Anita Baker-Schneider v. Benny Napoleon ( 2019 )


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  •                   NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
    File Name: 19a0195n.06
    Case No. 18-1604
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
    FILED
    Apr 16, 2019
    ANITA PATRICIA BAKER-SCHNEIDER,           )                            DEBORAH S. HUNT, Clerk
    as Personal Representative of the Estate of
    )
    Michael Edward Schneider,                 )
    Plaintiff-Appellee,               )             ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED
    )             STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR
    v.                                        )             THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF
    )             MICHIGAN
    BENNY N. NAPOLEON, et al.,                )
    Defendants,                       )                         OPINION
    )
    NAYEEM HUQ and FARHAN HUQ, as )
    Personal Representatives of the Estate of )
    Rubab Huq,                                )
    Defendants-Appellants.            )
    )
    BEFORE: BATCHELDER, McKEAGUE, and NALBANDIAN, Circuit Judges.
    NALBANDIAN, Circuit Judge. After Michael Schneider committed suicide at a Michigan
    jail while he was awaiting a pretrial hearing, his personal representative, Anita Patricia Baker-
    Schneider, sued several jail officials and government entities under federal and Michigan law.
    This appeal involves only one of those defendants, Rubab Huq, M.D., the on-duty physician who
    examined Schneider when he arrived at the jail.1 The crux of this appeal is whether Huq acted
    with deliberate indifference to Schneider’s psychological needs by releasing Schneider into the
    general jail population without first treating Schneider’s mental illness. Because the record
    contains no evidence that Schneider disclosed his underlying mental illness to Huq—much less
    1
    Huq died while this appeal was pending. Baker-Schneider filed a motion to substitute Huq’s
    personal representatives, Nayeem Huq and Farhan Huq, in place of Huq, which this court granted.
    Case No. 18-1604, Baker-Schneider v. Napoleon, et al.
    that he expressed suicidal thoughts to Huq—we conclude that Huq did not act with deliberate
    indifference in violation of Schneider’s constitutional rights. Thus, we REVERSE the district
    court’s denial of qualified immunity to Huq.
    I.
    On November 6, 2014, a state court judge arraigned Michael Schneider on a misdemeanor
    domestic violence charge and ordered him held without bond until his November 18, 2014, pretrial
    hearing.   The following morning, police officers transported Schneider to Wayne County,
    Michigan’s William Dickerson Detention Facility (“Dickerson”).          Shortly after his arrival,
    Schneider met with several medical professionals, beginning with medical assistant Cathryn
    Storey. Storey asked Schneider a series of questions about his medical history, medications, and
    drug and alcohol use and then uploaded Schneider’s answers to an online intake form. By his own
    account, Schneider was in poor physical health: he informed Storey that he had diabetes and
    Hepatitis C and had recently fractured a rib, causing chest pain and shortness of breath. A regular
    heroin user, Schneider also reported diarrhea and hearing voices—both symptoms of withdrawal.
    Schneider also described his mental health conditions, including bipolar disorder—for
    which he was taking prescription medication—and a history of self-cutting. Indeed, Schneider
    acknowledged that he had attempted suicide, although further details about that attempt, including
    the date, are unknown. Schneider denied having present thoughts of suicide, and Storey noted that
    Schneider was not crying or acting in a strange or unusual manner and showed no signs of anxiety,
    depression, or shame. But Storey noticed that Schneider had cuts on both of his hands, and
    Schneider acknowledged that the injuries were self-inflicted. So Storey referred Schneider to a
    psychiatrist for a follow-up examination at a later date.
    2
    Case No. 18-1604, Baker-Schneider v. Napoleon, et al.
    Around noon, Schneider visited Dickerson’s medical clinic and met with registered nurse
    Mildred Neal, who collected additional information from Schneider. In her examination notes,
    Neal wrote that Schneider had suffered from hypertension for more than twenty years and had also
    been diagnosed with prostate cancer. Schneider told Neal that he was taking Hydrocodone for
    back pain but that he did not recall the names of his other medications or the name of his pharmacy.
    After testing Schneider’s blood sugar levels, Neal sent Schneider to the medical doctor on duty in
    the clinic, Defendant-Appellant Rubab Huq, M.D.
    Huq began the examination just after 1:30 p.m. by palpating Schneider’s ribcage. Although
    Schneider did not report pain, Huq still ordered a chest x-ray. Huq collected still more medical
    history from Schneider, including that he had undergone a prostatectomy two years earlier. She
    also noted that Schneider was crying off and on during her examination and that Schneider
    complained of diarrhea and skin crawling. Thus, Huq placed Schneider on a heroin withdrawal
    regimen, prescribing Catapres, Benadryl, and Imodium. Schneider received his first doses of those
    medicines that afternoon while he was in the clinic. And finally, Huq ordered regular blood sugar
    testing to monitor Schneider’s diabetes.
    Much of this appeal concerns Huq’s knowledge of Schneider’s underlying mental health
    conditions. Although Huq possessed Neal’s assessment of Schneider as she conducted the
    examination, Huq had not yet read Schneider’s responses to the questions that Storey asked from
    the intake form. In her deposition testimony, Huq stated that because she examined Schneider
    soon after he arrived at Dickerson and met with Storey, she did not have the intake form in front
    of her during the examination, as is normally the case. Huq conceded, however, that she could
    have accessed the intake form electronically because Storey recorded Schneider’s answers online
    contemporaneously.
    3
    Case No. 18-1604, Baker-Schneider v. Napoleon, et al.
    In any event, Huq testified that she did not know about Schneider’s mental health
    conditions, including that he had been psychiatrically hospitalized, took psychiatric medication,
    and had attempted suicide. According to Huq, Schneider said “[n]othing whatsoever” about any
    mental health issues. (R. 40-4, Huq Dep. at 27:17.) That is not to say that Huq skirted over the
    issue during her examination of Schneider: Huq insisted that she followed protocol by asking
    Schneider about his mental health but that Schneider “did not voice anything,” (Id. at 34:4), and
    that “[n]othing remotely made me think that this guy has issues with mental health . . . .” (Id. at
    34:1-2.) And Huq testified that even if she had reviewed Schneider’s responses to the intake form,
    she would not have treated Schneider differently.
    With his medical screening complete, Schneider entered the general jail population. The
    next morning, he visited the medical clinic, where nurse Brenda Williams tested his blood sugar
    levels. Although Williams stated in an affidavit that she had no independent recollection of
    Schneider’s visit, she consulted her records and found no indication that Schneider mentioned
    suicide. Williams remarked that she “would have documented [such information] in the record
    and immediately contacted the charge nurse for a mental health referral” had Schneider expressed
    suicidal thoughts. (R. 32-13, Williams Aff. at 2.)
    Around 1:00 p.m. on November 8—about twenty-four hours after Huq’s examination of
    Schneider—a jail guard passed the shower unit and observed someone sitting behind the door of
    the shower but without the water running. This prompted the guard to open the shower door,
    where he found Schneider hanging from a sheet. With assistance from two inmates, the guard
    removed the sheet from Schneider’s neck and began to resuscitate him. Paramedics soon arrived
    and transported Schneider to Detroit Receiving Hospital, but he died three days later.
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    Case No. 18-1604, Baker-Schneider v. Napoleon, et al.
    Anita Patricia Baker-Schneider, who represents Schneider’s estate, alleges a mix of claims
    under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
     and Michigan law against Huq, several other jail officials, Wayne County,
    Michigan, and the Wayne County Sheriff’s Department. The district court granted the defendants’
    motion for summary judgment on all claims as to all defendants, except for the § 1983 claim
    against Huq. The court denied Huq’s qualified immunity defense, holding that a factual dispute
    remained on whether Huq violated Schneider’s constitutional rights. Huq has appealed that
    decision.
    II.
    We first address our jurisdiction to hear this case. The denial of a motion for summary
    judgment is ordinarily not appealable because that decision “presents neither a final appealable
    order nor an appealable interlocutory order.” Floyd v. City of Detroit, 
    518 F.3d 398
    , 404 (6th Cir.
    2008) (citation omitted). But there is an exception to that rule in the qualified immunity context.
    We have jurisdiction to hear an appeal when a district court denies qualified immunity if the appeal
    “presents a question of law and does not require us to resolve disputes of material facts.” Jefferson
    v. Lewis, 
    594 F.3d 454
    , 459 (6th Cir. 2010) (citation omitted). Here, both parties have stipulated
    to the district court’s factual findings, leaving only questions of law for this court to resolve.
    Accordingly, we exercise our jurisdiction to hear this appeal, and we review the district court’s
    legal conclusions de novo. Brown v. Chapman, 
    814 F.3d 447
    , 464 (6th Cir. 2016).
    III.
    Because Huq has asserted qualified immunity as a defense, we must resolve two questions:
    (1) did she violate Schneider’s constitutional rights; and (2) if so, was the constitutional right
    clearly established when the violation occurred? Bays v. Montmorency Cty., 
    874 F.3d 264
    , 268
    (6th Cir. 2017) (citing Pearson v. Callahan, 
    555 U.S. 223
    , 232 (2009)).
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    Case No. 18-1604, Baker-Schneider v. Napoleon, et al.
    To answer the first question, we must determine what rights a pretrial detainee possesses—
    and whether Huq violated those rights. The Supreme Court has held that a prison official violates
    the Eighth Amendment when he acts with “deliberate indifference” to an inmate’s “serious medical
    needs.” Estelle v. Gamble, 
    429 U.S. 97
    , 104 (1976). Of course, Schneider was a pretrial detainee,
    not a prisoner, but that distinction is immaterial here because the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due
    Process Clause extends the same protections to pretrial detainees as the Eighth Amendment does
    to prisoners. Richko v. Wayne Cty., 
    819 F.3d 907
    , 915 (6th Cir. 2016).
    A claim of deliberate indifference under the Eighth Amendment has two components—
    one objective, the other subjective. Broughton v. Premier Health Care Servs., Inc., 656 F. App’x
    54, 56 (6th Cir. 2016) (citing Farmer v. Brennan, 
    511 U.S. 825
    , 834 (1994)). Under the objective
    component, the plaintiff must “allege that the medical need at issue is ‘sufficiently serious.’”
    Comstock v. McCrary, 
    273 F.3d 693
    , 702 (6th Cir. 2001) (quoting Farmer, 
    511 U.S. at 834
    ). The
    parties do not dispute that element of the claim, and we have repeatedly held that a prisoner’s
    psychological needs are sufficiently serious, especially when the prisoner is suicidal. See, e.g.,
    Comstock, 
    273 F.3d at
    703–04; Horn v. Madison Cty. Fiscal Ct., 
    22 F.3d 653
    , 660 (6th Cir. 1994).
    Instead, this appeal turns on the subjective component: here, whether Huq “subjectively perceived
    facts from which to infer substantial risk to [Schneider], that [she] did in fact draw that inference,
    and that [she] then disregarded that risk.” Comstock, 
    273 F.3d at
    703 (citing Farmer, 
    511 U.S. at 837
    ). Mere negligence does not rise to the level of a constitutional violation. Comstock, 
    273 F.3d at 703
    . Instead, the plaintiff must show that the prison official recklessly disregarded a known
    risk. 
    Id.
    The core of Baker-Schneider’s argument is threefold: (1) Huq directly examined
    Schneider; (2) Huq ignored Schneider’s significant psychological needs, including his heightened
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    Case No. 18-1604, Baker-Schneider v. Napoleon, et al.
    risk of suicide; and (3) Huq released Schneider into the general inmate population. Baker-
    Schneider argues that before releasing Schneider, Huq could have placed him in a secure
    environment with greater safeguards against inmate suicide, warned jail guards about his
    condition, or referred him to a psychiatrist for immediate treatment.
    The district court denied Huq’s qualified immunity defense because “reasonable minds
    could differ as to whether Huq’s failure to review [Schneider’s responses to the intake form]
    amounted to deliberate indifference,” noting that “it is a jury question as to whether Huq recklessly
    disregarded available information evidencing Schneider’s risk of suicide.” (R. 41, Order at 23.)
    But that holding, if applied broadly, would treat medical malpractice as a constitutional tort. That
    cannot be. See, e.g., Comstock, 
    273 F.3d at 703
    . Huq’s liability does not hinge on whether she
    should have logged onto her computer to review Schneider’s responses to the intake form. Rather,
    our inquiry considers Huq’s actions given the knowledge she possessed when she examined
    Schneider. Indeed, this is “not an objective test or [based on] collective knowledge.” Gray v. City
    of Detroit, 
    399 F.3d 612
    , 616 (6th Cir. 2005) (internal quotation marks omitted). We must
    determine “whether [Huq] recognized that [Schneider] was suffering from a serious mental illness
    creating a host of risks and requiring immediate treatment . . . .” Bays, 874 F.3d at 269 (citing
    Blackmore v. Kalamazoo Cty., 
    390 F.3d 890
    , 899 (6th Cir. 2004)).
    At the outset, we note that when a prison official renders medical treatment, constitutional
    liability attaches “only if the treatment is ‘so cursory as to amount to a conscious disregard for [the
    inmate’s] needs.’” Bays, 874 F.3d at 269 (quoting Rouster v. Cty. of Saginaw, 
    749 F.3d 437
    , 448
    (6th Cir. 2014)) (alterations in original). And in cases of suicide, the bar for establishing liability
    is even higher. Because suicide is a “difficult event to predict and prevent and often occurs without
    warning,” it cannot be the case that a prison doctor is liable any time an inmate under his care
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    Case No. 18-1604, Baker-Schneider v. Napoleon, et al.
    commits suicide. Gray, 
    399 F.3d at 616
    . Instead, liability attaches only when the decedent
    “showed a strong likelihood that he would attempt to take his own life in such a manner that failure
    to take adequate precautions amounted to deliberate indifference to the decedent’s serious medical
    needs.” Barber v. City of Salem, 
    953 F.2d 232
    , 240 (6th Cir. 1992). Here, the record shows that
    Huq rendered medical care. Indeed, she palpated Schneider’s ribs, ordered a chest x-ray and
    routine blood sugar testing, and placed Schneider on a medication regimen to lessen his heroin
    withdrawal symptoms.      The question, then, is whether Schneider showed to Huq a strong
    likelihood that he would commit suicide—and whether Huq recklessly disregarded that risk.
    The record contains no evidence to suggest that Huq knew of Schneider’s poor mental
    condition—much less that Huq recognized that he was suicidal and consciously disregarded his
    condition. To the contrary, Huq testified that she asked about Schneider’s mental health and that
    Schneider said “[n]othing whatsoever” suggesting that he was suicidal or otherwise suffering from
    mental illness. Nor did Schneider confide in Huq about his prior suicide attempts, bipolar disorder
    diagnosis, use of medication to treat his bipolar disorder, or history of self-harm. The only
    evidence that could have possibly alerted Huq to Schneider’s condition was the fact that Schneider
    cried intermittently during the examination. But that fact alone does not suggest a “strong
    likelihood” that Schneider would later commit suicide, particularly when placed in context:
    Schneider knew that he would have to spend the next eleven days in jail before his pretrial hearing,
    and worse yet, he was withdrawing from heroin, which he had used daily.
    Baker-Schneider argues that Bays supports affirming the district court’s decision, but we
    find that comparison inapt. There, the inmate repeatedly sought medical attention from the jail
    nurse, described himself as “bipolar,” “paranoid,” and “angry,” and later warned that he was
    “becoming a personal disaster.” Bays, 874 F.3d at 267. The jail nurse scheduled Bays for an
    8
    Case No. 18-1604, Baker-Schneider v. Napoleon, et al.
    appointment at a mental health center some three weeks later, turning down the center’s offer of
    an earlier appointment because “a deputy would be on vacation during the offered time and
    transporting [Bays] would be more difficult than usual.” Id. (internal quotation marks and
    alterations omitted). Meanwhile, Bays’s condition continued to deteriorate—which he reported to
    jail officials—and he ultimately hanged himself without ever receiving psychiatric treatment. Id.
    While both Bays and Schneider committed suicide as they awaited their next court date, the
    similarities between the cases end there. Bays fully disclosed his mental illness to medical
    professionals at the jail—and, indeed, repeatedly sought treatment—yet Schneider neither
    disclosed his history of mental illness to Huq nor requested assistance from Huq.
    Baker-Schneider also alleges that Huq sought to “remain blissfully ignorant” to
    Schneider’s mental health. (Appellee Br. at 25.) But this argument is similarly unavailing. For
    one, Huq attests that she examined Schneider and asked him about his mental health, undermining
    the assertion that Huq deliberately ignored Schneider’s condition. And the cases Baker-Schneider
    cites on this point—all from outside this circuit—do not advance her argument. In Leavitt v.
    Correctional Medical Services, Inc., for example, the First Circuit overturned the district court’s
    conferral of qualified immunity to a physician assistant who treated an HIV-positive inmate. 
    645 F.3d 484
     (1st Cir. 2011). There, the inmate disclosed his medical history and requested antiviral
    medications to prevent the progression of his condition. 
    Id. at 489
    . In turn, the physician assistant
    ordered a battery of blood tests to best determine which antiviral medication to prescribe—but
    then never reviewed those tests nor followed up with the inmate. 
    Id. at 490
    . But that case
    ultimately turned on a factual dispute over whether the physician assistant told the inmate that the
    jail lacked the financial resources to pay for antiviral medication, even if the inmate needed that
    medication. The First Circuit noted that the district court was “too quick to decide that [the
    9
    Case No. 18-1604, Baker-Schneider v. Napoleon, et al.
    physician assistant’s] version was credible and [the inmate’s] not,” and that the “genuine and
    material dispute ought to be resolved by a jury.” 
    Id.
     at 499–500. By contrast, we need not make
    credibility determinations to conclude here that Huq did not violate Schneider’s constitutional
    rights.
    Because the record contains no evidence that Schneider showed before Huq a strong
    likelihood that he would commit suicide, nor evidence that Huq disregarded that risk, we conclude
    as a matter of law that Huq is entitled to qualified immunity.
    IV.
    We REVERSE the district court’s denial of qualified immunity as to Rubab Huq, M.D.
    10