Call v. Maine Department of Corrections

CourtSuperior Court of Maine
DecidedOctober 24, 2019
DocketPENap-19-10
StatusUnpublished

This text of Call v. Maine Department of Corrections (Call v. Maine Department of Corrections) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Call v. Maine Department of Corrections, (Me. Super. Ct. 2019).

Opinion

STATE OF MAINE SUPERIOR COURT PENOBSCOT, ss. DKT. NO. AP-19-10

REX CALL, JR., ) ) Petitioner, ) ) V. ) ORDER ) MAINE DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, ) ) Respondent. )

Petitioner Rex Call filed a petition for judicial review of Respondent Maine Department of

Corrections' (MDOC) denial of his grievance regarding his ultimate termination from working in

the kitchen at Mountain View Correctional Facility. Petitioner contends that he was retaliated

against for originally filing a grievance regarding "medical discrimination" arising from his work

in the kitchen at Mountain View Correctional Facility. This purported retaliation was his

termination from his work position in the kitchen. After a rocky procedural start, the petition is

ready from review. 1 MDOC filed the certified record and both parties have filed their briefs in the

matter. 2 The Court has reviewed all filings and issues the following decision.

1 Petitioner filed a separate claim for damages stemming from a purported due process violation. He did not file a motion to specify the course of future proceedings. See M.R. Civ. P. 80C(i) ("A party in a proceeding governed by this rule asserting such an independent basis for relief shall file a motion no later than IO days after the petition is filed, requesting the court to specify the future course of proceedings."). Therefore, any independent claim for relief is not procedurally proper due to the failure to file a Rule 80C(i) motion. In any event, the basis of his alleged independent ground for relief is duplicative of the grounds underlying his SOC appeal. See Kane v. Comm 'r ofthe Dep 't ofHealth and Human Servs., 2008 ME 185, ,r,r 30-32, 960 A.2d 1196. The only claim proper for review at this point is his SOC appeal. 2 On October 9, 2019, Petitioner filed a "Motion to Object," ostensibly contending that the Court somehow made an error by not ruling on the petition within thirty days of the filing of his rebuttal brief. He cited to Rule 760 regarding briefs and oral arguments in the Superior Court. Rule 80C(I) contains a similar provision that says, "[uJnless the court othe1wise directs, all appeals shall be in order for oral argument 20 days after the date on which the responding party's brief is due or is filed, whichever is earlier." The Law Court has interpreted Rule SOC(/) by noting that "[t]he plain language of the Rule gives the court the prerogative to schedule, or not schedule, oral argument on SOC appeals." Lindemann v. Comm 'n on Governmental Ethics & Election Practices, 2008 ME 187, ,r 26,961 A.2d 538. The Court is exercising its

1 BACKGROUND

The certified record reveals the following facts: 3

Petitioner is an inmate housed at Mountain View Correctional Facility. On February 14,

2019, Petitioner was placed on medical restriction by the medical unit the facility; he was "seen in

medical for extreme dry hands, possible reaction to the dishwashing detergents from the kitchen

as he is a kitchen worker." (Cert. R. 4.) Medical concluded that "[h]e should avoid further dish

room work, including pots/pans and tray dishwasher until 2/28/19 and he will then be re-evaluated.

He is currently under medical treatment for his current skin condition of hands and could possibly

be reassigned in the kitchen with other work details." (Cert. R. 4.) That same day, Petitioner

submitted a grievance claiming that he was medically discriminated against because he was sent

back to his pod after returning to the kitchen from medical. (Cert. R. 3.) Petitioner contended that

there were other work details he could do not involving dishwashing. (Cert. R. 3.) The individual

with whom Petitioner attempted informal resolution concluded that Petitioner's complaint could

not be resolved at that stage because Petitioner "[d]id not choose to follow medical restriction

[and] wanted other job after being spoken to several hours earlier about his work and attitude." 4 (Cert. R. 3.) The grievance review officer (GRO) received the grievance on February 15.

prerogative to not schedule oral argument on the petition and to instead decide the matter based upon the certified record and the pruties' respective briefs. 3 Petitioner did not file any motion pursuant to Rule 80C(e), thus the Court is limited to reviewing only the

certified record. See 5 M.R.S. § 11006(1); M.R. Civ. P. 80C(d)-(e). It cannot consider factual assertions made by Petitioner in his petition and briefs that do not appear in the certified record.

4 Also on February 15, Petitioner filed a separate grievance claiming that his position in the kitchen was

terminated in retaliation for submitting the original grievance when he sought informal resolution of that original grievance. (Cert. R. 10.) The same GRO who was investigating the February 14 grievance dismissed the February 15 grievance as a duplicate. (Cert. R. 11.) He noted that the February 14 grievance

was received by myself on 2-15-19 and is currently being investigated. I have spoken to you personally and explained the process and pointed out the policy is in the Prisoners Handbook. By policy I have 30 days to

2 On February 27, the GRO submitted his denial of the grievance. He detailed his reasoning

as follows:

As explained to you prior to working in the kitchen, you were expected to complete a satisfactory probation period of 30 days before you would be considered for a kitchen worker position. You did not make your probation period for the following reasons that have already been explained to you. You told a CO/Cook earlier in the day to "Grow a set of balls" and when you returned from medical you argued you did not have to wait the 2 weeks for medical clearance. The requirements for facility jobs are not determined by medical. They only determine if you are medically cleared. Your probation was terminated because you were disrespectful and refused to wait for your medical clearance. You are still eligible for other work in the facility.

(Cert. R. 6.) One day later, Petitioner appealed the level 1 denial of his grievance, stating that the

response had nothing to do with the nature of the grievance, that he was never put on work hold,

and that he was not terminated from the kitchen position until he presented the grievance to the

food service manager. (Cert. R. 7.) Petitioner contended that the foregoing were various policy

violations. (Cert. R. 7.)

On March 25, the level 2 response to Petitioner's grievance was concluded. The response

noted that there was no policy violation based on the reasons detailed in the GRO's level 1 denial

of Petitioner's grievance, and the denial of the grievance was affirmed. (Cert. R. 8.) Petitioner

again appealed the denial, this time to the Commissioner. (Cert. R. 9.) In his appeal to the

investigate your grievance. I don't expect it to take that long, but any further grievances concerning this exact matter may be considered abuse of the grievance system.

(Cert. R. 11.) Based on this and the summary from the February 27 denial of the original grievance, it is clear the GRO considered Petitioner's challenge to the purported retaliatory termination as part of an all­ encompassing investigation into the original grievance. It is also clear that Petitioner's allegations of the actions being policy violations, including a violation of 03-201 C.M.R. ch. 010, § 29.01 (VI)(A)(l4) ("No prisoner using the grievance process in good faith shall be subjected to retaliation in the form of an adverse action or a threat of an adverse action for using the grievance process."), were considered and denied on the level 2 response to the grievance. (Cett. R. 7-8.)

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Related

Lindemann v. Commission on Governmental Ethics and Election Practices
2008 ME 187 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2008)
Somerset County v. Department of Corrections
2016 ME 33 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2016)
Robert D. Rossignol v. Maine Public Employees Retirement System
2016 ME 115 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2016)
Steven Wolfram v. Town of North Haven
2017 ME 114 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2017)
Joseph L. Richard v. Secretary of State
2018 ME 122 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2018)
Kane v. Commissioner of Department of Health & Human Services
2008 ME 185 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2008)
Teele v. West-Harper
2017 ME 196 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2017)
Richard v. Sec'y of State
192 A.3d 611 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 2018)

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Call v. Maine Department of Corrections, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/call-v-maine-department-of-corrections-mesuperct-2019.