Marcellus Breach v. Gary Copes

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 12, 2007
DocketCA-0007-0917
StatusUnknown

This text of Marcellus Breach v. Gary Copes (Marcellus Breach v. Gary Copes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Marcellus Breach v. Gary Copes, (La. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

STATE OF LOUISIANA COURT OF APPEAL, THIRD CIRCUIT

07-0917

MARCELLUS BREACH

VERSUS

GARY COPES, ET AL.

************

APPEAL FROM THE THIRTEENTH JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT, PARISH OF EVANGELINE, NO. 00067886-B HONORABLE THOMAS F. FUSELIER, DISTRICT JUDGE

JIMMIE C. PETERS JUDGE

Court composed of Ulysses Gene Thibodeaux, Chief Judge, Jimmie C. Peters, and James T. Genovese, Judges.

AFFIRMED.

Marcellus Breach Limestone C.F. 28779 Nick Davis Rd. Harvest, Alabama 35749 PLAINTIFF/APPELLANT: IN PROPER PERSON

Christopher A. Edwards Edwards Law Firm Post Office Box 2970 Lafayette, LA 70502-2970 (337) 237-6881 COUNSEL FOR DEFENDANTS/APPELLEES: Gary Copes, et al. PETERS, J.

The plaintiff in this litigation, Marcellus Breach, is a prison inmate appearing

herein in proper person. He appeals the trial court grant of summary judgment

dismissing his suit for damages and injunctive relief against various prison

authorities. For the following reasons, we affirm the trial court judgment in all

respects.

DISCUSSION OF THE RECORD

Immediately prior to March 16, 2006, Marcellus Breach was serving time in

the Alabama prison system for criminal offenses committed in that state. Due to

overcrowding conditions in the facility where he was being held, he was transferred

on that day to a private prison in Evangeline Parish, Louisiana, operated by LCS

Correction Services, Inc. (LCS). On April 6, 2006, just three weeks after his transfer

to the Louisiana facility, he filed a proper person suit in Louisiana state court1,

seeking relief for actions and inactions of prison personnel. Originally, and by

amendments to the original pleadings, Breach named numerous defendants, including

LCS; the warden of the Evangeline Parish facility, Gary Copes; and a number of other

officials affiliated with the Evangeline Parish facility.

Breach’s pleadings and subsequent amendments covered numerous areas of

contention including, but not limited to, complaints concerning lack of access to

support facilities for his legal claims against both Alabama and Louisiana defendants;

the failure to provide basic services and benefits ranging from notary service to

medical services; the refusals to allow him to practice his religion and to provide an

adequate grievance procedure; prison conditions, mistreatment, and discriminatory

practices; and mail tampering by prison officials. Through legal rulings and a consent

1 The plaintiff filed suit in the 13th Judicial District Court in Evangeline Parish, Louisiana. judgment, the focus of the litigation has been reduced to Breach’s claim that he was

denied medical care by the Evangeline Parish facility personnel who were made

defendants herein, specifically in regard to treatment for a hernia. He sought a

monetary award for damages as well as injunctive relief.2 The defendants answered

Breach’s assertions with the specific denial that Breach’s hernia needed repair.

Instead, the defendants argued that the hernia was a benign condition that might be

repairable through elective surgery but was neither life threatening nor dangerous.

On October 6, 2006, some six months and three weeks after he was placed in

LCS, Mr. Breach was transferred back to Alabama, thus ending his stay in the

Louisiana private prison. However, from his Alabama place of confinement he

continued to pursue his Louisiana damage suit and his Louisiana demand for

injunctive relief.

On February 7, 2007, the defendants moved for summary judgment, seeking

the dismissal of all demands. As to the damage claim, the defendants asserted that

there was no genuine issue of fact in dispute because Breach had not been denied

reasonable medical care. They also asserted that because Breach was no longer

present in Louisiana, the demand for injunctive relief was moot. In support of the

motion, the defendants submitted the affidavit of Dr. John Tassin, the Evangeline

Parish facility physician; a certified copy of all of Breach’s medical records while he

was in the Louisiana facility; and a certified copy of his prison records reflecting the

dates of incarceration in Alabama and Louisiana. In opposition to the motion Breach

2 Breach sought to enjoin the defendants from denying his requested medical care. Specifically, he sought a judgment ordering the defendants to repair the hernia through surgery.

2 filed the affidavits of Dr. Satyarandhana Rao Yerubandi, M.D. and Joann Breach,3 a

registered nurse, as well as the affidavits of two fellow prisoners in Alabama.

It is not disputed that Breach suffers from a left inguinal hernia. However, the

record before us does not provide the date of its origin, although it was clearly present

as early as February 2005, well before his sojourn in Louisiana began. The Louisiana

medical records and Dr. Tassin’s affidavit establish that Dr. Tassin first saw Breach

relative to the hernia on March 21, 2006. The medical record of that date contains the

notation, “Needs repair?” Breach relies on this notation to argue that this was a

medical acknowledgment by the facility doctor that he was in need of surgical repair

of the hernia as early as that date, and that, thereafter, the defendants’ denial of

surgery was a violation of the duty to provide him with appropriate medical care.

However, Dr. Tassin asserted in his affidavit that the notation was merely a question

he asked himself at the time and was not intended as an affirmative finding of a need

for surgery.

Dr. Tassin’s affidavit asserts that on July 12, 2006, he determined that the

Alabama Department of Corrections did not require that hernia repairs be performed

when the hernia was not incarcerated or into the scrotum. When he next saw Breach

on July 18, 2006, Dr. Tassin found that the hernia was not incarcerated and was not

in the scrotum. Therefore, he concluded that this was only an elective procedure and

that repair was not required. He issued no new treatment orders on this date because

he found no change in the hernia since the initial examination. Dr. Tassin last saw

Breach on October 3, 2006. However, this visit was for an old ankle injury not

3 The record does not indicate that the affiant nurse, Joann Breach, is petitioner’s mother but it does reflect that his mother’s name is Joann Breach. We have not considered this affidavit in our de novo review of the motion for summary judgment because Mr. Breach’s claim is based on the failure of the defendants to accord him reasonable medical care, not nursing care.

3 related to the hernia. Dr. Tassin summarized that Breach’s hernia condition remained

the same during his time at the Louisiana correctional facility. That is to say, it was

stable, and surgery was not required for his health or safety.

Dr. Yerubandi executed his affidavit on April 27, 2007, over six months after

Breach returned to Alabama. In his affidavit, Dr. Yerubandi identified himself as a

surgeon specializing in hernia repair in Alabama. He stated that he had reviewed

Breach’s medical records at LCS and that he was “familiar” with Breach’s

complaints. Based on those complaints, he opined that “repair is needed” because the

hernia “can” get worse and “may lead to a danger to his health and safety and can lead

to hospitalization . . . .” However, what is missing from Dr. Yerubandi’s affidavit is

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