TALBERT v. WELL PATH

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 20, 2020
Docket2:20-cv-03401
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
TALBERT v. WELL PATH, (E.D. Pa. 2020).

Opinion

FORI NT HTEH EE AUSNTIETREND DSTISATTREISC DT IOSTFR PIECNTN CSOYULVRAT NIA

CHARLES TALBERT : CIVIL ACTION : v. : NO. 20-3401 : WELL PATH, et al. :

MEMORANDUM

KEARNEY, J. July 20, 2020

Incarcerated pro se litigant Charles Talbert challenges his latest prison’s level of medical care without paying the filing fees despite us barring him in April 2019 from filing lawsuits without paying the filing fees under Congress’s mandate in 28 U.S.C. § 1915. Mr. Talbert alleges an undiagnosed heart infection is causing him leg and chest pains at SCI-Phoenix and he wants a private consult at Abington Hospital. Mr. Talbert alleges the prison medical staff failed to diagnose his heart infection. He pleads his leg and chest pains are symptoms of this undiagnosed heart infection which is caused by his preexisting health problems. Dissatisfied by the professional opinions of the SCI Phoenix medical staff, Mr. Talbert requests a mandatory preliminary injunction so he may be evaluated by doctors at Abington Memorial Hospital. Because we barred Mr. Talbert in April 2019 from filing further lawsuits without paying the filing fees, Congress requires he plead imminent danger of serious physical injury to proceed in forma pauperis. Neither speculation of disease nor disagreement with determinations made by prison medical professionals constitute imminent danger of serious physical injury to meet Congress’s exception to the filing bar under 28 U.S.C. § 1915(g). We deny Mr. Talbert’s in forma pauperis motion and require he either pay the filing fees or amend his complaint to plead facts showing he is in imminent danger of serious physical injury. We also deny his motion for a preliminary mandatory injunction without prejudice should he pay the filing fee or meet the level of imminent physical danger and then show us an indisputably clear right to compel prison medical I. Alleged pro se facts Mr. Talbert began experiencing “painful” swelling “up to his knees” on July 3, 2020 after nearly four months in solitary confinement.1 Mr. Talbert suffers from an “oral infection[,] high blood pressure[,] and high cholesterol[.]”2 Mr. Talbert requested and received a medical evaluation after he began experiencing “chest pains.”3 The medical staff “examined” Mr. Talbert but did not diagnose him with illness based on his complaint of pains.4 Mr. Talbert self-diagnoses his preexisting “heart conditions” and “oral infection” are causing him “endocarditis” and the pains he now experiences are symptoms of endocarditis.5 He opines this undiagnosed heart infection could prove to be “life-threatening” if left untreated.6 The

SCI Phoenix medical team lacks the “heart, skin, [and] blood . . . specialists” to properly diagnose Mr. Talbert.7 He is not receiving “adequate [medical] care.”8 He requests “an immediate and permanent injunction” so he may be evaluated at “Abington Hospital for examination, diagnosis, and possible surgery.”9 His current pains and suspected endocarditis “meet[] 1915(g) requirements” as imminent dangers of serious physical injury.10 II. Analysis Mr. Talbert filed this complaint and moves to proceed in forma pauperis. The issue is whether Mr. Talbert’s alleged suspected heart condition and his leg and chest pains pose imminent dangers of serious physical injury to clear Congress’s screening bar and proceed in forma pauperis.11 If so, Mr. Talbert must then demonstrate an “indisputably clear” need for a mandatory

preliminary injunction. Mr. Talbert fails to plausibly allege he is in imminent danger of serious physical injury because his fears of developing a heart condition are speculative and he is receiving medical attention in SCI Phoenix. We need not consider whether Mr. Talbert is entitled to an injunction until we know the case may proceed. The Prison Litigation Reform Act (“Act”) requires a prisoner who has previously had at least three complaints dismissed for being “frivolous, malicious, or fail[ing] to state a claim upon which relief may be granted” to allege he is “under imminent danger of serious physical injury” to proceed in forma pauperis.12 Our Court of Appeals has defined “imminent dangers” as those which are “impending[.]”13 Past instances of serious physical injury do not merit section 1915(g)’s exception.14 We detailed Mr. Talbert’s history of filing complaints while in prison and his status as a “three-strike” plaintiff in our April 5, 2019 Order in Talbert v. Carney.15 Mr. Talbert filed “at least fifty-four lawsuits” in our District by April 2019.16 He had “at least four” pro se complaints dismissed for being frivolous or failing to state a claim from 2013 to 2016.17 We reviewed his

April 2019 complaint in Talbert v. Carney under section 1915(g) and required Mr. Talbert plead imminent danger of serious physical injury.18 We declined his motion to proceed in forma pauperis because he did not plead imminent danger.19 Just last month we declined another of Mr. Talbert’s motions to proceed in forma pauperis after he failed to allege imminent danger of serious physical injury from headaches due to prison officials allegedly taking his property.20 A three-strike plaintiff fails to clear section 1915’s bar where they allege eventual or suspected development of a serious health condition.21 For example, the incarcerated plaintiff in Brown alleged his “irregular heartbeat, high blood pressure . . . [and] high cholesterol” constituted imminent danger of serious physical injury because they “could contribute” to his contracting heart disease.22 The plaintiff admitted doctors examined him but contested their findings and alleged

they rendered “inadequate medical treatment.”23 Judge Robreno denied the plaintiff’s motion to proceed in forma pauperis and declined to consider the plaintiff’s “risk factors for heart disease” as an imminent danger of serious physical injury because a speculated “impending” illness is not an imminent danger.24 Pain stemming from diagnosed health issues does not clear Congress’s imminent danger exception where the plaintiff receives a medical evaluation before filing a complaint.25 For example, the three-strike incarcerated plaintiff in Tripati alleged “unbearable pain” after doctors changed his medications and he developed a cyst in his right eye despite “receiving medical attention” from doctors for both his bodily and eye pains.26 Judge McVerry construed the complaint as the plaintiff “disagree[ing] with the quality of the medical care” provided by the doctors and denied his motion to proceed in forma pauperis because the doctors evaluated the plaintiff’s ailments.27 By way of comparison, a three-strike incarcerated plaintiff meets section 1915’s exception

if the prison denies medical care or evaluation and the plaintiff experiences pain as a result of the denial.28 The incarcerated plaintiff in Williams alleged his previously diagnosed “terminal disease” and “urinary tract infection” caused him “serious pain.”29 Our Court of Appeals granted the plaintiff’s motion to proceed in forma pauperis and considered the pain ongoing because it stemmed from his untreated previously diagnosed illnesses and thus satisfied Congress’s imminent danger of serious physical injury requirement.30 As presently plead, Mr. Talbert’s leg and chest pains do not constitute imminent danger of serious physical injury because he does not allege doctors neglected to examine him. We liberally construe Mr. Talbert’s complaint as speculating he is experiencing an undiagnosed heart condition which he concludes constitutes imminent danger of serious physical injury.31 An incarcerated

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Bluebook (online)
TALBERT v. WELL PATH, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/talbert-v-well-path-paed-2020.