Perotti v. Seiter, s. 87-3532

Decision Date16 February 1989
Docket NumberNos. 87-3532,87-3533,s. 87-3532
PartiesUnpublished Disposition John PEROTTI, Plaintiff-Appellee, Cross-Appellant, v. Richard SEITER, et al., Defendants, Gary Brown, Defendant-Appellant, Cross-Appellee.
CourtU.S. Court of Appeals — Sixth Circuit

Before KENNEDY, RALPH B. GUY, Jr. and RYAN, Circuit Judges.

RYAN, Circuit Judge.

Defendant Gary Brown appeals and plaintiff John Perotti cross-appeals from a judgment following a jury verdict awarding the plaintiff compensatory and punitive damages totaling $2,000 in a suit alleging that prison officials violated Perotti's civil rights by subjecting him to cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the eighth amendment to the United States Constitution. Appellant Brown argues that the jury's verdict is against the weight of the evidence, that each defendant acted reasonably under the circumstances and was therefore immune from liability, and that the district court erred by failing to give jury instructions on medical probability and causation. Cross-appellant Perotti argues that the district court erred in admitting evidence of his disciplinary record in the Ohio Correctional System.

We conclude that defendant Brown's arguments are meritless and that, although the court erred in admitting evidence of Perotti's prison disciplinary record, the error was harmless. We therefore affirm the judgment of the district court.

I.

John Perotti brought this action against the Director of the Ohio Department of Rehabilitation and Corrections and twelve Southern Ohio Correctional Facility ("SOCF") officials while Perotti was an inmate at the facility. He based his claim on 42 U.S.C. Sec. 1983, alleging that prison personnel beat him on three separate occasions, thereby subjecting him to cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the eighth amendment. The district court dismissed claims against six of the defendants prior to trial. A jury eventually found in favor of all but one of the remaining defendants. It held SOCF Correctional Officer Gary Brown liable for $1,000 compensatory damages and $1,000 punitive damages. Brown moved for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, and both he and Perotti moved for a new trial. The district judge denied all post-verdict motions and this appeal followed.

A.

Perotti's claims involved beatings that occurred at the SOCF on three separate occasions in 1983. The defendants admitted using force against Perotti on each occasion, but argued that the force was made necessary by Perotti's unruly behavior and, in all events, was reasonable under the circumstances.

1.

The first incident occurred on January 8, 1983. Perotti testified that on that morning he slipped on a bar of soap while showering and injured his back. He claimed that after complaining of pain he was taken by correctional officer Williams to the infirmary while seated in a wheelchair and restrained in handcuffs. Perotti claimed that two other officers, Swan and Hall, joined him and Williams in an elevator, and that when the elevator doors closed the three officers began to beat him without provocation.

The defendants' testimony was very different. They claimed that Perotti expressed extreme displeasure at being required to go to the infirmary, and resisted the officers' efforts to take him there by kicking and hitting them and using profanity. The officers claimed they were required to use force to subdue and restrain Perotti who was "out of his head," and smelling of alcohol. As a result of the injuries received during the January altercation, Perotti was hospitalized for thirty days at the prison infirmary. His injuries included passing blood in his urine, bruising over the entire body, and a "golf ball size lump" on his leg, and a permanent leg scar.

2.

The second incident occurred on March 14, 1983. Perotti testified that on that morning, while in the 42nd day of a hunger strike, he failed to receive his prescribed medication and complained of chest pain. He was taken to the infirmary in handcuffs and leg irons, but was told that he would have to wait until the afternoon for medication. He testified that when he protested, defendant Wente was called, and then, without provocation, defendants Wente, Lynn, and Brown, and two other officers dragged Perotti by the leg irons out of the infirmary, down a hall, and into a holding cell, kicking and beating him along the way. In the holding cell, Perotti lit a cigarette, which was forbidden by prison rules, and refused to put it out. Defendant Wente put it out with a chemical fire extinguisher. Perotti testified that he lit another cigarette which Wente again extinguished by spraying the entire contents of the chemical extinguisher in Perotti's face.

Again, the defendants' version of the events of March 14 differed sharply from Perotti's. The defendants claimed that whatever force they used was necessary because Perotti refused to leave the infirmary and violently resisted the officers efforts to remove him. They claimed that in light of Perotti's violent temperament, the fire extinguisher was a reasonable means of enforcing the institution's smoking rules, and that no chemical was sprayed in Perotti's face.

After a cooling-off period, one of the defendants brought a wheelchair to be used in returning Perotti to his cell. Perotti testified that two of the defendants forced him to sit in the wheelchair, handcuffed him to it, and, without provocation, struck him about the head and chest with an officer's baton. Thereafter, according to Perotti, he was "dumped ... on the floor, ... dragged by leg irons into a 'strip cell,' and beaten with sticks."

The defendants testified that Perotti resisted being seated in the wheelchair, struck and kicked the officers, and resisted being placed in his cell. They testified that Perotti's violent resistance necessitated the use of force to subdue and confine him.

3.

The third incident occurred the following day, March 15, 1983. Perotti was once again taken by wheelchair to the prison hospital, this time to have his injuries from the previous day examined. After x-rays were taken, he was released to return to his cell. Perotti claimed that he told defendant Brown that he was too weak to walk back to his cell and requested a wheelchair. Brown refused Perotti's request. Brown testified that Perotti then raised his handcuffed wrists in a threatening manner. With his left hand Brown grabbed Perotti by the handcuffs he wore, and with his right hand Brown hit Perotti in the head. Brown was holding a second pair of handcuffs in his right hand when he struck Perotti.

Perotti was then returned to the infirmary in order to have the injury to his head examined. Although the versions of the respective parties as to what occurred next differ, it appears that while awaiting treatment at the infirmary, Perotti threw a metal tray at Brown and Brown responded by throwing a telephone at Perotti. A general melee ensued in which Perotti, two defendants, and two other correctional officers were wrestling on the floor. When Perotti was finally subdued, he was placed on an examination table and his injuries were examined by a prison nurse who ordered that he be taken to a nearby hospital. Perotti told Brown that he was unable to walk to the van that was to transport him the hospital. Brown, on the other hand, claimed that Perotti was unwilling to walk to the van. It appears to be undisputed that Brown and another guard then dragged Perotti in handcuffs, leg irons, and a belly chain "like a sack of potatoes" several hundred feet along a "smooth hard floor" to the stairs leading to the van. Brown testified that he and two correctional officers attempted to carry Perotti down the stairs to the van but when Perotti resisted they dropped him and he slid down the steps. Brown indicated that several of the guards then helped Perotti into the van. Perotti testified that the defendants dragged him, head bouncing, down the steps, and threw him into the van "like a sack of potatoes." Perotti claimed that this two-day beating ordeal caused severe lacerations on his head, a bloody face and mouth, and a back so sore that he was unable to straighten up.

B.

During Perotti's cross examination, the trial court admitted, over his counsel's timely objections, testimony and reports concerning Perotti's disciplinary records at SOCF and other penal institutions. Some of the disciplinary violations were more than ten years old. The evidence indicated that Perotti had been disciplined for the possession of a knife, use of alcohol and marijuana, and for fighting with inmates and guards. Perotti argues that the court should not have admitted the evidence because it was unfairly prejudicial to him and not relevant to any defense of the defendants.

We shall address first the issues raised by defendant Brown's appeal, and then turn to plaintiff Perotti's cross-appeal.

II.

The standard applicable to appellate court review of a trial court's decision granting or denying a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict is the same standard that binds the trial court, Morelock v. N.C.R. Corp., 586 F.2d 1096, 1104-05 (6th Cir.1978), cert. denied, 441 U.S. 906 (1979). It is that a court may grant a j.n.o.v. only when the evidence properly "viewed in the light most favorable to the party against whom the motion is made, drawing from the evidence all reasonable inferences in his favor," points so strongly in favor of the moving party that reasonable minds could not conclude otherwise. Ratliff v. Wellington Exempted Village Schools Bd. of Educ., 820 F.2d 792, 795 (6th Cir.1987); accord, Ivey v. Wilson, 832 F.2d 950, 953 (6th Cir.1987).

A.

The conclusion that a reasonable minded juror must have been able to draw in order to have been justified in finding that the prison officials' conduct in this case violated the eighth amendment is set forth in Whitley v. Albers, 475 U.S. 312 (1986). Whitley holds that "the question...

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  • White v. Deghetto
    • United States
    • U.S. District Court — Western District of Kentucky
    • March 16, 2011
    ...of a habit to show conformity, the information in Officer Deghetto's personnel file is not evidence of habit. See Perotti v. Setter, 869 F.2d 1492 (Table), Nos. 87-3532 & 87-3533, 1989 WL 15952, at *5 (6th Cir. Feb. 16, 1989) ("[T]he defendant's argument that the evidence was properly admit......

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