Gibson v. Moskowitz
Full Opinion (html_with_citations)
OPINION
Ozy Vaughn, a mentally disabled inmate, died from severe dehydration after being held for several days in a 90 to 100 degree observation room. A jury determined that Dr. David Moskowitzâs deliberate indifference and medical malpractice caused Vaughnâs death and awarded his estate $2 million in compensatory damages (later reduced to $1.5 million) and $3 million in punitive damages. We affirm in part and reverse in part.
I.
On Friday, January 25, 2002, Vaughn, an inmate in the Riverside Correctional Facility in Ionia, Michigan, began acting strangely. Concerned about his behavior, prison officials moved him from his prison cell to an observation room in the Residential Treatment Program of the Ionia facility. Each inmate placed in an observation room is looked after by a âtreatment team,â which includes a psychiatrist, team of nurses and other trained personnel. For reasons that the record does not fully explain, the temperature in the observation room exceeded 90 degrees (even *661 though it was January in Michigan and even though heating a prison is not cheap, whether in 2002 or today).
After moving Vaughn to the observation room, prison officials placed Dr. David Moskowitz, a psychiatrist, on Vaughnâs treatment team. That Friday, Moskowitz met with Vaughn, assessed his condition and proposed treatment â psychiatric medication and observation â to help Vaughn through the weekend.
When Moskowitz returned to work on Monday, he learned that Vaughnâs condition had worsened. Although Moskowitz left open the possibility that Vaughn might have a âheat problem,â JA 1256, his plan on Monday morning was to âkeep observing Mr. Vaughnâ and to give the medication â[a] little bit more time to work,â JA 1302.
Vaughnâs condition continued to deteriorate on Monday. At 12:30 p.m., Paul Foster, a prison guard, reported to the treatment team that Vaughn vomited in the bathroom after trying to drink a large amount of water from the bathroom sink. By Monday afternoon, Vaughnâs room had reached 96 degrees. At the end of his Monday shift, Moskowitz concluded that âwith cool temperature and more fluids [Vaughn] could be taken care of and ... the dehydration could be prevented.â JA 1308. Moskowitzâs plan was to give the medication still more time to work, to transfer Vaughn to a cooler room and eventually to move Vaughn to a psychiatric hospital. Moskowitz âdidnât feel that [Vaughnâs] status was life threatening.â Id.
He was wrong. Vaughn never reached the psychiatric hospital, and by the time he made it to a cooler room on Monday evening his condition had taken yet another turn for the worse. Vaughn began vomiting and dry-heaving, both of which continued into the night until he died from dehydration early Tuesday morning.
Antoinette Gibson, the representative of Vaughnâs estate, filed this § 1983 action against Moskowitz and 22 other defendants, alleging deliberate indifference in violation of the Eighth (and Fourteenth) Amendment and raising several state law claims. Before trial, the district court dismissed seven defendants. The remaining defendants asserted qualified immunity, which the district court denied â save for Nurse Jill Blankstrom, as to whom it granted qualified immunity on the deliberate indifference claims. The estate settled its claims against the remaining defendants, with the exception of Moskowitz, for $600,000. The estate took its claims against Moskowitz to trial, and the jury returned a verdict against Moskowitz on the § 1983 and the state law claims, awarding Gibson $2 million in compensatory damages, later reduced by $500,000 to account for settlements with the other defendants, and $3 million in punitive damages.
II.
A.
Moskowitz first challenges the sufficiency of the evidence, questioning whether it supports the juryâs finding that he acted with deliberate indifference to Vaughnâs serious medical needs and whether Vaughnâs death was a reasonably foreseeable result of Moskowitzâs conduct. An inmate may bring a § 1983 claim under the Eighth Amendment only where he can show that a state official acted with âdeliberate indifferenceâ to his âmedical needs.â Clark-Murphy v. Foreback, 439 F.3d 280, 286 (6th Cir.2006) (internal quotation marks omitted). âDeliberate indifferenceâ requires more than mere mistreatment or negligence; it requires the plaintiff to show that the injury was âobjectivelyâ serious and that the defendant âsubjectivelyâ *662 ignored the inmateâs medical needs. Id. (internal quotation marks omitted).
Was Vaughnâs medical condition objectively serious? While Moskowitz concedes that Vaughnâs medical needs had become serious by Monday, January 28, he argues that they were not serious on Friday, January 25 â when officials moved Vaughn to the observation room, when Moskowitz began treating Vaughn and when the jury ascribed initial liability to Moskowitz. But drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of the estate, as we must, Williams v. Nashville Network, 132 F.3d 1123, 1131 (6th Cir.1997), we disagree.
Here is what the jury was told about Vaughnâs condition on January 25. At one point, he stood naked over his cellmate, holding his Bible and âtalking about God.â JA 1689. When he finished preaching, Vaughn âtore up all the pages from his Bible, threw the papers all over the floorâ and claimed that âoutside forcesâ were controlling his actions. JA 1693. Vaughn was confused, refused to eat or drink and had difficulty following directions. And his condition only deteriorated after officials moved him to the 90-plus degree observation room.
Several experts testified that Vaughnâs medication and the hot observation room, in combination, created a serious medical risk, and Moskowitz himself admitted that he understood the potentially deadly combination. Dr. Gerald Shiener, the estateâs psychiatric expert, explained to the jury that the drugs Moskowitz prescribed to treat Vaughnâs schizophrenia âalso affect the part of the brain that regulates temperature.â JA 998. When patients on this type of medication are put into a hot environment, they develop a âpositive feedback,â which means they âkeep getting hot and they canât convect the heat or get rid of the heat and their body heats up out of controlâ- â all of which leads to âa very dangerous situation.â JA 999. Dr. Kathryn Burns, another expert for the estate and the former chief psychiatrist for the Department of Rehabilitation and Correction in Ohio, corroborated Shienerâs testimony. âThere is a condition among people who take psychotropic medication,â Burns said, âwhere they canât deal with heat as well as other people can. It just impacts their ... heat dissipation center in their brains.â JA 1436.
Dr. Scott Jacobs, the estateâs medical expert, bolstered these accounts. Jacobs â[ajbsolutelyâ believed that Vaughnâs dehydration occurred over âa period of days,â JA 1154, for three reasons: (1) Vaughnâs âphenomenally highâ sodium level of 182 â âto go from ... a normal sodium [level] of 140 to sodium of 180 takes a long time.... It absolutely takes days and days,â JA 1154-55; (2) Vaughnâs blood-urea-nitrogen level, which measures the buildup of waste in the bloodstream and which was five times the normal level; and (3) âmost profoundly,â Vaughnâs weight loss of 42 pounds over the several days leading to his death, which âcould not have happened in one day, could not have happened in two days. It had to have happened over a several day period.â JA 1155-56. A reasonable jury could find that Vaughnâs medical needs were serious on Friday the 25th.
Did Moskowitz subjectively ignore Vaughnâs medical needs? Moskowitz argues that he âdid not believe that a serious medical need existed, and specifically did not feel that Mr. Vaughn was suffering from dehydration on January 28, 2002.â Br. at 26. The question, however, is not just whether the state employee has admitted the inmate faced an excessive and imminent health risk; it is also whether circumstantial evidence, including âthe very fact that the risk was obvious,â Farmer v. Brennan, 511 U.S. 825, 842, 114 *663 S.Ct. 1970, 128 L.Ed.2d 811 (1994), shows the employee must have understood the nature of the risk. A reasonable jury could fairly conclude that Moskowitz âkn[ew] of and disregarded] an excessive risk to [Vaughnâs] health or safety.â Id. at 837, 114 S.Ct. 1970.
Moskowitzâs own testimony goes part of the way to establishing the point. He knew Vaughnâs observation room had heat problems, understood that the potential side effects of his prescribed medicine included âthermoregulation problems,â JA 1243, and recognized that Vaughn âmight be overheated,â JA 1255. Nonetheless, he never asked that Vaughnâs temperature be monitored over the weekend, and indeed it never was.
Testimony from other prison officials also supports the juryâs finding. Whether through Vaughnâs charts or through conversation with other staff members, Mos-kowitz knew that, over the weekend, Vaughn had stood in the same position for hours, had sweated profusely, had babbled nonsense, had been unable to operate a water cooler, had not slept more than âa couple of hours,â JA 1256, had appeared to be in a catatonic state and had vomited, stared blankly and seemed completely out of touch with reality.
All of this was enough for Nurse Blank-strom to reach the conclusion â which she initially shared with Moskowitz at noon on Monday â that Vaughn was suffering from severe dehydration. When Vaughn vomited on Monday afternoon after trying to drink a large amount of water, Blankstrom told Moskowitz that she was âscared for Mr. Vaughnâs safety and well being.â JA 15 68. She informed him that she had taken Vaughnâs vitals, which were all abnormal. And she relayed her opinion that âthe vomiting ultimately point[s] to [a] possibility [that] he was becoming dehydrated.â JA 1562.
Blankstrom also asked Moskowitz to examine Vaughn â which he did, concluding that the problem âwas [not] the [medication] or symptoms or side effects from the [medication],â JA 1568 â and she arranged for Vaughnâs medical team to meet to discuss Vaughnâs treatment. Blank-strom told the team that Vaughn was exhibiting signs of dehydration and needed immediate medical help. And she asked Moskowitz to evaluate Vaughn one more time because Vaughn âwas deteriorating greatly and might be dehydrated.â JA 1567. Despite this request, Moskowitz never examined Vaughn again.
The testimony of the estateâs experts also supports the verdict. Dr. Jacobs testified that Vaughnâs deterioration âha[d] to be apparent to really anyoneâ by Monday morning, JA 1173, because the physical manifestations of Vaughnâs dehydration â â including weight loss of over 40 pounds in just a few days â would have been âso prominent and so striking that you really couldnât miss it,â JA 1174. Moskowitz âshould have been shocked by [Vaughnâs] appearance,â Jacobs said. JA 1173. And Dr. Burns testified that Moskowitz should have recognized that Vaughn faced a substantial risk of harm. â[T]he only way,â Burns continued, that all of Vaughnâs symptoms â the ârapid respiratory rate ... the confusion, the delirium ... the [loss of] 40 pounds,â JA 1456 â could have come about is dehydration. â[I]tâs got to be water,â Burns concluded. Id.
Does the evidence support the compensatory damages award? Even if sufficient evidence supported the juryâs liability determination, Moskowitz argues that the evidence does not support the amount of compensatory damages, requiring a new trial on damages or a remittitur. We give abuse-of-discretion review to the denial of either motion. Skalka v. Fernald Envtl. *664 Restoration Mgmt. Corp., 178 F.3d 414, 424 (6th Cir.1999).
The district court did not abuse its discretion in letting this $1.5 million award stand. Vaughnâs condition deteriorated over the course of several days, beginning late Thursday/early Friday and ending with his death early Tuesday morning. He suffered cramping, vomiting, confusion, delirium and disorientation during this time. He did not sleep, he sweated profusely and he looked physically ill. His vital signs were all abnormal, and he lost over 40 pounds from the onset of his dehydration until his death. Along with this physical pain, his experts testified, Vaughn would have suffered extreme mental anguish as well. While it is difficult to quantify in dollars what such extensive pain and suffering deserve, the district court did not abuse its discretion in concluding that the juryâs award fell within a permissible range.
Does the evidence support the punitive damages award? Moskowitz argues that âno evidenceâ establishes âthat [he] demonstrated reckless or callous disregard for Mr. Vaughnâs rights.â Br. at 44. That of course is a harder argument to make now that we have concluded that the estate presented sufficient evidence to support a finding of deliberate indifference. See Farmer, 511 U.S. at 839, 114 S.Ct. 1970 (â[W]e adopt [the subjective recklessness standard] as the test for âdeliberate indifferenceâ under the Eighth Amendment.â). While we need not decide whether a finding of deliberate indifference ânecessitate^] a finding of callous indifference warranting punitive damages,â Coleman v. Rahija, 114 F.3d 778, 787 (8th Cir.1997), it remains true that the two standards are âconsistent,â Famer, 511 U.S. at 839-40, 114 S.Ct. 1970, and that much of the evidence bearing on the one question bears on the other. In particular, Moskowitzâs failure to respond to Vaughnâs deteriorating condition on Monday, when others testified that Vaughnâs dire condition would have been âstriking,â âapparentâ and âshocking,â supports the awardâ as do his appreciation of the heat-related side effects associated with the medications he prescribed and his inexplicably aloof response to the risk. On these facts, the trial court permissibly delegated the question of punitive damages to the jury.
Is the punitive damages award constitutionally excessive? Three considerations guide this inquiry: (1) the degree of reprehensibility of the conduct; (2) the disparity between the harm suffered by the plaintiff and the punitive damages award; and (3) the difference between the punitive damages and the civil penalty imposed in comparable cases. BMW of N. Am., Inc. v. Gore, 517 U.S. 559, 574-75, 116 S.Ct. 1589, 134 L.Ed.2d 809 (1996).
âPerhaps the most important indicium of the reasonableness of a punitive damages award is the degree of reprehensibility of the defendantâs conduct.â Id. at 575, 116 S.Ct. 1589. While there is no exchange rate for converting reprehensibility into dollars, an award at a minimum âshould reflect the enormity of the offense,â id. (internal quotation marks omitted), as shown by the permanence and severity of the injury together with the offenderâs degree of culpability, see id. at 575-76 & n. 24, 116 S.Ct. 1589. Vaughnâs injury of course is the most permanent and severe possible, and the considerable evidence of Moskowitzâs reckless conduct supports a substantial award.
The second consideration â ensuring âthat exemplary damages ... bear a âreasonable relationshipâ to compensatory damagesâ â âhas a long pedigree.â Id. at 580, 116 S.Ct. 1589. Nothing tells us exactly what ratios are reasonable, but the Supreme Court has said that the ratio normally will be no âmore than 10 to 1.â *665 Id. at 581, 116 S.Ct. 1589. Even giving Moskowitz the benefit of the doubt and comparing the punitive award with the portion of the compensatory damages for which he alone was responsible, the 2 to 1 ratio of punitive damages ($3 million) to compensatory damages ($1.5 million) falls well short of the high end of this range and indeed parallels the kind of relationship that the Court has said will often suffice. See State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. v. Campbell, 538 U.S. 408, 425, 123 S.Ct. 1513, 155 L.Ed.2d 585 (2003); Pac. Mut. Life Ins. v. Haslip, 499 U.S. 1, 23-24, 111 S.Ct. 1032, 113 L.Ed.2d 1 (1991).
Nor does the third consideration â the difference between the punitive damages award and the civil penalty authorized or imposed in comparable cases â establish that this award was excessive. Moskowitz points to four death-by-dehydration cases, but none involving a § 1983 claim or a punitive damages award. A sample of four cases, moreover, provides precious little guidance for establishing a norm. And the facts in these four cases, at any rate, differed considerably from the multi-day-wrenching facts in this one â a man in the custody of the State who loses 40 pounds over four and a half days in the course of dying from dehydration. See JA 707-08 (describing $1 million medical malpractice award where 14-month-old child died the night after being treated and released from hospital); JA 706 (describing $1 million medical malpractice award (reduced to $500,000 based on comparative negligence) where 47-year-old man died of dehydration the day after being treated and released from hospital); JA 703-04 (describing $450,000 medical malpractice award for dehydration death of 5-month-old child); JA 704-05 (describing $605,523 nursing home negligence award where 77-year-old nursing home resident died, ten days after being transferred to a hospital, of pneumonia, complications from bedsores, uncontrolled blood sugars and dehydration). This small sample does not provide a basis for vacating the award.
B.
Moskowitz next argues that the trial court committed a number of evidentiary errors: (1) by admitting evidence concerning his discharge from the prison, (2) by admitting evidence of his treatment of patients other than Vaughn and (3) by refusing to admit evidence about Vaughnâs criminal conviction. Abuse-of-discretion review applies to each argument. United States v. Humphrey, 279 F.3d 372, 376 (6th Cir.2002).
Moskowitzâs discharge. At trial, Moskowitz testified that he âdid everything within the standard of care and everything within [his] power to help this man.â JA 1320. In response, the court permitted the estate to introduce evidence that the prison discharged him for violating medical-treatment rules. Moskowitz testified, the court reasoned, âthat he did everything he could here. Now if there were rules he violated and that was a cause [of Moskowitzâs termination] ... then I think it needs to come in.... [T]he Court is going to allow it for impeachment purposes.â JA 1336. Because the district court has âbroad discretionâ when weighing undue prejudice against probative value, United States v. Vance, 871 F.2d 572, 576 (6th Cir.1989) (internal quotation marks omitted), and because Moskowitz opened the door to this evidence, no abuse of discretion occurred.
Moskowitzâs treatment of other patients. At trial, the estate asked Moskowitz whether he had ever âcalled [patients] derogatory names.â JA 1214. When Moskowitz denied he had, the estate attempted to introduce evidence that Moskowitz used an offensive term to describe a patient in a medical chart. Moskowitz ob *666 jected â unsuccessfullyâon relevance grounds. Moskowitz now argues that the evidence should not have been admitted under Evidence Rules 402 and 403. Because the estate introduced the evidence only for impeachment purposes, because the evidence contradicted Moskowitzâs testimony and because the district court limited the juryâs access to the evidence (the court never revealed the offensive comment to the jury), the court did not abuse its discretion.
Vaughnâs conviction. When the estate introduced evidence at tidal that Vaughn was a âgood guy,â Moskowitz sought to introduce evidence about Vaughnâs criminal conviction, namely that he had sexually assaulted a minor. No doubt, âgood characterâ evidence often begets âbad characterâ evidence in response. See United States v. McGuire, 744 F.2d 1197, 1204 (6th Cir.1984). But the trial court still has a job to do in deciding what kind of rebuttal evidence is appropriate and in deciding when the risk of undue prejudice outweighs the probative force of admitting the evidence. See id. at 1205-06. The district court did not abuse its discretion in concluding that the limited nature of the âgood characterâ evidenceâ that Vaughn worked hard, behaved responsibly and helped others while in prison â did not warrant introducing evidence about his highly charged crime. The estateâs evidence concerned Vaughnâs behavior once he was in prison, not what he had done before he entered prison, and the court fairly could restrict any impeachment evidence to his conduct in jail.
C.
Moskowitz raises two other arguments about alleged procedural errors. First, Moskowitz argues that the trial court erred in applying Michiganâs âhigh tier capâ on non-economic damages for medical malpractice. Br. at 57. Michigan law requires the presiding judge in a medical malpractice action to apply a cap on non-economic damages. Mich. Comp. Laws § 600.6098(1). The âlow capâ of $382,800 limits a plaintiffs recovery for non-economic damages, unless the judge determines the damages fall within a statutory exception, in which case the âhigh capâ of $683,500 becomes the new limit. Id. § 600.1483(1), (4). The relevant exception here provides that if âas a result of the negligence of 1 or more of the defendants ... [t]he plaintiff has permanently impaired cognitive capacity rendering him or her incapable of making independent, responsible life decisions and permanently incapable of independently performing the activities of normal, daily living,â the âhigh capâ applies. Id. § 600.1483(l)(b); see also Shinholster v. Annapolis Hosp., 471 Mich. 540, 685 N.W.2d 275, 286-89 (Mich.2004).
Because Vaughn already had a condition â schizophreniaâwhich âpermanently impaired [his] cognitive capacity,â Mos-kowitz argues that he could not satisfy the statutory exception. That Vaughn had an existing cognitive limitation, however, does not mean Moskowitzâs care could not have impaired Vaughnâs cognitive capacity in other ways â as surely happened when Vaughn became increasingly dehydrated over the relevant four-and-a-half-day period. Indeed, his estate presented evidence that, although Vaughn suffered from schizophrenia, he had the cognitive capacity to act responsibly and independently and even to help others less able. The district court correctly rejected this argument.
Second, Moskowitz argues that the district court abused its discretion in allocating the compensatory damages award between the deliberate indifference and medical malpractice claims. In addition to determining whether the statutory âhigh *667 capâ applied to the estateâs medical malpractice claim ($683,500), the court also _ had the duty to allocate the compensatory damages award between the two theories of relief â either by asking the jury to make the allocation or by making the allocation itself. The courtâs instructions asked the jury to make a compensatory damages award (originally $2 million, later reduced by the court to $1.5 million) and to separate the damages âif you are able to do so.â JA 490. While the jury was able to determine the amount of compensatory damages, it apparently was unable to allocate them and left this portion of the verdict blank.
That left the court with responsibility to make the allocation, a task often left to trial judges. See Passantino v. Johnson & Johnson Consumer Prods., Inc., 212 F.3d 493, 509 (9th Cir.2000) (â[T]he district court generally has discretion regarding how to allocate the damage award.â); see also Viskase Corp. v. Am. Natâl Can Co., 261 F.3d 1316, 1329 (Fed.Cir.2001) (after affirming a juryâs finding of liability on one theory of relief and reversing its finding of liability on others, remanding so the district court âmay determine whether the juryâs assessment of damages,â which did not allocate damages between theories of relief, âcan be reconstructed from the accounting evidenceâ); Quezada v. Bernalillo, 944 F.2d 710, 722-23 (10th Cir.1991), (vacating the unallocated damages award and instructing the district court on remand to allocate damages between state tort and § 1983 theories of relief where the appellate court affirmed the finding of state tort liability but set aside a judgment for the plaintiff on the § 1983 claim), overruled on other grounds by Saucier v. Katz, 533 U.S. 194, 121 S.Ct. 2151, 150 L.Ed.2d 272 (2001); cf. Johnson v. Howard, 24 Fed.Appx. 480, 485 (6th Cir. Dec.12, 2001) (âAlthough a double recovery may not be had, the jury is not prohibited from allocating a total damages award between different theories of recovery.â).
In making this allocation, however, the court simply decided that the medical malpractice damages went to the top of the âhigh capâ ($683,500) and allocated the rest of the $1.5 million award to the deliberate indifference claim ($816,500). That allocation may well represent a permissible allocation of the damages between the two theories, but the court gave no explanation for its decision, leaving us guessing whether this exercise of discretion is a permissible one.
Nor is the allocation without consequence in this context. The trial courtâs division happens to be the best the estate could hope for â allowing the medical malpractice damages to go precisely to the cap (and no higher), allocating the rest to deliberate indifference damages and effectively removing the cap as a limit on any damages in this case. The trial courtâs division also does not intuitively follow from the evidence. Because the deliberate-indifference standard requires the plaintiff to prove more in the way of culpability than the medical-malpractice standard requires her to prove, one might expect the damages attributable to medical malpractice to be higher than those attributable to deliberate indifference. But even if the trial court took the view that the damages should be allocated by halves â with 50% of the damages attributable to one theory and 50% attributable to the other â that still would make a difference here. It would mean the estate would receive $750,000 in deliberate indifference damages and $683,500 (after the cap) in medical malpractice damages â or $1,433,500, which is to say $66,500 less than the court awarded.
The point is that the cap matters, and the district courtâs decision leaves it unclear whether it appreciated the potential *668 impact of the cap and, what is more, leaves it unclear why it allocated the damages the way it did. None of what we have said limits the district courtâs discretion on remand, and none of what we have said requires a new trial. We simply ask the district court to make an allocation, then explain why it has done so. In the final analysis, we cannot tell whether the district judgeâs allocation of damages falls within her discretion on this record. See DWG Corp. v. Granada Invs., Inc., 962 F.2d 1201, 1202 (6th Cir.1992); see also Bridgeport Music, Inc. v. Universal-MCA Music Publâg, Inc., 481 F.3d 926, 930 (6th Cir.2007) (noting in the attorney-fee context that we âcannot know for sureâ whether the court abused its discretion until and âunless such grounds are made explicitâ) (internal quotation marks omitted); id. (â[T]he courtâs silence prohibits us from examining the soundness of its discretionary judgment.â) (internal quotation marks omitted); cf. Sprint/United Mgmt. Co. v. Mendelsohn, â U.S.-, 128 S.Ct. 1140, 1146, 170 L.Ed.2d 1 (2008).
III.
For these reasons, we affirm in part and reverse in part.