This is а suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against two police officers arising from the death of Edward Fitzgibbons as a result, the plaintiff claims, of the defendants’ deliberate indifference to Fitzgibbons’s diabetic condition. The defendants appeal from the dеnial of their motion for summary judgment on the ground of qualified immunity.
We have jurisdiction of such an appeal only if there are no disputed material issues of fact.
Behrens v. Pelletier,
There are disputed facts here, as we’ll see; and they may well be material. But as in
LeMarbe v. Wisneski,
Defendants are entitled to immunity before trial (and therеfore entitled to appeal immediately the denial of their motion for summary judgment on grounds of immunity) only if, even if thе facts are construed as favorably to the plaintiff as the record permits, they still are entitled to immunity — in which event they shouldn’t be put to the burden of a trial that might cast the facts in a light unnecessarily more favorable to them. As we said in
Anderson v. Romero, supra,
The facts, taken as favorably to the plaintiff as the recоrd permits, are as follows. Fitzgibbons, arrested for shoplifting, was an insulin-dependent diabetic. Of the defendant officers, Nicholson and Burdi, the former knew that an insulin-dependent diabetic needs regular insulin injections and the latter that diabetes is potentially fatal. When booked by Burdi after being arrested, . Fitzgibbons explained that he was an insulin-dependent diabetic and this was noted on the lock-up sheet. Someone from the police department сalled Fitzgibbons’s sister and asked her to bring his insulin to the police station, which was done. He received an insulin injection at 8:20 p.m. the day of the arrest, when he was still at the station. This was noted in the shift supervisor’s logbook' — and also that Fitzgibbons would need another shot in the morning.
Nicholson, the supervisor of the morning shift, received and read the logboоk and assigned Burdi to take Fitzgibbons to a bond hearing at a courthouse some 15 minutes away by car. Fitzgibbons told Burdi he neеded another insulin shot. Burdi relayed the request to Nicholson, who told Burdi that Fitzgibbons didn’t need a shot. (Nicholson denies telling Burdi this, but remember that for purposes of this appeal he is perforce conceding the truth of the plaintiffs еvidence.) Nicholson told Burdi to tell Fitzgibbons that if he wanted the shot he might miss his bond hearing and therefore be detained fоr another day or two. Fitzgibbons was not given the shot and was taken to the courthouse for the hearing. There he сomplained to Burdi of feeling woozy and shaky. Burdi did nothing. Shortly after-wards he was informed by a sheriffs deputy that Fitzgibbons was “freaking out” in an adjacent room. Fitzgibbons, feeling better it seems, was taken before the judge. Bond was denied and he wаs shipped off to the Cook County Jail, arriving about 2 p.m. He was examined there by a doctor, who noticed thаt he was dehydrated. His condition deteriorated rapidly, and he was dead by 11 p.m. as a consequence оf having missed the morning shot.
From these facts a reasonable jury could infer that Nicholson and Burdi were
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deliberately indifferent to Fitzgibbons’s welfare. They knew he was an insulin dependent diabetic. They knew (Nicholson certainly, Burdi probably) that diabetics can be seriously harmed by being deprived of insulin. They did not intend Fitzgib-bons’s death; nor, we may assume, did they know that missing one shot of insulin could kill him. But a jury could infer that they knew that depriving him of his morning shot would endanger his health and that they deрrived him of it for no better reason that to get him out of the police station. In short, a jury could infer that the defеndants knowingly exposed Fitzgib-bons to a substantial danger to his health for no good reason; that is a good definition of deliberate indifference. See
West By and Through Norris v. Waymire,
A trial may of course cast the facts in a different light. But construed as they must be for purposes of this appeal, they defeat the motion for quajified immunity.
AFFIRMED.
