Watson v. Caton ( 1993 )


Menu:
  • USCA1 Opinion









    January 29, 1993

    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

    ___________________


    No. 92-1269




    CHARLES N. WATSON,

    Plaintiff, Appellant,

    v.

    C. MARK CATON, ET AL.,

    Defendants, Appellees.


    __________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MAINE

    [Hon. Morton A. Brody, U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________

    ___________________

    Before

    Selya, Cyr and Boudin,
    Circuit Judges.
    ______________

    ___________________

    Charles N. Watson, on brief pro se.
    _________________



    __________________

    __________________






















    Per Curiam. The appellant, Charles N. Watson, was an
    __________

    inmate in the Maine correctional system, incarcerated at the

    Downeast Correctional Facility, and later at the Charleston

    Correctional Facility, at all times relevant to this lawsuit.

    In November 1991 Watson filed a complaint in federal court

    which alleged that the defendants, all officials of the Maine

    Department of Correction or the Downeast or Charleston

    prisons, had violated his federal constitutional rights, in

    violation of 42 U.S.C. 1983.

    Watson's complaint contained four counts, only three of

    which are at issue in this appeal.1 In his first count,

    Watson described injuries he had sustained to his right hand

    before he went to prison. The injuries had required surgery,

    and the hand continued to cause problems. After he entered

    prison, beginning in February 1989, Watson sought treatment.

    The specialists he contacted would not travel to the prison,

    and prison officials would not allow him to go to the

    doctors. According to the complaint, defendant Peggie

    Mitchie, a nurse at the Downeast Correctional Facility,

    refused to examine Watson's hand because the injury had

    occurred before he went to prison, and she said that

    "therefore she was not responsible for care or treatment of

    ____________________

    1The third count of the complaint related to dental
    treatment of a broken cap on a front tooth. Watson did not
    challenge the dismissal of this count in his appellate brief,
    and therefore has waived the issue. Pignons S.A. de
    _________________
    Mecanique v. Polaroid Corp., 701 F.2d 1, 3 (1st Cir. 1983)
    _________ _____________
    (issues not presented in appellant's opening brief are
    waived).















    that hand." Thereafter Watson says he continued to suffer

    and eventually a doctor did examine the hand and recommended

    another round of surgery.

    The second count of the complaint alleged that Watson

    was injured when he fell through a weak ceiling while working

    at the Downeast prison. He saw a nurse, who treated a gash

    on his leg but declined to provide further treatment when he

    told her that he had also injured his back, saying that his

    back "would be okay." Not until he transferred to the

    Charleston prison did Watson receive treatment for his back

    injury; but even then, Watson complained, the doctors

    prescribed only medication and bed rest, and failed to order

    the physical therapy that he thought was necessary.

    Eventually, the injury required surgery, and even after the

    operation Watson's back remained "40% impaired."

    Finally, Watson alleged in his fourth count that, while

    housed at the Downeast Correctional Facility, he purchased a

    number of cassette tapes and compact disks through the mail.

    When these items arrived at the prison, officials deemed them

    "non-allowable" and did not deliver them to Watson. Nor did

    they provide Watson with a "non-allowable property sheet,"

    which, Watson contends, the Department of Correction

    "normally issues" in such situations. A corrections officer

    destroyed the tapes and disks, but the prison did not notify

    Watson of either the delivery or the destruction until 11



    -3-
    -3-















    days had passed.

    In addition to his complaint, Watson filed with the

    district court an application to proceed in forma pauperis.
    _________________

    Acting on this request before any of the defendants had

    responded to the complaint, the district court granted Watson

    in forma pauperis status but dismissed the complaint on its
    __________________

    own motion under 28 U.S.C. 1915(d) with a short opinion

    stating its reasons. After the district court denied his

    motion for reconsideration and motion to vacate judgment,

    Watson filed this appeal.

    Under 28 U.S.C. 1915(d) a federal district court may

    dismiss an in forma pauperis complaint if the complaint is,
    __________________

    among other things, "frivolous." A claim is "frivolous"

    within the meaning of section 1915(d) when it is "based on an

    indisputably meritless legal theory," or makes "clearly

    baseless" factual contentions. Neitzke v. Williams, 490 U.S.
    _______ ________

    319, 327 (1989). We review a section 1915(d) dismissal for

    "abuse of discretion," Denton v. Hernandez, 112 S. Ct. 1728,
    ______ _________

    1734 (1992), taking into account the liberal pleading

    standards applicable to complaints filed by pro se
    ________

    plaintiffs.

    Watson's first two counts alleged that the defendants

    failed to provide, or caused delays in providing, appropriate

    medical care. The courts have consistently refused to create

    constitutional claims out of disagreements between prisoners



    -4-
    -4-















    and doctors about the proper course of a prisoner's medical

    treatment, or to conclude that simple medical malpractice

    rises to the level of cruel and unusual punishment. See,
    ____

    e.g., Estelle v. Gamble, 429 U.S. 97, 106 (1976); DesRosiers
    ___ _______ ______ __________

    v. Moran, 949 F.2d 15, 19 (1st Cir. 1991). However, prison
    _____

    officials and doctors may violate the Eighth Amendment if

    they exhibit "deliberate indifference to serious medical

    needs." Estelle v. Gamble, 429 U.S. at 106. The obvious
    _______ ______

    case would be a denial of needed medical treatment in order

    to punish the inmate. But deliberate indifference may also

    reside in "wanton" decisions to deny or delay care, Wilson
    ______

    v. Seiter, 111 S. Ct. 2321, 2326 (1992), where the action is
    ______

    recklessness, "not in the tort law sense but in the

    appreciably stricter criminal-law sense, requiring actual

    knowledge of impending harm, easily preventable."

    DesRosiers, 949 F.2d at 19.
    __________

    Watson alleged in the first count of his complaint that

    the prison nurse refused to treat him for an injury, which

    proved serious enough to require surgery, on the non-medical

    ground that the state was not responsible for injuries caused

    by events that occurred before Watson entered prison. A

    deliberate refusal to treat a serious medical condition of a

    prisoner on such a ground could hardly be justified and,

    while the allegations may prove untrue, they are not

    "fantastic or delusional." Estelle v. Gamble, 490 U.S. at
    _______ ______



    -5-
    -5-















    328. We conclude that Watson's first count was not

    frivolous, although it may--based on further information--

    prove to be wholly without merit. How and in what form that

    information is obtained is a matter for the district court to

    decide in the first instance; we note that the state has not

    yet filed an answer to this charge.

    Watson's second count relating to his back injury

    presents a different question. On its face, the facts set

    forth allege only the kind of disagreement about the proper

    course of treatment that does not rise to the level of a

    constitutional violation: Watson wanted more attention from

    the nurse, who said that no treatment was needed; he later

    wanted physical therapy to be ordered by the doctors, who

    thought that drugs and rest would do the trick.

    To append labels like "wanton" or "deliberate

    indifference" to this conduct, when nothing suggests that the

    medical judgment was absurd or that improper reasons were

    given for refusing treatment, cannot alter what is in essence

    a claim of negligence. The difference between failing to

    state a claim and making a frivolous claim is in some

    situations a question of degree. In this case we think that

    the district court acted within its considerable discretion,

    Wilson, 111 S. Ct. at 2326, in concluding that this count
    ______

    stated no facts suggesting more than simple negligence and

    that, since simple negligence is not a constitutional



    -6-
    -6-















    violation, the claim was subject to dismissal under section

    1915(d).2

    Watson's fourth count alleged that prison officials

    refused to deliver several cassette tapes and compact discs

    to him, denying those items as "non-allowable" but failing to

    give Watson a "non-allowable property sheet," and failing as

    well to notify Watson that the items had been delivered.

    Instead, Watson says, a corrections officer destroyed them.

    Watson does not complain directly of the decision to withhold

    the property from him, but rather of the lack of notice and

    the resulting destruction of the property before he had a

    change to have the items sent back. In other words, Watson

    has raised an issue of procedural due process.

    The Fourteenth Amendment says that state officials may

    not deprive persons of property without "due process of law."

    U.S. Const., art. XIV. The process due depends on the

    circumstances. Mathews v. Eldridge, 424 U.S. 319, 335
    _______ ________

    (1976). The cases distinguish sharply between deprivations

    caused by "random, unauthorized" conduct of state officials,

    and deprivations caused by conduct "pursuant to established

    state procedure." See Hudson v. Palmer, 468 U.S. 517, 532
    ___ ______ ______

    (1984). For the former, the state is not automatically


    ____________________

    2 Conceivably, in the remand in connection with count
    one, Watson could move for leave to replead count two to
    allege facts amounting to a constitutional violation. If he
    did so, we assume the court would give this motion due
    consideration. See Denton, 112 S. Ct. at 1734.
    ___ ______

    -7-
    -7-















    liable;3 in the latter case there may be liability where the

    state policy approves or directs the conduct but falls below

    constitutional standards.

    In this instance, Watson does not suggest that the

    officer's conduct reflected a state policy. His brief states

    that "a [s]upervisor took it upon his own" to throw away the

    property without giving Watson notice or allowing him the 30

    days permitted to prisoners to ship back non-allowable items.

    The complaint itself asserts that the lack of notice to

    Watson involved the failure to furnish him "a non-allowable

    property sheet, which the Department of Corrections normally

    issues . . . . " The clear inference from these allegations

    is that the action was a deviation from, and not a reflection

    of, an established state procedure. Under the precedents

    cited, such a claim has no legal basis in a section 1983

    case.

    We affirm the judgment below in dismissing counts two
    ______

    and four of the complaint. As to count one, judgment is

    vacated and the case remanded for further proceedings in
    _______

    accordance with this opinion.

    So Ordered.
    __________




    ____________________

    3The officer allegedly responsible for the destruction
    is apparently not a defendant in this case. Watson does not
    allege that the state refused to provide a post-deprivation
    remedy for the alleged wrong by the officer. See Hudson v.
    ___ ______
    Palmer, 468 U.S. at 533.
    ______

    -8-
    -8-