RICHARD D. ROGERS, District Judge.
Plaintiff is a state system inmate who has brought a
This case is now before the court upon plaintiff's motion to alter or amend judgment pursuant to FED.R.CIV.P. 59(e). Doc. No. 226. Plaintiff's motion raises several arguments seeking modification of the court's rulings in the January 23, 2014 order. After careful review, the motion shall be denied for the reasons which follow.
Grounds warranting relief under Rule 59(e) include: 1) an intervening change in the controlling law; 2) new evidence previously unavailable, and 3) the need to correct clear error or prevent manifest injustice.
Relief shall be denied to plaintiff because he does not satisfy the standards of Rule 59(e). In addition, a few of plaintiff's many arguments are presented for the first time in his reply brief. This provides an additional reason to reject some of plaintiff's arguments. See
Defendant has made two timeliness arguments. First, defendant contends that plaintiff's amended memorandum in support of his Rule 59(e) motion was untimely and that additional arguments made in that memorandum should not be considered. Given that the court's order which plaintiff seeks to alter or amend was mailed by regular mail to plaintiff on January 23, 2014, plaintiff had 31 days to file his Rule 59(e) motion. Plaintiff filed his amended memorandum before that deadline. So, the court rejects defendant's first timeliness argument.
Defendant's second timeliness argument concerns plaintiff's challenge to the court's rulings on nondispositive motions. As already stated, the court's order granting summary judgment also ruled upon some nondispositive motions. Plaintiff's motion to alter or amend objects to or asks for reconsideration of the court's rulings on some of the nondispositive motions. Defendant asserts that plaintiff's arguments as to the nondispositive matters are untimely because Local Rule 7.3(b) requires that motions for reconsideration of nondispositive orders be filed within 14 days of the order. Plaintiff argues that since the nondispositive rulings were made in the same order that granted summary judgment, the 28-day time limit for filing a Rule 59(e) motion should apply to the nondispositive rulings.
Support for defendant's argument may be found in
The court agrees with defendant that plaintiff's request for reconsideration of the court's rulings upon nondispositive motions is untimely. Nevertheless, the court shall proceed to discuss plaintiff's arguments for reconsideration of those rulings.
Plaintiff argues that the court erred in denying plaintiff's objections to the Magistrate Judge's rulings upon motions to enforce subpoenas and motions to quash subpoenas. These objections were made in Doc. No. 198. One of plaintiff's arguments is that the court applied the wrong standard of review. Plaintiff contends that the court erred by applying a "clearly erroneous" standard instead of a "de novo" standard. Plaintiff asserts that a "de novo" standard should apply to subpoena enforcement rulings, citing
As the court reads FED.R.CIV.P. 72(a), a "clearly erroneous or is contrary to law" standard applies because the order in question concerned a nondispositive matter.
Plaintiff makes several arguments relating to the court's denial of objections in Doc. No. 198 to the Magistrate Judge's order (Doc. No. 188) concerning the enforcement of two subpoenas — one subpoena issued to Mr. Raymond N. Roberts and one subpoena issued to Mr. Timothy Taylor. As noted previously, plaintiff's motion to alter or amend is untimely as to these motions. The issues plaintiff raises are also moot in light of the court's grant of summary judgment. Nevertheless, the court will attempt to address plaintiff's contentions.
First, plaintiff argues that the court mischaracterized the objections he made in Doc. No. 198. Plaintiff is correct that the court did not accurately characterize the full extent of the rulings in the order to which plaintiff objected. But, plaintiff does not argue why this justifies the relief he requests. The court found and still finds that the Magistrate Judge's rulings were not clearly erroneous or contrary to law.
Under the clearly erroneous standard, the court is required to affirm a magistrate judge's order unless a complete review leaves it "with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed."
Plaintiff has not shown that the Magistrate Judge's conclusions in quashing plaintiff's subpoena to Mr. Roberts were clearly erroneous or contrary to law. Normally, issues relating to a motion to quash a subpoena are a subject of discretion.
As for the subpoena issued to Mr. Taylor, the Magistrate Judge quashed the subpoena on the grounds of relevance or overbreadth. But, plaintiff was granted leave to serve a more narrowly tailored subpoena when discovery, which had been stayed, resumed. Plaintiff's memorandum in support of the motion to alter and amend and his reply brief barely mention the subpoena issued to Mr. Taylor. So, no credible argument can be made for overturning the court's order sustaining the Magistrate Judge's decision as to that subpoena. Even if the court returns to the objections made in Doc. No. 198, it is clear that the Magistrate Judge's order was not clearly mistaken. Like plaintiff's objections to quashing the Roberts subpoena, plaintiff makes a broad reference to prior pleadings (Doc. Nos. 116, 117, 140 and 141).
In plaintiff's motion to alter or amend, he refers to the motions to quash as untimely. This argument, however, was not made in his objections in Doc. No. 198 and therefore, this court could not have erred in failing to consider it. Moreover, the timeliness question was considered by the Magistrate Judge as to the Taylor subpoena and plaintiff does not attempt to dispute the Magistrate Judge's reasoning which would appear to apply to the Roberts subpoena as well.
Plaintiff argues in his reply brief that defendant has no standing to resist plaintiff's arguments to alter and amend this court's order relating to the subpoena issues and therefore that his motion is uncontested as to those subpoenas. This argument does not demonstrate however that the court should have overturned the Magistrate Judge's order as clearly erroneous on the basis of plaintiff's rather spare argumentation and general reference to prior pleadings. Nor does it prove that this court's order caused manifest injustice.
Finally, and more pertinently, plaintiff belatedly suggests in his reply brief that he attempted to limit the scope of the subpoena issued to Mr. Roberts. This contention, however, does not reach the problem of vagueness identified by the Magistrate Judge and it fails to clearly show that the proposed modification would satisfy the concerns of overbreadth.
In sum, the court continues to find that the Magistrate Judge's order (Doc. No. 188) was not clearly erroneous or contrary to law.
Plaintiff's next argument is that the court mischaracterized Doc. No. 216 — "Plaintiff's Objections to Order of Magistrate Judge to District Court." The document refers to two orders by the Magistrate Judge, an order denying plaintiff's motion to modify the scheduling order — Doc. No. 178; and an order denying plaintiff's motion to reconsider — Doc. No. 210. Plaintiff argues that the court erred by referring the plaintiff's objections in Doc. No. 216 as relating to "the Magistrate Judge's denial of [plaintiff's] motion to reconsider the Magistrate Judge's denial of plaintiff's motion to modify the scheduling order." Doc. No. 224 at p. 31. We see no significant error here. The Magistrate Judge's order in Doc. No. 210 denied plaintiff's motion for reconsideration (Doc No. 186) of the Magistrate's Order denying the motion to modify the scheduling order — Doc. No. 178. Those are the two orders mentioned in Doc. No. 216. Plaintiff could not timely ask for review of Doc. No. 178 by this court in Doc. No. 216. This court's consideration of Doc. No. 178 could only be accomplished by objecting to the Magistrate Judge's denial of reconsideration in Doc. No. 210. So, the court did not substantially mischaracterize Doc. No. 216.
Plaintiff's next argument is that the court made a mistake of law or clear error because the court did not allow discovery to continue pursuant to FED.R.CIV.P. 56(d) and stay action upon defendant's summary judgment motion. Plaintiff asserts that the court was legally required to take this action because defendant did not file opposition to plaintiff's motion to stay in spite of the court's direction that defendant "should file a response to plaintiff's motion to stay and a reply to plaintiff's response to the motion for summary judgment." Doc. No. 169 at p. 2. Defendant did not file a response to the motion to stay, although defendant did oppose plaintiff's attempts to modify the scheduling order to extend the discovery deadline which had expired prior to the summary judgment decision. Doc. No. 190. Because the motion to stay was "unopposed," plaintiff contends this court was required by law to grant the motion to stay. Plaintiff supports his position by citing Local Rule 7.4(b) which provides that if a responsive brief is not filed to oppose a motion, the court will decide the motion as an uncontested motion and ordinarily grant the motion without further notice. Obviously, Local Rule 7.4(b) does not command the court to grant uncontested motions under all circumstances. So, the court did not violate the Local Rules by denying plaintiff's motion to stay, particularly where defendant was generally in opposition to the extension of discovery.
The denial of the motion to stay did not cause injustice for the reasons stated in the court's order. Plaintiff did not justify relief under Rule 56(d) because plaintiff did not identify "probable facts" available to him through additional discovery which would demonstrate a chilling injury or rebut defendant's claim to qualified immunity. Plaintiff contends that the court did not "liberally construe" his Rule 56(d) motion and affidavit or sufficiently consider that defendant was in exclusive control of the information plaintiff has sought to discover. But, the court was well aware of plaintiff's
Plaintiff has attempted to extend the time and scope of discovery in various ways. It is the court's view that plaintiff has failed to demonstrate in his Rule 56(d) argumentation, his contentions for an extension of the discovery deadline, and his motion to compel discovery that the desired discovery would make a material difference to the critical issues in the summary judgment pleadings. This was the court's reason for denying plaintiff's Rule 56(d) request and plaintiff's Rule 59(e) motion fails to demonstrate that the court was mistaken.
The court denied plaintiff leave to file a second amended complaint ("SAC") because plaintiff waited too long to make the motion, and because some of the "new" allegations were either unnecessary or futile. Before discussing plaintiff's arguments to alter this court's denial of leave to file plaintiff's SAC, the court will observe that many of plaintiff's arguments could have been raised in his briefing in support of his motion to amend the complaint. The arguments are raised for the first time in the motion to alter or amend and, therefore, they are improper.
When the court denied leave to file the proposed SAC, the court accepted defendant's argument that Count Three was futile and noted that plaintiff had not responded to this contention from defendant. In the motion to alter or amend, plaintiff argues for the first time that Count Three of the proposed SAC — alleging "Negligent Infliction of Emotional Distress" (Doc. No. 182-1 at p. 4) — is not futile where the injurious conduct is willful or wanton or defendant acts with intent to injure. Plaintiff's argument obviously is not pertinent to Count Three, which alleged
In plaintiff's reply brief, he argues for the first time that defendant was aware of plaintiff's particular susceptibility to emotional distress. This argument is belatedly made. Of course, even if the court had permitted plaintiff to amend his complaint to add Count Three, it would have been dismissed when the court declined to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over plaintiff's state law claims.
The remainder of plaintiff's argumentation does not address the case law cited in the court's order, or address the court's reasoning that the proposed SAC was untimely, unnecessary and futile. The actions plaintiff alleges occurred primarily before February 2012. Yet, plaintiff waited until November 18, 2013 (near the close of discovery) to ask for leave to amend the complaint, after he had been aware of the actions for a long period of time. The court considered some of the actions to be outside the scope of the amended complaint.
Plaintiff's reasons for amending the complaint are various and sometimes late in coming. In the original motion to amend, plaintiff suggests that discovery had been denied and obstructed, but also that discovery provided plaintiff with additional facts and that plaintiff could itemize the actual injuries suffered. Doc. No. 182 at p. 2. In plaintiff's reply in support of his motion for leave to file the proposed SAC he states that he waited to file the motion because he had been denied discovery so long and that several acts were not known to plaintiff until after he amended his complaint. Doc. No. 196-1 at p. 2. In the motion to alter or amend, plaintiff argues that he waited to ask for leave to amend because was trying not to waste judicial resources with several amendments and trying to resolve all the claims in one final amendment. Doc. No. 228 at p. 11. These various arguments do not adequately justify plaintiff's delay in raising some of his complaints regarding conditions he suffered or actions taken against him while he was in C-Unit. He was transferred out of C-Unit Pod 3 on March 9, 2012, more than eighteen months after he filed the motion for leave to file the proposed SAC.
Finally, the court's order denying leave to file the SAC should not be altered because plaintiff has failed to address why the proposed amendments were necessary and why they were not futile. As the court attempted to explain in our previous order, some of the actions alleged in the proposed SAC could already be considered as part of the amended complaint. Therefore, the SAC was not necessary as to those claims. The court further held that all of the proposed amendments were not sufficient to show that defendant violated federal law against retaliation or, if he did, to rebut defendant's claim to qualified immunity.
Plaintiff makes numerous arguments to alter or amend the court's order granting defendant's motion for summary judgment. The court shall attempt to address the arguments in the order in which they are presented.
Plaintiff objects to the following statement of uncontroverted fact which is contained in the summary judgment order: "After plaintiff learned [that he needed to pay the filing and service fees for a state court action with two checks instead of one], he requested that forms to withdraw money, a letter and a check be returned to him." This statement appears fairly consistent with plaintiff's response to defendant's statement of facts. Doc. No. 194, p.3 (response to defendant's statement of fact ("SOF") #5). Plaintiff's purported correction
Plaintiff objects to another of the court's statements of uncontroverted fact: "Plaintiff admits that he has frequently filed grievances, property claims and Kansas Open Records requests and that it may have appeared that plaintiff had excess property at times because plaintiff had his paperwork laid out in his cell so he could work." This statement is consistent with plaintiff's SOF # 27 (Doc. No. 194 at p. 21) and plaintiff's response to defendant's SOF # 14 (compare Doc. No. 145 at p. 4 and Doc. No. 194 at p. 6). Again, plaintiff does not explain why any correction to this statement would alter the court's findings on summary judgment.
Plaintiff next objects to the court failing to find as an uncontroverted fact that C-Unit Pod-3 was a disciplinary unit. As the court reads the pleadings, this was not an uncontroverted fact and plaintiff did not propose it as an uncontroverted fact. Plaintiff did assert that it was uncontroverted that he had to share his day room with disciplinary restriction inmates and that administrative segregation and disciplinary segregation inmates were housed in C-Unit, Pod 3, where plaintiff was housed. Doc. No. 194, p. 21. But, these assertions were controverted. Doc. No. 215, p. 27. Plaintiff also referred to C-Unit Pod 3 as a "Disciplinary Restriction Pod" in his responses to defendant's alleged uncontroverted facts, but did not cite evidentiary support for this label. Doc. No. 194, pp. 8-10. Defendant claimed that plaintiff was not forced to spend day room time with disciplinary restriction inmates. Defendant further claimed that inmates on restriction were not housed on plaintiff's level; that segregation inmates never have contact with general population inmates; and that segregation inmates were not housed in C-Unit, Pod 3 while plaintiff was there. Defendant further claimed that segregation inmates are temporarily housed in Pod 3 of C Unit when segregation beds in A Unit are full, but that segregation inmates are never allowed in the dayroom except when escorted outside by prison staff. Doc. No. 145, p. 7. Plaintiff did not dispute these alleged facts. Doc. No. 194, pp. 12-13.
Plaintiff also objects that the court should have listed as an uncontroverted fact that the goal of advancement for inmates at NCF is to achieve a room in A-Unit and that disciplinary restrictions required inmates to be moved from A-Unit. Again, these alleged uncontroverted facts were not proposed as such although plaintiff did assert that it was "common knowledge among inmates that A-Unit is the honor Unit with inmates on incentive Levels 2 and 3 having priority in housing there."
In sum, in his motion to alter or amend plaintiff has attempted to reword his arguments in opposition to summary judgment. This is not a proper purpose for a motion to alter or amend judgment. In addition, plaintiff does not demonstrate that if the court accepted plaintiff's view of what should have been considered uncontroverted that it should have changed the court's ruling upon the summary judgment motion. The court's order focused upon the fact that plaintiff was not placed on restrictions and he was not given discipline. The court's order also focused upon the differences in the conditions of confinement between plaintiff's cell in A-Unit and his cell in C-Unit. The court considered plaintiff's alleged contact with inmates on discipline or restrictions. The court is not convinced that plaintiff's arguments, as reworded in his motion to alter or amend, should alter the court's holding upon defendant's motion for summary judgment.
Plaintiff objects that the court ignored plaintiff's statement that defendant's alleged retaliatory actions chilled plaintiff's engagement in protected activity. The court did not. The court noted in the summary judgment order that plaintiff asserted he was forced to agree not to file grievances and claims in order to be permitted to move from cell C-3003 to a different cell in C-Unit. Doc. No. 224 at p. 11.
The key inquiry is not subjective, it is objective. See
Plaintiff next takes issue with the court's finding that "plaintiff's evidence that he was transferred to C-3003 for retaliatory reasons boiled down to mere tempor[al] proximity which is insufficient to sustain a material fact issue as to defendant's motivation and the cause of plaintiff's transfer."
Next, plaintiff presents several arguments against the court's conclusion that plaintiff cannot demonstrate that the cell transfer amounted to a "chilling" injury. First, plaintiff asserts the court was incorrect in stating that there was a light "shining into" cell C-3003 24-hours a day that caused plaintiff some sleep deprivation, as opposed to stating that there was a light
Plaintiff also objects to the court's statement that plaintiff was transferred from one general population unit to another. Plaintiff, however, does not provide support for a claim that C-Unit was something other than a general population unit.
Plaintiff claims that C-Unit
Next, defendant contends that the court erred in our analysis of plaintiff's claim that he was viewed by female correctional officers while showering in C-Unit. The court stated that the Tenth Circuit had ruled that the constitutionality of prison guards observing members of the opposite sex undressed or showering was dependent on the scope of the intrusion, the manner in which it is conducted, the justification for initiating it and the place in which it is conducted. See
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Plaintiff's citation to the state statutes represents new authority which could have been presented, but was not, in plaintiff's response to the summary judgment motion. In addition, K.S.A. 22-2521(b) appears to pertain to strip searches, not the situation before this court. Plaintiff's reference to 28 C.F.R. § 115.15(b) also could have been made in response to the summary judgment motion, but plaintiff did not so do. Furthermore, it is unclear whether or how plaintiff's fact situation is at odds with the federal regulation. As the court stated, plaintiff's evidence does not indicate the extent of plaintiff's exposure, the frequency, the length of time, the distance of observation or whether a legitimate purpose existed for observation. Finally, plaintiff also does not allege that his treatment in this regard was different from that of any other inmate in C-Unit or the normal conditions of confinement endured by a great number of inmates.
Next, plaintiff argues that the court erred in holding that summary judgment was warranted against plaintiff's "campaign of harassment" claim. Plaintiff's argumentation mainly rehashes plaintiff's prior arguments, although plaintiff appears to expand upon the claims he described in his response to the summary judgment motion and in his affidavit in support of the response by claiming there were sixteen cell searches "in a couple of months." Doc. No. 228 at p. 20. The court sees no grounds to change our decision on plaintiff's "campaign of harassment" claim.
Finally, plaintiff contends the court erred by concluding that defendant's claim of qualified immunity was valid. In the summary judgment order the court quoted
Plaintiff mainly relies upon broadly stated case law which sets out the legal principles against retaliation for the exercise of First Amendment rights.
In conclusion, for the above-stated reasons, plaintiff's motion to alter or amend judgment (Doc. No. 226) shall be denied. Plaintiff's amended motions to file additional pages and to file a supplemental exhibit (Doc. Nos. 236 and 238) shall be granted.