Ralph Mlaska v. Paul Talbot

571 F. App'x 483
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 18, 2014
Docket13-1695
StatusUnpublished

This text of 571 F. App'x 483 (Ralph Mlaska v. Paul Talbot) 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
Ralph Mlaska v. Paul Talbot, 571 F. App'x 483 (7th Cir. 2014).

Opinion

ORDER

Illinois prisoner Ralph Mlaska appeals the grant of summary judgment to three prison medical officials and one non-prison urologist in this suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 asserting deliberate indifference to his penile and testicular pain. We affirm.

In early 2011 Mlaska sued a large number of defendants over the treatment he had received at the Danville Correctional Center during the previous year for his genital pain. He also asserted that Paul Talbot, one of the doctors at Danville, violated his right to privacy by allowing a female prison guard to be present during examinations in order to embarrass him, and to inhibit him from articulating complaints about his genitals.

Judge McCuskey screened Mlaska’s complaint under 28 U.S.C. § 1915A, and allowed Mlaska to proceed on his deliberate — indifference claim against three doctors and a nurse: Talbot; Arthur Funk, a doctor and administrator with a correctional health care company; April Walblay, a nurse at Danville; and Richard Wolf, a urologist at a private clinic who accepted referrals from the prison. Judge McCus-key, however, dismissed Mlaska’s privacy claim, concluding on the basis of Johnson v. Phelan, 69 F.3d 144 (7th Cir.1995), that he did not sufficiently allege being subjected to the unnecessary or wanton infliction of pain.

Mlaska promptly moved the court to recruit counsel, stating that his case would involve the marshaling of medical evidence and that he, as a prisoner, was unlikely to be able to do that effectively without an advocate. Judge McCuskey denied the motion, explaining that he wanted to wait to make sure that the issues raised in the case were “substantial and meritorious.” Mlaska then requested that an independent expert be appointed to assess the medical evidence in the record, and Judge McCuskey denied that motion as well, stating that Mlaska had no right to an independent expert in a civil case. Eleven days later Mlaska again asked for an expert, and the judge summarily denied this request.

*485 Discovery ensued, and the following facts (gleaned from a record spanning 4262 pages), presented in the light most favorable to Mlaska, were introduced. See Williams v. City of Chicago, 733 F.3d 749, 752 (7th Cir.2013). Mlaska, upon being transferred to Danville in April 2010, was seen by Talbot on sixteen occasions between April 2010 and the end of 2011. Mlaska repeatedly sought treatment for pain in his penis and testicles. In health care requests and consultations with prison medical officials, Mlaska described his pain variously as dull, sharp, throbbing, stabbing, burning, and radiating through his testicles into his abdomen. The pain became unbearable, he asserted, if he sat or stood in one position for too long, and walking was so painful that he had taken to staying in his bed. Scarring on his penis, he added, restricted blood flow and made obtaining an erection both difficult and painful. In response to Mlaska’s persistent complaints of pain, Talbot regularly examined Mlaska but at no time found any abnormalities. No abnormalities had been found either during examinations that Mlaska underwent at his previous facility, including one exam conducted by an outside urologist, though one doctor there had recommended a penile angiogram or penile ultrasound to further explore Mlaska’s condition.

On one visit to the infirmary in July 2010, Mlaska was seen by Nurse April Walblay for intense pain and swollen testicles. According to Mlaska, his blood pressure was higher than normal during that visit, but Walblay refused to note that on his chart, put his complaints into his medical file, or schedule him to see a doctor.

A month later Arthur Funk, the Regional Medical Director for Wexford Health Sources, Inc., examined Mlaska at the request of the Medical Director of the Illinois Department of Corrections. On the first examination, Funk found no anomalies but, in light of Mlaska’s complaints of severe pain, offered to recommend that Mlaska see an outside urologist should his condition not improve. At the second examination two weeks later, Funk reported that a urinalysis and a pelvic x-ray had turned out normal, but he agreed to allow Mlaska to see the outside specialist.

Several weeks later Mlaska was seen by Richard Wolf, a urologist at the Carle Clinic in Urbana, who reported that Mlas-ka’s penile exam was normal, suggested that a Doppler flow study might be helpful, and opined that Mlaska’s problem likely was neurological rather than physical. Based on Wolfs report and conversations with Funk, Talbot concluded that there was no medical reason to order a Doppler flow study. Talbot’s continued physical examinations revealed no abnormalities and Talbot continued to order counseling and prescribe ibuprofen for Mlaska’s pain.

As the litigation progressed, the case was reassigned to Judge Darrow, after which Mlaska promptly renewed his motion for recruitment of counsel. Mlaska also asked her to reconsider all of his previously rejected motions, including his request for an expert. Judge Darrow denied his motions; she observed that Mlas-ka had proven himself sufficiently competent to articulate his claims and litigate them, and she saw no reason to question the soundness of Judge McCuskey’s earlier rulings.

Six months later Judge Darrow granted summary judgment to Wolf, concluding that Mlaska had not shown that the care provided by Wolf — during his single examination — departed sufficiently from accepted medical standards to constitute an Eighth Amendment violation.

One week later, Mlaska again sought counsel, but Judge Darrow summarily denied his request “for the reasons previous *486 ly stated by the court.” Four months later Mlaska again sought counsel or an expert. His request for counsel was denied without explanation, though the judge stated that Mlaska could renew his motion if the case proceeded to trial. She denied his request for an expert because Mlaska already had been examined by two specialists whose findings were included in the record.

The district court eventually granted summary judgment to the defendants, concluding that Mlaska failed to show that any of them was deliberately indifferent to his complaints of pain. The court stated that both Talbot and Funk “repeatedly examined the plaintiff, offered him medication and sent him to two outside specialists, but nothing revealed a physical cause for his symptoms.” Mlaska’s legal claims, the court concluded, were nothing more than dissatisfaction or disagreement with the treatment he received. As for Mlas-ka’s claim against Nurse Walblay, the court concluded that he produced no evidence supporting his claim that he suffered from a serious medical condition when he saw her in July 2010, or that her purported delay in arranging for treatment or testing had, or could have had, any effect on his condition.

On appeal Mlaska first challenges the district court’s conclusion that his claims simply reflect a dispute about the proper course of treatment.

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Bluebook (online)
571 F. App'x 483, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ralph-mlaska-v-paul-talbot-ca7-2014.