MARTIN C. CARLSON, Magistrate Judge.
Tyrik Vernon is an inmate in the custody of the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections, currently incarcerated at the State Correctional Institution at Greene. Vernon has previously lodged three different, legally flawed complaints with this court. (Docs. 1,10, and 20.) In each instance we have been compelled to dismiss these complaint. We have, however, provided Vernon with leave to amend his pleadings on multiple occasions in order to afford him every opportunity to state a claim.
In this action, the latest iteration of this lawsuit Vernon now files a fourth complaint (Doc. 38), which brings claims against a number of supervisory officials within the Department of Corrections, as well as a number of employees at SCI-Coal Township, where Vernon was housed before his transfer to SCI-Greene in the spring of 2013. Many of these claims mirror or closely parallel claims that we have previously found to be wanting. Thus, Vernon brings claims against the defendants for alleged violations of his right to procedural due process in connection with certain disciplinary proceedings that were brought against him in Fall of 2012. In addition, Vernon claims that the defendants retaliated against him for engaging in activities protected by the First Amendment, specifically for filing grievances challenging the actions of the disciplinary hearing officer who issued an adverse ruling in the disciplinary proceedings. Finally, Vernon claims that some of the defendants committed intentional torts against him in violation of federal law, in connection with his disciplinary proceedings.
The defendants have moved to dismiss this, Vernon's latest amended complaint. (Doc. 42.) The motion is fully briefed and is ripe for disposition. For the reasons that follow, the motion will be granted, and the complaint will be dismissed.
The background of this memorandum is taken chiefly from the well pleaded allegations set forth in Vernon's latest amended complaint (Doc. 38), which are in large measure substantially similar to those allegations in Vernon's prior amended complaint (Doc. 20), a complaint we previously found was inadequate to state a claim (Docs. 34, 35).
In September 2012, Vernon was housed at SCI-Coal Township. Vernon claims that sometime during this month, he began experiencing problems with a Lieutenant Shipe at that institution, who warned Vernon that if he did not provide information about inmates that Lieutenant Shipe believed were smuggling drugs and contraband into the institution, "he would personally see to it that [Vernon] would not get another visit in that institution or any where else, from [his] wife." (Doc. 38, ¶ 22.) Nevertheless, Vernon alleges that he had no such information and therefore provided none, notwithstanding Lieutenant Shipe's threat. (
On September 18, 2012, Vernon clams that he submitted a Request to Staff form to Superintendent David Varano. It appears that when Vernon submitted this form, he had been held in restricted or administrative housing since September 2, 2012, pending an investigation into allegations that Vernon was receiving contraband from prison visitors, including his wife. It appears that these charges were filed by Lieutenant Shipe. Vernon submitted the request to Varano to inform the Superintendent that Vernon had been held in administrative custody for more than 15 days, while the investigation unfolded, and Vernon believed that under Department of Corrections' written policies, he was required to be released back into the general population of the prison following this brief investigative period.
However, at approximately 10:30 p.m. on September 18, 2012, Vernon received a DC-141 form that advised him that the prison was extending its investigation, and that he would be held in administrative custody for an additional 15 days. On September 20, 2012, Superintendent Varano responded to Vernon's request, stating that he understood Vernon was going to be held for an additional 15 days, and that Vernon had received adequate notice of this decision. (Doc. 20, ¶¶ 17-20; Doc. 38, ¶¶ 12-15.)
Also on September 20, Vernon met with members of the Program Review Committee (PRC), which was comprised of Defendants Linda Chesmar, George Miller, and Deputy Luscavage. During this meeting, Vernon argued that he was being held in administrative custody unlawfully or in violation of Corrections' policy, but was told that he was not going to be released on a technicality while the investigation into the charges continued. (Doc. 20, ¶¶ 21-23; Doc. 38, ¶¶ 16-17.)
On September 29, 2012, Vernon received a DC-141 misconduct report prepared by Lieutenant Shipe alleging that Vernon had engaged in an unlawful criminal conspiracy to possess a telecommunications device, as well as for violations of other unspecified Department of Corrections policies. (Doc. 20, ¶ 25; Doc. 38, ¶ 18.) The following day, Vernon submitted a DC-141 part 2A form, which is the form that inmates who are charged with misconduct may use to request representation and witnesses at their misconduct proceedings. Vernon requested that the disciplinary hearing officer review video surveillance and phone recordings as exculpatory evidence. (Doc. 20, ¶¶ 26-27; Doc. 38, ¶19.)
Notwithstanding his request, on October 4, 2012, Vernon was taken to his disciplinary hearing before the hearing examiner, Defendant Lisa Kerns-Barr, who declined his request for the presentment of exculpatory evidence, and did not review any other unidentified evidence that Vernon claims he provided. (Doc. 20, ¶ 28; Doc. 38, ¶ 20.) At this hearing, Vernon claims that Defendant Kerns-Barr threatened that she would find Vernon guilty of the misconduct if he refused to sign a waiver. (Doc. 38, ¶ 21.)
On October 23, 2012, Vernon was taken to his misconduct hearing, where he learned that Defendant Kerns-Barr still had not reviewed exculpatory evidence that Vernon wished her to consider. (Doc. 38, ¶ 23.) Instead, the hearing examiner rejected Vernon's request for the charges to be dismissed on the basis of her alleged violations of his due process rights, and instead took testimony from Lieutenant Shipe, the reporting officer who filed the misconduct against Vernon in the first place. (
On October 28, 2012, Vernon wrote to the Secretary of the Department of Corrections, John Wetzel and defendant Robin Lewis to complain about the misconduct he had been issued and the process that he received, but Wetzel declined to respond, and Lewis merely acknowledged receipt of Vernon's letter. (Doc. 20, ¶ 38; Doc. 38, ¶¶ 27-28.) On November 7, 2012, the appeal board upheld Defendant Kerns-Barr's decision in a ruling that Vernon claims was "untimely." (Doc. 38, ¶ 26.) On November 5, 2012, Superintendent Varano sanctioned Vernon for the misconduct conviction by indefinitely suspending visitation between Vernon and his wife. (Doc. 20, ¶ 39; Doc. 38, ¶ 30.)
Vernon continued his efforts to challenge what he perceived to be due process violations in connection with his disciplinary proceedings. To this end, Vernon filed grievances with Department of Corrections officials, including defendants Lewis and Wetzel, but he did not obtain any relief, and he claims these officials failed to investigate his claims. (Doc. 20, ¶¶ 40-41, 50-60; Doc. 38, ¶ 32-33.)
Vernon claims that in early 2013 he was subjected to various indignities, sexual harassment, and improper treatment by prison staff in early 2013, which Vernon challenged unsuccessfully through the prison grievance process. (Doc. 38, ¶¶ 42-51.)
March 7, 2013, Vernon was summoned to another PRC hearing where he was addressed by defendants Luscavage and Miller. (
With respect to this benchmark standard for legal sufficiency of a complaint, the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit has aptly noted the evolving standards governing pleading practice in federal court, stating that:
In considering whether a complaint fails to state a claim upon which relief may be granted, the Court must accept as true all allegations in the complaint and all reasonable inferences that can be drawn from the complaint are to be construed in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.
In keeping with the principles of
Thus, following
In practice, consideration of the legal sufficiency of a complaint entails a three-step analysis: "First, the court must `tak[e] note of the elements a plaintiff must plead to state a claim.'
Vernon has alleged a string of due process violations stemming from his charged misconduct, his initial disciplinary custody while these charges were investigated, the hearing examiner's refusal to consider exculpatory evidence during his proceedings, and the adverse rulings on the misconduct and the appeals that followed. However, no matter how Vernon frames his claims, he is unable to state a claim for due process upon which relief can be granted in this case.
The Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution provides, in pertinent part, as follows: "No State shall . . . deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law. . . ." In the case of procedural due process, which is implicated in Vernon's claims, the Supreme Court has enunciated a two-part analysis to determine the adequacy of the claims: (1) "whether the asserted individual interests are encompassed within the . . . protection of `life, liberty or property[,]" and (2) "if protected interests are implicated, we then must decide what procedures constitute `due process of law.'"
In the case of prison inmates, the court's due process inquiry is grounded in consideration of whether the state action resulted in an "atypical and significant hardship" on the plaintiff-inmate:
In this case, Vernon claims that he brief detention in administrative custody while officials at SCI-Coal Township conducted an investigation into the serious charges against him constituted a deprivation of his right to due process. Additionally, he believes that process was flawed throughout his disciplinary proceedings and appeals, and he takes issue with receiving five days of segregation at SCI-Greene, the fact that he was transferred some distance from his family, and that he has been deprived of visitation with his spouse. However, the case law in this field makes clear that none of these claims are sufficient to allege that Vernon was subjected to "atypical and significant hardship" necessary to support a due process claim.
As a threshold matter, the fact that Vernon was held in administrative or disciplinary custody for a period of a few weeks or even months during his disciplinary proceedings at SCI-Coal Township does not present an atypical or significant hardship.
This result is not altered if we consider Vernon's vague assertions that the Department of Corrections may have failed to follow its own internal regulations regarding periods of administrative custody during investigations into misconduct.
Likewise, Vernon's transfer to SCI-Greene does not present a due process issue, since the Supreme Court has made clear that inmates have no liberty interest in being confined at any particular prison.
The result is no different with respect to Vernon's complaints that he has been denied visitation with his wife for an extended period. Setting aside the fact that the amended complaint suggests that Vernon was found guilty of receiving contraband from visitors, including his wife, the suspension of visitation privileges does not trigger due process consideration. It is axiomatic that inmates do not retain rights that are found to be incompatible with their incarceration, and "freedom of association is among the rights least compatible with incarceration."
As the foregoing case law makes clear, no matter how Vernon frames his due process claims, they fail because he has not alleged facts to show that he suffered atypical and significant hardships in relation to the ordinary incidents of prison life with respect to his detention in administrative and disciplinary custody, or in connection with his disciplinary proceedings, or in the sanctions that he received.
Vernon claims that the defendants retaliated against him after he persisted in seeking recourse for the alleged unlawful conduct of defendants Shipe and Kerns-Barr in connection with the issuance of a misconduct, and defendant Kerns-Barr's handling of his misconduct proceedings. In his earlier complaint (Doc. 20), Vernon alleged that he was transferred from SCI-Coal Township to SCI-Greene, and denied visitation privileges with his wife, in retaliation for filing grievances and seeking redress for what he perceived to have been malfeasance by defendants Shipe and Kerns-Barr. In the latest iteration of his complaint, Vernon seems to have altered his theory of retaliation, and now claims that Shipe issued him a misconduct in retaliation for Vernon's refusal to provide information about other inmates. Regardless of Vernon's theory of retaliation, he has failed to allege an actionable claim.
In order to make out a claim for First Amendment retaliation, a plaintiff must show that (1) "the conduct which led to the alleged retaliation [is] constitutionally protected"; (2) "he suffered some adverse action at the hands of prison officials . . . sufficient to deter a person of ordinary firmness from exercising his constitutional rights"; and (3) there is a "causal link between the exercise of his constitutional rights and the adverse action taken against him."
It is undisputed that the filing of inmate grievances constitutes activity protected by the First Amendment.
Mindful of these concerns, courts have in the past carefully scrutinized inmate claims of retaliation premised solely on circumstantial proof of a temporal proximity between the plaintiff's conduct and allegedly retaliatory acts. Indeed, this Court has spoken directly to the issue of what must be shown to state a valid complaint in this factual context, noting that:
Applying this standard, courts in civil rights cases have frequently rebuffed speculative efforts to infer causation from temporal proximity when a span of weeks or months separated the plaintiff's constitutionally protected conduct from the defendants' alleged acts of retaliation. Thus, "[o]ur sister courts have held that a temporal proximity of as little as seventeen days was insufficient to establish causation.
In practice, application of these legal tenets has routinely led to the rejection of retaliation claims as legally insufficient when those claims are like the retaliation assertion made here by Vernon: An assertion of retaliation based solely on circumstantial proof of some temporal link between the plaintiff's conduct and the defendants' actions when, in fact, the evidence shows that these events are separated by months.
In this case, although we are mindful of the deference that we must pay to the facts that Vernon has alleged in the complaint, we nevertheless do not find that the plaintiff has adequately alleged facts sufficient to support a claim for First Amendment retaliation. As a threshold matter, to the extent that Vernon continues to press his claim that his transfer to SCI-Greene was retaliatory, he has offered nothing to support this speculative assertion, and he previously conceded that the separate decision to prevent Vernon from visitation with his wife was the "result of the misconduct conviction." (Doc. 20, Am. Compl., at 8.) Vernon thus has acknowledged that he was barred from visiting with his wife after he was convicted of violating prison rules, and it appears that this violation may be involved his receipt of contraband from visitors, including his wife. Nothing in the earlier iteration of Vernon's amended complaint supports Vernon's allegations that his loss of visitation privileges was retaliation for his exercise of constitutionally protected conduct. Rather, that transfer seems reasonably calculated to reduce future opportunities to institutional misconduct and contraband smuggling by Vernon.
We also find that Vernon has failed to allege plausible facts to show that the Secretary of the Department of Corrections, and the Superintendent of SCI-Coal Township, jointly engaged in unlawful retaliation by ordering Vernon transferred to SCI-Greene. Although Vernon has alleged that this transfer occurred very shortly after his grievances were exhausted, he has alleged no other facts to plausibly connect his transfer — which followed his conviction for serious prison infractions — to what he earlier described as his "supplications for recourse from [prison officials] to rectify the malfeasance of Defendant Kerns-Barr". (Doc. 20, Am. Compl., at 16 ¶ 70.) Vernon's allegations in each of his complaints regarding his transfer are summary and conclusory, and lack adequate factual allegations to support them as the predicate for a retaliation claim.
Additionally, to the extent that Vernon is now attempting to claim that he was issued a misconduct for refusing to provide information about other inmates, the claim fails. To the extent that Vernon's alleged refusal is, in fact, protected activity, it is undisputed that Vernon was found guilty of the misconduct charges and the finding of guilt was upheld at every level of review. As a result, the finding of guilt on the misconduct effectively bars Vernon from now claiming that the misconduct was issued for retaliatory purposes, since the finding of guilt constitutes some evidence that the allegedly retaliatory action would have occurred regardless of whether Vernon had engaged in protected conduct, and therefore forecloses the retaliation claim.
In short, Vernon has not alleged facts in the amended complaint sufficient to articulate a retaliation claim, regardless of whether that claim is based upon a misconduct that he was issued by defendant Shipe, or on his transfer to SCI-Greene. Vernon's conviction for this misconduct, which involved contraband smuggling by family members, effectively checkmates this conclusory retaliation claim. Moreover, Vernon has not alleged well-pleaded facts which would permit an inference that these actions were causally related to his act of writing to the Superintendent at SCI-Coal Township, or to the letters he claims to have sent to the Secretary of the Department of Corrections complaining about what he perceived were flawed misconduct proceedings. Instead, these actions seem to be a result of Vernon's institutional misconduct. We have endeavored to give Vernon ample opportunity to articulate facts to support his retaliation claim, but this has proved unavailing. Because Vernon's latest amended pleading still fails to include sufficient factual allegations, Vernon's First Amendment retaliation claim will also be dismissed.
In addition to these substantive shortcomings, we note that Vernon's amended complaint purports to bring claims against defendants Wetzel, Lewis, Varano, Luscavage, Miller, Chismar, and Custer based upon their roles as supervisors responsible for the actions of their subordinates. Vernon may also be suing these defendants for their allegedly unfavorable responses to his complaints about their roles in his administrative appeals process. Whatever his theory, Vernon's claims against these supervisory officials fail.
Section 1983 of Title 42 of the United States Code provides private citizens with a means to redress violations of federal law committed by state officials.
In claims brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, it is axiomatic that "[an individual government] defendant in a civil rights action must have personal involvement in the alleged wrongdoing; liability cannot be predicated solely on the operation of respondeat superior. Personal involvement can be shown through allegations of personal direction or of actual knowledge and acquiescence."
Vernon's allegations that the supervisory defendants somehow violated his rights merely because they supervised other defendants, or because they allegedly failed to properly address his written complaints and appeals, without more, is insufficient to show personal involvement by this prison official absent some other evidence that these defendants personally engaged in retaliatory conduct or violated Vernon's right to due process.
Thus, Vernon has simply not articulated facts to show that any of these supervisory defendants committed actionable violations of his constitutional rights.
In addition to his federal claims brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, Vernon may be continuing his efforts to articulate state-law tort claims against the individual defendants for what he alleges was intentional misconduct on their part, based upon the same general course of conduct upon which he based his constitutional claims. As explained below, to the extent Vernon is continuing to press these claims, they fail as a matter of law because state law expressly bars them.
Under Pennsylvania law, the Commonwealth, its agencies and employees enjoy broad immunity from most state-law tort claims, as the General Assembly has by statute provided that "the Commonwealth, and its officials and employees acting within the scope of their duties, shall continue to enjoy sovereign immunity and official immunity and remain immune from suit except as the General Assembly shall specifically waive the immunity." 1 Pa. Cons. Stat. Ann. § 2310;
In this case, the defendants contend that they are each Commonwealth employees or officials, who were acting within the scope of their employment in committing each of the acts alleged in this case, which are limited to Vernon's complaints about his misconduct proceedings, his housing, his transfer, and restrictions on his visitation privileges. The allegations in the amended complaint support the defendants' contention.
The defendants also contend that none of the nine recognized exceptions to sovereign immunity apply here. In 42 Pa. Cons. Stat. Ann. § 8522(b), the General Assembly defined nine separate, narrow exceptions to the broad grant of sovereign immunity. These exceptions include: (1) vehicle liability; (2) medical-professional liability; (3) care, custody or control of personal property; (4) Commonwealth real estate, highways and sidewalks; (5) potholes and other dangerous conditions; (6) care, custody or control of animals; (7) liquor store sales; (8) National Guard activities; and (9) toxoids and vaccines. "Because of the clear intent to insulate government from exposure to tort liability, the exceptions to immunity are to be strictly construed."
Given the broad grant of immunity provided by Pennsylvania law, and mindful of the narrow scope and application of the nine limited exceptions to sovereign immunity that plainly do not apply to the conduct alleged in this case, which involve the defendants' acts and decisions made in the scope of their duties with the Department of Corrections, we conclude that the defendants in this case are immune from Vernon's state-law tort claims, and these claims must be dismissed.
For all of the foregoing reasons, we find that Vernon's amended complaint fails to state a claim upon which relief can be granted and must be dismissed.
In civil rights cases pro se plaintiffs often should be afforded an opportunity to amend a complaint before the complaint is dismissed in its entirety,
An appropriate order dismissing this action with prejudice will be entered separately.