Sams v. Franklin County, Ohio

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Ohio
DecidedJuly 2, 2024
Docket2:19-cv-05330
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Sams v. Franklin County, Ohio, (S.D. Ohio 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF OHIO EASTERN DIVISION

FREDDIE SAMS, : : Plaintiff, : Case No. 2:19-cv-5330 : v. : Chief Judge Algenon L. Marbley : FRANKLIN COUNTY, OHIO, et al., : Magistrate Judge Chelsey M. Vascura : : Defendants. :

OPINION AND ORDER This matter is before this Court on Defendants’ Motions for Summary Judgment. (ECF Nos. 104, 106). For the reasons that follow, Defendants’ Motions are GRANTED. I. BACKGROUND A. Factual Background Following a domestic altercation on November 18, 2017, Mr. Freddie Sams presented to the Emergency Department at Mount Carmel East Hospital with a “very very small” stab wound on his left arm and pain in his right hand. (ECF No. 115 at 17-18). The Emergency Department x-rayed his right hand and identified a fracture to the third metacarpal bone. (Id. at 19). Mr. Sams was placed in a “volar splint” and discharged, with various instructions “to follow up with orthopedics in 5-7 days,” “[c]all for an Appointment in 5-7 days,” and “follow-up as needed.” (Id.). He was also prescribed an antibiotic for the stab wound and provided with wound care instructions. (Id. at 24, 30). Tylenol and Advil were to be taken as needed for fever or pain, respectively. (Id. at 23, 30-31). Mr. Sams had contacted the police to lodge a complaint about the assault, but police officers arrived at the hospital and placed him under arrest for domestic violence. (Id. at 19). Upon arrival at the jail, medical staff assessed Mr. Sams, during which they noted that he had a “cast” on his right arm and a stab wound. (ECF No. 107-1 at 28). Medical staff acknowledged receipt of the Mount Carmel paperwork that indicated that Mr. Sams should contact orthopedics in five to seven days. (Id.). The same injuries were noted during Mr. Sams’s

classification interview the following day. (ECF No. 107-2 at 67). With respect to Mr. Sams’s stab wound, on November 19, the day after Mr. Sams’s arrival, a non-defendant doctor at the jail ordered that wound care should be completed once a day. (ECF No. 104-1). On November 20, records indicate that a non-defendant nurse was unable to complete wound care because Mr. Sams was out of the facility. (ECF No. 107-3 at 18). Between November 21 and November 29, Defendant Nurses Levering and Sumo assert that they performed wound care and medication administration for Mr. Sams daily, with a few exceptions when wound care was performed by non-defendant nurses. Mr. Sams alleges, however, that the last time he received wound care was on November 27. Indeed, medical records from the jail indicate that “wound

care” was “Administered” by Defendant Nurse Sumo on November 27, but the entry on November 29 indicates “Other” and “Patient up to see PA on 11-30-17.” (ECF No. 107-3 at 18). On November 30, the physician assistant ordered that Mr. Sams should receive wound care only once a week. (ECF No. 104-1). On December 7, when Defendant Nurse New-Berry attempted to complete Mr. Sams’s wound care, no correctional officers were available to escort her to Mr. Sams’s cell, as required by facility policy. (ECF No. 107-1 at 30). She reported her inability to perform the care to Defendant Nurse Flores. (Id.). With respect to Mr. Sams’s fracture, on November 23, five days after admission to the jail, Mr. Sams submitted a sick call request explaining that he had not been “sent to my doctor to have my cast put on and the hospital said 10 days.” (ECF No. 103-3 at 53). He indicated that he “would like to file a grievance form as soon as possible so I can see a specialist.” (Id.). The next day, on November 24, Mr. Sams was evaluated by a non-defendant nurse practitioner. Mr. Sams indicated that his soft cast was beginning to smell, and the nurse practitioner removed it, cleansing the area with soap and water and rewrapping it with an ACE bandage to stabilize the hand and forearm.

(ECF No. 107-1 at 28). She also evaluated whether Mr. Sams’s capillaries in his fingers refilled at an appropriate rate when pressed, and noted that his third, fourth, and fifth fingers were “deviating to the right” and that swelling was present. (Id.). During this evaluation, Mr. Sams expressed concern that he had not yet been seen by an orthopedist. (Id.). The nurse practitioner’s notes reflect that she explained to Mr. Sams that “embolizing the fracture” with the “hard splint” is treatment, and that “fractures take 6-8 weeks to heal.” (Id. at 29). That same day, Mr. Sams submitted another sick call request, again indicating that he had not seen a specialist yet, “which was ordered 10 days ago by the hospital.” (Id. at 62). A few days later, on November 27, Mr. Sams filed another sick call slip, indicating that he

believed he was experiencing medical neglect and that “Nurse Elizabeth” and “Nurse [Deddeh],” presumably Defendants Levering or Flores and Sumo, “purposely” lied to him about having a broken finger when he has a broken hand. (ECF No. 103-3 at 78). Mr. Sams also explained in the sick call form that he believed Nurse Elizabeth lied again by telling him, in front of Nurse Deddeh and three deputies, that he knew about the December 1 doctor’s appointment. (Id.). Mr. Sams concluded from this exchange that Nurse Elizabeth “cancelled” his appointment. (Id.). Mr. Sams submitted an “Inmate Call Card” on November 29, which was labeled in several places as a “GRIEVANCE” and addressed to “Major,” presumably Defendant Turner, the facility commander. (Id. at 65). Mr. Sams explains that his “main issue” is his broken hand, “which has not been addressed properly by a professional doctor.” “I’ve written several complaints to your staff with no results, but a re-wrap to my hand. I was ordered by a Mount Carmel East medical doctor to have a cast on my hand within 7-10 days but your medical staff ignores that order.” (Id.). He also notes that he requested several grievance forms, but has not been given any. (Id.). Mr. Sams received a response to his call card later that day: “you are scheduled to go to a dr. but that

info will not be given to you for security reasons. The Physician Asst. here will see you tomorrow.” (Id. at 65). The bulk of the response author’s last name is unintelligible, but it is at least clear that the response was signed by a “Sgt. M.” Mr. Sams has named a “Sgt. Jay Muncy” as Defendant. But Defendant Taylor denies that a “Sgt. Jay Muncy” has worked at the facility during his tenure there. (ECF No. 106-1 at 1). On November 30, Mr. Sams met with a non-defendant physician assistant. She also removed Mr. Sams’s splint, noting “mild edema” and “mild deformation of the 4th metacarpal and tenderness to palpation.” (ECF No. 107-3 at 28-29). The physician assistant also noted, however, that Mr. Sams was able to move his fingers and that his capillaries still refilled briskly. (Id.). She

molded Mr. Sams a new volar splint. (Id.). Mr. Sams’s stab wound appeared to her to be healing well. (Id.). Records indicate that staff marked the task of contacting the Mount Carmel orthopedics department as “completed” on November 30, twelve days after Mr. Sams was assessed at Mount Carmel. (Id. at 16). The recommended orthopedic follow-up appointment was scheduled for December 13. Mr. Sams submitted two more sick call request forms, on December 2 and December 4. A nurse responded to the second of those requests on December 5, noting that “follow up ortho appt scheduled. 12/13/17. Per NP note splint in place.” (ECF No. 103-3 at 63). That same day, on December 5, an x-ray was performed on Mr. Sams’s hand. (ECF No. 107-3 at 87). It revealed that his right third metacarpal remained fractured. (Id.). The domestic violence charges against Mr. Sams were eventually dismissed, and he was released from the facility on December 12. During his deposition, Mr. Sams initially asserted that he had seen an orthopedic specialist on December 13, as scheduled. (See ECF No. 107 at 92). But

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Bluebook (online)
Sams v. Franklin County, Ohio, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sams-v-franklin-county-ohio-ohsd-2024.