On October 8, 1997, DuPage County Deputy Sheriffs Howard Keltner and Yo-shida Williams arrested Vickie Chapman, who was dressed in a fuchsia bathrobe and slippers, pursuant to a warrant upon her discharge from Good Samaritan Hospital in Downers Grove, Illinois. Chapman had been hospitalized for about five days, recovering from bowel resection surgery, which entailed making a nine-inch incision across her lower abdomen and pelvic area. Prior to her discharge, Dr. Bruce Dillon gave her instructions. During this conversation, Chapman asked if she could take .the two stairs leading to the front door of her house. She says that Dr. Dillon okayed it so long as she took them “one at a time.” Dr. Dillon does not specifically recall giving Chapman this instruсtion, but says that he probably would have. The only instruction written on the discharge record, however, was “no heavy lifting.”
Once inside the hospital, Keltner and Williams showed the nurse the arrest warrant. The nurse asked about the conditions at the jail infirmary, аnd called the infirmary nurse to inquire further. The nurse then told the officers that Chapman could be taken to jail without any problems. Chapman was arrested and handcuffed with her hands in front of her body. Keltner and Williams escorted her to a van, one of the types of vehicles authorized by the DuPage County Sheriffs Office, along with squad cars, to transport prisoners. As the van door was opened, Chapman refused to get in because her incision might rip open and said, “the step is too high, the dоctor told me not to take stairs except one at a time.” Keltner told her that she had to go to jail in the van. Chapman asked if she could slide into the van backwards and sit on the floor. Kelt-ner said no because she had to sit in the seаt. Keltner decided that he and Williams would assist Chapman into the van, with one on each side for support. As Chapman stepped up, the incision opened and began to bleed. During the drive to *845 jail, Chapman cried and trembled, and although Kеltner commented on her crying, Chapman did not reveal what had happened. Upon arriving at the jail, the officers similarly assisted her out of the van. Chapman was processed and attended court. Her husband posted the bond depоsit. Chapman left jail with her husband and headed to the emergency room at Hinsdale Hospital. Her incision had separated one centimeter and, according to her expert, caused a hernia.
Chapman filed a three-cоunt complaint. Count One, brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, claimed a Fourteenth Amendment violation in that the officers were deliberately indifferent to her serious medical needs. Count Two, also arising under § 1983, stated a Fourth Amendment violation in that the officers used excessive force during her arrest. Count Three stated, in pertinent part, a claim against the officers for willful and wanton conduct under Illinois law. Keltner and Williams moved for summary judgment, which was granted in their favor on all three counts. In so granting, the district cоurt determined that Chapman’s allegations were “not fully supported by the evidence obtained through discovery.” Chapman appealed.
We review a grant of summary judgment de novo, construing all facts and drawing all reasonable inferences from the record in the light most favоrable to the nonmovant. Summary judgment is proper when the record reveals no genuine issue of material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). The meat of Chapman’s appeal is that by requiring her to step up into the van, which was more than twice as high as an ordinary stair, after she told the officers that the step was too high and that her doctor instructed her not to take stairs except one at a time, the officers (1) were deliberately indifferent to her serious medical needs by intentionally interfering with her prescribed treatment, (2) used excessive force dining her arrest, and (3) were willful and wanton by showing a conscious disregard for or an utter indifference to her safety. We affirm the district court’s decision as to each claim.
I. Count I: Fourteenth Amendment— Deliberate Indifference
The Eighth Amendment protects prisoners from deliberate indifference to a serious injury or medical need. See
Zentmyer v. Kendall County,
Chapman relies on
Martin v. Board of County Comm’rs,
Further, even if the doctor had totally prohibited Chapman from stair climbing, there is no evidence that the officers were aware of this blanket ban. True, Chapman told the police of her doctoris orders when she said, “the step is too high, the doctor told me not to take the stairs except one at a time.” However, this statement did not convey to the officers that she had to avoid steps altogether. The district court correctly reasoned:
The difference between the allegations in Chapman’s complaint and the actual evidence is critical on this point. If defendants were infonned that a physician instructed Chapman not to climb any stairs, that is a far different matter than if they were infonned that a physiciаn told Chapman to take stairs one at a time. Requiring Chapman to climb into the van represents a clear disregard of the former, but only a potentially negligent interpretation of the latter. If defendants knew that Chapman was permittеd to climb stairs under limited circumstances, they may have believed that assisting her into the van would be permissible under the physician’s instructions.
The officers heeded the doctor’s directive, precisely as Chapman told them, by requiring Chapman to take only one step. Chapman though makes much of the fact that the step into the van was twice the height of an ordinary stair, arguing that the officers disregarded her doctor’s orders by making her essentially take two steps. This is of no matter since the officers heeded Chapman’s protestation that the step was too high in assisting her into the van by supporting her weight on each side.
We agree with the district court that the officers requiring Chapman to step up so high, even with their assistance, may well constitute some form of negligence, but it does not constitute deliberate indifference. If the officers were aware that Chapman was prohibited from climbing all stairs, disregarded this and required her to step into the van, then pеrhaps the officers’ conduct would constitute deliberate indifference.
See Zentmyer,
The district court also found that the officers were not deliberately indifferent because there is no evidence that the officers knew or reasonably should have known that Chapman’s incision had opened. Chapman did not tell the officers and there was no evidence that the officers saw any blood. The court reаsoned that *847 the officers could have reasonably believed that her sobbing and shaking were “natural responses to being placed under arrest,” and not a sign that she needed medical attention. On appeal Chapman does nоt raise the question of whether the officers were deliberately indifferent after her incision had opened; rather, she focuses solely on the officers requiring her to step into the van. Since her appellate brief does not аrgue that the officers’ failure to get her medical attention violated the Fourteenth Amendment, we do not address the issue.
II. Count II: Fourth Amendment— Excessive Force
The Fourth Amendment protects citizens against the use of excessive force during an arrest.
See Graham v. Connor,
III. Count III: Illinois Law — Willful and Wanton Conduct
Conduct is willful and wanton under Illinois law if it constitutes “a course of action which shows an actual or deliberate intention to cause harm or which, if not intentional, shows an utter indifference to or conscious disregard for the safety of others оr their property.” 745 ILCS 10/1—210. Illinois recognizes that negligence and willful and wanton conduct are different,
see Burke v. 12 Rothschild’s Liquor Mart, Inc.,
