The defendant and its named employee are not an agency and an agent of the State in the usual sense in which these terms are applied in the State Tort Claims Act. The question presented by the motion is whether plaintiff has alleged a failure to perform "such a fundamental and paramount obligation of the state that the state can not absolve itself of responsibility by delegating it to another, and thus must bear liability for the negligence of those who seek to fulfill that responsibility". Medley v. N.C.Department of Correction,
Claimant's affidavit does not allege that he was indigent at the time he sought advice from defendant's staff attorney, and "the State is not constitutionally required to provide attorneys free of charge to those inmates who can afford counsel of their own." Bounds, at 1332, citing the U.S. Supreme Court's decision in Bounds,
In Medley, the State Supreme Court, in a case of first impression, found that the State could be held liable for the malpractice of a physician, engaged as an independent contractor by the State to provide medical services to inmates, under the State Tort Claims Act. Although the liable party and grounds for liability are quite different (see Medley v. N.C. Department ofCorrection, I.C. No. TA-10184, 25 August 1989), the Court inMedley drew heavily on decisions concerning Title
While it certainly may be argued that defendant's employee was accomplishing the State's constitutionally mandated purpose of furnishing legal counsel, regardless of any effect on its purpose to incarcerate the claimant, the adversarial nature of his role logically permits — or requires — a distance from those actually accomplishing the purpose that makes holding the State liable on the basis of respondeat superior inappropriate. Presumably, that kind of detachment is also permissible when the prison is meeting needs with less immediate critical importance than medical care. Thus, although inmates also have an Eighth Amendment right to be properly fed, the State perhaps would not be liable for the unforeseen negligence of a milk truck driver on its premises, or a foreign object in canned food.
The premise for all of the physician cases cited above was that, "An inmate must rely on prison authorities to treat his medical needs; if the authorities fail to do so, those needs will not be met." Estelle,
Consequently, the plaintiff's claim should be, and hereby is, DISMISSED.
S/ _____________________________________ J. RANDOLPH WARD COMMISSIONER
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