GLEN E. CONRAD, Chief District Judge.
Angel Centero Morales, also known as Angel Centeno Morales, a Virginia inmate proceeding fro se, filed this civil rights action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that while he was an inmate at the Middle River Regional Jail ("the jail"), a jail officer sexually assaulted him. Morales sued the jail, its superintendent, and the assailant officer, Carl Moore. Morales later obtained counsel and filed an amended complaint, renewing his constitutional claims under § 1983 and adding related state law claims against all of the defendants and the jail authority. The jail, jail authority, and the superintendent, Jack Lee, have filed dispositive motions, and Morales has responded, making these motions ripe for disposition. After review of the record, the court dismisses the state law claims as time barred; dismisses the § 1983 claims against the jail and the jail authority; and grants summary judgment for Lee. Furthermore, the court will require Morales to provide service information for Defendant Carl Moore in thirty (30) days if he wishes to avoid dismissal under Rule 4(m) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
During his time as an inmate at the jail, Morales worked as a staff cook. On November 14, 2011, he was preparing lunch for jail staff and talking to another inmate kitchen worker named Hodgins. Officer Moore was also in the kitchen, conducting his rounds. Hodgins suddenly stopped talking. Morales turned to look and recognized Moore. As he turned, he felt a forceful poke of an object right into his rectum. Morales asked Moore if he had really just stuck something into his rectum, and Moore said, "Yes, and who do you think they will believe?" (Morales Affid. 1, ECF 55-1.)
Moore was making rounds of the kitchen area on the following day, while Morales was working. After Morales and Hodgins went to the break room, Moore walked in, holding his genitals and repeatedly telling Morales in Spanish to "s*** his dick." (
After Morales reported these events to jail officials, they reviewed surveillance camera footage of the kitchen, which confirmed Morales' account of Moore's assault. Officials immediately suspended Moore. With help from a jail official, Morales filed a criminal summons, stating that Officer Moore had shoved a pipe, also known as a "chase" into his rectum. Moore ultimately pleaded guilty and was convicted of misdemeanor sexual battery of an inmate by a jail employee.
Officer Washington told Morales that he was right to report Moore's conduct because sooner or later, someone would have reported it. A female officer told Morales said that she had seen Moore chase an inmate while making sexual gestures. Captain Moubray, who interviewed Morales about the incident, said he was not surprised at Moore's actions toward Morales, because staff had previously complained about similar behavior by Moore. Officer Hon told Morales she had heard several complaints about Moore, but that none were followed through or written up.
Within days of Moore's assault, Morales was transferred to another jail. Later, a psychiatrist at a state correctional center examined Morales, and diagnosed and treated him for psychological issues, including Post Traumatic Stress Disorder, related to Moore's attack.
In his amended complaint, Morales asserts a § 1983 claim of cruel and unusual punishment (Count IV) and state law assault and battery claims (Counts I & III) against Officer Moore; a § 1983 claim of supervisory liability (Count V) and a state law negligence claim (Count VI) against Jack Lee as the jail superintendent and state law claims of assault, battery, and negligence (Count II, IV, & VII) against the jail authority.
A motion to dismiss pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) tests the legal sufficiency of a complaint to determine whether the plaintiff has properly stated a claim; "it does not resolve
The jail is operated by the jail authority. Morales named only the jail in his original,
As stated, Morales also seeks to bring state law claims of assault, battery, and negligence against Jack Lee and the jail authority, as Moore's supervisor and employer, respectively. Defendants argue that these state law claims are time barred under Virginia Code Ann. § 8.01-243.2, because Morales did not raise such claims within one year of accrual. The court agrees.
Under Virginia Code Ann. § 8.01-243.2, a "person confined in a state or local correctional facility" who brings a legal claim related to the "conditions of his confinement" must do so "within one year after cause of action accrues." Va. Code Ann. § 8.01-243.2. This limitation period in § 8.01-243.2 applies to all personal actions relating to the conditions of an individual's confinement, whether or not the plaintiff is still incarcerated when he files the lawsuit.
Morales states that Moore attacked and injured him on November 14, 2011, while Morales was confined at the jail. Morales did not file his state law claims against Lee or the jail authority until he submitted his amended complaint on August 7, 2014, nearly three years after his cause of action on these claims accrued. Therefore, Morales' state law claims against Lee and the jail authority fall squarely under Va. Code Ann. § 8.01-243.2 and must be dismissed as time barred.
On a motion for summary judgment, the moving party carries the burden of proving that there is no genuine issue of material fact, and that he is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. Rule 56. To withstand a summary judgment motion, however, the non-movant must produce sufficient evidence from which a reasonable jury could return a verdict in his favor.
Section 1983 permits an aggrieved party to file a civil action against a person for actions taken under color of state law that violated his constitutional rights.
"Constructive knowledge may be inferred from the widespread extent of the [misconduct], general knowledge of [its] existence, manifest opportunities and official duty of [defendant] to be informed, or combinations of these."
Lee states that as superintendant of the jail, he is an employee of the jail authority, as are the other officers who work at the jail. Lee states that he "did not have any personal involvement or contemporaneous knowledge of the events alleged by [Morales]. (Lee Affid. 1, ECF 28-1.) Lee expressly states: "I had no prior warning or notice that a Jail officer was going to assault Morales." (
Morales fails to offer any genuine issue of material fact to refute these specific statements by Lee. At the most, Morales' affidavits predict that some other officers at the jail could testify that before Moore's assault on Morales, they had observed or heard complaints about Moore engaging in sexually inappropriate behavior while on duty. Because these officers were under Lee's supervision, Morales asserts, Lee knew or should have known what the officers knew about Moore.
Morales' evidence does not support such a finding. The record is devoid of any indication that Moore had previously committed any physically assaultive act of a sexual or nonsexual nature against any jail inmate or that any officer had received a complaint of any such act. Despite ample time for discovery, Morales has failed to present any evidence that Moore had previously committed such acts or that Lee had any knowledge of Moore's having done so. The court cannot find that the occasional, sexually offensive comments and gestures Moore had allegedly made put any officer on notice that Moore "posed `a pervasive and unreasonable risk' of constitutional injury" to Morales or any other inmate.
For the stated reasons, Morales has failed to present any genuine issue of material fact on which he could prove that Lee had knowledge or constructive knowledge of any risk that Moore would commit a sexual assault against Morales.
Because Morales is proceeding
Morales filed his original complaint against Moore in November 2013 and, through counsel, filed his amended complaint on August 7, 2014, still proceeding
For the reasons stated, the court grants the motion to dismiss as to the § 1983 claims against the jail and the jail authority, and as to all state law claims against the jail, the jail authority, and Jack Lee. Furthermore, the court grants summary judgment for Jack Lee as to all claims under § 1983, and will require Morales to take immediate action toward accomplishing service on Defendant Moore in order to avoid dismissal of this case under Rule 4(m). The clerk is directed to send copies of this memorandum opinion and accompanying order to plaintiff.