BRIAN L. OWSLEY, Magistrate Judge.
This is a civil rights action filed by a state prisoner pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Pending is plaintiff's motion to alter or amend final judgment. (D.E. 89). For the reasons stated herein, plaintiff's motion is denied.
Plaintiff alleged that defendants engaged in a pattern of retaliatory conduct in response to his filing of grievances, including deliberately failing to properly place an order for craft shop equipment, disciplining him for tattoos that he acquired years earlier, unfairly suspending him from the craft shop, and ultimately revoking his privileges there for practices that they long knew about and condoned, as well as punishing him with the loss of commissary and recreation days for those same practices. He asserted that defendants' actions violated his constitutional rights, as well as his state law right to be free from the unlawful conversion of his property.
Defendants filed a motion for summary judgment arguing that they were entitled to qualified immunity. Summary judgment on defendants' qualified immunity defense was denied.
In February 2012, a three-day jury trial was held regarding plaintiff's retaliation claims and his state-law conversion claims. During plaintiff's case-in-chief, he testified as well as called three witnesses to testify about his claims. After plaintiff rested, defendants argued for directed verdict as a matter of law pursuant to Rule 50 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
Rule 59(e) motions "serve the narrow purpose of allowing a party `to correct manifest errors of law or fact or to present newly discovered evidence.'"
Pursuant to Texas state law, the common law tort of conversion is committed by "`[t]he unauthorized and wrongful assumption and exercise of dominion and control over the personal property of another, to the exclusion of or inconsistent with the owner's rights.'"
In the pending motion, plaintiff claims that the "dismissal of the state common-law tort of conversion is based on the taking of his craftshop tools and material is based on an incorrect legal standard instead of the controlling U.S. Supreme Court precedent and a mistake of the actual claim." (D.E. 89, at 1). First, to the extent that he is arguing that there is some controlling Supreme Court case, he does not cite any decision by the Supreme Court. Second, he does not address the fact that his trial counsel conceded that there were insufficient facts to support the conversion claim and that it was no longer being pursued. Third, he does not point to any evidence elicited at trial that would satisfy any of the four elements to prove a conversion claim in Texas.
Next, plaintiff argues that his attorney "failed to establish, during trial, how the defendants took plaintiffs [sic] property without compesation [sic]."
Finally, he asserts that "the evidence was overwhelming on plaintiff's retaliation claim and such would be an injustice of law not to correct." (D.E. 89, at 2). This statement is the only one that addresses the retaliation claim. He does not note any facts that rendered the jury verdict unjust.
Plaintiff has failed to establish either a legal or factual basis supporting reconsideration of the dismissal of his claims. Accordingly, plaintiff's motion to alter or amend final judgment, (D.E. 89), is denied.
ORDERED.