Lech v. Von Goeler
Lech v. Von Goeler
Opinion
United States Court of Appeals For the First Circuit
No. 22-1507
LIDIA LECH,
Plaintiff, Appellant,
v.
DOROTHEA VON GOELER; BAYSTATE MEDICAL PRACTICES, INC.; HAMPDEN COUNTY SHERIFF'S DEPARTMENT; MARIA DIAZ; NICOLE SKORUPSKI; ELIZABETH MEAUX; SHANTELLE ROSADO; JULIE BELLE-ISLE; LYNN CHASE; MICHAEL J. ASHE, JR.; PATRICIA MURPHY; NICHOLAS COCCHI; NATALIE CRUZ; and MICHAEL VANCINI,
Defendants, Appellees,
JOHN DOE 1 and JOHN DOE 2,
Defendants.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
[Hon. Katherine A. Robertson, U.S. Magistrate Judge]
Before
Rikelman, Selya, and Howard, Circuit Judges.
Daniel Volchok, with whom Allison M. Schultz, Joseph M. Meyer, Michael Moorin, Wilmer Cutler Pickering Hale and Dorr LLP, and John R. Godleski were on brief, for appellant.
Thomas E. Day, with whom Lauren F. Olanoff and Egan, Flanagan and Cohen, P.C. were on brief, for appellees Hampden County Sheriff's Department, Maria Diaz, Nicole Skorupski, Elizabeth Meaux, Shantelle Rosado, Julie Belle-Isle, Lynn Chase, Michael J. Ashe, Jr., Patricia Murphy, Nicholas Cocchi, Natalie Cruz, and Michael Vancini.
Michael B. Doherty, with whom Kevin C. Giordano and Keyes and Donnellan, P.C. were on brief, for appellees Dorothea von Goeler and Baystate Medical Practices, Inc.
February 2, 2024 RIKELMAN, Circuit Judge. When she was thirty-four weeks
pregnant and during a three-month period of incarceration at a
correctional facility in Western Massachusetts, Lidia Lech
experienced a stillbirth. She sued healthcare providers and other
staff affiliated with the facility, alleging that they disregarded
her concerns about the serious medical symptoms she was
experiencing and denied her repeated requests to go to a hospital,
resulting in her baby's death. The district court granted summary
judgment to one of the defendants but permitted most of Lech's
other claims to proceed to trial, after which a jury returned a
defense verdict.
Lech now challenges the grant of summary judgment and
two of the district court's evidentiary rulings at trial.
According to Lech, the erroneous evidentiary rulings reinforced
each other and precluded her from responding fully to the defense's
central theory of the case: that the jury should believe the
medical staff and not Lech.
After careful review and on the undisputed facts here,
we conclude that the district court did not err in granting summary
judgment to a correctional officer on Lech's claims of deliberate
indifference and intentional infliction of emotional distress. We
determine, however, that the district court did abuse its
discretion in the two evidentiary rulings challenged on appeal.
Together, the rulings permitted the defense to use extrinsic
-3- evidence to impugn Lech's character for truthfulness while
simultaneously precluding Lech from introducing testimony
corroborating her version of events. Because we conclude that at
least one of these evidentiary rulings was not harmless, we vacate
the jury verdict and remand for a new trial against most of the
defendants.
I. BACKGROUND
A. Relevant Facts
We present the facts relevant to the challenged
evidentiary rulings in a "balanced" manner, "objectively view[ing]
the evidence of record." United States v. Velazquez-Fontanez,
6 F.4th 205, 212(1st Cir. 2021) (citation omitted).1
On October 4, 2013, when she was approximately twenty-
two weeks pregnant, Lech was incarcerated at the Western
Massachusetts Regional Women's Correctional Center (WCC) for a
probation violation. Lech's 2013 pregnancy was high-risk because
she had experienced a uterine rupture during a previous pregnancy
and then miscarried. During her intake with medical staff at WCC
on October 4, Lech reported that she had a high-risk pregnancy.
Shortly thereafter, WCC received, and medical staff members
1When we review the district court's grant of summary judgment infra, we recite the facts relevant to that issue in the light most favorable to Lech "consistent with record support." Lahens v. AT&T Mobility P.R., Inc.,
28 F.4th 325, 328(1st Cir. 2022).
-4- reviewed, Lech's medical records documenting her prior uterine
rupture and miscarriage. Lech's medical records at WCC likewise
noted that her "principal diagnosis" was high-risk pregnancy. A
few weeks later, in November, Lech was referred to a maternal-
fetal medicine physician, a specialist who receives additional
training within the field of obstetrics and gynecology focusing on
high-risk pregnancy. The specialist recommended that she deliver
via cesarean section (C-section) because labor would increase the
risk of another uterine rupture, which would be life-threatening
to Lech and her baby. Lech's C-section was scheduled for mid-
January.
Lech's claims in this case focus on the period of
December 22, 2013, to January 1, 2014, when Lech was about two to
three weeks away from her scheduled C-section. Lech testified at
trial that, during this time period, she sought near-daily medical
attention for her pregnancy and became extremely concerned that
something was wrong. She stated that she reported to WCC medical
staff increasing signs of serious problems with her pregnancy,
including decreased fetal movement, vaginal discharge, cramping,
a "dropping feeling" in her abdomen, a "bulging sensation" on her
right side, and, later, vaginal bleeding. Lech also stated that,
because of these symptoms, she repeatedly requested to go to the
hospital. And yet, she maintained, WCC medical staff either
belittled or ignored her symptoms. WCC medical staff, by contrast,
-5- denied that Lech reported any pregnancy-related symptoms other
than those contained in the medical notes for each of Lech's
visits -- which report either no pregnancy-related symptoms at all
or only a small subset of them.2 The staff further denied that
Lech ever asked them to send her to the hospital.
Eventually, on January 1, 2014, Lech was transported to
the hospital. That night, she had told Natalie Cruz, a
correctional officer at WCC, and a nurse on staff that she was
experiencing vaginal bleeding; Lech testified that she had also
told them she believed she was going into labor. The nurse
contacted the on-call certified nurse midwife, who directed that
Lech should be sent to the hospital.
Lech arrived at the hospital on the morning of January
2, 2014. There, she was told that her baby had passed away.
Physicians diagnosed her with a suspected placental abruption, a
condition in which the placenta separates from the uterus,
depriving the fetus of oxygen. Lech had a C-section later that
day.
Specifically, defendants agree that Lech reported decreased 2
fetal movement once, on December 23, 2013, vaginal discharge once, on December 30, 2013, and some vaginal bleeding and cramping on January 1, 2014, as the providers' medical records document, but they deny that Lech reported any other pregnancy-related symptoms.
-6- B. Legal Proceedings
Lech filed this action in 2017, naming as defendants
several healthcare providers and correctional personnel at WCC
with whom she interacted in the days before she learned of her
stillbirth, as well as their employers. The defendants included
six nurses, two correctional officers, and the assistant
superintendent at WCC; the Hampden County Sheriff's Department,
which employs those staff; and the Hampden County Sheriff
(collectively, "the Hampden County defendants"). They also
included Dr. Dorothea von Goeler, an internal medicine physician
who provides medical care at WCC as an independent contractor, and
her employer, Baystate Medical Practices, Inc. (collectively, "von
Goeler"). In her complaint, Lech alleged that defendants
disregarded her concerns about her pregnancy and denied her
repeated requests to go to the hospital, which resulted in her
baby's death. She brought Eighth Amendment claims based on
defendants' deliberate indifference to her serious medical needs
and Massachusetts state-law claims of deliberate indifference,
negligence, medical malpractice, and intentional infliction of
emotional distress (IIED). The parties agreed to have a magistrate
judge conduct all proceedings.3
We refer to the magistrate judge as the district court 3
throughout this opinion.
-7- The district court resolved some of Lech's claims at the
summary-judgment stage. As relevant here, it found that Natalie
Cruz, whom Lech told that she needed medical care on January 1,
2014, was entitled to summary judgment on Lech's deliberate
indifference and IIED claims against her.
Most of Lech's other claims proceeded to a jury trial,
which was held over 17 days. The fact witnesses included Lech,
members of the medical and correctional staff at WCC, Lech's
mother, and Lech's close friend, Alfred Zygmont, who had visited
her at the facility twice during the critical time period. Both
parties also offered expert testimony, which primarily focused on
the timing and cause of Lech's stillbirth and whether the medical
staff's treatment as documented in their medical notes complied
with the standard of care.
Throughout trial, the defendants all agreed on one
central theory of the case: that Lech never told the facility's
medical staff about most of the pregnancy-related concerns she
claimed to have reported and that the medical providers' version
of events, not Lech's, was credible.4 Defendants focused on this
theory in their opening statement, asserting that the jury would
"hear two stories," the first of which was alleged in Lech's
4In addition, von Goeler offered a causation theory, claiming that Lech's stillbirth occurred before she saw von Goeler on December 30, 2013, and was caused in part by Lech's underlying risk factors.
-8- complaint and in her testimony, and the second of which was told
by medical providers, their medical records, and "Lech's own
recorded phone calls." As the defense framed the case, the true
story of what transpired "is told not by what [Lech] says but what
she doesn't say."
Recorded phone calls that Lech made to her family and
then-boyfriend while at WCC took center stage in the defense.5
Defendants used the contents of the calls in two key ways. First,
they argued that Lech's calls undercut her own testimony because
"what [the jury] w[ould not] hear" in those calls was Lech stating
that she "th[ought] she need[ed] to go to the hospital" or "that
[she] ha[d] asked the medical providers to send her to the hospital
and they ha[d] refused." Thus, defendants maintained, Lech's
failure to mention her symptoms or appointments with WCC medical
staff during the calls "contradict[ed] the story . . . Lech [was]
trying to tell [the jury] through this lawsuit." Second,
defendants used other portions of Lech's calls to demonstrate
specific occasions on which she allegedly lied about topics
unrelated to her health or medical care, contending that those
lies showed her general character for untruthfulness.
At trial, the district court made two evidentiary
rulings that Lech challenges on appeal, both of which implicate
5 It appears that WCC records all phone calls made by individuals incarcerated there.
-9- defendants' attacks on her credibility. During Lech's
cross-examination, the district court allowed defendants to play
recordings of Lech's phone calls to prove her purportedly
untruthful character. It then excluded testimony from Zygmont
about statements Lech made to him when he visited her at WCC on
December 26 and 28, 2013. Based on Lech's proffer at trial,
Zygmont would have corroborated her version of events by testifying
that, during those visits, Lech told him that she was concerned
about her pregnancy, that she thought she needed to go to the
hospital, and that WCC staff were not paying attention to her.
The jury ultimately found in favor of defendants on all
claims. This timely appeal followed.
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review preserved objections to the district court's
evidentiary rulings for abuse of discretion. United States v.
Kilmartin,
944 F.3d 315, 335(1st Cir. 2019). An abuse of
discretion occurs "when a material factor deserving significant
weight is ignored, when an improper factor is relied upon, or when
all proper and no improper factors are assessed, but the court
makes a serious mistake in weighing them." Ruiz-Troche v. Pepsi
Cola of P.R. Bottling Co.,
161 F.3d 77, 83(1st Cir. 1998) (quoting
Foster v. Mydas Assocs., Inc.,
943 F.2d 139, 143(1st Cir. 1991)).
An error of law qualifies as an abuse of discretion. Torres-Rivera
v. O'Neill-Cancel,
524 F.3d 331, 336(1st Cir. 2008).
-10- If we determine that the district court erroneously
admitted or excluded evidence, we then review that ruling for
harmless error. Duval v. Dep't of Veterans Affs.,
69 F.4th 37, 42(1st Cir. 2023) (quoting Gay v. Stonebridge Life Ins. Co.,
660 F.3d 58, 62(1st Cir. 2011)). An error is harmless if it is
"highly probable that [it] did not affect the outcome of the case."
McDonough v. City of Quincy,
452 F.3d 8, 19-20(1st Cir. 2006);
see also Nieves-Villanueva v. Soto-Rivera,
133 F.3d 92, 102(1st
Cir. 1997) (explaining that in a civil case, the party claiming
error has the burden of demonstrating that the error was not
harmless). To determine the probable impact of improperly admitted
or excluded evidence on the jury verdict, we consider factors such
as "[t]he centrality of the evidence, its prejudicial effect,
whether it is cumulative, the use of the evidence by counsel, and
the closeness of the case." Kowalski v. Gagne,
914 F.2d 299, 308(1st Cir. 1990) (quoting Lataille v. Ponte,
754 F.2d 33, 37(1st
Cir. 1985)); accord Nieves-Villanueva,
133 F.3d at 102. We weigh
these factors "in the context of the case," as drawn "from the
record as a whole." Nieves-Villanueva,
133 F.3d at 102(citation
omitted).
A different standard applies to the district court's
grant of summary judgment to Cruz. We review that ruling de novo,
drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of Lech, the nonmoving
party. Fincher v. Town of Brookline,
26 F.4th 479, 485(1st Cir.
-11- 2022). "Summary judgment is proper if the movant," here Cruz,
"shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact
and [she] is entitled to judgment as a matter of law."
Id.(quoting
Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a)).
III. DISCUSSION
We begin by discussing Lech's challenge to the district
court's evidentiary rulings. We ultimately determine that the
district court abused its discretion both by permitting defendants
to use Lech's recorded phone calls to attack her character for
truthfulness and by excluding Zygmont's proffered testimony. At
least one of these errors was not harmless as to the Hampden County
defendants, whose defense hinged on the jury finding that Lech's
version of events was not believable, and thus requires a new trial
as to those defendants. We cannot say that the evidentiary rulings
affected the outcome of the trial as to von Goeler, however,
because she offered a causation defense that did not implicate
Lech's credibility and instead relied on a concession by Lech's
own expert: that it was possible Lech's stillbirth occurred before
her appointment with von Goeler. After addressing the evidentiary
rulings, we turn to the grant of summary judgment to Cruz on the
deliberate indifference and IIED claims, which we affirm.
-12- A. Evidentiary Rulings
1. Use of Lech's Recorded Phone Calls
In her first challenge to the district court's
evidentiary rulings, Lech argues that the district court erred
when it allowed defendants to play portions of recorded calls she
made at WCC to prove her purportedly untruthful character. She
asserts that this use of the recordings violated Federal Rule of
Evidence 608(b).
We address the standard of review before turning to the
substance of Lech's argument. The Hampden County defendants
contend that we must review Lech's claim for plain error because
she did not object to the admission of the phone calls, which
occurred during Lech's direct examination, but only to defendants'
inquiry into whether certain statements she made on the phone calls
were false. But Lech did specifically object below on Rule 608(b)
grounds to defendants' use of the recorded calls for the purpose
of proving her purportedly untruthful character, which is the exact
issue she now raises. Lech thereby preserved her evidentiary
objection, and we review her 608(b) claim for abuse of discretion.
Rule 608(b) "bars the credibility-related use of some
extrinsic evidence." United States v. Winchenbach,
197 F.3d 548, 557(1st Cir. 1999). Under the rule, "extrinsic evidence is not
admissible to prove specific instances of a witness's conduct in
order to attack or support the witness's character for
-13- truthfulness." Fed. R. Evid. 608(b). But the district court "may,
on cross-examination, allow [such specific instances] to be
inquired into if they are probative of [the witness's] character
for truthfulness or untruthfulness." Id.; see also United States
v. Abel,
469 U.S. 45, 55(1984).
At trial, defendants played portions of recorded phone
calls Lech made to her family while she was at WCC. They then
asked her whether specific statements she made in those recordings
unrelated to her medical care -- such as the basis for her
probation violation, whether her then-boyfriend was living in a
sober house, and her boyfriend's employment history -- were
untruthful. Similarly, defendants played portions of recorded
calls Lech made to her then-boyfriend. They asked her to confirm
that, in those recordings, she discussed participating in or
planning deceitful conduct unrelated to her medical care, such as
lying to her family for her boyfriend, telling her boyfriend not
to appear for an upcoming court date, and discussing how her
boyfriend could obtain a false negative on a drug test.
The district court initially ruled that such use of the
recorded calls violated Rule 608(b), but it invited defendants to
file a motion on the issue. Defendants did so, arguing in part
that the phone calls were not extrinsic because they already had
been admitted into evidence, and that, even if the rule's
prohibition on the use of extrinsic evidence applied, defendants
-14- were permitted on cross-examination to inquire into Lech's
untruthful statements on the calls. The district court then
reversed its earlier ruling and determined that "the specific
instances of untruthfulness reflected in the phone calls" were
admissible, although it did not explain its reasoning.
We conclude that the district court ran afoul of Rule
608(b) when it allowed defendants to play the recordings before
the jury. Defendants recognize on appeal, as they did below, that
Lech's allegedly untruthful statements on the recordings were
specific instances of her conduct and that they sought to use the
recordings to attack Lech's character for truthfulness.
Defendants argue, however, that the recordings were not extrinsic
evidence because they were admitted and used during Lech's direct
testimony and so are not covered by Rule 608(b).
But we have stated that "extrinsic evidence includes any
evidence other than trial testimony." United States v. Balsam,
203 F.3d 72, 87 n.18 (1st Cir. 2000); see also 4 Jack B. Weinstein
& Margaret A. Berger, Weinstein's Federal Evidence § 608.20[1]
(2023) ("Evidence is 'extrinsic' if offered through documents or
other witnesses, rather than through cross-examination of the
witness himself or herself."). Indeed, in Balsam, we held that
taped recordings of jailhouse phone conversations were
inadmissible under Rule 608(b) because "the tapes were just such
nontestimonial evidence."
203 F.3d at 87n.18; see also United
-15- States v. Sabean,
885 F.3d 27, 39(1st Cir. 2018) (holding that
the district court properly excluded an audio recording of a
witness's testimony in a previous case when the recording was
offered to impeach the witness's truthful character, given that
such use would "ru[n] headlong into Federal Rule of Evidence
608(b)").6 Here, Lech's statements on the recordings were not
developed in her trial testimony and therefore were extrinsic.
And the fact that Lech's counsel used portions of the calls for
one purpose -- to bolster her testimony on direct examination --
does not answer the question of whether defendants' use of
The Hampden County defendants offer different definitions 6
of extrinsic evidence and contend that the recordings do not qualify. But their arguments do not stand up to scrutiny. First, relying on United States v. Ofray-Campos,
534 F.3d 1, 18(1st Cir. 2008), defendants contend that extrinsic evidence is evidence other than that developed or introduced at trial. Ofray-Campos, however, did not involve Rule 608(b) and examined only whether a judge's response to a jury note during deliberations inappropriately exposed the jury to "extrinsic information," meaning "any outside influence," in violation of the defendant's Sixth Amendment rights. Ofray-Campos,
534 F.3d at 18-19 (quoting Patterson v. Colorado,
205 U.S. 454, 462(1907)). Second, defendants assert that the recordings were highly relevant to the litigation and that extrinsic evidence is evidence that is "'not relevant in the litigation to establish a fact of consequence,' i.e., evidence of a 'collateral matter.'" United States v. Boulerice,
325 F.3d 75, 82 n.5 (1st Cir. 2003) (quoting United States v. Andújar,
49 F.3d 16, 26(1st Cir. 1995)). But whether the recordings were "highly relevant" has no bearing on whether they are extrinsic. The recordings went beyond Lech's own testimony during her cross-examination and are therefore extrinsic. See
id.(contrasting evidence offered through documents or another witness, which is extrinsic, and testimony elicited on the witness's own cross-examination, which is not).
-16- different portions of the calls for a different purpose violated
Rule 608(b). See Fed. R. Evid. 105 (explaining that evidence may
be admissible for one purpose but not another).
Defendants offer several reasons for why it was
permissible for them to play the recordings, but we find none
persuasive. First, the Hampden County defendants contend that
Lech's calls were admissible as statements of a party opponent.
See Fed. R. Evid. 801(d)(2)(A). But that rule provides only that
an opposing party's statements are not hearsay. Fed. R. Evid.
801(d). It does not establish that the statements are admissible
in violation of another rule. See Fed. R. Evid. 105.
Next, the Hampden County defendants argue that, on
cross-examination, they were permitted to inquire into false
statements Lech made on the recorded calls to demonstrate her
allegedly untruthful character. Defendants are correct that Rule
608(b) allows a party to ask a witness about a specific instance
of past conduct if it is probative of the witness's character for
truthfulness, with the understanding that the party is then "stuck"
with the witness's answer. See United States v. A.S.,
939 F.3d 1063, 1072(10th Cir. 2019) (quoting Seifert v. Unified Gov't,
779 F.3d 1141, 1154(10th Cir. 2015)); see also Fed. R. Evid. 608(b);
Abel,
469 U.S. at 55. So, when defendants asked Lech on
cross-examination whether she lied during the phone calls, the
rule did not render Lech's answers inadmissible. But the rule did
-17- prohibit defendants from playing the recordings to introduce
specific instances of her past conduct for the purpose of showing
her alleged penchant for untruthfulness. See United States v.
Mateos-Sanchez,
864 F.2d 232, 237(1st Cir. 1988) (distinguishing
between inquiry on cross-examination to demonstrate untruthful
character, which is permissible, and presentation of physical
evidence, which is not); Sabean,
885 F.3d at 39(determining that
the district court properly permitted the defendant to cross-
examine a witness about testimony she had given in a prior case to
impeach her general truthfulness while excluding an audiotape of
that testimony). And that is what defendants did here. They told
the district court they sought to play the calls because specific
statements on the recordings were either false on their face or
demonstrated that Lech lied on other occasions, all of which was
"highly probative of her character for untruthfulness."
As their last line of defense, the Hampden County
defendants contend that, even if the phone calls were extrinsic
evidence, they were admissible because Rule 608(b) does not bar
extrinsic evidence unless "the sole purpose" for offering the
evidence was to prove a witness's character for untruthfulness.
See Fed. R. Evid. 608(b) advisory committee's note to 2003
amendment. They note that both parties used Lech's calls for
different purposes throughout trial. But defendants fail to offer
important context for the authority upon which they rely. A
-18- previous version of Rule 608(b) stated that extrinsic evidence
could not be used to prove specific instances of conduct for the
purpose of "attacking or supporting the witness' credibility."
United States v. Epstein,
426 F.3d 431, 439 n.4 (1st Cir. 2005).
The rule was later amended to substitute "character for
truthfulness" for "credibility."
Id.The advisory committee's
note explains that the amendment intended to "clarify that the
absolute prohibition on extrinsic evidence applies only when the
sole reason for proffering that evidence is to attack or support
the witness' character for truthfulness," thereby "leav[ing] the
admissibility of extrinsic evidence offered for other grounds of
impeachment (such as contradiction, prior inconsistent statement,
bias and mental capacity)" to other rules. Fed. R. Evid. 608(b)
advisory committee's note to 2003 amendment; see also United States
v. Delgado-Marrero,
744 F.3d 167, 179(1st Cir. 2014) (explaining
that the amendment sought to make clear that the rule "exclude[d]
extrinsic evidence of a witness's general propensity for honesty
and truth, rather than . . . for other non-propensity purposes").
Critically, in defendants' own words, they sought to use the
recordings in the manner challenged here to demonstrate Lech's
"character for untruthfulness." Accordingly, Rule 608(b) applies.
Finally, von Goeler recognizes that Rule 608(b), "read
narrowly," would prohibit a party from using previously admitted
exhibits when cross-examining a witness about allegedly untruthful
-19- conduct. But she states that a narrow construction would have
been inefficient here. She asserts that, because the recorded
calls were already in evidence, it was more efficient for
defendants to use the recordings to establish that Lech made the
statements, rather than proceed through the more extended process
of using the recording to refresh Lech's recollection or impeach
her. But the issue here is not that defendants played the
recordings simply to confirm that Lech made certain statements in
her phone calls. Rather, it is that defendants played the
recordings to prove that Lech had lied in the calls, with the
ultimate aim of depicting her as habitually untruthful.
To summarize, we conclude that the district court abused
its discretion when it allowed defendants to play the recordings
of Lech's calls to prove she had lied in the past and impugn her
truthful character, in violation of Rule 608(b). We next turn to
Lech's second evidentiary argument.
2. Exclusion of Zygmont's Testimony
Lech argues that the district court erred when it
excluded testimony from her friend Alfred Zygmont about
corroborating statements she made to him when he visited her at
WCC. The parties agree that she preserved this objection, and
that the abuse of discretion standard applies.
Below, Lech proffered that Zygmont would testify that,
during his visits with her on December 26 and 28, 2013, "Lech
-20- complained WCC medical staff were not paying attention to her, she
was experiencing decreased fetal movement, felt that something was
wrong, and that she thought she needed to go to the hospital."
Lech contends that those statements were admissible as prior
consistent statements under Federal Rule of Evidence
801(d)(1)(B)(i).
We have explained that under Federal Rule of Evidence
801(d)(1)(B)(i), "a witness's prior statement is excluded from the
rule against hearsay -- and thus may be admissible -- 'when (1)
the declarant testifies at trial and is subject to
cross-examination; (2) the prior statement is consistent with the
declarant's trial testimony; and (3) the prior statement is offered
to rebut an express or implied charge against the declarant of
recent fabrication or improper influence or motive.'" United
States v. Chiu,
36 F.4th 294, 300(1st Cir. 2022) (quoting United
States v. Jahagirdar,
466 F.3d 149, 155(1st Cir. 2006)); see also
Fed. R. Evid. 801(d)(1)(B)(i).
In rejecting the proffer, the district court focused on
the third element -- that Zygmont's testimony must be offered to
rebut an express or implied charge of recent fabrication levied
against Lech. It concluded that there was no such charge of
fabrication because on cross-examination, defendants did not
challenge Lech on whether she told the medical providers about all
of her pregnancy-related symptoms or whether she asked those
-21- providers to go to the hospital but was ignored. In the district
court's view, therefore, Lech was offering impermissible
bolstering testimony. On appeal, the parties also focus primarily
on this third element.7 Accordingly, we turn to whether that
element is satisfied here.
For this inquiry, we consider whether there is "some
degree of fit between the alleged fabrication and the prior
statement." Chiu,
36 F.4th at 301. To meet this standard, a
charge of recent fabrication does not have to be "expressly made."
United States v. Lozada-Rivera,
177 F.3d 98, 104(1st Cir. 1999).
But the person who seeks to introduce prior consistent statements,
here Lech, must "point to specific questions" during the opposing
party's examination "that suggest recent fabrication or bias."
Id."Merely appealing to credibility as a live issue will not do
the trick." Id.; see also Chiu, 36 F.4th at 300–01 (examining
whether the government challenged the defendant on the "specific
subject of the rehabilitative, prior consistent statement" or
launched only a generalized attack on his credibility); United
States v. Wilkerson,
411 F.3d 1, 5(1st Cir. 2005) (explaining
The Hampden County defendants concede that the first two 7
elements set forth in Chiu are satisfied, although von Goeler briefly suggests that Zygmont's testimony would not have been consistent with Lech's. She contends that Zygmont would have testified as to broad, generalized statements that Lech made to him, but that Lech's testimony was about specific medical issues she experienced. We reject this argument based on our review of the proffer and the record.
-22- that prior consistent statements "must at least have some rebutting
force beyond the mere fact that the witness has repeated on a prior
occasion a statement consistent with [their] trial testimony"
(internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting United States v.
Simonelli,
237 F.3d 19, 27(1st Cir. 2001))).
Lech easily satisfies that standard here. The trial
record makes abundantly clear that defendants accused Lech of
fabrication and that there is at least "some degree of fit" between
Zygmont's testimony and the charge of fabrication it was offered
to rebut. Chiu,
36 F.4th at 301. One of the central theories
pursued by all defendants at trial was that the jury should believe
the medical providers and their medical records, not Lech. As
defendants recognized at oral argument before us, that theory
required the jury to reject Lech's contrary testimony that she
raised all her pregnancy-related concerns to the medical staff,
who ignored her. Indeed, throughout trial, defendants compared
(i) what Lech stated she told medical providers with (ii) what she
discussed on her recorded calls with family members and her
then-boyfriend to imply that her testimony about experiencing
symptoms, reporting all those symptoms to medical staff, and
requesting to go to the hospital was all fabricated.
For instance, during their cross-examination of Lech,
defendants confirmed that she had just testified that she reported
pregnancy-related symptoms to medical staff. They then played
-23- recorded calls Lech had with her mother, brother, and
then-boyfriend on the same day as those appointments and asked her
to confirm that during those calls she did not mention anything
about her pregnancy, the appointments, or the health of her baby,
or that she needed to go to the hospital and medical staff refused
to send her.
The implication of defendants' cross-examination was
that Lech fabricated her testimony that she communicated concerns
about her pregnancy to WCC medical staff. Defendants argued that
the omissions in Lech's calls to family members made it unlikely
that Lech experienced her symptoms at all or shared her symptoms
with anyone, providers included, and more likely that she never
told providers what she claimed.
In their opening statement, defendants confirmed that
the purpose of using the recorded calls was to undermine Lech's
testimony that she told providers her concerns about her pregnancy.
So, too, in their closing argument, when defendants contended that
Lech's pleas to the medical providers "are not supported by the
medical records, and . . . are not supported by the recorded phone
calls for a simple reason: Because they did not happen." In fact,
at closing, defendants implored the jury, "[i]f [they were] having
any doubt as to the v[e]racity of [defendants'] story," to
"[d]ecide . . . whether [Lech's] phone conversations, the topics,
the tone . . . are consistent with a woman who feels that her baby
-24- is dying within her, who has been repeatedly begging to be sent to
the hospital, and who has repeatedly been refused by every single
medical provider she encountered over that 10-day period." To
believe Lech, defendants asserted, the jury had to believe that,
"in spite of [her] pressing concerns that she told [the jury]
about, it is entirely reasonable that [she] made almost no mention
of them" in her recorded conversations.
Zygmont's testimony would have rebutted defendants'
theory that Lech fabricated either experiencing certain symptoms
or sharing them with others (or both). As to Lech's symptoms,
Zygmont would have testified that, when he visited Lech at WCC
twice during the critical time period, Lech told him that she "was
experiencing decreased fetal movement, felt that something was
wrong, and that she thought she needed to go to the hospital." As
to her communications with the providers, he would have testified
that "Lech complained WCC medical staff were not paying attention
to her." Lech contended that his testimony would have helped to
establish that she was concerned about her pregnancy, communicated
those concerns to her close friend, and felt that medical staff
were dismissive of her. It also would have shown that Lech
specifically mentioned experiencing decreased fetal movement
multiple times and not just once. Further, a jury could have
viewed Zygmont's testimony that Lech told him about her symptoms
and thought she needed to go to the hospital as making it more
-25- likely that Lech reported those symptoms to WCC staff and asked
them to send her to the hospital. Accordingly, Zygmont's testimony
would not have rebutted merely a broad attack on Lech's
credibility. See Lozada-Rivera,
177 F.3d at 104; Chiu, 36 F.4th
at 300–01. Rather, it would have rebutted the specific charge
that she fabricated either her symptoms or her communication of
those symptoms to providers. Chiu,
36 F.4th at 301.
Moreover, Zygmont's proposed testimony would not have
been impermissible bolstering testimony. See Wilkerson,
411 F.3d at 5; Simonelli,
237 F.3d at 28. Its "rebutting force" was that,
although Lech did not mention to some people in her life the
concerns she said she raised to the providers, Lech told the one
person who visited her while she was incarcerated at WCC that she
was worried about her pregnancy. Wilkerson,
411 F.3d at 5(citation omitted).
For these reasons, Zygmont's testimony was admissible as
evidence of Lech's prior consistent statements under Rule
801(d)(1)(B)(i). See United States v. Washington,
434 F.3d 7, 15(1st Cir. 2006) (finding that a prior consistent statement was
properly admitted when the opposing party "had suggested that the
entirety of [the declarant's] testimony on direct examination had
been false," including testimony about the specific subject of the
prior consistent statement (emphasis omitted)). The district
court abused its discretion when it excluded his testimony. Its
-26- determination that there was no charge of fabrication for that
testimony to rebut simply does not reflect what occurred at trial.
Having found that the district court abused its
discretion by allowing defendants to play recordings of Lech's
calls to assail her character for truthfulness and by excluding
Zygmont's testimony, we proceed to a harmless-error analysis.
3. Harmless-Error Inquiry
The district court's erroneous exclusion of Zygmont's
testimony was not harmless as to the Hampden County defendants.
The theme that they revisited at opening, at closing, in their
cross-examination of Lech, and with virtually every fact witness
was that the medical providers' account, not Lech's, was
believable. In pursuit of that strategy, defendants emphasized
that Lech's alleged silence about her pregnancy-related concerns
on her recorded calls and her lack of corroborating evidence backed
up their version of events and disproved Lech's. Indeed,
defendants ended their closing argument by stating that "[t]he
conflicts between . . . [Lech's] story and virtually all of the
other evidence in this case" was "why such an important part" of
the jury's job "is deciding who is telling the truth, whom do you
believe is credible." In a similar manner, they contrasted Lech's
testimony with that of the medical providers, which was "entirely
corroborated" by the medical records and "all of the percipient
witnesses."
-27- Given that the case centered on a credibility battle
between Lech and the medical providers, it cannot be harmless error
to exclude corroborating testimony from the sole person who visited
Lech at WCC during the relevant time period. Zygmont's testimony
would have buttressed Lech's account, rebutted the argument that
she never told anyone about all her symptoms, and made it more
likely that she either discussed her concerns with providers or
requested to be sent to the hospital.8 See United States v. Awon,
135 F.3d 96, 101(1st Cir. 1998), abrogated on other grounds by
United States v. Piper,
298 F.3d 47(1st Cir. 2002) (explaining
that the impact of prior consistent statements is that they
corroborate other evidence).
The district court's ruling excluded exactly the type of
evidence that defendants emphasized was missing from Lech's case.
It also excluded the only corroborating account from another
witness that Lech sought to introduce. And because Zygmont's
testimony was her sole corroborating account, it was not
cumulative. Its value is precisely that it came from someone other
than Lech.
8 We note that the district court characterized Zygmont's testimony differently than the way that testimony was described in the proffer. The district court understood that Zygmont would testify that Lech told him she had relayed to medical staff her various pregnancy-related symptoms and asked medical staff to go to the hospital but was ignored. Zygmont's testimony would have had even more rebutting force -- and its exclusion would therefore have been more harmful -- when characterized in such a way.
-28- Moreover, as Lech notes, the district court permitted
Zygmont to testify about his visits but only as to what he observed
about Lech, not what she stated to him. The exclusion of Lech's
statements to Zygmont could have implied to the jury that Lech did
not mention any issues with her pregnancy to him either. The jury
therefore could have been misled into thinking that what was
actually corroborating evidence undermined Lech's account.
To be sure, the accounts of seven medical providers and
their notes conflicted with Lech's version of events. In addition,
Lech had to contend with defendants' argument that it was
inherently unlikely that providers ignored and failed to document
some of Lech's pregnancy-related symptoms, while simultaneously
responding to and documenting other symptoms that Lech agreed she
reported. However, that backdrop only reinforces that the case
hinged on competing credibility assessments. Lech's inability to
offset defendants' account with evidence of her own is, in part,
what helped defendants argue her account was false. And although
Zygmont's testimony would not have changed Lech's omissions on the
recorded calls, Lech explained at trial that she did not speak to
her then-boyfriend or family members about her health because her
boyfriend was not sympathetic and her family was dismissive of her
concerns. Zygmont, by contrast, was the only person who visited
her at WCC. The jury, if it had Zygmont's testimony, could have
found that Lech was more likely to have confided in Zygmont about
-29- her medical issues than the people she spoke with on the phone.
Accordingly, his testimony was particularly important to rebutting
the attacks on Lech's credibility.
Indeed, the exclusion of Zygmont's testimony is
especially harmful when we consider it alongside defendants' use
of the recorded calls to show Lech's alleged penchant for
untruthfulness. We agree with Lech that, as a practical matter,
it is necessary to evaluate the evidentiary rulings in combination.
The jury would have reviewed the trial evidence holistically and
could have weighed together -- and was encouraged by defendants to
weigh together -- the evidence of Lech's alleged untruthfulness
and the presence or absence of corroborating evidence for each
side's version of events. The district court rejected Lech's
proffer after defendants had spent part of their cross-examination
attempting to show that Lech had a propensity to lie. With that
ruling, Lech was deprived of the opportunity to introduce Zygmont's
testimony to bolster her credibility, rebut the claim that she
fabricated her account, and challenge defendants' account. At the
same time, defendants were allowed to use statements unrelated to
her medical care to show her alleged character for untruthfulness
and to shore up their version of events. The two errors are
mutually reinforcing.
Finally, Zygmont's testimony would have been relevant to
Lech's contention that defendants unjustifiably delayed her access
-30- to medical care. A jury could have found that his testimony helped
show that Lech consistently noted decreased fetal movement over a
period of days and that, as of December 26 and 28, she believed
she needed to go to the hospital, but WCC medical staff did not
send her there until the morning of January 2.
In considering the centrality of Zygmont's testimony to
the trial and the prejudicial effect of its exclusion, see
Nieves-Villanueva,
133 F.3d at 102, we conclude that it is not
"highly probable that the error did not affect the outcome of the
case" against the Hampden County defendants. McDonough,
452 F.3d at 19-20.9 Because we determine that the exclusion of Zygmont's
testimony was not harmless as to the Hampden County defendants and
vacate the jury verdict as to those defendants on that ground, we
need not determine whether the use of the recorded phone calls in
violation of Rule 608(b) was also harmful.
4. Effect of the Evidentiary Rulings as to von Goeler
We reach a different conclusion about the impact of the
evidentiary errors on the verdict as to von Goeler. Like the
Hampden County defendants, von Goeler also attacked Lech's
credibility. However, she offered an additional defense theory:
Because we resolve Lech's claim on the ground that Zygmont's 9
testimony was admissible as evidence of prior consistent statements and its exclusion was harmful, we need not address Lech's additional argument that the testimony was also admissible as evidence of her then-existing condition under Rule 803(3).
-31- that Lech's stillbirth had already happened by the time von Goeler
saw Lech on December 30, 2013. She presented that theory at
opening, in closing, and through expert testimony. This theory
relied on von Goeler's own expert, who estimated that Lech's
placental abruption occurred one week before Lech's C-section on
January 2, 2014, or on approximately December 26, 2013. But it
also relied on a concession by Lech's expert, who testified that
it was "not likely" but "possible" that the placental abruption
occurred 72 hours before the C-section. Under that timeline,
Lech's stillbirth would have occurred before Lech's December 30
appointment with von Goeler that formed the basis of her claims.
Thus, if the jury credited Lech's own expert, it could have found
that, even under Lech's version of events, von Goeler's actions
did not cause Lech to lose her baby. That lack of causation would
have been fatal to Lech's claims against von Goeler. As the
district court's jury instructions made clear, each claim --
deliberate indifference, medical malpractice, and IIED -- required
Lech to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that von Goeler's
conduct was a but-for cause of Lech's harm. 10 See
Nieves-Villanueva,
133 F.3d at 102(considering jury instructions
10Although the loss of Lech's baby may not be the only relevant harm as to Lech's IIED claim against von Goeler, Lech offers no argument on appeal that von Goeler's actions caused her some type of other, independent emotional distress that is sufficient to sustain an IIED claim.
-32- in assessing the centrality of the evidence and any prejudicial
effect on the jury's decision).
Although the parties did not discuss von Goeler's
causation theory as part of their harmless-error arguments on
appeal, we may affirm the judgment on any ground apparent in the
record. United States v. George,
886 F.3d 31, 39(1st Cir. 2018).
Given the evidence supporting von Goeler's theory, which was the
only defense theory that did not implicate Lech's credibility, the
exclusion of Zygmont's testimony "cannot reasonably be understood
as the pivotal evidence that tipped the verdict in favor of [von
Goeler]." Gay,
660 F.3d at 64. Because we "cannot say that the
[district court's evidentiary ruling] affected the outcome of the
trial" as to von Goeler, we find that error harmless as to her.
Nieves-Villanueva,
133 F.3d at 102.
B. Summary Judgment
Next, we address Lech's argument that the district court
should not have granted summary judgment to correctional officer
Natalie Cruz on the deliberate indifference and IIED claims against
her. We first address a threshold issue before turning to the
relevant facts and legal standard.
Defendants argue that, even if the district court erred
by granting summary judgment to Cruz on the deliberate indifference
and IIED claims, any error was harmless given that the jury found
that Cruz was not liable for negligence. We have declined to
-33- "reenter the morass" of summary judgment when it is "perfectly
clear that, even if a plaintiff's claim should not have been
dismissed[,] . . . any such mistake was harmless, given the jury's
verdict in the defendant's favor on other claims addressed to the
very same factual circumstances." In re Nexium (Esomeprazole)
Antitrust Litig.,
842 F.3d 34, 62(1st Cir. 2016) (cleaned up)
(quoting Fite v. Dig. Equip. Corp.,
232 F.3d 3, 6(1st Cir. 2000)).
Because we have determined that one of the evidentiary rulings
discussed above affected the jury verdict, it is not "perfectly
clear" that the verdict on the negligence claim renders the grant
of summary judgment to Cruz on the deliberate indifference and
IIED claims harmless.
Id.Accordingly, we proceed to evaluate de
novo the merits of the district court's entry of summary judgment.
We begin by setting forth the facts related to the motion in the
light most favorable to Lech consistent with record support.
Johnson v. Johnson,
23 F.4th 136, 139(1st Cir. 2022).
Lech interacted with Cruz the night before she was
eventually transported to the hospital, where she was told her
baby had passed away. At around 10 p.m. on January 1, 2014, Lech
stood up to have her identification bracelet scanned as part of
the facility's evening count. Lech felt a "gushing sensation" and
a "wetness," in addition to abdominal cramping and bulging. She
noticed that she was having vaginal bleeding and that her clothes
were stained and wet. Lech used the intercom in her cell to call
-34- the correctional officers' station, and Cruz answered. Cruz, who
had received first-responder training as part of her job as a
correctional officer, knew that Lech was pregnant both because it
was clear to Cruz from Lech's appearance and because a list of
prisoner information that Cruz possessed noted Lech's pregnancy.
When she called Cruz, Lech told Cruz that her water had broken,
that she believed she was in labor, and that she "need[ed] to go
to medical or [she] need[ed] to go to the hospital."
WCC correctional officers like Cruz have two options for
responding to inmates' medical needs: (1) they can "call medical
[staff] and let them know the inmate is requesting medical," in
which case the individual will be sent from their cell to the
medical unit if the medical staff deems it necessary, or (2) they
can "call a medical emergency via the radio," in which case medical
staff will go to the individual's cell immediately to assess the
individual. In responding to Lech, Cruz used the first option.
Cruz told Lech that everything was fine, and that she would contact
medical staff after finishing her count. After Cruz finished the
count, which takes between two-and-a-half and three minutes to
complete, and at some point between 10 p.m. and 10:19 p.m., Cruz
called WCC medical staff. After speaking with medical staff, Cruz
called Lech on the intercom and told her that medical staff wanted
to know how serious her symptoms were and if she could wait until
the morning to be seen. Lech told Cruz "why" she needed to see
-35- medical, and her roommate shouted through the intercom that Lech
"need[ed] to go [to] medical" and that "[Lech's] water broke."
Cruz then spoke with the medical staff again, and they directed
Cruz to send Lech to the medical unit. Cruz did so, and Lech was
scanned out of the housing unit on her way to medical at 10:19
p.m. -- about twenty minutes after she first called Cruz. Lech
walked to the medical unit with another WCC staff member.
In granting summary judgment to Cruz, the district court
determined that "[t]he twenty−minute delay in transferring [Lech]
from her cell to the medical unit while she was bleeding may have
been negligence on Cruz's part, but it was not deliberate
indifference." It also held that "[b]ecause the bar for IIED
liability may be as high as the standard for a finding of
deliberate indifference," Lech failed to show that Cruz's delay
rose to the level of intentional infliction of emotional distress
under Massachusetts law. We address the deliberate indifference
and the IIED claim in turn.
1. Deliberate Indifference Claim
Prison officials violate the Eighth Amendment when they
act with deliberate indifference to a prisoner's serious medical
needs. Estelle v. Gamble,
429 U.S. 97, 104(1976). To establish
an Eighth Amendment violation, a prisoner must satisfy both an
objective element, which requires proof of a serious medical need,
and a subjective element, which requires a showing that a prison
-36- official had a "sufficiently culpable state of mind" such that
they were deliberately indifferent to that need. Leite v.
Bergeron,
911 F.3d 47, 52(1st Cir. 2018) (quoting Farmer v.
Brennan,
511 U.S. 825, 834(1994)).
The district court concluded that Lech had a serious
medical need, and defendants do not contest that conclusion. We
agree that Lech's medical needs were sufficiently serious at the
time she interacted with Cruz to satisfy the objective element.
"A medical need is sufficiently serious if it 'has been diagnosed
by a physician as mandating treatment,' or is 'so obvious that
even a lay person would easily recognize the necessity for a
doctor's attention.'" Sosa v. Mass. Dep't of Corr.,
80 F.4th 15,
27 (1st Cir. 2023) (quoting Zingg v. Groblewski,
907 F.3d 630, 635(1st Cir. 2018)). On the evening of January 1, 2014, Lech had
vaginal bleeding and had reported that her water broke and that
she was in labor. Those symptoms are obvious enough that a
layperson presented with them would recognize that Lech needed
medical attention. Accordingly, the open issue is whether Lech
has produced enough evidence for a jury to conclude that Cruz was
deliberately indifferent.
Prison officials are deliberately indifferent when they
"know[] of and disregard[] an excessive risk to inmate health or
safety." Farmer, 511 U.S. at 836–37. To meet this standard,
"prison officials must either deny needed medical treatment in
-37- order to punish the inmate, or display wanton or criminal
recklessness in the treatment afforded." Sosa, 80 F.4th at 27
(internal quotation marks omitted) (quoting Zingg,
907 F.3d at 635). That is, deliberate indifference may take the form of
"'wanton' decisions to deny or delay care where the action is
recklessness, 'not in the tort law sense but in the appreciably
stricter criminal-law sense, requiring actual knowledge of
impending harm, easily preventable.'" Watson v. Caton,
984 F.2d 537, 540(1st Cir. 1993) (citations omitted). It is that form of
deliberate indifference that Lech argues a jury could find here.
Thus, to survive summary judgment, she must present enough evidence
for a factfinder to conclude that, in taking about twenty minutes
to transfer Lech to the medical unit, Cruz acted with "wanton
disregard" for Lech's serious medical needs -- that is, Cruz knew
Lech faced a substantial risk of serious harm and yet failed to
take reasonable measures to prevent it. Zingg,
907 F.3d at 635.
On the particular facts here, given Lech's own framing
of her request, what Cruz knew at the time, and Cruz's multiple
calls to Lech and medical staff within the twenty-minute period,
we conclude that the district court did not err in granting summary
judgment to Cruz. Lech herself asked Cruz to send her to the
medical unit or to the hospital. After finishing her count, Cruz
responded to Lech's request by calling the medical unit and went
back and forth with the medical unit and Lech. Critically, no
-38- evidence indicates that Cruz knew Lech had a high-risk pregnancy.
See Burnette v. Taylor,
533 F.3d 1325, 1331(11th Cir. 2008)
(explaining that each defendant's subjective awareness of a risk
of harm must be assessed individually). The evidence shows only
that Cruz knew Lech's water had broken and Lech believed she was
in labor. Within that context, neither Cruz's completion of all
the steps needed to send Lech to the medical unit within twenty
minutes of Lech's request nor Cruz's decision to call the medical
unit, as opposed to using the radio to announce a medical
emergency, is sufficient to support a finding that Cruz wantonly
delayed care.
To be sure, "short[] delays" in providing medical care
"may . . . constitute a constitutional violation if injuries are
sufficiently serious." Youmans v. Gagnon,
626 F.3d 557, 564(11th
Cir. 2010). As Lech points out, in other cases, courts have found
sufficient evidence to permit a finding of deliberate indifference
by prison officials when medical care was delayed for fewer than
twenty minutes. But cases with shorter or comparable delays
involved prison officials' knowledge of readily apparent life-
threatening injuries. See Beauford v. Mesa County,
35 F.4th 1248,
1267 (10th Cir. 2022) (finding that waiting ten minutes to seek
medical assistance when prison official was not sure if prisoner
was breathing may constitute deliberate indifference); Bradich ex
rel. Est. of Bradich v. City of Chicago,
413 F.3d 688, 691-92(7th
-39- Cir. 2005) (same when three prison officials waited ten minutes to
seek help after prisoner's attempted hanging and in that time
provided unhelpful assistance); Bozeman v. Orum,
422 F.3d 1265, 1273(11th Cir. 2005), abrogated on other grounds by Kingsley v.
Hendrickson,
576 U.S. 389(2015) (same when officers knew prisoner
was either unconscious or not breathing (or both) and failed to
summon help for fourteen minutes); Tlamka v. Serrell,
244 F.3d 628, 632–35 (8th Cir. 2001) (same when correctional officers forced
prisoners who were providing CPR to another prisoner who had
suffered a heart attack to stop and then failed to approach the
prisoner or provide CPR for a period of up to ten minutes). As we
noted above, because Lech did not dispute that Cruz was unaware of
her high-risk pregnancy, no such readily apparent life-threatening
injury was presented here.
Relying on Giroux v. Somerset County,
178 F.3d 28(1st
Cir. 1999) and Goebert v. Lee County,
510 F.3d 1312(11th Cir.
2007), Lech also argues that Cruz's failure to enter her cell and
investigate her condition is enough to support her deliberate
indifference claim. But, again, the defendants' conduct in those
cases is different than Cruz's conduct. In Giroux, we explained
that the evidence showed a correctional-officer defendant was
"aware of a high probability that [a prisoner] was vulnerable to
attack from another inmate but took no action despite that
awareness."
178 F.3d at 33. And in Goebert, a jail official
-40- failed to act in response to a pregnant woman's complaint that she
had been leaking fluid for more than nine days for no reason other
than that he "automatically disbelieve[d] all inmate statements
about medical care." 510 F.3d at 1316–19, 1327–29. Here, by
contrast, Cruz completed the steps to arrange for medical
assistance for Lech within twenty minutes of Lech's request.
We therefore affirm the district court's grant of
summary judgment to Cruz on the deliberate indifference claim.
2. IIED Claim
We must next determine whether the district court
correctly ruled that Cruz's conduct failed to rise to the level
required for an IIED claim. "The standard for making a claim of
intentional infliction of emotional distress is very high." Polay
v. McMahon,
10 N.E.3d 1122, 1128 (Mass. 2014) (citation omitted).
To sustain an IIED claim under Massachusetts law, a plaintiff must
show "(1) that [the defendant] intended, knew, or should have known
that [their] conduct would cause emotional distress; (2) that the
conduct was extreme and outrageous; (3) that the conduct caused
emotional distress; and (4) that the emotional distress was
severe."
Id.Massachusetts courts have interpreted "extreme and
outrageous conduct" to mean behavior that is "so outrageous in
character, and so extreme in degree, as to go beyond all possible
bounds of decency, and to be regarded as atrocious, and utterly
intolerable in a civilized community." Roman v. Tr. of Tufts
-41- Coll.,
964 N.E.2d 331, 341(Mass. 2012) (quoting Foley v. Polaroid
Corp.,
508 N.E.2d 72, 82(Mass. 1987)). In determining whether
conduct rises to that level, a factfinder is entitled to "put as
harsh a face on the actions of the [defendant] as the basic facts
would reasonably allow." Richey v. Am. Auto. Ass'n,
406 N.E.2d 675, 678(Mass. 1980).
We determine that it was not error for the district court
to conclude that Cruz's conduct fails to rise to the level of
extreme or outrageous. The fact that Cruz, who did not know that
Lech had a high-risk pregnancy, engaged in all the steps to send
Lech to medical within twenty minutes of Lech's request and did so
rather than call a medical emergency via radio is insufficient to
permit a jury to find that she engaged in conduct that exceeds
"all possible bounds of decency" and is "utterly intolerable in a
civilized community." Polay, 10 N.E.3d at 1128 (citation omitted).
We therefore affirm the district court's grant of
summary judgment to Cruz on the IIED claim.
IV. CONCLUSION
For these reasons, we affirm in part and vacate and
remand in part. The parties shall bear their own costs.
-42-
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