Roscoe v. Collins

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Virginia
DecidedMarch 23, 2020
Docket7:17-cv-00494
StatusUnknown

This text of Roscoe v. Collins (Roscoe v. Collins) 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
Roscoe v. Collins, (W.D. Va. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA ROANOKE DIVISION

EMMITT ROSCOE, JR., ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) Case No. 7:17CV00494 ) v. ) OPINION AND ORDER ) L. COLLINS, ET AL., ) By: James P. Jones ) United States District Judge Defendants. )

Emmitt Roscoe, Jr., Pro Se Plaintiff; Margaret H. O’Shea, Office of the Attorney General of Virginia, Richmond, Virginia, for Defendants Collins, Scarberry, Brock, Sellers, Bentley, Farmer, Large, Meade, also referred to as Mead, Bray, Sykes, Payne (Childress), Sexton, Mullins, Hubbard, Sowards and Dr. Wyatt; and Nathan H. Schnetzler, FRITH ANDERSON+PEAKE, P.C., Roanoke, Virginia, for Defendant Dr. Boakye.

The plaintiff, Emmitt Roscoe, Jr., a Virginia inmate proceeding pro se, filed this civil rights action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. In his Second Amended Complaint (“Complaint”), he alleges that the defendants denied him prompt access to dental care for a broken jaw, provided meals he could not eat with his jaw wired shut, and denied him due process during disciplinary proceedings. Presently before me are separate motions for summary judgment by the defendants and Roscoe’s responses thereto. After review of the record, I conclude that one defendant’s motion must be granted and that the other defendants’ motion must be granted in part and denied in part. I. BACKGROUND. The facts, where contested, are presented in the light most favorable to the

plaintiff’s version of those facts and are not intended to represent findings of the court. While Roscoe was speaking to attendees of the Nation of Islam (“NOI”)

religious service at Red Onion State Prison (“Red Onion”) on February 3, 2017, another inmate punched him in the face. Officers took Roscoe to segregation without providing medical care despite his insistence that he had suffered a broken jaw. Later, he was transported to the Red Onion medical unit and then to a local

hospital’s emergency department. A CT scan confirmed that his jaw was broken, and the ER doctor recommended Percocet for pain relief. Back at Red Onion, Roscoe spent three days in the medical unit, where he received allegedly insufficient

pain medication and nothing to stabilize his jaw. On February 6, 2017, an outside physician, Dr. Hollyfield, performed oral surgery on Roscoe and wired his jaws shut to facilitate healing. Many times in the following weeks, Roscoe’s meals were not liquid enough for him to eat with his jaws

wired shut, contrary to medical diet orders. Based on events at the NOI service on February 3, 2017, an officer who was monitoring the meeting charged Roscoe with a disciplinary infraction for fighting.

The hearing officer found him guilty and fined him. Dr. Hollyfield removed the wires from Roscoe’s jaw on March 2, 2017, and put in metal braces bound by rubber bands. Roscoe continued to seek dental care

for complains of pain and difficulty eating. In June of 2017, transportation officers refused to transport Roscoe to an off-site medical appointment, based on their reports that he was disruptive and threatened to harm them. That appointment was not

rescheduled until September of 2017. Roscoe filed his § 1983 action in October of 2017, suing multiple defendants and claiming denial of adequate dental care and food he could eat and denial of due process during the disciplinary proceedings. He alleged ongoing issues with pain

while brushing his teeth and eating. He stated that his jaws were misaligned, causing speech difficulties and pain that interfered with his sleep and his ability to hear. As of September of 2017, Roscoe was allegedly unable to eat regular prison meals, was

not being provided the soft diet ordered for him and was waiting for a follow up appointment at the Medical College of Virginia (“MCV”). In January of 2018, after many of the defendants had waived service of process in this case, Roscoe filed a motion seeking interlocutory injunctive relief.

He asked the court to order the defendants to provide him with appropriate dental treatment and a soft diet, to stop retaliating against him for this lawsuit, and to transfer him to another prison. The presiding judge, Senior United States District

Judge Jackson L. Kiser, referred the case to United States Magistrate Judge Pamela Meade Sargent, who conducted an evidentiary hearing on March 1, 2018. Based on the testimony presented and the record, Judge Sargent issued a Report and

Recommendation (“R&R”), recommending that the court grant in part Roscoe’s request for interlocutory injunctive relief. On June 26, 2018, Judge Kiser overruled the parties’ objections, adopted the R&R, and ordered Dr. Moore,1 in his official

capacity as the Red Onion dentist, to arrange for Roscoe to be evaluated by an oral surgeon within thirty days for his complaints of continued pain and inability to chew food. Roscoe saw an oral surgeon on July 11, 2018, who prescribed physical therapy and other measures.2

During the March 1, 2018, evidentiary hearing, Roscoe questioned R. Hubbard,3 a dental assistant at Red Onion, about a request Roscoe filed in November of 2017, asking to see the dentist about ongoing pain and difficulty eating his food.

Hubbard treated the request as a nonemergency and scheduled Roscoe for a routine dental exam that did not occur until December 28, 2017. Hubbard also testified that

1 Roscoe sometimes refers to this defendant as Dr. Morre.

2 Roscoe later filed motions for interlocutory injunctive relief, among other things complaining that he did not receive all of these recommended treatment measures. Judge Sargent issued a R&R on March 19, 2019, finding that Roscoe had not presented sufficient evidence to justify interlocutory relief. She reported evidence that Roscoe has had follow up care by specialists, who have found that his mandible fracture has healed well, but who disagree about the proper course of treatment for his continuing complaints of paresthesia and discomfort. I adopted the R&R and denied Roscoe’s motions for interlocutory relief.

3 The Complaint refers to this defendant as Jane Doe #1. after receiving another request from Roscoe, dated January 8, 2018, she said she had scheduled him for a dental exam as requested, but did not actually do so. She

explained that Dr. Moore then relayed to her instructions from Dr. Wyatt, chief dentist for the Virginia Department of Corrections (“VDOC”), to provide care to Roscoe only in an “emergency situation” until his lawsuits against the dental

department were resolved. Tr. 105, ECF No. 225. Judge Sargent granted Roscoe’s request to file a second amended pleading4 to add a claim that Dr. Wyatt retaliated against Roscoe for filing this lawsuit by ordering Moore and Hubbard to deny him care. Id. at 332-35. Roscoe filed his amended pleading in early May of 2018.

In response to Roscoe’s current Complaint, Dr. Moore and Nurse Bledsoe filed a Motion to Dismiss and attached Dr. Moore’s declaration, a transcript excerpt of Bledsoe’s evidentiary hearing testimony, and medical records. Hubbard, P. Adams5 (a medical staff employee at Red Onion), and Dr. Wyatt filed Motions to

Dismiss. Other defendants filed only Answers. Judge Sargent issued a R&R on November 9, 2018, addressing these motions. Because evidence outside the pleadings had been presented to the court, pursuant to

Rule 12(d), Judge Sargent considered all of the motions under Rule 56 of the Federal

4 Roscoe’s first motion for leave to file an amended pleading was dismissed without prejudice.

5 Roscoe’s prior complaints referred to this defendant as Jane Doe #2. Rules of Civil Procedure.

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Roscoe v. Collins, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roscoe-v-collins-vawd-2020.