NONPRECEDENTIAL DISPOSITION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 May 11, 2020*
Decided May 15, 2020
Before
DIANE P. WOOD, Chief Judge
MICHAEL B. BRENNAN, Circuit Judge
MICHAEL Y. SCUDDER, Circuit Judge
No. 18-3048
RAYMOND E. KING, Appeal from the United States District
Plaintiff-Appellant, Court for the Northern District of Illinois,
Eastern Division.
v. No. 09 C 1184
STEVEN NEWBOLD, et al., Sidney I. Schenkier,
Defendants-Appellees. Magistrate Judge.
ORDER
Raymond King, an Illinois inmate at high risk for lockjaw, sued prison dentists
under the Eighth Amendment for their deliberate indifference to his medical condition.
The district court entered summary judgment for the defendants on most claims and
dismissed one as time-barred. We vacate and remand with respect to one defendant
because a jury reasonably could conclude that this defendant recklessly ignored King’s
serious need for oral surgery. For all other defendants, we affirm.
* 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. 18-3048 Page 2
We take the facts and draw all reasonable inferences in favor of King, the
nonmoving party. Walker v. Wexford Health Sources, Inc., 940 F.3d 954, 963 (7th Cir. 2019).
Following injuries to his face in the 1990s, King developed temporomandibular joint
disfunction (TMJ), a condition that causes jaw muscles to deteriorate and, if left
untreated, lockjaw. While on trial for a criminal charge in 2004, King reinjured his jaw.
Post-conviction, Dr. Steven Newbold, a dentist at Menard Correctional Center in
Illinois, examined King and decided that he needed a mouth guard for his TMJ and
pain. (He also x-rayed King’s mouth and found no “definite” signs of fracture.)
Dr. Newbold delayed fitting King for the mouth guard for six months, despite his
frequent complaints of steady pain and swelling. King received the mouth guard in
April 2005, and some months later Dr. Newbold referred him to Menard’s medical
director for more evaluation.
Over the next two years, King’s jaw deteriorated, eventually necessitating an
exam by an oral surgeon. King complained of chronic jaw pain at an appointment in
June 2006 with Dr. Newbold. No further tests or treatment for his TMJ occurred in the
next nine months. King’s pain and swelling worsened, though, and in March 2007,
another dentist evaluated him. This doctor diagnosed King with a tight jaw, swollen
face, and bloody mouth; soon after, King lost his ability to chew and eat solid food.
These events led Menard’s dental director to order a CT scan which revealed loose bone
fragments in King’s jaw. This director referred King to an oral surgeon.
To meet with the oral surgeon, King was transferred to Stateville Correctional
Center (also in Illinois) in September 2007 and placed under the care of two new
doctors: Stateville’s medical director and Dr. Jacqueline Mitchell-Lawshea, its dental
director. On September 26, the oral surgeon recommended to Dr. Mitchell-Lawshea that
King receive jaw-replacement surgery for his TMJ. Despite receiving this
recommendation and knowing about King’s history of jaw deterioration,
Dr. Mitchell-Lawshea never asked the medical director (the only one who could
authorize surgery) to refer King for surgery. Over the next three weeks, as King’s pain
persisted, he repeatedly asked for dental care, but received none. On October 19, King’s
jaw locked shut. He went to the emergency room that day, where a doctor
recommended an MRI and another oral-surgery exam. The medical director then
referred King for the surgery.
A half year later, King received the jaw-reconstruction surgery, and afterward,
physical therapy. When, over the next two years, his pain still worsened and his jaw
began locking up again, King had follow-up visits with his surgeon and a pain
No. 18-3048 Page 3
specialist. Dr. Mitchell-Lawshea and two other Stateville dentists also saw King at times
and provided palliative care prescribed by the medical director and the oral surgeon.
King sued in February 2009, contending that since 2004 medical staff at Menard
and Stateville had been deliberately indifferent to his need for TMJ care. As relevant to
this appeal, he named Dr. Newbold, Dr. Mitchell-Lawshea, and two other Stateville
dentists as defendants. (King also sued Stateville’s medical director, but those claims
have settled.) The standard for surviving a motion for summary judgment on a claim
for deliberate indifference to a medical need is familiar: King needed to present
evidence that (1) his need was objectively serious, and (2) the defendants consciously
disregarded it. See Farmer v. Brennan, 511 U.S. 825, 834 (1994); Petties v. Carter, 836 F.3d
722, 728 (7th Cir. 2016) (en banc). A magistrate judge, presiding by consent over the case
for almost ten years, eventually entered judgment for the defendants. King lost most
claims at summary judgment because, the judge said, the medical records showed that
the defendants provided adequate care. King’s remaining claim against Dr. Newbold
(for the delay in fitting him for a mouth guard) failed on the pleadings, the judge ruled,
because King sued on it outside the two-year statute of limitations.
On appeal, King argues that a jury could find that Dr. Mitchell-Lawshea
recklessly ignored King’s need for care after he arrived at Stateville. Construing the
record in his favor as we must at this stage, Walker, 940 F.3d at 963, he is correct.
Following King’s initial consultation with the oral surgeon in September 2007,
Dr. Mitchell-Lawshea was responsible for King’s care and knew that he needed surgery
for his TMJ. She also knew that his CT scan revealed a fragmented jaw, and that just
months earlier, his mouth bled, his face swelled, and his ability to chew had vanished.
Yet she never asked the medical director to approve the surgeon’s recommendation.
With King’s diagnosed, serious need for surgery ignored, King developed lockjaw.
From these facts, a jury reasonably could conclude that Dr. Mitchell-Lawshea’s inaction
caused King needless pain and delayed treatment for a serious medical need. See Petties,
836 F.3d at 729 (failure to follow specialist’s instructions can show deliberate
indifference).
Dr. Mitchell-Lawshea has not offered a reason for her inaction, responding only
that she was one of several dentists responsible for reviewing appointment requests.
But this is beside the point. She knew of King’s need for treatment independently of his
frequent requests for dental care. And while shared responsibility may support an
argument for seeking contribution from joint tortfeasors, see, e.g. Illinois Joint Tortfeasor
No. 18-3048 Page 4
Contribution Act, 740 ILCS 100/2, it does not relieve her from her own potential
liability.
To assist the district court on remand, we observe that the record shows the jury
question as to Dr. Mitchell-Lawshea is limited to a defined period of time. She first
learned of, and allegedly did not respond to, King’s need for surgery to prevent lockjaw
on September 26, 2007. Three weeks later, on October 19, when King experienced his
mouth locking shut and he went to the emergency room, the Stateville medical director
referred King to the oral surgeon. So for these three weeks, a jury could find that
Dr. Mitchell-Lawshea’s inaction amounted to deliberate indifference. See Berry
v. Peterman, 604 F.3d 435, 441 (7th Cir. 2010) (recognizing that even a short delay in
treatment can support a deliberate-indifference claim if it prolongs unnecessary pain).
King next focuses on Dr. Newbold, arguing that the district court improperly
concluded that the statute of limitations bars his claim based on the delay in getting his
mouth guard. But King does not dispute that, at latest, Dr. Newbold’s delay ended in
April 2005, when he gave King the mouth guard. And he also concedes that the
limitations period is two years from when he discovered his injury. See Woods v. Illinois
Dep't of Children & Family Servs., 710 F.3d 762, 766 (7th Cir. 2013); 735 ILCS 5/13-202.
King sued, however, in February 2009, more than four years after he received the
mouth guard in April 2005. So, this claim is out of time and dismissal was correct.
King responds by citing Devbrow v. Kalu, 705 F.3d 765 (7th Cir. 2013), to argue that
his claim did not accrue until 2007, when he learned that he needed surgery. He is
wrong. For deliberate-indifference claims based on medical error, we apply the accrual
rules for medical malpractice. Id. at 768. The clock starts “when a person knows his
injury and its cause.” Richards v. Mitcheff, 696 F.3d 635, 637 (7th Cir. 2012). By April 2005,
King knew that Dr. Newbold delayed fitting him for and getting him the prescribed
mouth guard until April 2005, and that this delay injured him with needless pain. King
replies that the injury from this delay also included his need for surgery in 2007. That
may be, but he knew about the pain from the delay in April 2005, and he thought that it
was serious enough to complain about it then. So that pain started the limitations
period.
King next argues that the district court erred in entering summary judgment in
favor of Dr. Newbold for his supposed inaction in the month of March 2007. That is the
first full month of the two-year period of limitations, and it is also when King saw
another dentist who observed his facial swelling, bloody mouth, and tight jaw. King
argues that Dr. Newbold should have done something in March because, nine months
No. 18-3048 Page 5
earlier in June 2006, Dr. Newbold saw King for his chronic TMJ pain. But June 2006 was
the last time that Dr. Newbold saw King, and nothing in the record shows that he knew
about King’s later, deteriorating condition. To the contrary, by this time in 2006,
Dr. Newbold knew that the x-ray he had previously ordered in 2004 showed no definite
fracture, that King was now using the prescribed mouth guard, and that he had referred
King to Menard’s medical director for ongoing evaluation. Under these circumstances,
Dr. Newbold cannot be held liable for the conditions that later emerged in March 2007.
See Walker, 940 F.3d at 964 (plaintiff must show defendant’s inaction caused harm).
Finally, King challenges the entry of summary judgment in favor of the Stateville
dentists who treated him after his surgery, but the district court committed no error on
that point. These dentists reasonably responded to King’s complaints by providing
palliative care and referring him to Stateville’s medical director, the only one authorized
to refer King to specialists. Given this response, a jury could not find that they
recklessly disregarded King’s need for treatment. See Wilson v. Adams, 901 F.3d 816,
821–22 (7th Cir. 2018) (affirming summary judgment where “totality” of care did not
show deliberate indifference).
We VACATE and REMAND with respect to King’s claims against
Dr. Mitchell-Lawshea for ignoring the surgery recommendation. We otherwise
AFFIRM.