Figueroa v. Vose

USCA1 Opinion









September 26, 1995
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT

___________________




No. 94-2062


BERNARDO FIGUEROA,
Plaintiff, Appellant,

v.

GEORGE A. VOSE, ET AL.,
Defendants, Appellees.

____________________

ERRATA SHEET


Opinion of this court issued on September 22, 1995, is
amended as follows:

On page 3, line 11: replace the words "had worked" with "had
not worked".




































September 22, 1995
[NOT FOR PUBLICATION]
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT




____________________


No. 94-2062

BERNARDO FIGUEROA,

Plaintiff, Appellant,

v.

GEORGE A. VOSE, ET AL.,

Defendants, Appellees.


____________________

APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

FOR THE DISTRICT OF RHODE ISLAND


[Hon. Robert W. Lovegreen, U.S. Magistrate Judge] _____________________

____________________

Before

Torruella, Chief Judge, ___________
Selya and Boudin, Circuit Judges. ______________

____________________

Bernardo Figueroa on brief pro se. _________________
David J. Gentile on Memorandum In Support of Motion for Summary _________________
Disposition for appellees.


____________________

____________________

















Per Curiam. Bernardo Figueroa appeals from the ___________

district court's judgment in favor of various prison

officials and medical personnel. In his action under 42

U.S.C. 1983, Figueroa alleged that defendants had violated

his Eighth Amendment rights by denying him proper medical

care for certain eye ailments. Because the record amply

supports the district court's judgment, we affirm,

essentially for the reasons given in the district court's

decision. See Figueroa v. Vose, 874 F. Supp. 500 (D.R.I. ___ ________ ____

1994). We add only the following comments about certain

arguments made on appeal.

First, although Figueroa claims that the court

refused to permit two physicians to testify on his behalf,

the facts do not support his claim. In scheduling an

additional day of trial, the district court ordered the

parties to present any remaining testimony at that time.

Figueroa told the court that he had no further witnessess.

Second, Figueroa claims that the record shows a

pattern of missed outside medical appointments which

demonstrates defendants' deliberate indifference to his

medical needs. The record documents only one occasion on

which Figueroa missed an outside medical appointment due to

circumstances within the prison's control. In August 1993,

prison officials brought him to the Rhode Island Hospital eye

clinic on the wrong day. They rescheduled the appointment,

















however, and the rescheduled appointment was kept. Although

a few appointments were missed due to circumstances beyond

the prison's control, all such appointments were promptly

rescheduled and kept. Figueroa had numerous appointments

with outside physicians which were not missed. Accordingly,

the magistrate correctly found that defendants' failure to

bring Figueroa to certain medical appointments did not show

their deliberate indifference to his medical needs.

Third, Figueroa argues that the court should not

have admitted into evidence a computer printout, which was

prepared by the prison payroll department and which allegedly

showed that corrections officer Alfred Lancellotti had not

worked on April 23 and 24, 1993. The court determined that

the printout verified Lancellotti's trial testimony that he

had not worked on the days in question. We need not

determine whether the court erred in admitting the printout

into evidence, or in determining that it supported

Lancellotti's trial testimony, since any such error would

have been harmless. Figueroa hoped to show that Lancellotti

had worked on April 23 and April 24, 1993, in order to

establish two other facts that allegedly occurred on those

days -- first, that Lancellotti had heard one of the

defendants, a nurse, tell him that she did not have a

particular medication for him; and, second, that Lancellotti

had signed written requests by Figueroa for that medication.



-3-













Demonstrating either of those facts would not show the

defendants' deliberate indifference to Figueroa's medical

needs, however. The record indicates that the medication

Figueroa sought was Naphcon-A, which an outside specialist

had recommended on April 20, 1993. But the record also shows

that prison staff doctors had never prescribed that

medication for Figueroa in April 1993 and that a prescription

by a staff doctor was required before medication recommended

by outside physicians could be given to an inmate.

Consequently, assuming that the nurse did tell Figueroa that

she did not have the medication he sought, she was entirely

right, and her statement does not evidence deliberate

indifference to Figueroa's medical needs. Likewise, assuming

that Figueroa did submit written requests for that

medication, the failure to give it to him would not

demonstrate defendants' deliberate indifference to his

medical needs, absent a showing that the prison unreasonably

delayed in having a staff doctor evaluate the appropriateness

of the medication and then issuing a prescription. Figueroa

made no such showing.

Since the facts Figueroa ultimately sought to

demonstrate would not have shown defendants' culpability,

showing that Lancellotti could have witnessed the nurse's

statement or signed Figueroa's requests would not have

advanced Figueroa's cause. Hence, the admission of the



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payroll printout allegedly showing that Lancellotti was

absent from work on the days in question and could not have

known about the events alleged by Figueroa, and the court's

determination that the printout confirmed Lancellotti's

testimony that he was absent, could not have been

prejudicial.

Finally, Figueroa argues that defendants have never

returned him to an outside dermatologist regarding the lesion

on his eyelid. The record indicates that there was no need

to do so. The last physician to evaluate the lesion

recommended seeing a dermatologist again only if the lesion

did not heal. In his appellate papers, Figueroa states that

the lesion left a scar on his eyelid, indicating that the

lesion has healed.

Affirmed. _________























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