Tijerina v. New Mexico Corrections Department

CourtDistrict Court, D. New Mexico
DecidedJune 8, 2021
Docket1:20-cv-00706
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Tijerina v. New Mexico Corrections Department, (D.N.M. 2021).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW MEXICO

DIEGO TIJERINA,

Plaintiff, v. CV 20-0706 JAP/JHR

STATE OF NEW MEXICO CORRECTIONS DEPARTMENT, CHRIS MARQUEZ and JOSE CORDERO,

Defendants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

This matter comes before the Court on Defendant State of New Mexico Corrections Department’s Motion to Compel Independent Psychological Examination of Plaintiff [Doc. 42], filed March 2, 2021, and Defendants’ Opposed Motion for Extension of Time for Defendants to Disclose Expert Witness(es) [Doc. 43], filed March 4, 2021. Plaintiff Tijerina responded to both Motions and Defendants have replied. [See Docs. 47, 48, 51, 55]. Also before the Court is Plaintiff’s Motion to Exclude Defendants’ Expert Samuel Roll, Ph.D., [Doc. 73], filed May 26, 2021. Having considered the parities’ briefing and all pertinent authority, the Court grants Defendants’ Motions and denies Plaintiff’s without prejudice, for the following reasons. I. BACKGROUND Diego Tijerina was an inmate in custody of the New Mexico Department of Corrections from May 15, 2019 to February 20, 2020. [Complaint for Deprivation of Civil Rights, Doc. 1-2, p. 2]. Chris Marquez and Jose Cordero were employed as correctional officers at the time. [Id.]. On June 21, 2019, Tijerina was transported by van from a facility in Los Lunas en route to another in Clayton; Marquez drove the van and Cordero rode along as an escort. [Id., pp. 2-3]. At one point, an object struck the bottom of the van causing wood shards to spray up from the floor. [Id., p. 3]. Soon after, a rear tire blowout forced the van to pull to the side of the road. [Id., p. 4]. Tijerina reported to Marquez and Cordero that his neck was injured by the sudden movement of the van and that he and others had been hit by shards of wood; Tijerina says that Marquez dismissed their complaints with insults. [Id., p. 5]. The group waited over two hours for

a replacement van to arrive, then waited in the replacement van without ventilation for another 90 minutes to two hours during repairs. [Id., pp. 5-6]. Tijerina did not receive water while waiting. [Id., p. 7]. The inmates were then taken to the prison in Santa Fe in the hot replacement van; Tijerina says he and other suffered greatly from the heat but their requests for relief were ignored. [Id., pp. 6-8]. In Santa Fe, Tijerina says, “[a]ll inmates were taken to see medical personnel at PNM upon arrival” but Tijerina “did not see a doctor.” [Id., p. 8]. He says he got “a single small cup of water.” [Id.]. The inmates got back into the unventilated replacement van, according to Tijerina, only because Marquez and Cordero lied that it was not the same van. [Id., pp. 8-9]. Marquez and

Cordero ignored their protests when the inmates discovered the deception. [Id., p. 9]. Tijerina says that he was overcome by the heat and lost consciousness, fell, and hit his head, while Marquez and Cordero failed to stop and render aid. [Id., p. 10]. Tijerina says that he woke upon arrival as fresh air came in through the rear doors as they were opened. [Id.]. Medical staff saw all inmates at their destination. [Id.]. According to Tijerina, they noted that he was lightheaded, dizzy, and had a headache, as well as “dangerously elevated” blood pressure and an abnormal EKG. [Id., p. 11]. Tijerina was transported by ambulance to the hospital, where he displayed the same symptoms. [Id.]. He was discharged the same day with instructions to return if he developed new symptoms. [id., p. 12]. Upon his return to the facility in Clayton, Tijerina was placed in solitary confinement until his eventual discharge from custody, never leaving his cell from June 24, 2019 through February 20, 2020. [Id.]. Tijerina filed a complaint against the Department of Corrections, and against Marquez and Cordero in their individual capacities, in New Mexico’s First Judicial District Court on June 3, 2020. [Doc. 1-2, pp. 1-2]. He claims continuing and permanent injuries as well as post-traumatic

stress disorder from his experience during transport. [Id., pp. 12-13]. He asserts claims of cruel and unusual punishment by Marquez and Cordero in violation of the Eighth Amendment, and negligent maintenance and operation of a motor vehicle by all Defendants. [Id., pp. 13-21]. Tijerina demands compensatory and punitive damages, attorney fees and costs. [Id., p. 22]. Defendants removed the case to federal court on July 16, 2020. [Doc. 1]. They filed an answer on July 17, 2020, [Doc. 8], and, with leave of court, [see Doc. 12], an amended answer on August 19, 2020. [Doc. 13]. The Corrections Department filed a Motion to Compel Independent Psychological Examination of Plaintiff on March 2, 2021. [Doc. 42]. Tijerina filed a response on March 15,

2021, [Doc. 47], and the Corrections Department filed a reply on March 22, 2021. [Doc. 51]. Defendants then filed an Opposed Motion for Extension of Time for Defendants to Disclose Expert Witnesses on March 4, 2021. [Doc. 43]. Tijerina filed a response on March 15, 2021, [Doc. 48], and Defendants filed a reply on March 24, 2021. [Doc. 55]. Defendants’ expert disclosure deadline was March 18, 2021, and the discovery deadline was April 19, 2021, according to the scheduling order. [Doc. 30]. The discovery motions deadline was a week later. [Id.]. The pretrial motions deadline for non-discovery issues was May 26, 2021, when Tijerina filed his Motion to Exclude Dr. Roll from trial. [Doc. 73]. Defendants’ response to Tijerina’s Motion is not yet due. II. MOTION FOR INDEPENDENT PSYCHOLOGICAL EXAMINATION The Corrections Department seeks an independent psychological examination of Tijerina under authority of Fed. R. Civ. P. 35. [Doc. 42 p. 1]. It asserts that Tijerina has alleged prior diagnoses of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and claimed increasing and extreme anxiety since the Corrections van transport and is refusing to participate in an in-person psychological examination

with its expert, Dr. Samuel Roll, Ph.D., unless Dr. Roll agrees to record the interview or allow Plaintiff’s counsel to be present. [Docs. 42 pp. 1-2, 42-1 pp. 2-3, 42-2 p. 2-3, 47 p. 1]. Defendant argues that Tijerina has disclosed an expert to testify to his mental status and the effect of the van transport, and that the examination by Tijerina’s expert was not recorded. [Doc. 42 pp. 2-7, 51 p. 5]. Further, Dr. Roll says that the presence of another person or a recording device could distort Tijerina’s responses. [Doc. 42-5 p. 1]. Tijerina concedes that his claims have put his mental status in issue for the purposes of Rule 35. [Doc. 47 p. 2]. Nonetheless, he argues that the Corrections Department has not shown good cause for an independent psychological examination, in part because the Corrections

Department could simply rely upon Tijerina’s own medical records, expert report, and deposition testimony. [Doc. 47 pp. 2-3]. As noted, Tijerina objects to a psychological examination unless the interview portion is video recorded to assure that the examiner does not manipulate the examination. [Doc. 47 pp. 3-6]. Tijerina cites his long history of mental illness and learning disorders and his poor memory as circumstances justifying video recording. [Doc. 47 p. 4]. He disputes the risk of distortion because of recording, though noting that his own expert did not record his responses to his earlier exam; Tijerina also proposes that his prior exam, which was conducted via Zoom videoconference, “actually demonstrates the ability to use recording devices without concern of altering responses.” [Doc. 47, p. 5]. Tijerina’s expert testified in his deposition that in-person and Zoom evaluations are substantially equivalent. [Doc. 47 p. 5, 47-1 p. 6]. III.

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