Carl McDaniel v. Michael Meisner

617 F. App'x 553
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 28, 2015
Docket14-2833
StatusUnpublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 617 F. App'x 553 (Carl McDaniel v. Michael Meisner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carl McDaniel v. Michael Meisner, 617 F. App'x 553 (7th Cir. 2015).

Opinion

ORDER

Carl McDaniel, a Wisconsin inmate, was assaulted by his cellmate at Columbia Correctional Institution (“Columbia”). He was immediately transferred to Wisconsin Resource Center (“WRC”), a secure treatment facility. McDaniel later filed this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and state law claiming that six defendants at Columbia failed to protect him from an assault and that two more defendants at WRC withheld necessary medical care. The district court (a magistrate judge presiding by consent) screened McDaniel’s complaint, see 28 U.S.C. § 1915A, and permitted him to proceed with his Eighth Amendment and state tort claims. On the defendants’ motion, the court dismissed the entire action on the ground that McDaniel had not complied with the exhaustion requirement of 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a). Because we hold that McDaniel exhausted his failure-to-protect claims, we remand those claims for further proceedings.

For purposes of this appeal, we accept as true the allegations in McDaniel’s complaint. McDaniel was assaulted by his cellmate, Ryan Olson, at Columbia on March 8, 2012. Olson was known to be dangerous; he already had assaulted other inmates and staff at Columbia. A week before the March 8 incident, McDaniel alerted a prison psychiatrist that he feared for his safety because Olson was threatening him. The psychiatrist asked several Columbia administrators to move McDaniel into a single cell or to protective custody. McDaniel also wrote to the warden, deputy warden, and security director at Columbia, informing them of his concerns. His requests to be moved were denied. Olson severely beat McDaniel about the face, arms, ribs, and stomach when, at 3:30 a.m. on March 8, McDaniel asked Olson to lower the volume on his television. That same day, McDaniel was transferred to WRC. A physician and the infirmary manager at that facility refused to' provide medical treatment for his injuries, including damage to his inner ear, which has left McDaniel with permanent hearing loss.

After his transfer to WRC, McDaniel submitted' multiple grievances, four of which addressed the March 8 assault. In *555 offender complaint number WRC-2012-5881, submitted on March 18, 2012, McDaniel complained about a history of abuse from inmates culminating in Olson’s assault on March 8. McDaniel explained that his previous cellmate had assaulted him on December 13, 2011, and that he had been granted “pair with care” status. McDaniel then recounted that, at the beginning of March, he had been assigned to share a cell with Olson, whose history of violence was known to staff. The grievance states that McDaniel told a female physician, who visited him six days in a row, including the day before the assault, that Olson was a “ ‘firecracker’ with the fuse lit,” and that he “needed out.” The physician told McDaniel that psychological services could not give him the relief that he requested. The grievance then details his assault, alleging that he “suffered a beating so bad I can’t remember the actual beating.” At the top of the grievance form, McDaniel wrote “December 13, 2011” in the space marked “Date of Incident.” The inmate complaint examiner (or “examiner”) rejected the grievance with the explanation that McDaniel previously had submitted a grievance about the December 2011 assault. The reviewing authority characterized the examiner’s decision as “appropriate.”

McDaniel submitted offender complaint number WRC-2012-6510, his second grievance, on March 25, 2012. This grievance similarly recounts that McDaniel had been beaten by Olson after repeated requests to be moved for his safety. McDaniel wrote, “Considering all the proper steps I took to prevent this[,] Staff still left me in a violent & ‘Hands-Tied’ ... position.” He stated that he “would like single (cell status) till further notice.” The examiner rejected the grievance, stating: “Cell assignments [sic] decisions are made by the IUS and Treatment Team. Cell assignment is not within the scope of institution Complaint System.” The examiner said nothing about the timeliness of the grievance. McDaniel promptly filed an administrative appeal emphasizing that the grievance “wasn’t simply a complaint requesting a single cell” and that, instead, it “complained that I had been assaulted.” Prison staff, he asserted, had been “very aware of the immediate threat to my safety and failed to reasonably respond.” Their “level of deliberate indifference and reckless and hazardous negligence,” he added, had constituted “an 8th Amendment violation” that should be “investigated fully.” The reviewing authority upheld the rejection, stating that it was “appropriately rejected” as outside the scope of the complaint system. 1

McDaniel’s two remaining grievances alleged that he was denied medical care. In offender complaint number WRC-2012-14356, submitted on July 4, 2012, he stated that “[t]he health care [that he] received since arriving at WRC has been systematically inadequate at best.” He references the “numerous health care requests [that he] submitted.” The examiner rejected his grievance for failing to allege sufficient facts to indicate “how the treatment provided has effected [sic] his health,” or to identify a specific incident. In offender complaint number WRC-2012-19687, submitted two months later, McDaniel specifically alleged that he did not receive appropriate medical care following the March 8 assault. The examin *556 er rejected the grievance as untimely. The examiners’ rejections of McDaniel’s medical-care grievances were found appropriate by the reviewing authority.

The defendants moved for summary judgment on the sole ground that McDaniel had not exhausted his administrative remedies. The defendants maintained that McDaniel failed to exhaust the remedies for his failure-to-protect claims because the March 18 grievance listed December 13, 2011, as the “date of incident,” and the remaining grievances were untimely. See Wis. Admin. Code Doc § 310.09(6) (unless excused for good cause, inmate “shall file a complaint within 14 calendar days after the occurrence giving rise to the complaint”). The defendants submitted that McDaniel failed to exhaust his medical-care claims because he failed to allege sufficient facts in complaint number 14356 and he filed complaint number 19687 more than fourteen days after the incident.

In granting summary judgment for the defendants, the district court accepted their contention that McDaniel failed to exhaust his claims. The district court reasoned that the examiner could not have been expected to associate the March 18 grievance with the assault by Olson on March 8, 2012, because it gives the date of incident as December 13. The court continued by explaining that, even if it were to look past the incorrect date, it could not “conclude that this offender complaint presented only one issue or that any one issue was clearly identified,” as required by the Wisconsin Administrative Code. See Wis. Admin. Code DOC § 310.09(l)(e).

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617 F. App'x 553, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carl-mcdaniel-v-michael-meisner-ca7-2015.