Shаne BAILEY, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. Don FELTMANN, in his individual capacity, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 14-3859.
United States Court of Appeals, Eighth Circuit.
Submitted: Sept. 23, 2015. Filed: Jan. 15, 2016.
794 F.3d 589
While we agree that the Release language is broad, the subject matter of the Release is different from the subject matter of the рresent lawsuit, which is Riceland‘s failure to contribute to the fund. The claims regarding genetically-modified rice were released by the Settlement Agreement and Release, but the Release does not govern the Plaintiffs’ unjust enrichment and quantum meruit claims against Ricelаnd for its failure to contribute to the fund. We therefore affirm the district court‘s dismissal of Riceland‘s counterclaims.
III.
For these reasons, we affirm the district court‘s dismissal of Riceland‘s counterclaims as well as the certification of such dismissal as final under
Jason Scott Retter, Saint Louis, MO, for Defendant-Appellee.
Before WOLLMAN, COLLOTON, and KELLY, Circuit Judges.
COLLOTON, Circuit Judge.
Shane Bailey brought a civil rights action under
I.
On the afternoon of March 13, 2012, Bailey was at a friend‘s house. After arguing with his friend, Bailey left the house upset. Once outside, Bailey punched the driver‘s side mirror of his truck and punched and kicked out the truck‘s windshield, cutting his right hand in the process. Bailey drove away in his truck but ran out of gas shortly thereafter. Bailey then called for emergency assistance.
Paramеdics arrived at the scene at 3:05 p.m. Bailey, who was eighteen years old, told the paramedics that he had been drinking alcohol earlier that day. Bailey eventually allowed the paramedics to evaluate and treat his right hand. The paramedics examined his hand, noting that the area around the lacerations was bruised and swollen and that the bleeding was controlled. The paramedics dressed the wound. The paramedics reported that Bailey then cursed at them and refused further treatment, but Bailey averred by affidavit that he did not refuse treatment.
Deputy Feltmann arrived at the scene shortly thereafter. Feltmann observed the damage Bailey had inflicted on the truck and also saw a large amount of blood on the truck‘s rear window. Because of the bandages on Bailey‘s hand, Feltmann could not determine the full extent of Bailey‘s injuries, but he was aware that Bailey‘s hand was cut and had been bleeding. Feltmann also could see blood soaking through, and leaking out of, the bandages on Bailey‘s hand. Feltmann asked Bailey how he sustained the injuries to his hand;
Feltmann could not recall what he discussed with the paramedics, but one of the two paramedics who treated Bailey testified that the pаramedics advised the deputy at the scene that Bailey‘s right hand needed sutures and that Bailey needed to be taken to an emergency room for evaluation. The paramedic‘s report reflected that a deputy agreed to transport Bailey to a hospital before taking him to jail. According to Feltmann, however, he believed that the paramedics’ treatment of Bailey‘s hand was sufficient, and he drove Bailey directly to the county jail. During the short time that Bailey was in Feltmann‘s custody, blood continued tо seep through Bailey‘s bandages, but Bailey did not complain about his hand or request additional medical treatment. When they arrived at the jail, Feltmann released Bailey into the custody of jail personnel. Bailey never saw Feltmann again.
Early the next morning, Bailey‘s family picked him up from the jail and took him to an emergency room. A physician examined Bailey‘s right hand, noted that Bailey‘s pain was mild, determined that his hand was not tingling or numb, and found that he had no loss of sensation in his hand. An x-ray of Bailey‘s hand showed no fractures. The physician cleaned the wounds and removed a small glass fragment from one of the cuts on Bailey‘s hand but chose not to suture any of the cuts, because the injuries had occurred nearly twenty-four hours earlier, and the skin was “too rotted” to stitch. He also treated a laceration on Bailey‘s forehead that was sustained at the jail and sent Bailey home with ibuprofen. A few days later, Bailey returned to the hospital, and a physician removed the stitches on his forehead but did not examine the injured hand. Bailey never sought additional treatment for his hand.
Bailey testified that he suffers from pain in his right hand between his index and middle fingers, but that the pain occurs only rarely. He did not miss any time from work due to his injuries. Bailey‘s right hand also has several scars from the lacerations. One scar is on the back of Bailey‘s hаnd and is approximately one inch long; the others are located on and between his index and middle fingers. Aside from expenses associated with his first visit to the hospital, Bailey could not recall any other costs incurred as a result of the injuries to his hand.
Bailey brought a claim under
II.
In a
Bailey first argues that we should analyze his
Bailey argues in the alternative that Feltmann‘s decision to proceed to the jail rather than a hospital exhibited deliberate indifference to his need for medical attention in violation of his clearly established constitutional rights under the Due Process Clausе. Regardless of whether an “unreasonable” decision to forego treatment would violate the Constitution, this court deemed it clearly established by 2008 that a pretrial detainee (or an arrestee, see Spencer, 183 F.3d at 905 n. 3) has a right to be free from deliberately indifferent dеnials of emergency medical care. See Thompson v. King, 730 F.3d 742, 750 (8th Cir. 2013). Bailey‘s claim fails, however, because he has not produced sufficient evidence to support a finding that Feltmann violated that right.
Our cases in this area borrow from the
Bailey did not present a physician‘s diagnosis or othеr medical evidence that establishes detrimental effects of the alleged delay in treatment. Bailey missed no time from work as a result of his injuries, and aside from the initial examination, he sought no treatment for his hand and incurred no additional medical costs. The only lingering effects allegedly stemming from the injuries are several scars on and between Bailey‘s index and middle fingers and an aching pain between those fingers that occurs only rarely. There is no evidence from a physician or other expert that these seemingly modest effects would have been avoided if Feltmann had brought Bailey to a hospital at the time of his arrest. The medical evidence is thus insufficient to establish an objectively serious medical need for expeditious treatment on the day of Bailey‘s arrеst.
Bailey contends, however, that his serious need for prompt medical treatment should have been obvious to a layperson like Feltmann. Bailey cites the paramedic‘s statement to Feltmann that Bailey needed sutures and needed to visit an emergеncy room for evaluation, along with the paramedic‘s report that a sheriff‘s deputy said he would transport Bailey to an emergency room for evaluation and care before the arrestee was processed. Bailey also cites the blоod soaking through his bandages, and his pained facial expressions. We are not convinced that this evidence creates a submissible case.
The statement of a paramedic that an arrestee needs sutures and further evaluation does not neсessarily establish an objectively serious medical need for immediate treatment that would be obvious to a layperson. When Feltmann assumed custody of Bailey, the paramedics had treated and bandaged his hand, and the bleeding was controlled. Feltmann nеver observed the injury, and the appearance of blood on the bandages did not show profuse bleeding of the sort that might have demonstrated to a law enforcement officer an obvious need for emergency medical attention. Bailey never said anything to Feltmann about his condition or a desire for immediate treatment. Whatever facial expressions Feltmann might have observed would not obviously have demonstrated a serious medical need for urgent care in light of the circumstances.
In sum, Bailey has not presented medical evidence that he experienced a serious medical need for urgent care at the time of his arrest, and there is no evidence that a delay in treatment caused detrimental effects. The circumstances aрparent to Feltmann at the time of arrest were not so dramatic that a layperson easily would have recognized an obvious need for immediate care by a physician. Feltmann is thus entitled to qualified immunity.
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The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
COLLOTON
CIRCUIT JUDGE
