Reginald SONDS, Plaintiff,
v.
ST. BARNABAS HOSPITAL CORRECTIONAL HEALTH SERVICES; the City of New York; Sumpter, Captain No. 1370; Johnson, Correction Officer No. 14488; Ocasio, Correction Officer No. 14100; Parks, Correction Officer No. 14373; Powell, Correction Officer No. 4316; Dr. Robert, Riker's Island; Adolescent Reception Detention Center; Department of Corrections; as Individuals in Their Official and Personal Capacities, the State of New York Department of Corrections, Defendants.
United States District Court, S.D. New York.
*304 *305 *306 Reginald Sonds, pro se.
Rose M. Weber, Assistant Corporation Counsel, Law Department of the City of New York City, Andrew Zwerling, Garbarini & Scher, New York City, for defendants.
MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER DISMISSING COMPLAINT
McMAHON, District Judge.
Pro Se Plaintiff Reginald Sonds sues St. Barnabas Correctional Health Services ("St.Barnabas"), the City of New York, the City of New York Department of Corrections, and various correction officers pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for denying him necessary medical treatment while a prisoner on Riker's Island in the City of New York. Defendants St. Barnabаs and the City of New York have moved to dismiss *307 the instant complaint. Return of service of summons and complaint were executed as to St. Barnabas, Correctional Health Services, and the City of New York on March 14, 2001.
Two separate grounds exist for dismissal of the civil rights claim asserted by plaintiff against the moving defendants, either of which is sufficient to justify granting such relief.
First, the complaint must be dismissed because the plaintiff has admitted that he failed, prior to commencing this lawsuit, to avail himself of institutional administrative procedures in order to raise his claim that he was deprived of necessary medical treatment. Decisional law makes it plain that a failure to exhaust administrative remedies, as required by the Prison Litigation Reform Act, mandates dismissal of a complaint.
Second, plaintiff fails to state a claim for relief under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, because Plaintiff's injury does not qualify as "serious" under the objective prong of the "deliberate indifference" test. Furthermore, as to defendant St. Barnabas, plaintiff fails to allege deliberate indifference, since he admits that he received medical attention from the physicians affiliated with defendant.
STATEMENT OF FACTS
The following factual allegations, drawn from the four corners of the complaint, are deemed true for purposes of evaluating this motion to dismiss.
At approximately 4:00 PM on July 11, 1998, plaintiff injured his finger in a cell door at the Rikers Island Adolescent Reception Detention Center, where he was being held. According to the complaint, skin was ripped off his finger, leaving it "bleeding, red and burning." The complaint alleges that Plaintiff filled out an injury report, and that he was allowed to go to the clinic at approximately 7:00 PM. Plaintiff was given a tetanus shot and his finger was bandaged.
The following day, July 12, plaintiff removed the bandage from his finger. The skin peeled off. Plaintiff thereafter went back to the clinic, where he received a second treatment, the nature of which is not specified.
Although it is not entirely clear, it seems that plaintiff is alleging that the defendants were deliberately indifferent to his medical needs in the following ways: a medical officer did not come to his cell immediately to treat his injury; there was a delay in taking plaintiff to the clinic; plaintiff's wound was not stitched; and plaintiff's finger was not x-rayed to ascertain whether he suffered from "internal bleeding or damages." The complaint does not contain any allegation of permanent disability due to the injury to plaintiff's finger.
CONCLUSIONS OF LAW
1. Plaintiff has not exhausted his administrative remedies.
The plaintiff admits in his complaint that, prior to instituting this lawsuit, he failed to resort to institutional administrative procedures in order to protest the fact that he was allegedly denied proper medical care. This fact compels dismissal of the complaint.
Under the Prison Litigation Reform Act ("PLRA"), an inmate is required to exhaust all available administrative remеdies before bringing suit on a federal claim. Specifically, the PLRA provides:
No action shall be brought with respect to prison conditions under section ... 1983 [of this title], or any other Federal law, by a prisoner confined in any jail, prison, or other correctional *308 facility until such administrative remedies as are available are exhausted.
42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a). As interpreted by decisional law, this statute dеmands that prisoners first challenge the conditions of their confinement through the highest level of available administrative avenues prior to filing suit. Santiago v. Meinsen,
New York State has procedures for filing grievances in each of its correctional facilities. Id. Plaintiff admits that this is so. (Compl. at II A.). Plaintiff further admits that he did not avail himself of those procedures to challenge to the purported denial of medical care to him. (Id. at II B.) Consequently, his civil rights complaint must be dismissed.
Plaintiff argues that he was not required to exhaust the available administrative remedies because he seeks only money damages. As the City points out in its reply letter, the Second Circuit has not yet ruled on whether thе PLRA's exhaustion requirement applies where a prisoner seeks only money damages and the available administrative remedies make no provision for such relief. Nussle v. Willette,
2. Even If Plaintiff Did Not have to Exhaust Administrative Remedies. The Complaint Would have to be dismissed.
Even if Sonds did not have to exhaust his administrative remedies, or if he had actually done so, his complaint would have to be dismissed for failure to state a claim on whiсh relief could be granted. Fed. R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6).
To survive a 12(b) motion, a plaintiff must allege facts that, accepted as true, make out the elements of a claim. Johnson v. A.P. Products, Ltd.,
Broad and conclusory statements, coupled with a failure to allege the facts of the alleged offending conduct, arе insufficient to state a claim. See Pang Hung Leung v. City of New York,
The basis of the plaintiff's civil rights complaint is twofold: first, that he was denied a medical treatment for his injured finger for three and one half hours because a corrections officer refused to take plaintiff in for treatment, due to the plaintiff's failure to have identification; second, that he was not given appropriate treatment. Although I must use the most liberal pleading standards because plaintiff is proceeding pro se, see Platsky v. CIA,
St. Barnabas (the only moving defendant to raise this as an alternative ground for relief) suggests two reasons why it would be entitled to dismissal for failure to state a claim. First, St. Barnabas asserts that plaintiff had not alleged an essential element of a claim against the hospital under Section 1983: namely, that St. Barnabas possessed final policymaking authority in relation to inmate health services and, with deliberate indifference to his medical needs, implemented a policy or custom that caused injury to him. Second, St. Barnabas contends that plaintiff's allegations do not, as a matter of law, rise to the level necessary to establish a violation of his Constitutional rights. Obviously, the first ground is peculiar to St. Barnabas alone, while the second ground would apply equally to the City and, indeed, to the non-moving defendаnts.
St. Barnabas is correct about the pleading deficiency concerning final policymaking authority. However, on the record before me, I could not conclude anything definitive about who actually has that authority. The question of who has final policymaking authority is a question of law. See Gordon v. County of Rockland,
However, to state a cognizable claim under 42 U.S.C. Section 1983, a plaintiff must allege conduct under color of law that deprives him or her of rights under the law and Constitution. Dwares v. City of New York,
The standard of "deliberate indifference to serious medical needs" contains two componentsone objective, one subjective. Farmer v. Brennan,
1. Objective Standard
First, there is an objective component, i.e., the alleged deprivation must be, in objective terms, sufficiently serious. Farmer,
A medical condition is deemed "serious" if it is "one that has been diagnosed by a physician as requiring treatment or one that is so obvious that a lay person would easily recognize the necessity for a doctor's attention.... The seriousness of an inmate's medical need may also be determined by reference to the еffect of denying the particular treatment." Hunt v. Uphoff,
*311 Plaintiff has failed to plead an objectively serious injury. A bleeding finger does not pose a substantial risk of serious harm. Case law holds that the objective prong of the deliberate indifference test is not satisfied even where a finger is broken. Henderson v. Doe, No. Civ.A. 98-5011,
2. Subjective Standard
The second component is a subjective оne, requiring a showing that the officials accused of the deprivation act with the requisite culpable mental state. Wilson v. Seiter,
As the Supreme Court has stated, "deliberate indifference is a stringent standard of fault." Bd. of the County Comm'rs of Bryan County, Oklahoma v. Brown,
A difference of opinion between a prisoner and prison officials regarding medical treatment does not, as a matter of law, constitute deliberate indifference. Chance v. Armstrong,
Indeed, prison officials and medical officers have wide discretion in treating prisoners, and Section 1983 is not designed to permit federal courts to interfere in the ordinary medical practices of state prisons. Church v. Hegstrom,
Here again, the complaint is deficient, because there is no allegation by the plaintiff that St. Barnabas denied him any medically-necessary treatment. To the contrary, the plaintiff alleges in the complaint that he was treated within 3½ hours of his injury, had his finger soaked in a brown colored liquid, was given a tetanus shot, and had the injury bandaged. These facts undermine any claim of deliberate indifference by St. Barnabas and demonstrate that it did not willfully disregаrd the plaintiff's medical needs. See also Henderson v. Doe, No. Civ.A. 98-5011,
Finally, to the extent that plaintiff alleges that he was not properly treated, or that he disagreed with the treatment given him by the doctors from St. Barnabas (for example, his claim that the doctors failed to x-ray his finger), that conduct does not rise to the level of a constitutional violation. Courts have repeatedly held that an omission of this nature does not amоunt to a constitutional violation, See Rivera v. SB Johnson, No. Civ.A. 95-0845,
3. As a Matter of Law, There Has Been no Excessive Force
In his response to the City's motion, plaintiff alleges, for the first time, that the injury to his finger resulted from excessive force on the part of prison officials at Rikers, and further that the defective cell door in which he cut his finger constituted a weapon. As no defendant has answered, plaintiff has an absolute right to amend his complaint, without seeking leave of Court. Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(a). However, assuming, arguendo, that plaintiff's responsive letter were deemed to assert an amendment to the complaint, the allegation would have to be dismissed.
In essence, plaintiff contends that prison officials caused him injury by having a *313 defective door in the facility. There is, however, no allegation in either the original complaint or in plaintiff's responsive letter (where he raises the spectre of excessive force) that any corrections officer laid hands on plaintiff, let alone that an officer deliberately shut the door on his finger. Thus, there exists no factual predicate for a claim of excessive force. Even in some situations where delibеrate acts are committed by a state officer to cause harm to an inmate, courts have found no excessive force. Whitley v. Albers,
CONCLUSION
The individual Corrections Officers, the Department of Corrections and "Dr. Robert" have not moved to dismiss the amended complaint. However, the court dismisses the claims against the nonmoving defendants sua sponte. The District Court may dismiss a complaint sua sponte for failure to state a claim, as long as the plaintiff has been given an opportunity to be heard. Thomas v. Scully,
For the above reasons, plaintiff's complaint is dismissed with prejudice as against all defendants. The Clerk of the Court is directed to close the casе.
NOTES
Notes
[1] 42 U.S.C. Section 1983 provides, inter alia, as follows:
Every person who, under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State or Territory or the District of Columbia, subjects, or causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States or other person within the jurisdiction thereof to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to the party injured in an action at law, suit in equity or other proper proceeding for redress...
