SCOTT v. MYERS

CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 15, 2024
Docket3:21-cv-00194
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
SCOTT v. MYERS, (W.D. Pa. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

EARNEST SCOTT, Jr., : Plaintiff : v. : Case No. 3:21-cv-194-KAP NURSE CONOR MYERS, et al., : Defendants :

Memorandum Order Defendants’ motion for summary judgment, ECF no. 118, is granted. The various open motions are denied: ECF no. 111, seeking additional time to file plaintiff’s pretrial statement, because it is moot, see the pretrial statement at ECF no. 112; ECF no. 113, the latest motion to appoint counsel, for the same reasons given in all the other denials, see e.g. ECF no. 83 and Local Civil Rule 10; and ECF no. 114 and ECF no. 123, to conduct additional discovery, to compel, and for sanctions, because they are meritless. On November 4, 2021, plaintiff Scott, an inmate in the state prison system who was then at S.C.I. Houtzdale, signed a complaint against three defendants – Nurse John Doe, nursing supervisor Michael Radaker, and Correct Care Solutions, their employer - alleging that on May 13, 2021, he had been skipped for his afternoon/evening dose of insulin; Scott implied that perhaps this was because he had moved from cell HD-12 to HD-10. After Scott had eaten dinner, some two hours later he asked about his insulin and both a corrections officer and the other inmates in the RHU told him that the nurse had come and gone. Scott asked that the nurse be contacted. A corrections officer allegedly did that and then told Scott that the nurse told him “he will be okay until tomorrow insulin [sic].” Scott alleged that when he wrote a grievance, Radaker falsely replied that Scott had been on a hunger strike. Scott alleged that “the same incident just happened again, on 10/29/2021.” Scott wrote that his eyes and kidneys “hurt” and he “couldn’t stop peeing” the night after the May incident; he offered no similar details about the October incident. As relief, Scott sought a declaration that his rights under the Eighth Amendment had been violated, and nominal and punitive damages, but not compensatory damages. Scott filed many complaints while at Houtzdale, and this is Scott’s second complaint (by date of occurrence) against Radaker over Scott’s allegations that delivery of his insulin was being mismanaged. Scott has also filed many grievances and has become familiar with the requirements of administrative exhaustion and the three-step administrative remedy procedure created by DC-ADM 804. By 2022, Scott had amended the complaint several times with permission, to delete Correct Care and to add as defendants the Department of Corrections, Lieutenant Pancoast and Corrections Officer Kephart (who allegedly were working in the RHU on October 29, 2021), Jon Altemus (the 1 nursing supervisor on October 29, 2021), and to identify the John Doe nurse responsible for delivering his insulin on both occasions as Conor Myers. As finalized in the Third Amended Complaint in March 2022, ECF no. 25, Scott alleged that on September 23, 2021, he had received the final decision on his grievance (Grievance No. 927495) about the May 13, 2021 incident. This date is confirmed by the exhibits filed with defendants’ motion for summary judgment. Scott refrained from stating the date he allegedly received a final decision relating to the grievance (Grievance No. 952494) about the October 29, 2021 incident. The defendants attach as an exhibit to their motion for summary judgment the final decision on that grievance and it is dated April 1, 2022. In the Third Amended Complaint, Scott gave substantially the same account of the May 13, 2021 incident given in the original complaint and alleged that after the October 29, 2021 incident he suffered the same types of pain that he suffered in May. Scott also gave more background about the October 29, 2021 incident: Scott alleged that he was in a psychiatric observation cell and had covered his window with feces, and defendants Pancoast and Kephart told him he would not get his insulin unless he licked the feces off. Scott alleged that the Department of Corrections had inmates whose prison job was to clean cells, and Pancoast and Kephart could have escorted him to the shower while his cell was being cleaned so that he would get his insulin on schedule. Scott alleged that when he wrote a grievance about this incident Altemus responded that Scott had been marked down as a refusal because Altemus stated that Scott had covered himself, and not just his cell window, with his feces. Scott alleges that Altemus’ statement that Scott smeared himself with feces was false. In the claims for relief portion of the Third Amended Complaint, Scott added to his original Eighth Amendment claim the claim that the Department of Corrections violated his rights under the Rehabilitation Act and Americans with Disabilities Act because as an insulin-dependent diabetic he was an individual with a disability under the ADA/RA and the denial of insulin denied him “adequate medical services/care.” Scott alleged that the individual defendants also violated his statutory rights by failing to “provide appropriate medical attention” and by other generalities such as failing “to adopt appropriate policies” and “failing to comply with the laws.” Scott again sought a declaration that his rights under the Eighth Amendment had been violated and nominal and punitive damages, but not compensatory damages. After discovery, defendants moved for summary judgment. The defendants contend that Scott was on an announced hunger strike on May 13, 2021 and refused his insulin; and that on October 29, 2021 Scott’s conduct in smearing himself and his cell with feces constituted a refusal of his insulin. ECF no. 120, defendants’ statement of facts, and ECF no. 121, Appendix. In response, Scott asserts that events unfolded more or less as he alleged them in his Third Amended Complaint. See ECF no. 126, Scott’s 2 counterstatement of facts. Scott considers it significant that in the October 29, 2021 incident he only smeared his cell and not himself with feces, although his argument that defendants are liable because they could and should have cleaned his cell and given him his insulin on schedule would equally imply that if they had wanted to they could and should have cleaned him up too. I can grant summary judgment on grounds not raised by the parties so long as they are on notice to come forward with all relevant evidence. Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(f)(2),(3). It appears that Scott’s complaint as to the October 29, 2021 incident is completely barred by his failure to exhaust administrative remedies. The standard practice is for the court to identify the issue and have the parties muster all the necessary evidence, although even when the court does not give advance notice, the losing party must show some prejudice from that lack of opportunity, that is, that the party could have produced new favorable evidence or arguments had prior notice been given. See Good v. Walworth, 2023 WL 9320823 at *3 (6th Cir. Aug. 22, 2023), cert. denied, 144 S. Ct. 1071, 218 L. Ed. 2d 248 (2024), citing Smith v. Perkins Bd. of Educ., 708 F.3d 821, 829 (6th Cir. 2013). As the record is clear, no factual development is necessary to decide the nonjury legal question of the adequacy of exhaustion, a preliminary issue for which no right to a jury trial exists. See Small v. Camden County, 728 F.3d 265, 271 (3d Cir. 2013).

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SCOTT v. MYERS, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-myers-pawd-2024.