PUBLISHED
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT
No. 19-7340
ERIC WAYNE MOSS,
Plaintiff – Appellant,
v.
BUDDY HARWOOD, Sheriff, Madison County Sheriff’s Office; FRANCES
DENTON, Sgt. over jail, Madison County Sheriff’s Office; TOM BANKS, Captain,
Madison County Sheriff’s Office,
Defendants – Appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of North Carolina at
Asheville. Frank D. Whitney, District Judge. (1:18-cv-00122-FDW)
Argued: September 23, 2021 Decided: December 2, 2021
Before MOTZ, DIAZ, and HARRIS, Circuit Judges.
Affirmed by published opinion. Judge Harris wrote the opinion, in which Judge Motz and
Judge Diaz joined.
ARGUED: Sarah Keller, Sierra Weingartner, WAKE FOREST UNIVERSITY SCHOOL
OF LAW, Winston-Salem, North Carolina, for Appellant. Michael A. Ingersoll,
WOMBLE BOND DICKINSON (US) LLP, Charlotte, North Carolina, for Appellees. ON
BRIEF: John J. Korzen, Director, Patrick J. Crowley, Third-Year Law Student, Elliott C.
Riches, Third-Year Law Student, WAKE FOREST UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW,
Winston-Salem, North Carolina, for Appellant. Sean F. Perrin, WOMBLE BOND
DICKINSON (US) LLP, Charlotte, North Carolina, for Appellees.
2
PAMELA HARRIS, Circuit Judge:
Eric Wayne Moss filed suit under § 1983, alleging violations of his civil rights while
he was a pretrial detainee. At issue on appeal are two specific claims: first, that jail
officials put Moss in disciplinary confinement without a hearing, in violation of his
procedural due process rights; and second, that they delayed his access to urgent medical
care, again violating his due process rights. The district court granted summary judgment
to the officials on both counts, finding it beyond dispute that Moss failed to exhaust
available administrative remedies for his procedural due process claim and that any delay
in the provision of medical treatment did not rise to the level of deliberate indifference.
We agree with the district court. Moss does not contend that he exhausted his
procedural due process claim, arguing instead that jail officials made administrative
remedies unavailable by denying him access to the grievance system while he was in
disciplinary confinement. But undisputed record evidence establishes that Moss was able
to use the grievance system during that time, compelling the conclusion that administrative
remedies were available to him. Likewise, we agree with the district court that Moss cannot
show deliberate indifference, because there is no evidence that the defendants knew of but
deliberately ignored a substantial risk to Moss’s health. Accordingly, we affirm the
judgment of the district court.
3
I.
A.
Both of Moss’s claims stem from his pretrial detention at the Madison County
Detention Center, a state jail in North Carolina, between March 4 and September 5, 2018.
Although the facts related to the two claims overlap in some respects, for the sake of clarity
we describe them separately below. Because Moss appeals from an order granting
summary judgment, the facts are recounted in the light most favorable to Moss, the
nonmoving party. See Gordon v. Schilling, 937 F.3d 348, 356 (4th Cir. 2019).
1.
We begin with Moss’s claim that he was disciplined without a hearing, in violation
of his procedural due process rights. That claim arose on April 1, 2018, when guards found
a weapon in Moss’s cell while searching for a food tray taken by his cellmate. Although
Moss denied that the weapon was his, he was informed by Sergeant Frances Denton that
he was being placed on disciplinary confinement, or “lockdown.” Moss was initially
sanctioned with 30 days of disciplinary confinement, but ultimately remained on lockdown
until at least June 7, 2018.
According to Moss, he never received a disciplinary hearing in connection with his
disciplinary confinement, notwithstanding jail policy providing for such hearings. The
defendants point to a disciplinary report indicating that Moss waived his right to a hearing
and pled responsible to possessing a weapon. But Moss has denied that he waived his
hearing rights or admitted responsibility, noting that the disciplinary report is unsigned and
calling into question its authenticity.
4
At the time of Moss’s detention, the jail had a grievance policy – #7.13 “Inmate
Grievance Procedure” – outlining an administrative process for the resolution of inmate
complaints. J.A. 165. That policy, as summarized in the inmate handbook, instructed
inmates first to attempt resolution by speaking with a detention officer. If that effort was
unsuccessful, then inmates were to file a written grievance, requesting a grievance form
from a detention officer and then returning the completed form to a staff member. As Moss
acknowledges, inmates also were permitted to submit grievances, along with other
requests, on the jail’s electronic kiosk. Grievances were routed to the Jail Administrator,
with inmates given the right to appeal an unfavorable response to a higher-ranked officer.
Moss does not dispute that he failed to submit a written grievance, before filing suit,
regarding his entitlement to a disciplinary hearing. Instead, he alleges – and the defendants
do not contest, for purposes of this appeal – that while he was on lockdown, jail officials
refused to give him written grievance forms and denied him physical access to the
electronic kiosk. Nevertheless, there is undisputed record evidence that during this
lockdown period, Moss did file numerous grievances and medical requests through the
kiosk, which were answered promptly. According to Moss, he was able to accomplish this
by having other inmates use his kiosk pin number to file on his behalf, at least until later in
the lockdown period when he says he was able to file for himself.
Most relevant here, on April 22 – during the initial 30 days of Moss’s disciplinary
lockdown – Moss filed a written grievance on the kiosk, complaining about his medical
treatment but not the failure to provide him with a disciplinary hearing. Three days later,
on April 25, Moss filed this lawsuit, raising claims regarding both his medical treatment
5
and the lack of a disciplinary hearing. Then on May 24 – while still on lockdown, and a
month after filing suit – Moss filed another written grievance on the kiosk, this one
complaining that he had yet to receive a disciplinary hearing.
2.
We turn now to Moss’s claim regarding his medical treatment, which he alleges fell
below constitutional due process standards. Upon arrival at the Madison County Detention
Center on March 4, 2018, Moss informed the intake officer that he was taking several
medications: a medication for a thyroid condition, Vyvanse for attention deficit
hyperactivity disorder (“ADHD”), and Zoloft for post-traumatic stress disorder (“PTSD”).
Moss’s deliberate indifference claim focuses on alleged delays in providing him with those
medications while he was detained.
Moss first asked for his medications on March 16, twelve days after his arrival (and
before he was placed on lockdown on April 1). The next day, he filed two written
grievances repeating his request. On March 20, Captain Tom Banks, the Jail
Administrator, told Moss he would “check into this matter” and indicated on the kiosk
record that the prescription would be filled at Mashburn Medical Clinic. Moss received
his thyroid medication just over three weeks later, and 26 days after his first request, when
he was treated at Mashburn on April 11. According to Moss, his thyroid level was so high
that his treating doctor told him that “it was a wonder that [he] wasn’t in a coma, because
[he] hadn’t had [his] medication.” J.A. 146.
Moss continued to seek his mental health medications. On April 22 – while on
lockdown, and as noted above – Moss filed a grievance requesting an appointment at RHA
6
Health Services, a mental health clinic to which he had been referred by Mashburn. The
next day, Banks replied that he would have Moss seen at RHA. Moss thanked Banks on
April 24 and then sued him, along with the other defendants, the next day, on April 25.
About two weeks later, on May 8, Moss received ADHD and PTSD medications from
RHA, 53 days after his first request. While unmedicated, Moss experienced severe anxiety,
exacerbated PTSD, and suicidal thoughts.
In subsequent months, after the filing of his April 22 grievance and this § 1983
action, Moss experienced an additional delay in the receipt of his mental health
medications. After the medications provided to him on May 8 ran out in early June, Moss
filed several grievances and sought another appointment at RHA. Banks or Denton replied
to each, with Denton stating that she had requested an appointment for Moss but could not
control the timing of that appointment. See, e.g., J.A. 184 (“[W]e can not make the Medical
Center see you any sooner. I have put in for you a Dr. appointment.”). In mid-August,
Moss was treated at RHA and again received his medications.
B.
On April 25, 2018, Moss, still on lockdown, filed his § 1983 complaint in the
District Court for the Western District of North Carolina, naming Madison County Sheriff
Buddy Harwood, Sergeant Denton, and Captain Banks as defendants. Proceeding pro se –
that is, without counsel – he alleged that the defendants violated his procedural due process
rights in two respects: by placing him on indefinite lockdown without a disciplinary
hearing, and by preventing him from using the jail’s grievance system. He also alleged
that the defendants deprived him of adequate medical care by failing to provide timely
7
access to his medications for thyroid disease, ADHD, and PTSD. After Moss filed a
motion raising retaliation claims, as well, the district court invited him to amend his
complaint, but Moss failed to do so.
The district court reviewed the complaint for frivolity under 28 U.S.C. § 1915A and
dismissed Moss’s claim regarding the grievance system, reasoning that access to jail
grievance procedures is not constitutionally protected. Moss v. Harwood, No. 1:18-cv-
122, 2018 WL 4620626, at *3 (W.D.N.C. Sept. 26, 2018). But the district court allowed
Moss’s other two claims – regarding his right to a disciplinary hearing and his medical
treatment – to proceed. Id. at *3–4.
Following discovery, the defendants moved for summary judgment. With respect
to the disciplinary hearing claim, they argued that Moss had failed to exhaust his
administrative remedies before filing suit, as required by the Prison Litigation Reform Act
(“PLRA”). See 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a) (prohibiting prisoners from filing a lawsuit
challenging prison conditions “until such administrative remedies as are available are
exhausted”). Although Moss had filed multiple written grievances and medical requests
while on lockdown, they contended, the only grievance regarding a disciplinary hearing
was submitted on May 24, 2018, almost a month after suit was filed. With respect to
Moss’s medical treatment claim, the defendants – all non-medical personnel – argued that
there was no evidence that they had been deliberately indifferent to Moss’s known medical
needs and that they were in any event entitled to qualified immunity. Moss, still pro se,
filed both a sworn declaration and a brief in opposition.
8
The district court granted summary judgment to the defendants. Moss v. Harwood,
No. 1:18-cv-122, 2019 WL 4263826, at *11–12, *14 (W.D.N.C. Sept. 9, 2019). First, the
district court agreed with the defendants that Moss had failed to exhaust his procedural due
process claim to a disciplinary hearing. As the court explained, the PLRA requires all
inmates to exhaust administrative remedies before filing a § 1983 action in court. Id. at
*8; see Jones v. Bock, 549 U.S. 199, 204 (2007). Moss did not contend that he had done
so. Instead, he argued that his failure should be excused because he was denied access to
grievance forms and the kiosk while he was on lockdown, rendering the grievance system
unavailable to him during that period. See Moss, 2019 WL 4263826, at *2–3, *11; Ross v.
Blake, 136 S. Ct. 1850, 1858 (2016) (under the PLRA, inmates “must exhaust available
remedies, but need not exhaust unavailable ones”). But that argument, the district court
held, was “refuted by the record,” which showed that Moss in fact had “submitted multiple
grievances while he was on lockdown” – including “a grievance about the lack of due
process in the disciplinary proceeding [submitted] on May 24, 2018, while [Moss] was still
on lockdown” but well after he had filed suit. Moss, 2019 WL 4263826, at *11. 1
The court then turned to Moss’s remaining claim: that the defendants exhibited
deliberate indifference to his serious medical needs by causing a delay of several weeks in
his receipt of his medications. See id. at *9, *11–12. Because Moss was a pretrial detainee,
the court explained, his claim was “properly brought under the Fourteenth Amendment
The district court also rejected Moss’s argument that the PLRA did not apply to
1
him because he was a pretrial detainee rather than a convicted prisoner. Moss, 2019 WL
4263826, at *11. Moss does not renew that argument on appeal.
9
rather than the Eighth Amendment” – which applies only to convicted prisoners – “but the
analysis is the same.” Id. at *9 (citing Martin v. Gentile, 849 F.2d 863 (4th Cir. 1988)).
Accordingly, the district court assessed Moss’s claim under the Eighth Amendment
deliberate indifference standard, requiring him to show that the defendants knew,
subjectively, that their actions would expose Moss to a substantial risk of harm but chose
to disregard that risk. Id. at *9, *11–12; see Farmer v. Brennan, 511 U.S. 825, 837 (1994).
The record in this case, the district court concluded, would not allow a jury to make
such a finding. Instead, the “record reflects that [the defendants], none of whom are
medical personnel, responded promptly” by scheduling appointments when Moss
requested medical care, and did not purposefully cause any delay. Moss, 2019 WL
4263826, at *11–12. Nor could Moss show that the defendants would have known that a
delay in receiving medication risked any serious harm to Moss. Id. at *12. In sum, because
Moss could not demonstrate that “any of the [d]efendants’ actions or inactions with regards
to his medications and appointments knowingly exposed him to a risk of serious harm,” he
could not prevail, as a matter of law, on his deliberate indifference claim. Id. 2
Moss timely appealed the district court’s grant of summary judgment to the
defendants, and we appointed pro bono appellate counsel.
2
The district court also held that the defendants were entitled to qualified immunity
because Moss had not shown a violation of a “clearly established right.” Moss, 2019 WL
263826, at *12. We agree with the district court’s merits determination, as explained
below, and therefore need not address this portion of the court’s analysis.
10
II.
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo. Jehovah v.
Clarke, 798 F.3d 169, 176 (4th Cir. 2015). Summary judgment is appropriate only if “no
material facts are disputed and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.”
Henry v. Purnell, 652 F.3d 524, 531 (4th Cir. 2011) (en banc) (internal quotation marks
omitted). Largely for the reasons given by the district court, we affirm the grant of
summary judgment to the defendants.
A.
We begin with the district court’s holding that Moss failed to exhaust available
administrative remedies with respect to his procedural due process claim. Moss does not
contend that he submitted a timely written grievance regarding a hearing, consistent with
the jail’s grievance procedure. His position is that he was not required to exhaust that
grievance procedure, because officials made it “unavailable” to him by withholding
grievance forms and access to the kiosk while he was on lockdown. Like the district court,
we disagree.
The PLRA mandates that “[n]o action shall be brought” in federal court by an inmate
challenging prison conditions “until such administrative remedies as are available are
exhausted.” 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a). The requirement that inmates comply with all steps of
a grievance policy is important because it gives a prison a full “opportunity to correct its
own mistakes” before federal litigation is launched. Woodford v. Ngo, 548 U.S. 81, 89
(2006) (internal quotation marks omitted). And given the PLRA’s “mandatory language,”
there is no room to excuse a failure to exhaust all available remedies, even to take into
11
account “special circumstances” that might otherwise justify noncompliance with
procedural requirements. Ross, 136 S. Ct. at 1856.
But there is one limit on § 1997e(a)’s mandate “baked into its text,” on which Moss
relies: An inmate need exhaust only “available” administrative remedies. See id. at 1862.
If an administrative remedy “officially on the books” is not actually “capable of use to
obtain relief,” then the PLRA does not require exhaustion. Id. at 1859. The Supreme Court
has identified certain circumstances in which an official grievance policy is not “capable
of use” in this sense, id. at 1859–60, and Moss argues that his case squarely presents one
such circumstance: situations in which officials “thwart inmates from taking advantage of
a grievance process through machination, misrepresentation, or intimidation.” Id. at 1860;
see Moore v. Bennette, 517 F.3d 717, 725 (4th Cir. 2008) (“[A]n administrative remedy is
not considered to have been available if a prisoner, through no fault of his own, was
prevented from availing himself of it.”). According to Moss, he was “thwarted” from using
the jail’s grievance system while he was on lockdown, by the denial of written grievance
forms and access to the kiosk, and thus relieved of his duty to exhaust under the PLRA.
The problem for Moss’s argument, as the district court held, is the undisputed record
evidence establishing that he was in fact able to take advantage of the grievance system
while he was on lockdown. It is true, as the district court recognized, that Moss has
presented unrebutted testimony that jail officials refused his requests for forms or access
to the kiosk, see Moss, 2019 WL 4263826, at *11, from which a jury might find that
officials took steps to thwart his access to the grievance process. But Moss also testified
that he nevertheless was able to submit grievances – during the same lockdown period and
12
under precisely those constraints – by having other inmates use his kiosk pin number to
file grievances for him. See id. at *2–3, *6. And the record evidence bears this out: Moss
submitted multiple requests and grievances through the kiosk while he was on lockdown.
Most tellingly, on April 22, three days before filing this lawsuit, Moss was able to file a
written grievance targeted at his medical treatment, which did not include any complaint
about a disciplinary hearing. And then, weeks later, Moss – still on lockdown, and still
allegedly “thwarted” from availing himself of the grievance process – did file a written
grievance raising the hearing issue, though it was too late to satisfy the PLRA. Like the
district court, we think this evidence of access to the grievance system conclusively refutes
Moss’s allegation that the jail’s administrative remedies were not “available” to him.
In response to this common-sense conclusion, Moss points to cases recognizing that
an inmate able to file one grievance is not necessarily able to file others, at different times
or on different topics. A prisoner’s “ability to take advantage of administrative grievances
is not an ‘either-or’ proposition,” he explains, because “[s]ometimes grievances are clearly
available; sometimes they are not; and sometimes there is a middle ground where, for
example, a prisoner may only be able to file grievances on certain topics.” Kaba v. Stepp,
458 F.3d 678, 685 (7th Cir. 2006); see also Hill v. O’Brien, 387 F. App’x 396, 401 (4th
Cir. 2010) (per curiam); Hill v. Haynes, 380 F. App’x 268, 273 (4th Cir. 2010) (per curiam).
We agree. And if there were record evidence to indicate, for instance, that Moss was able
to use the grievance system on April 22 to raise issues regarding medical treatment but not
disciplinary hearings, then we would have a different case. But before the district court,
Moss offered no account for why he was able to file some – indeed, many – grievances and
13
requests while on lockdown but not the one required here, raising the hearing issue.
Instead, Moss has effectively made this an “either-or” case, see Kaba, 458 F.3d at 685,
alleging only a blanket denial of all access to the grievance system during the relevant
period – an allegation that cannot be reconciled with the record evidence.
Moss also suggests that his multiple grievances and requests are not evidence of
access to the jail’s actual “administrative remedies,” see 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a), because
official jail policy allows for submission of grievances only on written forms and not on
the kiosk. Before the district court, however, Moss acknowledged in his testimony that
inmates could submit grievances on the kiosk. And he did not challenge the sworn
statement of a jail official explaining that Policy #7.13 – the policy covering inmate
grievances – allows for the submission of written grievances either on forms or by using
the electronic kiosk. Moreover, the evidence shows that Moss’s kiosk grievances –
whether submitted by Moss or by other inmates on his behalf – were treated as such by jail
staff, who responded to and acted upon the requests. In this posture, we, like the district
court, see Moss, 2019 WL 4263826, at *11, proceed on the assumption that Moss was
indeed availing himself of the jail’s administrative remedies when he submitted his
grievances via kiosk during his lockdown.
At bottom, on this evidentiary record, Moss can prevail only if it is enough to show
“unavailability” that jail officials took steps that were intended to and could have thwarted
his access to the grievance system, even if he was not in fact thwarted. But that is not the
rule. Instead, as many of our sister circuits have held, a grievance process is rendered
“unavailable” under the PLRA only if an inmate actually is prevented from using it. See
14
Hardy v. Shaikh, 959 F.3d 578, 587–88 (3d Cir. 2020); Rinaldi v. United States, 904 F.3d
257, 268 (3d Cir. 2018); McBride v. Lopez, 807 F.3d 982, 987 (9th Cir. 2015); Tuckel v.
Grover, 660 F.3d 1249, 1254 (10th Cir. 2011); Turner v. Burnside, 541 F.3d 1077, 1085
(11th Cir. 2008). Even where officials make threats or misleading statements that would
deter a reasonable inmate from pursuing a grievance process, that is, the process remains
“available” if the plaintiff himself was not deterred. See, e.g., Rinaldi, 904 F.3d at 268–
69. That is consistent with the Supreme Court’s functional approach in Ross, asking
whether a purported grievance system is in fact “not capable of use.” See 136 S. Ct. at
1859. If an inmate is able to access a grievance process despite official threats or
“machinations,” id. at 1860, then that process is “capable of use” by him, id. at 1859.
That does not mean, to be clear, that if prison officials take steps to block an inmate’s
access to a grievance process, the inmate is obliged to find some novel way around those
obstacles. See Hardy, 959 F.3d at 590 (“It is no answer – where a prison has . . .
affirmatively misled the inmate – that the inmate should have sought advice from fellow
prisoners.”). The prison bears the risk that an official threat or impediment that “would
deter a reasonable inmate of ordinary firmness and fortitude,” id. at 587, will have the
predictable effect of actually preventing a prisoner from filing a grievance, rendering the
process unavailable and lifting the exhaustion requirement. Id. at 586; cf. Ross, 136 S. Ct.
at 1859 (“Given prisons’ own incentives to maintain functioning remedial processes, we
expect that these circumstances” – in which grievance processes are rendered unavailable
– “will not often arise.”). Indeed, the defendants acknowledged as much at oral argument,
conceding that had Moss not found a way to file grievances during the lockdown period,
15
his allegations, if credited, would establish that the grievance system was “unavailable” to
him.
But where, as here, an inmate in fact is able to participate in a grievance process,
notwithstanding alleged obstacles, then that process remains “available” for purposes of
the PLRA. And as the district court determined, the record in this case establishes
conclusively that Moss was able to submit multiple grievances while he was on lockdown,
but failed to raise the disciplinary hearing claim he seeks to litigate now. See Moss, 2019
WL 4263826, at *11. Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary
judgment to the defendants on Moss’s procedural due process claim. 3
B.
We turn now to Moss’s deliberate indifference claim. According to Moss, the
defendants acted with deliberate indifference to his serious medical needs by delaying his
receipt of his medications – for his thyroid condition, ADHD, and PTSD – and thus
exposing him to a substantial risk of serious harm. The district court granted summary
judgment to the defendants, finding that there was no record evidence that the defendants
3
Consistent with precedent, the district court specified that it was dismissing
without prejudice Moss’s claim for failure to exhaust administrative remedies. See Booth
v. Churner, 532 U.S. 731, 735 (2001) (affirming dismissal without prejudice of prisoner’s
civil rights claim for failure to exhaust); Ford v. Johnson, 362 F.3d 395, 401 (7th Cir. 2004)
(joining several other circuits in holding that failure to exhaust under § 1997e(a) should
result in dismissal without prejudice); see also Germain v. Shearin, 653 F. App’x 231, 234–
35 (4th Cir. 2016) (affirming order granting summary judgment for failure to exhaust but
modifying the dismissal to be without prejudice to plaintiff’s right to refile should
exhaustion become complete).
16
had known of such a risk and deliberately ignored it. See Moss, 2019 WL 4263826, at *12.
We agree.
The parties do not dispute the standard that governs this claim. Because Moss was
a pretrial detainee, his deliberate indifference claim arises under the Fourteenth
Amendment. Martin, 849 F.2d at 870. As the district court explained, however, we
traditionally apply Eighth Amendment deliberate indifference precedents to such claims,
see Moss, 2019 WL 4263826, at *9, and Moss, like the defendants, has embraced the Eighth
Amendment standard here. Under that standard, as Moss concedes, he must establish both
an objective and a subjective component of deliberate indifference. See Farmer, 511 U.S.
at 835; Scinto v. Stansberry, 841 F.3d 219, 225 (4th Cir. 2016). The objective prong
requires Moss to show that the alleged delay in provision of his medications put him at a
“substantial risk” of “serious harm.” See Scinto, 841 F.3d at 225. And under the subjective
prong, he can prevail only if the defendants “subjectively recognized” that there was such
a risk and that their “actions were inappropriate in light of that risk.” Anderson v. Kingsley,
877 F.3d 539, 545 (4th Cir. 2017) (internal quotation marks omitted). 4
4
As the district court recognized, under Kingsley v. Hendrickson, 576 U.S. 389
(2015), pretrial detainees bringing excessive force claims under the Fourteenth
Amendment are no longer required to satisfy the analogous subjective component that
governs the Eighth Amendment excessive force claims of convicted prisoners. See Moss,
2019 WL 4263826, at *9. But as the district court also noted, the Supreme Court has not
extended Kingsley beyond the excessive force context to deliberate indifference claims, see
id., and neither has our court, see Mays v. Sprinkle, 992 F.3d 295, 300–02 (4th Cir. 2021)
(declining to decide whether pretrial detainee must satisfy the subjective component of the
Eighth Amendment deliberate indifference standard). Because Moss has expressly
endorsed application of the Eighth Amendment standard – including its subjective
17
We will assume, for purposes of this appeal, that Moss can satisfy the objective
prong. Moss’s thyroid condition, ADHD, and PTSD were diagnosed medical conditions.
According to Moss, his wait of several weeks for thyroid medication caused his thyroid
level to become so elevated that his treating doctor at Mashburn believed he could have
entered a coma, Moss, 2019 WL 4263826, at *12, which surely would qualify as “serious
harm.” And Moss also testified that delays in providing him with his mental health
medications exacerbated his conditions and caused suicidal thoughts. Id. at *5, *7, *12;
cf. DePaola v. Clarke, 884 F.3d 481, 486 (4th Cir. 2018) (discussing threats to mental
health under deliberate indifference standard). So we accept, arguendo, Moss’s position
that a reasonable jury could find that at least some of the delays of which he complains
posed a substantial risk of serious harm. See Scinto, 841 F.3d at 225.
But Moss cannot satisfy the subjective prong, because there is no record evidence
that the defendants subjectively appreciated any such risk. Moss argues that he put the
defendants sufficiently on notice of his medical needs by repeatedly requesting his
medications. As the district court recognized, however, a request for medication does not
by itself indicate an emergency, and none of Moss’s communications conveyed to the
defendants that immediate intervention was required to avoid a substantial risk of harm.
See Moss, 2019 WL 4263826, at *12. And while we agree with Moss that subjective
knowledge of a risk sometimes may be inferred “from the very fact that the risk was
component – to his Fourteenth Amendment claim, we have no occasion to consider that
question today.
18
obvious,” Scinto, 841 F.3d at 226 (internal quotation marks omitted), this is not one of
those cases. The defendants here are non-medical personnel. Even if, as Moss argues, it
is generally well known that thyroid disease is a serious illness that may have serious
consequences, it does not follow that these jail officials would have understood that they
were facing an urgent situation, in which a weeks-long delay in receiving medication could
cause a coma. Likewise, to the extent a delay in providing ADHD and PTSD medications
put Moss at a “substantial risk” of serious mental health harm, that risk was not so patently
obvious “that the fact-finder could conclude that [jail officials] did know of it because
[they] could not have failed to know of it.” See Brice v. Va. Beach Corr. Ctr., 58 F.3d 101,
105 (4th Cir. 1995); cf. Scinto, 841 F.3d at 231–32 (finding risk of serious harm “obvious”
where inmate with severe stomach pain was “throwing up vomit and blood”).
Moreover, even assuming that the defendants could be charged with knowledge of
a substantial risk to Moss, Moss has produced no evidence that they also knew that their
efforts to respond to Moss’s requests were inappropriate in light of that risk. See Anderson,
877 F.3d at 545. As the district court explained, the record makes clear that the defendants
answered Moss’s communications promptly and requested the appropriate medical
appointments for him, and it includes no evidence of any deliberate decision to delay
treatment. Moss, 2019 WL 4263826, at *12. Moss suggests that a jury could infer this
intentionality from a pattern of lengthy delays, but we disagree: Because the record
indicates that the defendants – again, non-medical personnel – could neither directly
provide Moss with medication nor control the speed with which their requested
19
appointments were scheduled, the mere fact of delay, by itself, does not suggest a deliberate
choice to ignore a risk. 5
Because we agree with the district court that no reasonable jury could find, on this
record, that the defendants were deliberately indifferent to a known “substantial risk” of
serious health consequences to Moss, we affirm its grant of summary judgment to the
defendants.
III.
For the reasons given above, we affirm the district court’s grant of summary
judgment to the defendants.
AFFIRMED
5
Moss relies for part of this argument on alleged delays in July and August of 2018,
post-dating both his April 22 grievance regarding his medical treatment and the filing of
his complaint on April 25, 2018. The district court nevertheless addressed those delays,
see Moss, 2019 WL 4263826, at *12, and we therefore do so here, as well. The defendants
contend that those delays are not properly before us given the timing, but we need not
resolve that question, since consideration of these events does not affect our ultimate
conclusion.
20