Surya Nallani v. Wayne County

665 F. App'x 498
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedDecember 15, 2016
Docket15-2502
StatusUnpublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 665 F. App'x 498 (Surya Nallani v. Wayne County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Surya Nallani v. Wayne County, 665 F. App'x 498 (6th Cir. 2016).

Opinion

MARTHA CRAIG DAUGHTREY, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff Surya Nallani, the personal representative for her deceased husband’s estate, appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment to municipal and individual defendants on her claims brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, asserting that his suicide—while incarcerated in the Wayne County jail—resulted in large part from the defendants’ deliberate indifference to Srinivas Nallani’s serious medical needs and from the failure of the county to train jail personnel properly. Surya Nalla-ni argues that she has identified genuine disputes of material fact that should preclude a decision in favor of the defendants at this stage of the litigation. For the reasons set out below, we conclude that the plaintiff adduced sufficient evidence to create a genuine dispute of fact regarding the liability of defendant William Coving-ton. We thus find it necessary to reverse the judgment in favor of Covington and remand the matter to the district court for such further proceedings as are necessary. However, we affirm the grant of summary judgment to defendants Faye Zuhairy, Hisham Hammoud, Steve Hunter, Jason Case, Benny Napoleon, and Wayne County-

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

After an arranged marriage in India in 1993, Srinivas and Surya Nallani emigrated to the United States in 1995 and settled in the Detroit area where Surya, a physician specializing in geriatric medicine, eventually started her own practice in 2005. Although Srinivas was trained as an engineer, he had difficulty holding a job in the engineering field. Consequently, from 2005 until 2011, he assumed the position of office manager of his wife’s practice “because he wanted to, not because [she] asked him to.” In fact, whenever Surya Nallani would attempt to tell her husband that she did not want him to serve as her office manager, he would become abusive *501 and physically violent. During one of the abusive episodes, Srinivas went so far as to kick Surya while she was pregnant and, on another occasion, hit her so forcefully that she thought he had fractured her ribs. Nevertheless, she did not seek medical attention in that latter instance because Srinivas claimed he would kill himself if she did so.

In his role as office manager, Srinivas “[h]ired and fired employees,” “took care of the payroll [and] billing,” and “pretty much controlled the office.” In 2011, the federal government brought charges of Medicare fraud against the Nallanis. The couple was released from custody pending trial although Srinivas “was asked by the court to seek—to see a psychiatrist,” either because of the fraud charges or because of a subsequent DUI conviction. Despite that suggestion, Srinivas discontinued his visits with his therapist after six or seven months and also ceased taking his prescribed medications for depression and attention deficit disorder.

Then, in late May 2013, Surya Nallani received emails both from her pretrial officer and from her attorney, each informing her that Srinivas had attempted to purchase a firearm while still under federal indictment for the health-care-fraud charge. Surya confronted Srinivas with that fact and asked whether he had sought to purchase the weapon to harm himself or his family, a suggestion that Srinivas denied, claiming that he was attempting merely to purchase the firearm for a friend. Nevertheless, because Srinivas had lied on the purchase application by denying that he then was under federal indictment for a felony offense, FBI agents arrested him on Friday, May 31, 2013, and transported him to the Wayne County jail.

After Srinivas was booked at the jail, Gayle Hatfield, a masters-level social worker, conducted a mental-status screening of him. In her notes of that encounter, Hatfield reported Srinivas’s admission that he had not seen his psychiatrist for three or four months and had not taken medications prescribed for anxiety and depression for the preceding three months. She further noted that Srinivas claimed to have tried to injure himself when he was ten years old, some 38 years before the screening. He also told Hatfield that “he was feeling suicidal earlier when he was arrested but is not feeling it now.” Moreover, although he admitted that he remained “extremely depressed,” Srinivas claimed that he harbored no homicidal or suicidal thoughts at the time of the screening. Because Hatfield nevertheless considered Srinivas to be unstable, extremely depressed, and anxious, and because he claimed to “hear[ ] voices telling him he is causing trouble to his family,” she recommended that he be assigned to the mental-health unit of the jail.

An additional evaluation later that night by a registered nurse corroborated Hatfield’s understanding that Srinivas suffered from attention deficient hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and depression and that he had not taken prescribed medications for at least two months. The nurse’s assessment, however, like that of Hatfield, was that Srinivas, at that time, had no suicidal or homicidal ideations.

Srinivas remained incarcerated over the following weekend, and on Monday, June 3, he appeared before Magistrate Judge ft. Steven Whalen for a detention hearing. During that proceeding, Srinivas’s own counsel asked the magistrate judge to order mental-health treatment for his client. In doing so, the attorney explained:

I certainly know he needs the medication. His wife tells me that he was on Adderall. He has significant issues with attention deficit. I believe the reason he was buying this gun, your Honor, was to *502 do harm to himself. I think that was a distinct possibility* I must say that. I can’t think of any other rational excuse in this situation for why he did what he needed to do.

In light of that plea and Surya’s statement that Srinivas "may be dangerous to himself,” “that he is aggressive, he has a temper, he can be violent and there are children in the—children in the home,” Judge Whalen ordered Srinivas detained pending trial. In his oral ruling, the magistrate judge noted that Srinivas “is a dangerous individual,” and that if he were to be granted bond, “there is nothing that reasonably assures [the magistrate judge] that he is not going to present a danger to himself or others.” As part of the order of detention, however, the magistrate judge did require that Srinivas “be assessed by a medical psychiatric/psychological professional and that he be provided with any treatment that is medically or psychiat-rically necessary and that would include— that would include medication.”

The following day, June 4, in compliance with the magistrate judge’s order, psychologist Lisa Witulski visited Srinivas in the Wayne County jail. Although Witulski concluded that Srinivas “does not present to be a danger to himself or others,” she did note that he exhibited signs of paranoia and seemed fixated on the idea that the FBI was “out to get him.” Specifically, Srinivas believed that the FBI “set him up to buy a gun,” and called his former place of employment and “‘made them’ fire him.” As a result, Witulski recommended that Srinivas see psychiatrist Faye Zu-hairy the following day.

Dr. Zuhairy conducted her own evaluation of Srinivas on June 5, 2013.

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