Valdez v. Farmon

766 F. Supp. 1529, 91 Daily Journal DAR 8455, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8473, 1991 WL 108035
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. California
DecidedJune 11, 1991
DocketCIV S-89-0939 GGH P
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 766 F. Supp. 1529 (Valdez v. Farmon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Valdez v. Farmon, 766 F. Supp. 1529, 91 Daily Journal DAR 8455, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8473, 1991 WL 108035 (E.D. Cal. 1991).

Opinion

ORDER

GREGORY G. HOLLOWS, United States Magistrate Judge.

Order re Partial Summary Judgment; order re Motion-in-Limine (use of regulations); order re jury instruction on qualified immunity.

INTRODUCTION

This civil rights action arises under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Plaintiff alleges that defendant used excessive force against her while she was incarcerated. Specifically, plaintiff alleges that defendant, Lt. Robert Ayers, used unnecessary and wanton force in connection with an ordered strip search. Plaintiff has raised substantive claims under the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments, in addition to her Eighth Amendment claim. The Fourteenth Amendment claim includes an excessive force and right to privacy claim. The parties continue to dispute whether state regulations can be utilized in this constitutional tort case. Defendant has proffered jury instructions on the issue of qualified immunity. Because these difficult issues should be finally resolved prior to the instruction of the jury in this case, the court will detail its order concerning these issues.

Procedural Background

Defendant moved for summary judgment based on qualified immunity, and this court issued Findings and Recommendations concerning that motion. 1 The district court adopted the findings and recommendations and denied defendant’s motion for summary judgment. Since that time, the parties have consented to the undersigned’s further adjudication of this case for all purposes pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 636(c). The facts utilized in resolution of the summary judgment motion are still by and large applicable here. However, those facts have been refined somewhat by the parties’ subsequent joint submission of disputed and undisputed facts statement which was incorporated into the Pretrial Order. To make this order complete unto *1531 itself, the pertinent undisputed facts and disputed factual issues are set forth below.

Undisputed Facts

1. On July 18, 1988, plaintiff Angela Valdez was transferred from the Monterey County Jail to the Northern California Women’s Facility (NCWF) at Stockton, California.

2. Ms. Valdez had been previously incarcerated at NCWF.

3. Ms. Valdez has two children.

4. Ms. Valdez was pregnant at the time that she was returned to custody.

5. Monterey County Deputies Leininger and Johnson transported Ms. Valdez to NCWF.

6. Leininger and Johnson placed Ms. Valdez in a holding cell in the Receiving & Release area upon the direction of [ex]defendant Lubken.

7. Lubken gave Ms. Valdez orders to strip for searching so that the jumpsuit that she was wearing could be returned to the Sheriff’s deputies. Lubken ordered Ms. Valdez to go to a strip cell to perform these acts.

8. Ms. Valdez asked Lubken to check on her property which should have been transported from Monterey County to NCWF. Lubken would not agree to do so prior to concluding the Receiving and Release process.

9. Lubken left Ms. Valdez in the cell.

10. Lubken returned after a few minutes and again ordered Ms. Valdez to go to the strip cell and strip so that she could be searched.

11. Ms. Valdez refused to obey the orders to go to the strip cell and to submit to a search.

12. Lubken left Ms. Valdez in the holding tank and contacted Ortiz, her supervisor. Ortiz went to the holding cell and talked to Ms. Valdez concerning her refusal to obey the orders to go to the strip cell for searching and to exchange her county jail clothing for a prison muu muu.

13. Ortiz left and returned again. This time she gave Ms. Valdez the option of completing required written documents instead of immediately complying with the strip order.

14. Ortiz left Ms. Valdez and returned to her office. From there Ortiz called her supervisor, Lt. Ayers. Ortiz told Ayers that Ms. Valdez had been returned to custody as a parole violator and was refusing to comply with reception procedures, including a strip search. Ayers asked Ortiz what she had done to obtain compliance with her orders and Ortiz told him.

15. Ayers called his immediate superior, Program Administrator Brayer. Ayers told Brayer of the problem and asked for authorization to use the taser, if necessary.

16. Brayer called his supervisor Chief Deputy Warden Kuykendall, because he himself could not authorize use of the taser. Brayer recommended approval of Ayer’s request to use the taser, if necessary. Kuykendall approved use of the taser.

17. Ayers contacted Sgt. Randazzo and asked him to meet him at the R & R area of the prison.

18. Ayers and Randazzo met at R & R.

19. Ayers went to the holding cell where Ms. Valdez was and gave her five minutes to comply with Sgt. Ortiz’s orders.

20. Ayers then met with Ortiz, Lubken, and Randazzo in Ortiz’s office.

21. Ayers talked to Ortiz, Randazzo, and Lubken about their individual responsibilities in case it was necessary to use the taser.

22. After the MTA arrived, Ayers, Ortiz, Randazzo, Lubken and Rasmussen left Ortiz’s office and went to the holding tank where Ms. Valdez was. Then they all entered the holding tank.

23. Ayers ordered Ms. Valdez to comply with the orders previously given by Ortiz. Ortiz restated the orders.

24. As Ms. Valdez spoke, Ayers fired the taser without warning. The taser darts hit Ms. Valdez in the abdomen and left leg.

25. Ms. Valdez sank to her knees.

26. According to the MTA, her pulse and blood pressure were within normal *1532 ranges and her eyes responded appropriately to light.

27. Ms. Valdez was taken to a strip cell where she was undressed and searched by Lubken and Ortiz.

28. Ms. Valdez was taken to Administrative Segregation by Randazzo and Lubken.

29. Ms. Valdez was examined the following day by Dr. Reschke.

30. On August 2, 1988, Ms. Valdez came to the infirmary complaining that she was passing blood clots and of heavy bleeding. Ms. Valdez was thought to have suffered an incomplete abortion and she was sent to San Joaquin General Hospital for a D & C. A D & C was performed by Dr. Wells.

31. Ms. Valdez returned to NCWF at 10:30 p.m. that night.

32. On July 18, 1988, all of the defendants were employees of the State of California Department of Corrections and assigned to NCWF. 2 All were acting in performance of their duties and under color of state law.

Disputed Factual Issues

The disputed factual issues set the context for the rulings here.

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Bluebook (online)
766 F. Supp. 1529, 91 Daily Journal DAR 8455, 1991 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8473, 1991 WL 108035, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/valdez-v-farmon-caed-1991.