Taylor v. Cunningham

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Tennessee
DecidedAugust 22, 2025
Docket3:22-cv-00296
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Taylor v. Cunningham, (M.D. Tenn. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF TENNESSEE NASHVILLE DIVISION

TERRENCE MONTREL TAYLOR,

Plaintiff, Case No. 3:22-cv-00296

v. Judge Aleta A. Trauger Magistrate Judge Alistair E. Newbern JOHN CUNNINGHAM,

Defendant.

To: The Honorable Aleta A. Trauger, District Judge

AMENDED REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION This civil rights action brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 arises out of pro se and in forma pauperis Plaintiff Terrence Montrel Taylor’s incarceration at Riverbend Maximum Security Institution (Riverbend) in Nashville, Tennessee. (Doc. Nos. 1, 20.) Taylor’s amended complaint asserts Eighth Amendment conditions of confinement and deliberate indifference to his serious medical needs claims against Defendant John Cunningham, a Riverbend correctional officer, alleging that Cunningham failed to address the long-term presence of sewage in Taylor’s cell and denied his request to be evaluated by medical staff for the symptoms he experienced because of exposure to that sewage. (Doc. No. 20.) Cunningham moved for summary judgment on Taylor’s claims. (Doc. No. 65.) Taylor filed a response in opposition (Doc. No. 74) and Cunningham filed a reply (Doc. No. 78). The Magistrate Judge recommended that the Court grant Cunningham’s motion for summary judgment (Doc. No. 86), and the Court adopted the report and recommendation on February 23, 2024. After the Court entered judgment (Doc. No. 89), Taylor filed (1) a motion to cure his unverified amended complaint (Doc. No. 90); (2) a second motion for the appointment of counsel (Doc. No. 97); and (3) a motion for hearing on default judgment (Doc. No. 99). The Court reopened the case “based upon the fact that [Taylor] has made a strong case that his conditions

of confinement hampered him in the filing of timely objections to the Report and Recommendation issued by the Magistrate Judge on February 7, 2024 (Doc. No. 86).” (Doc. No. 101.) The Court “returned [the matter] to the Magistrate Judge to re-evaluate the Report and Recommendation in light of recent filings by the plaintiff.” (Id.) Taylor then filed a motion for enforcement of summary judgment in favor of Plaintiff and for settlement of cause (Doc. No. 102) and motion in opposition for violations of Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment rights to the United States Constitution (Doc. No. 110) that reiterate arguments made in his original summary judgment briefing. Taylor also filed a motion for sanctions against Cunningham. (Doc. No. 105.) The Magistrate Judge has reconsidered her original report and recommendation in light of Taylor’s later filings. Having done so, the Magistrate Judge will recommend that the Court grant

Cunningham’s motion for summary judgment for the reasons that follow. I. Background A. Factual Background1 Taylor is incarcerated at Riverbend and, in December 2021, was housed in restrictive housing Unit 1, D-Pod, cell 112. (Doc. Nos. 64, 74-2.) Cunningham was employed as a

1 The facts in this section are drawn from Taylor’s unverified amended complaint and exhibits (Doc. No. 20); Taylor’s unsworn affidavit submitted in support of his motion for summary judgment (Doc. No. 74-1); Cunningham’s statement of undisputed material facts (Doc. No. 64) and Taylor’s response (Doc. No. 74-2); the sworn declarations of Cunningham (Doc. No. 66-1) and non-party Dr. Kenneth Wiley (Doc. No. 66-2), who is currently employed by the Tennessee Department of Correction (TDOC) as associate chief medical officer and was TDOC’s associate Corrections Sergeant at Riverbend during the same time. (Doc. Nos. 64, 74-2.) Taylor states that he had an ongoing feud with the inmate housed in the next cell and that he and his neighbor “purposefully shoved foreign objects down the shower drains in their respective cells for the purpose of flooding the other inmate’s cell.” (Doc. No. 64, PageID# 402, ¶ 3; Doc. No. 74-2.)

Taylor alleges that, from December 4, 2021, to December 28, 2021, his “cell floor flooded with unsanitary sewer water and debris (feces and urine)[,]” which produced “noxious fumes [that] went on for over 23 days continuously” and caused him to suffer “headaches, coughing, eye irritation, skin rash[,]” as well as “stress and anxiety.” (Doc. No. 20, PageID# 81.) Taylor alleges that he “became disable[d] [and] incapacitated” for the time he was exposed to the sewage. (Doc. No. 74- 1, PageID# 2, ¶ 6.) Taylor states that he requested “maintenance, cleaning supplies, and help” from Cunningham to address the sewage but Cunningham did not provide the requested aid. (Doc. No. 20, PageID# 88.) Taylor alleges that he “was not moved from [his] cell until December 28, 2021.” (Id. at PageID# 81.) Taylor also states that Cunningham denied Taylor’s “numerous requests” to be examined by medical staff on December 27, 28, and 29, 2021, for treatment of

symptoms related to the sewage leak. (Id.) On December 29, 2021, Taylor filed a grievance complaining that his shower drain had been leaking and flooding his cell with “unclean, unhealthy dirty water” since December 4, 2021, and that he was forced to stay in that cell until December 28, 2021. (Doc. No. 20, PageID# 99.) Taylor alleges that this caused him “to go on food strike” and that Cunningham did not notify any mental health officials or nurses of that fact. (Id.) Taylor asked Cunningham to bring in a unit manager, but Cunningham refused and instead “took matter[s]” in his own hands by packing up

medical director during the relevant time period; and excerpts of Taylor’s medical records (Doc. No. 66-3). Taylor’s personal belongings and moving Taylor to a new cell without his property. (Id.) Taylor addressed these issues in a grievance and asked that Cunningham “be remove[d]” from TDOC. The grievance was “deemed inappropriate” and denied, but a supervisor responded on January 24, 2022, that “[t]he maintenance issues have been corrected and [that] . . . Cunningham has been

removed from the unit.” (Id. at PageID# 97.) For his part, Cunningham states that, sometime in December 2021, “Taylor came out of his cell for recreation and informed [him] that there was water coming up from his shower drain[.]” (Doc. No. 66-1, PageID# 425, ¶ 5.) On “[the] same day[,]” Cunningham informed maintenance of the issue, and Taylor was “moved [out of his cell and placed in] a recreation cell while the shower drain was [being] repaired.” (Id. at ¶ 6.) The “maintenance worker resolved the problem that same day and fixed the shower drain in Taylor’s cell.” (Id.) Cunningham further states that, in accordance with TDOC policy, inmates housed in restrictive housing “are checked on regularly by medical staff.” (Doc. No. 64, PageID# 405, ¶ 14; Doc. No. 74-2, PageID# 495, ¶ 14.) Taylor was “evaluated by a nurse every day during the month

of December 2021.” (Doc. No. 64, PageID# 405, ¶ 15; Doc. No. 66-3; Doc. No. 74-2, PageID# 495, ¶ 15.) The nurse’s “daily evaluations of Taylor” occurred “at the door of his cell, with Taylor and the nurse conversing through the door.” (Doc. No. 64, PageID# 506, ¶ 16; Doc. No. 74-2, PageID# 496, ¶ 16.) The record of Taylor’s daily medical visits does not include any notation that there was sewage in Taylor’s cell or that Taylor complained about the presence of sewage in his cell. (Doc. Nos. 64, 66-3, 74-2.) Dr. Kenneth Wiley states in a sworn declaration that the long-term presence of sewage in an inmate’s cell would constitute a health hazard that medical staff would document in the medical notes. (Doc. Nos. 66-2, 64, 74-2.) B. Procedural History 1. Taylor’s Pleadings Taylor initiated this action on February 6, 2022, by filing a complaint in the Eastern District of Tennessee asserting § 1983 claims against Cunningham.2 (Doc. No.

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