Quentrell Williams v. Dane Esser ( 2022 )


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  •                        NONPRECEDENTIAL DISPOSITION
    To be cited only in accordance with FED. R. APP. P. 32.1
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    Chicago, Illinois 60604
    Submitted January 18, 2022*
    Decided January 27, 2022
    Before
    DAVID F. HAMILTON, Circuit Judge
    MICHAEL B. BRENNAN, Circuit Judge
    THOMAS L. KIRSCH II, Circuit Judge
    No. 21‐2175
    QUENTRELL E. WILLIAMS,                         Appeal from the United States District
    Plaintiff‐Appellant,                       Court for the Western District of
    Wisconsin.
    v.                                       No. 18‐cv‐1008‐wmc
    DANE ESSER, et al.,                            William M. Conley,
    Defendants‐Appellees.                      Judge.
    ORDER
    Quentrell Williams’s tendency toward self‐harm led prison staff to use force
    against him on four occasions. Williams sued, arguing that each use of force was
    malicious and thus violated his rights under the Eighth Amendment. The district court
    entered summary judgment on the claims about each incident. We affirm in large part,
    *  We have agreed to decide the case without oral argument because the briefs and
    record adequately present the facts and legal arguments, and oral argument would not
    significantly aid the court. FED. R. APP. P. 34(a)(2)(C).
    No. 21‐2175                                                                       Page 2
    but conclude that, regarding the third incident, a jury could find that a guard
    maliciously used a Taser on an already fully restrained and compliant Williams. We
    vacate on that claim only and remand for further proceedings.
    Background
    Unless otherwise noted, we present the facts from the record in the light most
    favorable to Williams, the non‐movant, as we must do when reviewing a summary
    judgment. See Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 
    477 U.S. 242
    , 255 (1986). Williams is
    asthmatic; his medical file warns that pepper spray or other incapacitating airborne
    agents may harm him. All four interactions in this suit occurred in 2013 at the
    Wisconsin Secure Program Facility in Boscobel, Wisconsin when prison staff used force,
    including pepper spray, other airborne incapacitating agents, and a Taser, on Williams.
    The first incident, on March 3, occurred when Williams was under observation
    because of his risk of self‐harm. A guard gave Williams a glass bottle with nasal spray
    in it. Williams broke the bottle and began chewing the glass. (The district court allowed
    Williams to proceed to trial on his claim that, when this guard gave Williams the glass,
    the guard deliberately ignored the serious risk it posed to his health; that claim later
    settled and is not part of this appeal.) Upon learning what Williams was doing, Dane
    Esser, a prison lieutenant, ordered Williams to spit out the glass. When Williams
    refused, Esser misted him with pepper spray, knowing (according to Williams) of his
    sensitivity to it. Williams stopped chewing the glass and allowed himself to be
    restrained. Williams was then removed from his cell, examined by a nurse, allowed to
    shower off the residual spray, and strip searched.
    The second incident occurred on May 25, when Williams covered his cell’s
    window and camera with feces. Esser went to check on him and ordered him to remove
    the covering, but Williams was asleep and did not answer. Unable to see Williams or
    verify that he was not harming himself, Esser warned that if Williams continued not
    complying, he would use spray. Receiving no response, Esser shot one burst of spray.
    Still receiving no response, Esser shot a second burst. After the second burst Williams
    came to the cell door to allow himself to be restrained. A nurse then treated Williams by
    administering an inhaler and then clearing him to return to his cell. When Williams was
    still having trouble breathing, anther nurse provided a nebulizer treatment.
    The third incident, which involved the Taser, occurred in June. Williams had
    covered his cell’s front window, this time with a lunch tray. Esser, who came to talk to
    Williams, could see Williams through a plexiglass door. Williams assured Esser that he
    No. 21‐2175                                                                         Page 3
    was not harming himself. Esser, however, says that he saw something in Williams’s
    mouth. He therefore assembled a cell‐extraction team, which entered the cell, restrained
    Williams at his wrists and ankles, and removed him from his cell to be strip searched.
    During the strip search, Williams was naked, restrained at his wrists and ankles,
    and on his knees. Esser ordered Williams to open his mouth so that “staff could look
    into it” to check for contraband. Williams swears that he opened his mouth as directed.
    (Esser disputes Williams’s sworn statement, but at the summary‐judgment stage we
    accept Williams’s account.) After Williams opened his mouth for the search, team
    members applied pressure to his jaw. Esser then used his Taser on Williams. Esser first
    tested the device to ensure that it worked. Then Esser shocked Williams on his chest.
    Esser performed a “Drive” stun—using the Taser without its probe and without any
    neuromuscular incapacitation—on Williams’ right upper pectoral area for
    approximately 2 to 3 seconds. Nothing was found in Williams’s mouth. Williams asked
    to see a nurse, but because he had no observed injuries, he did not see one.
    The fourth incident occurred just a few days later. After receiving word that
    Williams might be harming himself, Esser went to Williams’s cell and saw Williams
    with an object that might be a rope around his neck. Esser ordered him to remove it, but
    Williams pulled it tighter. Believing that he needed to act quickly, Esser deployed
    escalating levels of force. First, he fired pepper‐spray‐like foam into Williams’s cell and
    then pepper‐spray‐like mist. Williams fell to the floor, he says, fading in and out of
    consciousness. But he kept his arms near his neck and continued to defy Esser’s orders
    to desist. Esser then fired a pepper ball, a projectile that bursts on impact and releases
    an incapacitating inhalant. Williams yelled at Esser and continued to disobey orders to
    remove the object from his neck. Esser then fired pepper balls at Williams’s body, still
    prone, after which Williams finally approached the cell door to be restrained. Williams
    was then seen by a nurse and was later medically cleared to return to his cell.
    Williams sued prison officials for violating his Eighth Amendment rights,
    alleging that Esser’s use of force on all four occasions was malicious and that the other
    defendants failed to intervene or deliberately ignored his serious medical needs. The
    district court ruled that no reasonable jury could find in favor of Williams. It explained
    that Esser used reasonable force to prevent Williams from harming himself, the other
    defendants thus had no duty to intervene, and they did not ignore Williams’s medical
    needs. Williams challenges these rulings on appeal.
    No. 21‐2175                                                                         Page 4
    Discussion
    We first address the third incident. Williams argues that the district court
    improperly resolved a factual dispute in Esser’s favor. In his view, the court should
    have allowed a jury to decide whether to credit his account that while restrained he
    compliantly opened his mouth before Esser needlessly and therefore maliciously
    shocked him in the chest with a Taser. A use of force violates the Eighth Amendment if
    applied “maliciously or sadistically for the very purpose of causing harm.”
    See Whitley v. Albers, 
    475 U.S. 312
    , 320–21 (1986). Whether a guard applied force
    maliciously turns on factors including the threat reasonably perceived by the guard, the
    need for and amount of force used, efforts made to temper the severity of force used,
    and the harm suffered by the prisoner. See 
    id.
     at 320–21; Lewis v. Downey, 
    581 F.3d 467
    ,
    477 (7th Cir. 2009).
    Under these factors, a reasonable jury could find that Esser maliciously used the
    Taser. Williams was restrained at his wrists and ankles, naked, and on his knees when
    Esser shocked him. Although ensuring compliance with orders can justify force, Hudson
    v. McMillian, 
    503 U.S. 1
    , 6–7 (1992), after guards had restrained Williams, stripped him,
    and forced him to the floor, according to Williams’s sworn statement, he complied by
    opening his mouth as ordered and permitting the search. A jury could therefore
    reasonably conclude that when Esser electrocuted Williams’s chest with the Taser after
    Williams was restrained and compliant, Esser acted maliciously. And even if the Taser
    did not yield lasting injury, it can cause “intense pain,” Abbot v. Sangamon County, Ill.,
    
    705 F.3d 706
    , 726 (7th Cir. 2013), and “pain, not injury,” is a measure of Eighth
    Amendment harm. Lewis, 
    581 F.3d at
    475 (citing Hudson, 
    503 U.S. at 9
    ).
    We recognize that Esser disputes that Williams opened his mouth before he used
    the Taser, but a jury must resolve whether Esser or Williams is telling the truth about
    compliance; the question cannot be resolved at summary judgment. See Lewis, 
    581 F.3d at 478
    . Esser responds that he is nonetheless entitled to qualified immunity. But if a jury
    credits Williams’s account that Esser needlessly jolted him with a Taser while he was
    docile and compliant, qualified immunity may not be appropriate. See 
    id. at 479
    . We
    warn, however, that a litigant who has lied in a sworn statement to secure relief or to
    defeat an appeal may face severe sanctions. See Rivera v. Drake, 
    767 F.3d 685
    , 686–87 (7th
    Cir. 2014).
    For the other three incidents, the district court properly ruled that no reasonable
    jury could find that Esser’s use of force violated Williams’s rights under the Eighth
    No. 21‐2175                                                                            Page 5
    Amendment. The record indisputably shows that, on each occasion, Esser reasonably
    used force to prevent Williams from harming himself. See Whitley, 
    475 U.S. at 319
    .
    For the first incident, Williams argues that it was malicious for Esser to mist him
    with pepper spray when Esser knew that he was sensitive to it. But Williams does not
    dispute that, despite Esser’s command to cease chewing glass, Williams continued to do
    so, thereby endangering himself and necessitating further action. And given the
    presence of glass shards, which Williams could use to harm others, Esser reasonably
    believed that he needed to avoid physically engaging with an unrestrained Williams;
    misting him with the spray was therefore permissible. Esser stopped misting Williams
    once he ceased chewing and allowed himself to be restrained. Based on these facts, no
    reasonable jury could find that Esser used force maliciously.
    Regarding the second incident, Williams argues that it was malicious for Esser to
    spray him twice while he was sleeping. But Williams does not dispute that, because he
    had covered his windows and camera, guards who were assigned to observe him for
    self‐harm could not see him. Nor does he dispute that, both before and after the first
    spraying, he did not respond to Esser to allay concerns that Williams might be harming
    himself. Thus, no jury could find that the first or second spray inflicted harm
    unreasonably; rather the sprayings allowed the guards to attempt to prevent serious
    harm without endangering themselves.
    For the fourth incident, Williams argues that Esser was malicious because he
    used escalating force while Williams was fading in and out of consciousness. But it is
    undisputed that, while he was in this state, Williams kept his arms up by his neck,
    which had something tied around it, defied an order to move them away, and yelled
    back at Esser who was commanding him to do so. Thus, Esser reasonably perceived
    that Williams was refusing to cease strangling himself. Given Esser’s perception, a
    reasonable jury could not find that he used force maliciously.
    We can readily dispatch Williams’s remaining arguments. First, he contends that
    the district court incorrectly entered summary judgment for the other defendants on his
    claim that they had a duty under the Eighth Amendment to intervene and prevent
    Esser’s use of spray. But given that his force was lawful, these claims fail. Harper v.
    Albert, 
    400 F.3d 1052
    , 1064 (7th Cir. 2005) (no failure to intervene claim if force is lawful).
    Second, he contends that these defendants were deliberately indifferent to his medical
    needs. But he does not present any evidence that these defendants knew that Williams
    had unmet medical needs as a result of the use of force or that they refused his requests
    for treatment. To the contrary, after each incident that aggravated his asthma, he was
    No. 21‐2175                                                                        Page 6
    brought to a nurse and medically cleared. Finally, Williams also argues that the district
    court erred in not recruiting counsel and an expert witness for him. But he gives us no
    persuasive reason to believe that counsel would have made a difference on the claims
    that properly ended at summary judgment. Pruitt v. Mote, 
    503 F.3d 647
    , 659 (7th Cir.
    2007). These claims depended solely on lay testimony and records readily available to
    Williams. And because Williams’s claims turn mainly on lay questions of historical fact
    and subjective motivation, no expert testimony was needed to resolve them.
    AFFIRMED in part, VACATED in part, and REMANDED for further proceedings.