Atkins v. Doctor Shamar et al
Filing
94
MEMORANDUM OPINION in re Motions to Dismiss and Motion for Summary Judgment. Signed by District Judge Leonie M. Brinkema on 3/27/2024. (swil)
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE
EASTERN DISTRICT OF VIRGINIA
Alexandria Division
David Atkins,
Plaintiff,
I:22cv630(LMB/JFA)
V.
Dr. Sharma,^ al..
Defendants.
MEMORANDUM OPINION
In this civil rights action filed under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, Virginia state prisoner David
Atkins ("plaintiff), who is acting pro
alleges that officials at Deerfield Correctional Center
(or"DCC")and the Virginia Department of Corrections(or"VDOC")failed to ensure he
received an appropriate diet to treat his diagnosed case of hypoglycemia. [Dkt. Nos. 1, 5, 31].
Three dispositive motions are before the Court: a Motion to Dismiss filed by defendants Dr.
Sharma and Nurse Stith [Dkt. No. 76]; a Motion to Dismiss filed by defendants Mr. Foxx,
Natarcha Gregg, and Ms. Hobbs [Dkt. No. 82]; and a Motion for summary Judgment filed by
defendant Ms. Oseghale [Dkt. No. 84].' Counsel for defendants filed Roseboro^ notices
informing plaintiff of his right to respond to these motions and stating that plaintiffs failure to
file oppositions could result in the Court granting the motions solely on the basis ofthe
information and evidence filed by the defendants. [Dkt. Nos. 78,91,92]. Despite receiving this
clear guidance, plaintiff has opposed only Ms. Oseghale's Motion for Summary Judgment. See
'Also pending is a Motion to Withdraw as Attorney by Attorney Grace Morse-McNelis [Dkt.
No. 87] and a Motion to Add Defendant[Dkt. No. 89]and a Motion for Appointment of Counsel
[Dkt. No.93]filed by plaintiff. These ancillary Motions will also be addressed in the body of
this Opinion.
^ See Roseboro v. Garrison. 528 F.2d 309(4th Cir. 1975).
[Dkt. No. 88]. The arguments raised in the two pending Motions to Dismiss are unopposed and
will be granted. The Court will also grant defendant Oseghale's Motion for Summary Judgment
and dismiss this action with prejudice.
I. Motions to Dismiss
A,
Backsround
The two pending Motions to Dismiss attack the sufficiency of plaintiffs Second
Amended Complaint("SAC"). The allegations in the SAC are difficult to understand because
they are not organized chronologically; however, it appears that the SAC alleges that plaintiff
was diagnosed with hypoglycemia in 2007,s^[Dkt. No.31] at 11, and mediced records
documenting this condition were faxed to officials at Deerfield Correctional Center on
November 22, 2019, when plaintiff was transferred to that facility,id. at 9. Despite having
learned of plaintiffs medical needs, and despite plaintiff having "suffered multiple seizures"
after he arrived at the facility, prison officials at Deerfield allegedly did not provide plaintiff an
adequate diet to manage his hypoglycemia until January 3,2020. Id
The SAC next suggests, without explicitly stating, that plaintiff received a medically
appropriate diet between January 2020 and roughly the summer of2022 but that"Nurse Stith
and Dr. Shamar []stopped plaintiffs special diet meals" on an unstated date. Id This allegedly
caused plaintiff to suffer four seizures—^two on June 23,2022, and two on July 10,2022. Id In
response to those seizures, unnamed members of Deerfield's medical staff are alleged to have
reinstated plaintiffs medically prescribed diet on July 13, 2022,^id; however,the SAC
claims that"Food Director Ms. Oseghale refused to honor" the diet for an unspecified length of
time. Id.
Plaintiff attempted to use the prison grievance system to obtain his specialized diet once
more. Id at 9-10. Oseghale and Gates responded to plaintiffs grievance, indicating that,
although plaintiffs medical diet would be reapproved for three months, prison officials wanted
to conduct tests on plaintiff before reinstating the diet permanently. Id at 10. The response also
indicated that conducting lab tests was important to "confirm [plaintiffs] diagnoses," as the diet
he was receiving to treat his hypoglycemia was so highly caloric that it was itself"put[ting]
[plaintiffs] health and life in danger." Id
Although the SAC is unclear, it appears to allege that, on November 12,2022, after the
conclusion ofthe three-month reinstatement of his medical diet, plaintiff suffered another
seizure. Id at 12. Over the next two weeks, plaintiffs blood sugar dropped on three occasions,
and nurses at Deerfield gave him "shots" to return his blood levels to normal. Id On November
22,2022,"[a]nother medical diet order was written," but plaintiff"didn't start receiving the trays
imtil December." Id The SAC alleges that when plaintiff eventually received his new diet,
defendant Hobbs "put all the food items on one tray" instead oftwo. Id He further claims that
there is "always something missing on the tray." Id Finally,the SAC claims that, on unstated
dates, defendants Foxx, Hobbs,and Gregg "decided to serve plaintiffs food [with] items that he
was allergy [sic] to beans and tomatoes." Id at 11.
B,
Standard ofReview
A motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6) ofthe Federal Rules of Civil Procedure requires
a court to consider the sufficiency of a complaint, not to resolve contests surrounding facts or the
merits ofa claim. Republican Partv of N.C. v. Martin. 980 F.2d 943,952(4th Cir. 1992). To
withstand a Rule 12(b)(6) motion,"a complaint must contain sufficient factual matter, accepted
as true, to 'state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.'" Ashcroft v. labal. 556 U.S. 662,
678(2009)(quoting Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombiv.550 U.S. 544, 570(2007)). To do so,the
complaint must allege specific facts in support of each element ofeach claim it raises;
"threadbare recitals ofthe elements of a cause of action, supported by mere conclusory
statements," do not suffice. Id
C
Analysis
Plaintiffs claims against defendants Sharma, Stith, Foxx, Hobbs, and Gregg—^the
defendants who filed motions to dismiss—^arise under the Eighth Amendment. With respect to
medical care in a prison, such a claim has two elements. First, a plaintiff must show that he
suffers from a sufficiently serious medical need. A need is sufficiently serious if it "has been
diagnosed by a physician as mandating treatment or ... is so obvious that even a lay person
would easily recognize the necessity for a doctor's attention." Iko v. Shreve,535 F.3d 225,241
(4th Cir. 2008). Second,the plaintiff must show that a defendant was deliberately indifferent to
his serious medical need. Farmer v. Brennan. 511 U.S. 825,837(1994). "[A]n official acts with
deliberate indifference if he had actual knowledge ofthe prisoner's serious medical needs and
the related risks, but nevertheless disregarded them." DePaola v. Clarke^ 884 F.3d 481,486(4th
Cir. 2018)(citing Scinto v. Stansberrv. 841 F.3d 219,225-26(4th Cir. 2016)). A prisoner's mere
disagreement with medical personnel over the course of his treatment is inadequate to state a
cause of action. S^ United States v. Clawson,650 F.3d 530,538(4th Cir. 2011).
The SAC satisfies the first element of an Eighth Amendment claim by alleging that
plaintiff has been diagnosed with chronic hypoglycemia. With regard to the second element,the
SAC lacks sufficient factual allegations. First, the SAC alleges that defendants Foxx, Hobbs,
and Gregg "refused plaintiffs special diet meals," and instead served him meals containing
beans and tomatoes, to which he claims he was allergic. S^[Dkt. No. 31] at 11. The SAC does
not identify when these acts occurred nor which of plaintiffs many special diets they allegedly
failed to provide. Additionally, although plaintiff claims to have suffered a number ofseizures
during his incarceration at DCC,he does not draw any temporal connection—let alone a causal
connection—^between any ofthose incidents and the alleged acts or omissions of Foxx, Hobbs, or
Gregg. Consequently,the Court concludes that the SAC's allegations against these defendants
are too vague to warrant relief. ^Torres v. Paredes. No. 22-cv-448-JES-JLB, 2023 WL
3855047, at *6(S.D. Cal. June 6, 2023)(finding in context of excessive force claims that a
failure to allege when specific incidents occurred meant the complaint "fail[ed] to show a causal
connection between the defendant's alleged wrongful conduct and the constitutional violation"
and was therefore subject to dismissal as "vague and conclusory"); Davis v. Penzone. No. CV
17-01912-PHX-DLR(BSB),2017 WL 8792541, at *6(D. Ariz. July 25, 2017)("[Plaintiff] does
not allege when and how Alverez learned of Plaintiffs need for surgery and what reason, if any,
Alverez gave for his refusal to authorize the recommended operation. Without such information.
Plaintiff cannot state a claim against Alverez based on deliberate indifference."). For this reason,
defendants' Foxx, Hobbs,and Gregg's Motion to Dismiss will be granted.
As to defendants Sharma and Stith, the SAC seeks only injunctive relief,
[Dkt. No.
31] at 13-14; however, because plaintiff has been transferred away from DCC such relief has
become moot. See Williams v. Griffin. 952 F.2d 820,823(4th Cir. 1991)(transfer of prisoner
moots his Eighth Amendment claims for injunctive and declaratory relief); Slade v. Hampton
Roads Reg. Jail. 407 F.3d 243, 248-49(4th Cir. 2005)(pretrial detainee's release moots his claim
for injunctive relief); Maeee v. Waters. 810 F.2d 451,452(4th Cir. 1987)(concluding that the
transfer ofa prisoner rendered moot his claim for injunctive relieQ. For this reason, defendants
Sharma and Stith's Motion to Dismiss also will be granted.
11. Motion to Add Defendant
In his Motion to Add Defendant, plaintiff seeks to "add the defendant Paul Targonski,
Supervisor/Chief Physician ofthe Virginia Department of Corrections." [Dkt. No. 89] at 1. In
support ofthe motion, plaintiff alleges that Targonski was deliberately indifferent to his medical
needs because, as the "Chief Physician," he "can have any diet enforced" but nevertheless did
not ensure plaintiffs double-portion continued throughout his incarceration at DCC. Id at 1-7.
Because this motion contains new factual allegations upon which plaintiff seeks relief,
the Motion essentially seeks the Court's permission to amend or supplement plaintiffs
Complaint. Although the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure provide that a district court should
"freely give leave [to amend] when justice so requires,"^Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(a)(2), it need not
provide leave if"the amendment would be prejudicial to the opposing party, there has been bad
faith on the part ofthe moving party, or the amendment would [be] futile." Johnson v. Oroweat
Foods Co.. 785 F.2d 503, 509(4th Cir. 1986)(citing Foman v. Davis. 371 U.S. 178,182(1962)).
Ifthe proposed amended complaint fails to state a claim for relief, amendment would be futile,
and denial of a motion to amend is appropriate. See United States v. Kellogg Brown & Root
Inc.. 525 F.3d 370, 376(4th Cir. 2008).
The new allegations in the plaintiffs motion fails to state a claim for relief against Dr.
Targonski, and the Court therefore will deny the motion to add him as a defendant in this
litigation. Plaintiff has submitted several emails to support his putative claim against Targonski,
see [Dkt. No. 89-1] at 6-8,10,12,14-19, but far from supporting plaintiffs claim, the emails
clearly establish that Dr. Targonski had plaintiffs long-term health in mind when suggesting
alterations to his diet.
For instance, after he was informed ofa diet that an endocrinologist had recommended
for plaintiff. Dr. Targonski sought to clarify the matter, inquiring,"May we have some clinical
background on the rationale for this order please. And has Nutrition been involved? I think I
know the case but would like to be sure and complete the full process." [Dkt. No. 89-1] at 18.
Furthermore, Dr. Targonski repeatedly temporarily approved the diets plaintiff had been
prescribed while simultaneously seeking to find a more permanent solution to plaintiffs health
needs. On July 22,2022, he wrote,"I approve for 3 months
The patient should be
reevaluated if a subsequent request is made, it should please include the long term evaluation and
management ofthe hypoglycemia, as double portions is a temporary solution not really
consistent with usual practice." Id. at 16. On November 23,2022, Targonski wrote an email to
Dr. Singareddy, another VDOC official, stating,"They must have billed for a diagnosis so it
probably requires a call to endocrine to ferret out exactly their rationale. I know this is a
challenging case and I look forward to speaking with you." Id. at 6. He later wrote to Nicole
Keeney, a registered dietitian, stating,"I spoke with Dr. Singareddy. I will approve the proposed
diet, noting only high protein [Ejnsure as a supplement,for 3 months. Please have the facility
send me a copy of[plaintiffs] chart, including the notes from outside consultations." Id
In this light, it is clear that plaintiffs dispute with Targonski is no more than a
disagreement regarding the course oftreatment he received for his hypoglycemia. Such a
disagreement is insufficient to state any Eighth Amendment claim. See, e.g., Wright v. Collins.
766 F.2d 841,849(4th Cir. 1985)("Disagreements between an inmate and a physician over the
inmate's proper medical care do not state a § 1983 claim unless exceptional circumstances are
alleged."). As a result, it would be futile to accept plaintiffs proposed amendment to the SAC,
and the Court will therefore deny his motion to add Targonski as a defendant.
III. Motion for Summary Judgment
The final dispositive motion is a Motion for Summary Judgment submitted by defendant
Oseghale. For the reasons that follow, the Motion will be granted.
A,
Statement of Undisputed Facts
The following facts are not in dispute. At all times relevant to this action, plaintiff was a
prisoner in the custody ofthe VDOC housed at DCC,where, beginning in November 2020,
defendant Oseghale worked in the Food Service Department. [Dkt. No. 85-3]("Oseghale Aff")
at 1, H 1. Oseghale now serves as Food Service Director at the facility. She is not a medical
practitioner and therefore does not possess qualifications to provide medical advice to inmates
regarding their diets. Id at 3,f 15. Rather, Oseghale is empowered to provide inmates with
specific, medically prescribed diets only ifthe diet has been approved by VDOC medical staff
pursuant to VDOC Operating Procedures(or "OP"). Id. at 114.
Since Oseghale has been employed at DCC,plaintiff has been prescribed several diets
designed to address his diagnosed case ofchronic hypoglycemia. Id at 3, H 13. Plaintiff claims
in this action that, in July 2022, Oseghale denied him—or "refused to honor"—one such diet.
[Dkt. No. 1] at 9. The diet in question called for plaintiff to receive double portions, and Dr.
Singareddy—^whom the SAC describes as a "Regional Doctor,"^[Dkt. No. 31] at 12—
approved that diet on July 13, 2022. Id at 9. At that time, VDOC Operating Procedure 500.1
outlined a variety of"therapeutic diets" that a prisoner could receive at the direction of a medical
practitioner.
Oseghale Aff at 4,^ 18; Oseghale Aff. Enclosure("End.") A at 6. The list did
not include a "double portion diet" but did include a catchall category entitled "Other diet as
approved by the Health Services Unit Chief Physician." Id Because it was a medically
prescribed diet that fell into OP 500.1's catchall category, plaintiffs double portion diet required
8
approval from the VDOC's Health Services Unit Chief Physician. Id In July 2022, VDOC's
Health Services Unit ChiefPhysician was Dr. Paul Targonski. Oseghale Aff. at 4,^ 19.
On July 22,2022, Dr. Targonski approved plaintiffs double portion diet for a three-
month period.^M,at ^ 20; Oseghale Aff. End. C at 2. After receiving the email containing
Dr. Targonski's approval, defendant Oseghale and other DCC food service employees "began
offering Atkins double trays." Oseghale Aff. at K 21. Upon the expiration of his July 2022
prescription, plaintiff"brought another Diet Order for double portions to Food Service dated
September 23,2022 and asked Food Service to follow that Diet Order." Id at ^ 22. Although
Dr. Targonski approved the renewed diet for an additional three months on November 23,2022,
see Oseghale Aff. End. E,defendant Oseghale did not receive word ofthe diet's approval until
December 7,2022,id; Oseghale Aff. at 5,H 23. Under the November 2022 diet, plaintiff was
additionally prescribed an Ensure protein drink, which he obtained from the medical department
rather than the food service department. Oseghale Aff. at ^ 24.
In March 2023, medical officials within VDOC reevaluated plaintiffs diet. Oseghale
Aff at 6,H 25. They concluded that plaintiffshould receive additional protein and vegetables at
mealtime,that he should receive fresh fhiit or a fruit cup in place of dessert, that he should not
receive juice, that his carbohydrate intake should be limited, and that he should receive farina or
oatmeal for breakfast. Id This diet took effect on March 8,2023. Id; Oseghale Aff. End. G.
Oseghale states that, under this diet order, plaintiffs food fit onto one tray and that he therefore
was not given two trays. Oseghale Aff. at H 25. Nevertheless, plaintiff repeatedly complained
that he was no longer receiving two trays offood and that items would frequently be missing
when officials "tr[ied] to put all the food items on one tray." SAC at ^ 26.
Despite the fact that plaintiff was routinely prescribed individualized diet orders, the
record shows that he frequently failed to comply with those orders by selling food items to other
inmates, purchasing food products and snacks from the prison commissary, and attempting to
ship dozens of bottles of Ensure protein drinks out of the facility. Oseghale Aff. at 7,H 29;[Dkt.
No. 85-1]("Gates Aff.") at 2,
B,
7-8.
Standard ofReview
"The court shall grant summary judgment ifthe movant shows that there is no genuine
dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter oflaw." Fed.
R. Civ. P. 56(a). "A dispute is genuine if a reasonable jury could return a verdict for the
nonmoving party," and "[a] fact is material if it might affect the outcome ofthe suit under the
governing law." Variety Stores v. Wal-Mart Stores. Inc.. 888 F.3d 651,659(4th Cir. 2018).
Once the moving party has met its burden to show that it is entitled to judgment as a matter of
law,the nonmoving party "must show that there is a genuine dispute of material fact for trial...
by offering sufficient proofin the form of admissible evidence." Id (quoting Guessous v.
Fairview Prop. Inv'rs.. LLC.828 F.3d 208,216(4th Cir. 2016)). In evaluating a motion for
summary judgment,a district court must consider the evidence in the light most favorable to the
nonmoving party and draw all reasonable inferences from those facts in favor ofthat party.
United States v. Diebold. Inc.. 369 U.S. 654,655 (1962).
C
Analysis
As discussed above, an Eighth Amendment claim requires a prisoner to show that he
suffers from a sufficiently serious medical need and that prison officials were deliberately
indifferent to that need.^Iko, 535 F.3d at 241; Farmer. 511 U.S. at 837. A prisoner's mere
disagreement with medical personnel over the course of his treatment is inadequate to state a
10
cause of action. ^Clawson.650 F.3d at 538. Here, there is no dispute with respect to the first
element ofthis test, which plaintiff has satisfied by showing that he has been diagnosed with
chronic hypoglycemia; however,for the reasons explained below,the Court concludes that there
is no genuine dispute with respect to the second element and that defendant Oseghale was not
deliberately indifferent to plaintiffs condition.
The extent ofthe claim against Oseghale is that she temporarily failed to honor diet
orders that had been written for plaintiff.
SAC at
14,23-24. This first occurred in July
2022, after plaintiff had a double portion diet approved by Dr. Singareddy.^SAC at 114.
Plaintiff argues that Oseghale merely "wanted someone other than [Singareddy] to sign [his] diet
order",
SAC at H 24, and that her decision to go "over [Singareddy's] head" constituted
deliberate indifference,^[Dkt. No. 88] at 2. This is a disingenuous argument that is not
supported by the record. Indeed, it is clear from the documents Oseghale has provided that
VDOC policy prohibited her from providing plaintiff a non-standard therapeutic diet without the
express authorization of Dr. Targonski,the VDOC's chief physician. Oseghale's compliance
with VDOC policy is not evidence that she was indifferent to plaintiffs needs. SL Williams v.
Dehav. 81 F.3d 153(Table), 1996 WL 128422, at *1 (4th Cir. 1996)(finding no deliberate
indifference where nurse complied with policy, consulted with warden about Plaintiffs request
for narcotics, and refused to dispense narcotics without the policy-required court order); Burwell
V. Citv of Lansing. Michigan. 7 F.4th 456,476, n.7(6th Cir. 2021)(opining that "whether an
officer complied with policy can be relevant to establishing the officer's knowledge ofthe risk to
an inmate and whether the officer disregarded that risk"). Moreover,the record establishes that
plaintiff was denied his medical diet for a maximum of nine days in July 2022 and that Oseghale
promptly began providing plaintiff his prescribed diet as soon as she learned it had been
11
approved. Finally, the SAC does not allege that plaintiff suffered any seizures or other adverse
health effects in the limited window oftime he did not receive his therapeutic diet in July 2022.
The SAC next alleges that plaintiff was again denied a medically prescribed diet after his
July 2022 diet order expired. But this factual allegation is inadequate for the same reasons
already stated. There is simply no evidence in the record that a reasonable factfinder could
consider and conclude that defendant Oseghale was deliberately indifferent to plaintiffs medical
needs when she waited for the required authorization to provide him a particular diet.
Moreover, plaintiffs complaints that VDOC officials failed to honor his prescribed diets
are undermined by the undisputed evidence that plaintiff failed to abide by the terms ofthose
diets. The record contains ample evidence that plaintiff routinely purchased high-sodium and
sugary food products from DCC's commissary and attempted to mail dozens ofEnsure protein
drinks out ofthe facility. These significant departures from the diets prescribed to plaintiff break
any causal chain with respect to whether any of plaintiffs seizures were related to the acts of
VDOC officials.
Finally, the SAC does not mention defendant Oseghale in either its "Claims for Relief or
"Relief Requested" sections, meaning that plaintiff does not seek any relief with regard to
Oseghale's alleged conduct.
SAC at 12-13. For all ofthese reasons, Oseghale's Motion for
Summary Judgment will be granted.
IV. Motion for Appointment of Counsel
In his Motion for Appointment of Counsel,[Dkt. No. 93], plaintiff asks the Court to
appoint counsel to represent him in this civil action. Pursuant to 28 U.S.C.§ 1915(e)(1), a
district court has discretion to appoint counsel to indigent litigants proceeding in forma pauperis.
See 28 U.S.C. § 1915(e)(1). The Court observed at the outset ofthis litigation that plaintiff
12
possessed over $7,000 in his inmate trust account and that he therefore did not qualify to proceed
without prepayment offees.
administrative fees in full.
[Dkt. No. 9]. Plaintiff promptly paid the filing and
[Dkt. No. 10]. Consequently, the Court concludes that plaintiff is
not indigent and that appointment ofcounsel under 28 U.S.C. § 1915(e)(1) would be
inappropriate.
Plaintiff additionally states in his Motion that, although he received Roseboro notices
related to defendants' dispositive motions, he did not receive the motions themselves.
[Dkt.
No.93]at 3. The record reflects that these notices were associated with Docket Entries 82 and 84,
which, respectively, are the Motion to Dismiss filed by defendants Foxx, Gregg, and Hobbs; and
the Motion for Summary Judgment filed by defendants Oseghale. Because plaintiff filed an
Opposition to Oseghale's Motion for Summary Judgment, it is clear that he received that motion.
For these reasons, there is no basis on which to appoint counsel for plaintiff.
V. Motion to Withdraw as Attorney
Finally, the Motion to Withdraw as Attorney [Dkt. No. 87] by Grace Morse-McNelis,
counsel for defendants Sharma and Stith, will be granted because the record reflects that
Attorney Elizabeth Martin Muldowney has appeared in place of the movant.
VL Conclusion
For the reasons stated above, defendants' Motions to Dismiss and Motion for Summary
Judgment will be granted. Attorney Grace Morse-McNelis's Motion to Withdraw also will be
granted. Plaintiffs Motion to Add Defendant and Motion for Appointment of Counsel will be
denied, and this action will be dismissed. An Order will be entered along with this Opinion.
Entered this
day of March 2024.
Alexandria, Virginia
/sf
Leonie M.Brinkema
13
United States District Judge
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