Sims v. Wackenhut Health Services, Inc.
This text of 708 So. 2d 1140 (Sims v. Wackenhut Health Services, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
James SIMS
v.
WACKENHUT HEALTH SERVICES, INC., Wackenhut Corrections Corporation, State of Louisiana Through the Department of Public Safety and Corrections, Carrol Guinn, M.D., and E. Michael Hageman.
Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.
Joseph T. Dalrymple and Eugene A. Ledet, Jr., Alexandria, for Plaintiff/Relator James Sims.
Michael T. LaPlace, Baton Rouge, LA.
Andre' Charles Castaing, Baton Rouge, for Defendant/Respondent State of Louisiana Through the Department of Public Safety and Corrections.
Hunter W. Lundy and Samuel B. Gabb, Lake Charles, for Defendant/Respondent Wachenhut Corrections Corporation.
Before CARTER and FITZSIMMONS, JJ., and REMY CHIASSON, J. Pro Tem.[1]
FITZSIMMONS, Judge.
This action involves a suit for damages by James Sims, a former prisoner. He asserts that he was denied proper medical treatment while incarcerated at a prison facility operated by the Wackenhut Corrections Corporation. When the suit was filed, relator was in custody. Subsequently he was granted parole, and he was released from custody. In the writ application before the court, relator seeks review of an order issued by a commissioner at the 19th Judicial District Court, *1141 which stayed the proceedings. The commissioner determined that relator was required to exhaust his administrative remedies before proceeding with the suit, and she issued a stay order to allow relator sixty days in which to file an amended grievance. At relator's request, the commissioner, thereafter, stayed the implementation of the administrative ruling pending Mr. Sims' writ application to this court. This court granted certiorari to review the commissioner's action.
Facts
Mr. Sims was a diabetic inmate. On November 17, 1993, he wrote a letter to the warden at the Wackenhut Corrections Corporation. He alleged inadequate treatment by the attending physician and inadequate care at the Wackenhut Corrections Corporation infirmary. He sought administrative relief to prevent the loss of his foot. Mr. Sims received no response whatsoever. On January 1, 1994, a transmetatarsal amputation of relator's foot was performed. Mr. Sims was, thereafter, transferred to Avoyelles Correctional Center.
On February 15, 1994, Mr. Sims sent a different letter to Dr. Quyen Tran at Avoyelles Correctional Center, requesting a transfer to Huey P. Long Hospital for improved treatment. Relator simultaneously transmitted a separate letter to the warden's office at the correctional center, imploring the warden to transfer him to a better equipped hospital, where he could receive adequate medical assistance. He received no response to any of his letters. Subsequently, in March, 1994, Mr. Sims' left leg was amputated.
On November 22, 1994, relator sued the State of Louisiana through the Department of Public Safety and Corrections, Wackenhut Health Services, Inc., Wackenhut Corrections Corporation, Carrol Guinn, M.D. (the treating physician at the infirmary), and E. Michael Hageman, M.D. (the medical director). According to the petition, while in custody, relator walked long distances twice daily to receive insulin injections for the treatment of diabetes. As a result of this walking, he developed sores on his feet which, allegedly because of inadequate medical care and the failure of prison officials to provide the treatment ordered by the doctors, eventually resulted in the initial amputation of part of his left foot in January, 1994. It was asserted that continued inadequate treatment, including a disregard of a physician's recommendation that relator be transferred to a different hospital facility, caused the ultimate amputation of his left leg in March, 1994.
The Department of Public Safety and Corrections filed a peremptory exception of abandonment, claiming the suit should be dismissed because the prisoner failed to properly pursue his administrative remedies under the Corrections Administrative Remedy Procedure Act before filing the suit. La. R.S. 15:1171-15:1177. The department initially alleged the prisoner did not initiate the grievance procedure. In a supplemental memorandum submitted in support of the exception, the department conceded that a letter written to the warden by Mr. Sims, which was received on February 16, 1994, was sufficient to be viewed as a request for administrative remedy.
After hearing argument on the department's exception, the commissioner issued a stay order. The commissioner determined that, because relator's discharge from custody occurred after the suit was filed, he was required to exhaust his administrative remedies before proceeding any further with the suit. The commissioner ordered the department to process the amended request for administrative relief to the Secretary of the Department of Public Safety and Corrections, at the third step of the administrative review process
Exhaustion of Administrative Remedies
The Department of Public Safety and Corrections operates according to rules and regulations that it promulgated pursuant to the Administrative Procedure Act[2]. Title 22, *1142 "Corrections, Criminal Justice and Law Enforcement," Part 1, Chapter 3, section 325 of the departmental regulations addresses the administrative remedy procedure for inmates, or offenders. That section expressly states in sub-section (G), in pertinent part:
"The requests shall be screened in the unit head's office, and, if appropriate for handling through the administrative remedy procedure, shall be forwarded to the staff member who could best afford relief ... [.] The unit head's office will send notice to the offender via Form ARP-1 that his request is either being processed, or is being rejected, as per the screening process. The first step respondent will respond to the offender within 15 days from the date the request is referred to the first level respondent by the unit head.... The unit head shall see to it that the offender receives his response in writing within 25 days of receipt of the request for second step review." (Emphasis supplied.)
The procedures set out in the Corrections Administrative Remedy Procedure Act provide the exclusive remedy available to inmates to preserve a cause of action against the department or its employees, including a claim for monetary relief. La. R.S. 15:1171 & 15:1172; Blackwell v. Louisiana Department of Public Safety & Corrections, 96-0954, 96-0955, pp. 5-7 (La.App. 1st Cir. 2/14/97); 690 So.2d 137, 140-41, writ denied, 97-1158 (La.9/5/97), 700 So.2d 507. A state court is precluded from entertaining an offender's complaint which falls under the purview of the administrative remedy procedure until the offender has exhausted the remedies provided to him by the procedure. If an offender fails to timely pursue administrative remedies through the procedure established by the statute, any petition he files must be dismissed. If at the time the petition is filed the process has not yet been completed, the court is required to stay the proceedings for ninety days to allow completion of the procedure and exhaustion of the remedies. La. R.S. 15:1172(B).
The Department of Public Safety and Corrections failed to follow its own explicit guidelines requiring that it advise Mr. Sims that his request was being processed, or that it was being denied. The department was utterly remiss in its handling of the regulations that it had written and instituted. Not one of the prescribed internal administrative regulations for processing offenders' requests was implemented.
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708 So. 2d 1140, 1998 WL 79086, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sims-v-wackenhut-health-services-inc-lactapp-1998.