MILLER v. WILLIAMS

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 31, 2024
Docket2:21-cv-00870
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
MILLER v. WILLIAMS, (W.D. Pa. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

JUSTIN M. MILLER, ) ) Plaintiff, ) 2:21-cv-00870-CB ) v. ) Judge Cathy Bissoon ) LAURA WILLIAMS, et al., ) ) Defendants. )

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER I. MEMORANDUM Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment (Doc. 136) will be granted. Plaintiff was a pretrial detainee at the Allegheny County Jail (“the Jail”). He filed this case over three years ago, complaining of his treatment by Jail-staff during a self-imposed hunger strike. His refusal to eat lasted from December 15 through December 18, 2020. 2d Am. Compl. (Doc. 75) at ECF-header pgs. 13-14 (hereafter, page numbers refer to the ECF-header pagination). Plaintiff originally challenged numerous aspects of the Jail’s handling of his hunger strike, and his suicide watch that shortly preceded it, but all of his claims have been dismissed except one: the Jail’s failure to provide “prednisoLONE Acetate Ophthalmic” eye drops, prescribed for a “possible macular edema” in his left eye (swelling of the retina). See Pl.’s Exs., filed under Doc. 144, and, specifically, Doc. 144-1 at pg. 2. The eye drops did not travel with Plaintiff from his cell in solitary confinement to the “Medical Housing” unit where he was kept during the hunger strike, referred to by both sides as “5C.” Pl.’s Doc. 144 at ⁋ 3. Rather, the eye drops container was “removed from [his] cell and put in a property bag,” because detainees were not allowed “property while in medical observation,” aside from clothing and a mattress. Pl.’s Doc. 146 at ⁋⁋ 10-11; cf. Defs.’ Stmt. of Facts (Doc. 137) at ⁋ 11. Jail records reveal that eye drops were administered on December 15, 2020 at 8:37 p.m., see Doc. 137-10 ‒ and then again on December 17, 2020 at 12:43 p.m. See Doc. 137-11. The period between treatments was roughly 40 hours. Doc. 137 at ⁋⁋ 10-12 (acknowledging that

eye drops were not administered on a single day, December 16th).1 Although Plaintiff claims to have suffered “much damage” as a result, see Doc. 146 at pgs. 4-5, his own evidence is plainly to the contrary. Only two weeks later, on December 30, 2020, an ophthalmologist examined Plaintiff in person and reported “a totally normal eye exam.” Pl.’s Doc. 144-1 at pg. 1. The doctor wrote: The left eye . . . reveal[ed] an entirely normal exam with no inflammation or cataract. There [was] a clear vitreous with no . . . detachment, evidence of trauma, tears or detachment. The nerve [was] healthy and pink with 0.6 cupping. The macular reflex [was] sharp and free of traction, edema or hole.

1 Plaintiff himself relies extensively on the Jail’s records, and has offered no evidence in rebuttal. Rather, he offers only a general assertion that, “[f]rom the evening” of December 15th to “Dec[ember] 18[th] at 9:00 p.m., [he] was denied access to [his] eye drops.” Pl.’s Doc. 146 at ⁋ 2 (emphasis supplied). This is consistent with his acknowledgement that detainees were not permitted to bring property into 5C. Plaintiff’s statements do not conflict, because both things could be true: Plaintiff himself was not permitted to maintain possession of the eye drops in 5C; yet, eye drops were administered at the dates and times reflected in the medical records. Plaintiff’s recounting of events that transpired near four years prior, while he was in the midst of a hunger strike, does not exactly inspire confidence in terms of being an accurate and reliable “historian.” On summary judgment, Plaintiff enjoys the benefit of reasonable inferences, and any suggestion that his present conclusory statements are superior to contemporaneous medical reports (recorded before Plaintiff’s “eye drops claim” logically could be anticipated) is not reasonable. A corollary result is reached, from a slightly different angle, through an application of black letter law. Kling v. U.P.M.C., 2021 WL 3667918, *17 (W.D. Pa. May 7, 2021) (on summary judgment, a non-movant “cannot rest [on bare] assertions . . . in the pleadings,” or “rely on merely colorable, conclusory, or speculative evidence”) (citation to binding authority omitted). Id. On these findings, the doctor found a CT scan to be unnecessary, and he opined, “based on [his] 30 years of experience with ocular trauma,” that Plaintiff was “suspect[ed of] malingering.” Id. Perhaps failing to fully comprehend the implications of his own evidence, Plaintiff also specifically quotes a report from his optometrist less than two weeks later, on January 11, 2021. Pl.’s Doc. 146 at ⁋ 13. The report indicated that Plaintiff “was told” by the ophthalmologist that

he had ”minimal retinal edema at that point,” and Plaintiff indicated that his “V[isual] A[cuity]” was “slowly improving.” Doc. 146-8. The optometrist prescribed an NSAID pain reliever and indicated, based on Plaintiff’s present condition, that his next visit should be three months later. Id. On the above record, Plaintiff insists, there are triable issues of fact. He is incorrect. First, he has failed to overcome Defendant’s evidence showing his failure to exhaust administrative remedies. Plaintiff filed no fewer than 186 grievances during his period of detention. Doc. 137-19 at ⁋⁋ 6-10.2 He filed at least 171 grievances between the year of his hunger strike, 2020, and his transfer-out in late 2022. Id.; Pl.’s Doc. 85 (notice of change of

address dated early December 2022, indicating that Plaintiff was transferred to SCI Albion, post- conviction, to serve his state sentence). The Jail has no record of a grievance by Plaintiff regarding the denial of eye drops during his hunger strike. Id. at ⁋⁋ 11-12. Plaintiff has offered no competent evidence to the contrary. The two “medical” grievances he references predated his hunger strike. Doc. 144-2 at pgs. 1 & 2 (grievances dated and signed on October 26 and November 16, 2020). The third grievance identified the “Date of Complaint” as December 14, 2020 ‒ the day before Plaintiff’s transfer to 5C ‒

2 The length of Plaintiff’s detention at the Jail is unclear from the record, but it appears to have been no longer than five years. and the form was signed and dated January 7, 2021. Doc. 144-2 at pg. 3. Tellingly, Plaintiff circled “Mental Health” as the complaint category, and the written narrative makes no reference to his eye condition. Compare id. (complaining about the Jail’s handling of his suicide watch, between December 12th and 14th) with R&R (Doc. 64) at 2, 7-8 (rejecting Plaintiff’s claim premised on the Jail’s having made “observation rounds” every 30 minutes, instead of

every 15 minutes), adopted as opinion of Dist. Ct. (Mem. Order filed at Doc. 68). Plaintiff’s ready production of evidence regarding contemporaneous, if unhelpful, grievances speaks volumes. His vague reference to Jail “customs” making “grievances [un]available,” Doc. 144 at ⁋ 4, is both belied by the record and insufficient under the law. Paladino v. Newsome, 885 F.3d 203, 208 (3d Cir. 2018) (affirming summary judgment where the plaintiff offered vague claims that prison records were “incomplete” and that staff purposefully interfered with his forms). Summary judgment is warranted on the exhaustion issue. Even had Plaintiff exhausted, his claim would fare no better. While the brief

“deprivation” of eye drops resulting from Plaintiff’s hunger strike is unfortunate, it is not actionable. Plaintiff has failed to establish that ‒ as of December 16, 2020 (the single day the drops were not administered) ‒ the medicinal regimen constituted a “serious” medical need. The drops initially were prescribed by Plaintiff’s treating optometrist on November 2, 2020, for a two-week period. Pl.’s Doc. 144-1 at pg. 2 (the optometrist “initiate[d] Pred Acetate” for “2 weeks”).

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Bluebook (online)
MILLER v. WILLIAMS, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-williams-pawd-2024.