Mustafa-El Ajala v. U.W. Hospital and Clinics

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 19, 2020
Docket19-3423
StatusUnpublished

This text of Mustafa-El Ajala v. U.W. Hospital and Clinics (Mustafa-El Ajala v. U.W. Hospital and Clinics) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mustafa-El Ajala v. U.W. Hospital and Clinics, (7th Cir. 2020).

Opinion

NONPRECEDENTIAL DISPOSITION To be cited only in accordance with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit Chicago, Illinois 60604

Submitted October 15, 2020* Decided November 19, 2020

Before

JOEL M. FLAUM, Circuit Judge

ILANA DIAMOND ROVNER, Circuit Judge

MICHAEL Y. SCUDDER, Circuit Judge

No. 19-3423

MUSTAFA-EL K.A. AJALA, formerly Appeal from the United States District known as DENNIS-EL JONES, Court for the Western District of Wisconsin. Plaintiff-Appellant,

v. No. 16-cv-639-bbc

UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN HOSPITAL Barbara B. Crabb, AND CLINICS, et al., Judge. Defendants-Appellees.

ORDER

Mustafa-El Ajala, a Wisconsin inmate, sued several doctors, alleging that their treatment of his urinary, kidney, and parathyroid conditions violated the Eighth Amendment and state malpractice law. The district court entered summary judgment

* We have agreed to decide the case without oral argument because the briefs and record adequately present the facts and legal arguments, and oral argument would not significantly aid the court. FED. R. APP. P. 34(a)(2)(C). No. 19-3423 Page 2

for the defendants. Because no reasonable juror could conclude that the doctors were negligent or constitutionally deficient in their responses to Ajala’s symptoms, we affirm.

From 2001 to 2010, Ajala experienced frequent, sometimes painful urination and above-average calcium in his blood. A test in 2001 first revealed his high calcium, a condition that can (but does not always) cause kidney stones and signal a problem in the parathyroid glands. Although the record contains no medical records from before 2007, Ajala attested that in 2003, he sought treatment from Dr. Burton Cox, a doctor at Wisconsin Secure Program Facility where he was housed, but Dr. Cox did not prescribe any medication or diagnose him. Ajala was housed at a different prison from 2005 to 2007. When he returned, he continued to complain of the same symptoms.

In 2010, Dr. Cox referred Ajala to the urology clinic at the University of Wisconsin Hospital, where he was treated for urinary problems and asymptomatic kidney stones. Dr. Sutchin Patel, a specialist at the clinic, conducted a urinalysis, bladder scan, and cystoscopy of the bladder’s lining, but the results were unremarkable. He suggested medication for an overactive bladder, and Dr. Cox ordered it. At a follow- up visit, Ajala complained of pain, and Dr. Patel ordered a CT scan, which showed small, asymptomatic kidney stones. Because Ajala denied past incontinence or stones, Dr. Patel concluded that they were side effects of the bladder medication and suggested an extended-release version with fewer side effects. He also recommended decreasing salt intake and increasing citrates by drinking lime juice or lemonade. After the visit, Dr. Cox did not prescribe an oral citrate tablet. He attested that he thought Ajala could get lemonade from the canteen; Ajala says he told him that he could not.

The next year, Ajala’s calcium and hormone levels remained steady, but his kidney stones worsened. Dr. Cox tested the calcium and parathyroid hormones in Ajala’s blood three times: The results showed moderately high calcium levels on the first test and mildly high levels on the second and third. Each test showed normal levels of parathyroid hormone. Soon after, however, Ajala developed new kidney stones, some of which caused blockage and blood in his urine. He was rushed to the emergency room, given pain medication, and told to pass the stones.

In 2012, Ajala began seeing another specialist at the clinic, Dr. Srihavan Sivalingam. During their first visit, Ajala reported that the extended-release medication was helping, but not resolving, his frequent urination. A urinalysis showed normal results, and Dr. Sivalingam recommended taking the bladder medicine daily instead of as needed and ordered tests to look for kidney imbalances. Dr. Patel conducted the tests No. 19-3423 Page 3

and diagnosed “mild hypercalcemia,” which he said does not require treatment when, as in Ajala’s case, urine flow is good and the bladder empties well. He ordered a follow- up in a year and, in the interim, an x-ray to monitor potential stones.

Shortly after, a CT scan revealed three more kidney stones. When the stones became painful, Dr. Cox ordered that Ajala receive lemon juice every day. The lemon juice helped for a while until, in early 2013, the pain worsened. Lab tests around that time showed moderately high calcium levels and, for the first time, elevated levels of his parathyroid hormone. Dr. Cox referred Ajala back to the clinic, where Dr. Sivalingam diagnosed “possible hyperparathyroidism” and found multiple stones, which he extracted. After the surgery, he prescribed Ajala a narcotic pain medication.

Dr. Cox later discontinued the narcotic with three days left on the prescription because Ajala refused to lift his tongue to show that he had swallowed his pills, and two pills were found in his cell. Dr. Cox ordered a non-narcotic pain medication instead. He prescribed a narcotic again ten days later when Ajala had another surgery.

Finally, in late 2013, a third doctor at the clinic diagnosed Ajala with “primary parathyroidism” and removed part of his parathyroid, a surgery which resolved all Ajala’s symptoms, including his urinary problems, kidney stones, and calcium levels.

In September 2016, Ajala sued Dr. Cox, Dr. Patel, and Dr. Sivalingam, alleging that their failure to diagnose and treat his underlying condition of hyperparathyroidism violated the Eighth Amendment, see 42 U.S.C. § 1983, and was negligent under Wisconsin law. He alleged that Dr. Cox further violated the Eighth Amendment when he discontinued his prescription narcotic. Ajala also sued the University of Wisconsin Hospital and Clinics over the treatment he received from Dr. Patel and Dr. Sivalingam.

As the case progressed, the district court denied several of Ajala’s motions, including three requests for recruited counsel. The court initially granted the first motion, but after more than a year of looking, it found no lawyer to take the case. Because Ajala by then had been transferred to Virginia, and it was “even less likely” to find counsel, the court stopped looking. It denied the two later motions because it had already exhausted its options and, it explained, Ajala is “an intelligent and experienced litigator” who understands the issues, communicates well, and is “much more capable than the average pro se litigant.” Ajala alternatively moved for a court-appointed medical expert, but the district court denied those requests as premature. It explained that before the dispositive issues were presented through summary judgment briefing, No. 19-3423 Page 4

the court could not tell if “complex or specialized issues” justified an expert. Finally, Ajala moved for default judgment against the defendants as a sanction for lying under oath. The court denied the motion, concluding that there was no evidence the defendants had purposely lied in any of the declarations Ajala challenged.

Eventually, the defendants moved for summary judgment. They argued that Ajala could not prove the medical malpractice claims because he failed to furnish evidence from a medical expert as required by Wisconsin law. In response, Ajala argued that, for two reasons, his malpractice claims should survive despite the absence of expert testimony: first, a medical expert was not required because the negligence was obvious; and, second, the medical defendants’ own testimony sufficed to establish the standard of care.

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Mustafa-El Ajala v. U.W. Hospital and Clinics, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mustafa-el-ajala-v-uw-hospital-and-clinics-ca7-2020.