, (W.D. Va. 2024).

Opinion

AT ROANOKE, VA FILED March 27, 202¢ IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT — JAURAA AUSTIN, □□□□ FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA □ isi, Taylor x ROANOKE DIVISION

ADIB EDDIE RAMEZ MAKDESSI, ) ) Plaintiff, ) Case No. 7:23CV00051 ) V. ) OPINION AND ORDER ) DR. FOX, ET AL., ) JUDGE JAMEs P. JONES ) Defendants. ) ) Adib Eddie Ramez Makdessi, Pro Se Plaintiff; Debra M. Bryan, Assistant Attorney General, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF VIRGINIA CRIMINAL JUSTICE AND PUBLIC SAFETY DIVISION, Richmond, Virginia, for Defendants Clarke, Robinson, Herrick, Kiser, White, King, Turner, Collins, and Dillman; Anthony S. Cottone, BYRNE CANAAN LAW, Richmond, Virginia, for Defendants Fox, Bledsoe, Trent, and Jessee (now known as Holbrook). The plaintiff, Adib Eddie Ramez Makdessi, a Virginia inmate proceeding pro se, filed an action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The Complaint in that case, Case No. 7:22CV00428, was asserted against 20 different defendants, and raised

numerous misjoined claims based on events that had allegedly occurred over several years. An Amended Complaint continued the pattern of misjoinder. The court then ordered Makdessi to file a complaint that raised only properly joined claims. In his attempt to correct the misjoinder problem in a Second Amended Complaint, Makdessi included nine separate claims, purportedly joined by the pain he allegedly had suffered from lack of appropriate medical treatment over several

years. By Opinion and Order entered January 23, 2023, in Case No. 7:22CV00428, ECF No. 17, the court severed certain of his claims into separate

civil actions.1 This case involves the claim that certain of the defendants failed to provide Makdessi with medically appropriate shoes and a back brace. After review of the record, I conclude that the defendants’ separate motions to dismiss must be

granted, and Makdessi’s summary judgment motion must be denied, along with his request for interlocutory injunctive relief. I. BACKGROUND. The Eighth Amendment claims alleged in this action arose while Makdessi

was confined in the Protective Custody Unit at Red Onion State Prison (Red Onion), a prison facility operated by the Virginia Department of Corrections (VDOC). Years before that, in 1993, after Makdessi had back surgery related to an

injured disc, his neurosurgeon recommended providing him with “medical shoes [and] back brace that did provide pain relief until [Makdessi] was imprisoned.” Compl. 8, ECF No. 1. Makdessi alleges that the defendants have refused to provide the treatments the neurosurgeon recommended in 1993, which has

allegedly caused him “torture” for the past five to eight years. Id. He also alleges that defendant Collins told him many times over seven years, “We all seen the

1 Two claims concerning events that occurred in 2015 and early 2016 remained in Case No. 7:22CV00428 and were eventually dismissed as untimely. move NetFlx [sic] made about your crime, this is why you deserve to suffer.” Id.2 As relief on this claim, Makdessi seeks monetary relief and a court order for the

medical shoes and back brace the surgeon recommended. The defendants are Dr. Fox, Nurse Bledsoe, Nurse Trent, and Leah Jessee (now Holbrook) (the medical defendants); and Harold Clarke, David Robinson, Steve Herrick, Warden Kiser,

Warden White, Major King, D. Turner, L. Collins, and J. Dillman (the VDOC defendants). The medical defendants and the VDOC defendants have filed separate motions seeking dismissal for failure to state a claim. Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6).

They argue that Makdessi does not allege personal actions undertaken by any of the defendants that deprived him of his constitutionally protected rights. Makdessi has filed a response to these motions that alleges a much more

detailed chronology of facts than the Complaint itself, supported by attached documents as exhibits. Makdessi’s response alleges that while he was assigned to the Protective Custody Unit (PCU) at River North Correctional Center (River North), Dr. Dulaney examined his feet and ordered on October 21, 2014, that he

should be allowed to purchase and possess size “9 ½ 4E wide medical boots or shoes.” Resp. 1, ECF No. 37. Makdessi alleges that Dr. Dulaney based his

2 Makdessi was convicted for the 1996 first-degree murders of his wife and his wife’s co-worker and sentenced to two life sentences. Makdessi v. Watson, 682 F. Supp. 2d 633 (E.D. Va. 2010) (denying habeas petition), appeal dismissed, 415 F. App’x 483 (4th Cir. 2011) (unpublished), cert. denied, 132 S. Ct. 202 (2011). opinion on the recommendation of the neurosurgeon in 1993 that shoes in that size with “high soft soles” would provide pain relief for Makdessi. Id. Based on Dr.

Dulaney’s order, Makdessi purchased “9 ½ 4E wide New Balance medical shoes with strings.” Id. On March 17, 2015, the VDOC moved the PCU and Makdessi to Red

Onion. Officers confiscated Makdessi’s shoes because Red Onion does not allow shoes with strings. Makdessi protested and exhausted administrative remedies. He alleges that “[a]ll the named defendants kept refusing [his] medical needs” for the shoes and back brace “for 8 years.” Id. at 2. Makdessi states that on March 25,

2019, a neurosurgeon recommended that Makdessi “should have the back brace [and] medical shoes with high soles which are soft to provide pain relief.” Id. According to Makdessi, every time he had sick call with the medical department at

Red Onion, he was “refused prescription of medical shoes [and] back brace, by Dr. Fox, Nurse Holbrook, Nurse Bledsoe, [and] Trent].” Id. He also asserts that “all” the defendants “lied” to him, by telling him that he would “need to sign another special order form.” Id. He alleges that medical staff completed the form and had

it signed by Kiser and Tate on April 23, 2019, and on another occasion, had another completed form signed on July 9, 2021, by Fuller and Turner. When the commissary staff received these forms, they responded that a special order of that

type needed “to go through the medical department.” Id. Makdessi contends that “all the defendants are playing games” with him and have been for eight years. Id. He states that the commissary has refused his orders

many times, and all the defendants have been notified of these refusals through written and verbal complaints. Yet, he complains, none of the defendants has ensured that while at Red Onion, he could order the shoes and back brace

recommended by his medical providers in 1993, 2014, and 2019. Rather, he asserts the defendants have “LIED [and] fraudulently refused” his many grievances on the issue. Id. at 3. On May 10, 2022, Nurse Trent allegedly offered Makdessi regular prison

shoes, size 9. Makdessi said that he could not fit into them and would file a lawsuit. He filed his lawsuit on January 23, 2023, and notified all defendants that he was suing to get the shoes and back brace that would relieve his back and foot

pain. Thereafter, Trent provided Makdessi with “medical shoes 9 ½ 4E wide with soft high soles,” and they “did provide relief” of the inmate’s back and foot pain. Id. at 4. Makdessi received these shoes on March 23, 2023, shortly before the court accomplished service on the defendants. He complains, however, that “the

back brace is still being refused.” Id. Makdessi has also filed a document seeking to convert his response to the Motions to Dismiss and its attached exhibits into a summary judgment motion.

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