Whitcomb v. Sukoway

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Wisconsin
DecidedDecember 27, 2024
Docket2:23-cv-00385
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Whitcomb v. Sukoway, (E.D. Wis. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF WISCONSIN

ANDREW T. WHITCOMB,

Plaintiff, v. Case No. 23 -cv-385-pp

LAURA SUKOWATY,

Defendant.

ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANT’S UNOPPOSED MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT (DKT. NO. 66) AND DISMSSING CASE

Plaintiff Andrew T. Whitcomb, who is incarcerated and is representing himself, filed a complaint under 42 U.S.C. §1983 asserting Eighth Amendment claims against officials at Waupun Correctional Institution. The defendant has filed a motion for summary judgment. Dkt. No. 66. The plaintiff has not responded to the motion, and his time to do so has passed. The court will grant the defendant’s unopposed motion and dismiss this case. I. Facts A. Procedural Background On March 24, 2023, the court received the plaintiff’s complaint and motions for a preliminary injunction. Dkt. Nos. 1, 3, 5. The court screened the complaint, allowed the plaintiff to proceed against Dr. Laura Sukowaty regarding allegedly delayed treatment for a hernia, dismissed all other defendants and ordered Sukowaty to answer the complaint and respond to the plaintiff’s request for a preliminary injunction. Dkt. No. 9. On September 8, 2023, after the defendant had responded to the plaintiff’s request, the court denied the plaintiff’s motion for a preliminary injunction because his medical records showed that he had received the corrective surgery for his hernia that he had requested in his motion. Dkt. No. 32. On September 11, 2023, the court issued a scheduling order setting deadlines for the parties to complete discovery and file dispositive motions.

Dkt. No. 33. After three times requesting an extension of her deadline to file a dispositive motion, dkt. nos. 43, 45, 47, the defendant moved for summary judgment, dkt. no. 49. The court ordered the plaintiff to respond to the motion within thirty days, but he did not do so. Dkt. No. 57. On August 23, 2024, the court denied the summary judgment motion without prejudice because the defendant had violated the court’s local rules allowing a party moving for summary judgment to file “‘not file more than 150 separately numbered statements of fact.’” Dkt. No. 60 at 2 (quoting Civil Local Rule 56(b)(1)(C)(ii) (E.D. Wis.)). The court also observed that it was not clear whether the plaintiff had received the defendant’s summary judgment materials. Id. at 3. The court

ordered the defendant to file an amended motion for summary judgment by September 27, 2024, and advised the defendant to “limit her statement of proposed facts to material facts that support her motion.” Id. On September 16, 2024, the defendant filed a motion seeking leave to exceed the 150 limit on proposed facts under Civil Local Rule 56(b)(1)(C)(ii), seeking to refile the same statement of 214 proposed facts that the defendant initially filed with her first motion for summary judgment. Dkt. No. 61. The plaintiff responded to and opposed this motion, suggesting that the defendant was “using this as a way to overload [him] with irrelevant paperwork.” Dkt. No. 62 at ¶2. The court denied the defendant’s motion, finding that the defendant had not explained “why all of” the plaintiff’s voluminous medical records were “necessary and material to her motion for summary judgment.” Dkt. No. 65 at 3. The court ordered the defendant to “file her amended motion for summary judgment and all supporting materials, complying with the court’s local rules,

by the end of the day on October 18, 2024.” Id. at 4 (bolding omitted). At the October 18, 2024 deadline, the court received the defendant’s amended motion for summary judgment and her brief and proposed facts in support. Dkt. Nos. 66–68. But the defendant had not filed any declarations or evidence in support of her motion and proposed facts. The court ordered the defendant to file those missing documents by October 23, 2024 or it would again deny her motion for summary judgment. Dkt. No. 69. The same day, the defendant filed her missing declarations and evidence. Dkt. Nos. 70–74. The court ordered the plaintiff to respond to the defendant’s summary judgment motion by the end of the day on November 20, 2024. Dkt. No. 76. The court

advised that if it did not receive “either the plaintiff’s response to the defendant’s motion for summary judgment or an explanation for why he cannot timely file a response” by the November 20, 2024 deadline, “the court will treat the defendant’s motion as unopposed, that is, without considering a response from the plaintiff.” Id. at 2–3. The same day that the court ordered the plaintiff to respond to the defendant’s motion for summary judgment, the court received the plaintiff’s motion “to Dismiss and move Forward on any Defendents Motion For Summery Judgement [sic].” Dkt. No. 75. The plaintiff asked the court to dismiss “any past or future motion” for summary judgment and to proceed to trial because, he asserted, the defendant did not file a motion for summary judgment by the October 18, 2024 deadline. Id. at 1. The court denied the motion because the defendant had filed her summary judgment motion on October 18, and the court had ordered the plaintiff to respond to that motion. Dkt. No. 77.

The November 20, 2024 deadline for the plaintiff’s response has passed, and the plaintiff has not filed any materials in response or explained to the court why is unable to do so. The court has not heard from the plaintiff since he filed his October 28, 2024 motion to dismiss. The plaintiff noted in that motion that he still was incarcerated at Waupun. Dkt. No. 75 at 2. The defendant’s certificate of service shows that she mailed her summary judgment motion and supporting materials to the plaintiff at Waupun. Dkt. Nos. 66-1, 70-2. The Department of Corrections Offender Locator website shows that he remains incarcerated there.

See https://appsdoc.wi.gov/lop/home/home (DOC #480004). The court has no reason to believe that the plaintiff did not receive the defendant’s motion and materials or the court’s previous order, which was not returned to the court as undeliverable. Nor did the plaintiff inform the court that he did not receive the defendant’s materials after the court denied his motion to dismiss. The court will enforce its previous order and consider the defendant’s proposed facts to be undisputed and the assertions in the defendant’s brief to be unopposed for purposes of this decision.1

1 The materials that the defendant filed on October 18, 2024 no more comply with this court’s local rules than did the previous materials she filed. She again filed 150 proposed findings of fact, many of which contain multiple factual B. Factual Background 1. The Plaintiff’s Complaint The court summarized the plaintiff’s allegations in the screening order: The plaintiff alleges that he has a large hernia that is causing him pain, but that Dr. Sukowa[t]y has failed to “give [him] anything to help with the pain.” He alleges that on November 7, 2022, Dr. Karen Reynolds, a surgeon at Waupun Memorial Hospital (who is not a defendant), informed the plaintiff that he needed immediate surgery. The plaintiff alleges that Dr. Reynolds’s order was sent back to Waupun, but that the defendants have refused to schedule him for surgery to treat his hernia and pain.

The plaintiff alleges that by refusing him the surgery, the defendants have put his life and safety at risk due to possible complications from the hernia. He says he has tried “to kill [him]self due to the amount of pain [he is] in everyday and as a way to escape dealing with it.” He alleges that Dr. Sukowa[t]y told him he “did it to [him]self” because of the number of times he has required surgery to remove a foreign body that the plaintiff ingested in an attempt to kill himself. The plaintiff claims that Dr.

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Bluebook (online)
Whitcomb v. Sukoway, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitcomb-v-sukoway-wied-2024.