Stevenson v. Lanham

736 A.2d 363, 127 Md. App. 597, 1999 Md. App. LEXIS 140
CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedSeptember 1, 1999
Docket445, Sept. Term, 1998
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 736 A.2d 363 (Stevenson v. Lanham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stevenson v. Lanham, 736 A.2d 363, 127 Md. App. 597, 1999 Md. App. LEXIS 140 (Md. Ct. App. 1999).

Opinions

BYRNES, Judge.

Warren R. Stevenson, appellant, an inmate at the Roxbury Correctional Institution who is on a self-proclaimed “hunger strike,” challenges a judgment by the Circuit Court for Washington County declaring that Richard A. Lanham, Sr., the Maryland Commissioner of Correction, appellee, may in the future use medically reasonable force to administer “sustenance and medical care” to him over his objection if necessary to prevent physical harm or death, so long as he is confined. Appellant presents the following questions for review, which we have rephrased:

I. Did the circuit court err in declining to dismiss appellee’s declaratory judgment action for mootness?

II. Did the circuit court err in granting a permanent injunction?

For the reasons explained below, we conclude that there was no justiciable controversy before the lower court when the declaratory judgment was entered. Accordingly, we answer [602]*602the first question presented affirmatively and vacate the judgment. We do not reach the second question presented.

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

In 1989, appellant began serving a sentence of twenty-five years without the possibility of parole for a burglary conviction. At first, he was incarcerated in the Maryland House of Correction Annex, in Jessup. On January 1, 1994, while housed at Jessup, appellant went on a “hunger strike” to protest his sentence. His version of a hunger strike is to abstain from eating all solid foods and liquid nutritional supplements, such as “Ensure,” and to take in only fluids, such as milk, fruit juices, coffee, tea, and water.

While at Jessup, appellant asked the prison authorities to supplement his meal trays with extra containers of milk and juice. They agreed to do so and for slightly more than three years appellant continued on his liquid diet hunger strike, drinking the fluids that were routinely provided with his meals and the supplemental servings of milk and juice that were being given to him specially. He did not experience any health problems during that time.

On March 7, 1997, appellant was transferred from Jessup to the Roxbury Correctional Institution (“RCI”), in Hagerstown. He was still on his hunger strike. Upon arrival at RCI, appellant asked to be given the same “liquid diet” that he had received at Jessup, i.e., to be furnished additional servings of milk and juice with his meal trays. Dr. Mohamed Moubarek, the associate medical director for RCI, denied appellant’s request as being without a medical basis. Appellant continued his hunger strike nevertheless, refusing solid food and drinking only the liquids provided to all prisoners with their meals.

On July 24, 1997, Dr. Moubarek and several medical and psychiatric health care providers held a “patient management conference” with appellant. They warned him that his continued refusal to take in solid food was jeopardizing his health and reiterated that his requests for extra liquids such as milk and juice were not medically indicated. They urged appellant [603]*603to start eating a normal diet. Appellant responded by stating that his intention in continuing his hunger strike was not to kill himself, but to express a point.

Despite ongoing requests by members of the RCI medical staff for appellant to relent and start eating solid food, appellant remained on his hunger strike. He continued to ask that his meals be supplemented with extra servings of milk and juice, and the medical staff continued to deny his requests. When it became apparent that appellant was losing weight, the medical staff started to monitor his condition by performing routine weight checks and urine and blood tests and by conducting periodic interviews to confirm that appellant was competent. From June 28, 1997 to December 8, 1997, appellant’s weight dropped from 121 pounds to 107 pounds. At 107 pounds, the medical staff considered that he was severely underweight.1

On December 12, 1997, during a routine weight, urine, and blood check at the RCI dispensary, appellant suddenly lost consciousness. Members of the medical staff initiated emergency measures, including administration of intravenous fluids and dextrose. They performed blood tests that revealed that appellant’s blood chemistry was abnormal, and that it evidenced malnutrition. Appellant’s physical condition by then was consistent with malnutrition: in addition to his substantial weight loss, he was suffering gross muscle wasting, mild loss of skin tone, and dry lips. In addition, his heart rate, body temperature, and blood pressure were abnormally low.

Appellant slowly regained consciousness after a few hours. The next day, appellee, in his capacity as Maryland Commissioner of Correction, filed an application for temporary restraining order and preliminary and permanent injunctions and an action for declaratory judgment against appellant, in the Circuit Court for Washington County. Appellee requested inter alia that the court issue a temporary restraining [604]*604order, pursuant to Md. Rule 15-504, “requiring [appellant] to submit to the medically appropriate administration of life-essential nutrition and medical treatment necessary to avoid permanent injury or death, and authorizing the Commissioner and his employees and agents to use reasonable force to administer life-essential nutrition and medical treatment over the objection and resistance of [appellant].” The complaint was supported by an affidavit by Dr. Moubarek, in which he opined that, without medical intervention, appellant likely would sustain serious and permanent bodily harm within seven days, and an affidavit by Richard A. Lanham attesting that appellant’s self-induced death would cause disruption and low morale in the prison population.

The court granted the temporary restraining order, ex parte, upon a finding that before an adversary hearing could be held, appellant’s refusal to submit to medical treatment and continued refusal to eat would bring about his death or would cause serious and irreversible bodily harm, and that appellant’s death would cause irreparable harm to appellee, in his official capacity, “due to the disruption to the operation of the Division [of Correction] caused by the voluntary starvation of an inmate committed to the custody of the Commissioner.” The temporary restraining order required appellant to submit to medical treatment necessary to support his life and to prevent permanent physical injury. It authorized appellee or his agents to use reasonable force to administer sustenance and medical treatment to appellant, over his objection and resistance. By its terms, the temporary restraining order was to expire on December 28,1997.

Immediately upon the issuance of the temporary restraining order, the RCI medical staff inserted a nasogastric (“NG”) tube into appellant’s nose and esophagus through which they began administering liquid nutrition to him. Appellant was still being “tube fed” in this manner on December 19, 1997, when appellee filed a motion for preliminary injunction or, in the alternative, for extension of temporary restraining order. In that filing, appellee alleged that appellant’s general state of health had improved since the initiation of tube feedings; that, [605]*605in Dr.

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Stevenson v. Lanham
736 A.2d 363 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 1999)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
736 A.2d 363, 127 Md. App. 597, 1999 Md. App. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevenson-v-lanham-mdctspecapp-1999.