Schmidt v. Odell

64 F. Supp. 2d 1014, 1999 WL 640041
CourtDistrict Court, D. Kansas
DecidedJuly 7, 1999
Docket97-1367-WEB
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 64 F. Supp. 2d 1014 (Schmidt v. Odell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schmidt v. Odell, 64 F. Supp. 2d 1014, 1999 WL 640041 (D. Kan. 1999).

Opinion

Memorandum and Order

WESLEY E. BROWN, Senior District Judge.

The plaintiff was formerly an inmate at the Cowley County Jail. He is a double amputee and is without both legs from a point below his knees. He alleges that during his incarceration the defendants deprived him of a wheelchair or other accommodation and forced him to crawl and pull himself about the jail on the floor. He asserts claims under the Eighth Amendment, the Americans with Disabilities Act, and the Rehabilitation Act of 1973. He also asserts a state law tort claim for intentional infliction of emotional distress. The matter is now before the court on the defendants’ motion for summary judgment. The court finds oral argument would not assist in deciding the issues presented.

I. Facts.

In keeping with the standards governing summary judgment, the following facts are either uncontroverted or are stated in the light most favorable to the plaintiff. Facts in the parties’ briefs not supported by the record, not based on the personal knowledge of the witness, or that are clearly immaterial have been deleted from the following statements.

A. Defendant’s Statement.

Plaintiff was incarcerated in the Cowley County Jail from February 14, 1995, after being convicted of driving under the influence of alcohol and driving on a suspended license.

Plaintiff is a double amputee and is without both legs from a point below his knees. Plaintiffs legs were amputated after he contracted frostbite in 1979 while on the run from the Atchison Youth Center, where he had been incarcerated.

Plaintiff was admitted to the Cowley County Jail in February of 1995 with prosthetic devices and was never prevented from using these devices to ambulate throughout the jail. Plaintiff did not wear his prostheses while showering, however, since they would have been damaged by the water. Plaintiff requested a shower chair from the beginning of his incarceration. In September of 1995, after the physician who treated inmates asked for it, the jail staff provided plaintiff with a shower chair so that he would not have to place his unprotected residual legs directly on the shower floor.

The prosthetic legs plaintiff had been using during his 1995 incarceration at the Cowley County Jail were damaged when plaintiff was in a fight with another inmate *1017 who plaintiff alleges had stolen his food. As a result of the fíght, a piece of wood was broken off from the right foot of plaintiffs prosthesis. According to plaintiff, this damage made it difficult for him to control the device. Consequently, plaintiff had difficulty walking and it became painful for him to wear the prosthesis. This incident was not reported to jail staff.

Prior to his incarceration in 1995, plaintiff had been taking Lortab, Lortab 7, Tylenol 3, Demerol and morphine because of the pain he had been experiencing in his residual legs. Plaintiff ultimately developed a dependency on these medications and continued to use them throughout his 1995 incarceration in the Cowley County Jail. In addition, plaintiff used illegal drugs including marijuana and methamphet-amines during his 1995 incarceration at the Cowley County Jail.

During the first few months of plaintiffs 1995 incarceration at the jail, jail officials permitted plaintiff to be taken to his private physicians by family and friends. In April of 1995, plaintiff tested positive for cocaine and was no longer given this privilege. Thereafter, jail staff transported plaintiff to Sabolich clinic in Wichita to be fitted for new prostheses; he was no longer allowed to be taken out of the jail by anyone other than jail personnel.

Plaintiffs appointments at the Sabolich clinic typically lasted up to three hours.

In addition to appointments at the Sabo-lich clinic, plaintiff was treated by the jail physician, Dr. Alvin Bird. Bird had treated plaintiff on a previous occasion when plaintiff had been incarcerated at the Cowley County Jail, including a period in 1980. Head Jailer Bill Munley scheduled doctor’s appointments with Dr. Bird for plaintiff when he requested treatment.

While treating plaintiff in 1995, Dr. Bird observed that plaintiffs residual legs had not suffered any tissue breakdown or irreversible harm during his 1995 incarceration. In addition, Dr. Bird testified in this action that plaintiffs condition during his 1995 incarceration was better than it had been during prior incarcerations and noted that in 1980 plaintiff had experienced swelling or edema on his knees.

Dr. Bird did not note any severe hygiene problems associated with the knee-pads plaintiff had been wearing in 1995 and did not observe any bacterial infection on plaintiffs knees or legs during that time period. He did observe that plaintiff had folliculitis (inflammation of hair follicles) on August 16, 1995, which he treated with Tetracycline and Ultram to prevent it from becoming a cellulitis, a “worrisome infection.”

Dr. Bird’s opinion is that the conditions of the Cowley County Jail in 1995 did not play a part in what he termed the “chronic irritation of plaintiffs knees.” Bird based this conclusion on his comparison of plaintiffs condition in 1995 to his condition during prior incarcerations.

Dr. Bird’s opinion is that the Cowley County Jail provided adequate care for plaintiffs medical needs in 1995. He felt like “we were doing all we could do under the circumstances.”

On April 10,1995, plaintiff suffered a fall at the Sabolich clinic in Wichita. As a result of the fall, plaintiffs residual legs were badly bruised and he suffered a great deal of pain and swelling in his residual legs. After the fall, plaintiff became physically unable to wear his prostheses.

As a result of swelling in his residual legs, the Sabolich technicians could not fit plaintiff with a permanent set of prostheses. Plaintiff still had a temporary pair of prostheses, but after he fell it was' too painful for him to walk in them.

Since plaintiff claimed he could no longer walk using his prostheses, Sabolich requested that the Cowley County jail officials place plaintiff in a wheelchair. Although jail officials gave due consideration to this request, they were unable to make this accommodation because the exits, entrances and hallways of the jail were too narrow for a wheelchair to pass through. In addition, jail administrators were concerned that a wheelchair could *1018 be used to conceal contraband or be dismantled so that the parts could be used as weapons. Therefore, without his prostheses, plaintiff ambulated through the jail on his knees.

Since plaintiff could not use a wheelchair, Head Jailer Bill Munley supplied plaintiff with kneepads to reduce the risk of further damage to his residual legs. On one occasion, Munley ran into plaintiffs mother at a Wal-Mart store and she assisted him in locating kneepads that would be best suited for plaintiff. During plaintiffs 1995 incarceration, Munley spent as long as three hours in one day looking for kneepads for plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
64 F. Supp. 2d 1014, 1999 WL 640041, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schmidt-v-odell-ksd-1999.