Carter v. Dolce

647 F. Supp. 2d 826, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 73729, 2009 WL 2581614
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Michigan
DecidedAugust 19, 2009
DocketCase 08-14877
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 647 F. Supp. 2d 826 (Carter v. Dolce) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Michigan primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carter v. Dolce, 647 F. Supp. 2d 826, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 73729, 2009 WL 2581614 (E.D. Mich. 2009).

Opinion

ORDER ADOPTING IN PART AND REJECTING IN PART MAGISTRATE JUDGE’S REPORT, ADOPTING RECOMMENDATION, SUSTAINING IN PART AND OVERRULING IN PART PLAINTIFF’S OBJECTIONS, GRANTING DEFENDANT’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT, AND DISMISSING CASE

DAVID M. LAWSON, District Judge.

This matter is before the Court on the plaintiffs objections to a report issued by *830 Magistrate Judge Mona M. Majzoub recommending that this Court grant the defendant’s motion for summary judgment because the plaintiff has not established an element of his prima facie case for unconstitutional retaliation and has not made out an Eighth Amendment violation. At the time of the events described in the complaint, the plaintiff was an inmate in the custody of the Michigan Department of Corrections. He filed a complaint alleging that the defendant retaliated against him by charging him with major misconduct when he threatened to file a grievance after the defendant ordered him to wash pots and pans in scalding water without protective gloves. The ease was referred to Judge Majzoub to conduct all pretrial proceedings. The defendant then filed her summary judgment motion. On April 3, 2009, 2009 WL 2595640, Judge Majzoub filed a report recommending that the motion be granted. The plaintiff filed timely objections. After a de novo review of the record in light of the plaintiffs objections, the Court finds that the magistrate judge erred in concluding that the plaintiff did not offer sufficient evidence of causation as part of his prima facie case. However, the plaintiff has not offered any evidence to rebut the defendant’s assertion that she would have charged the plaintiff with major misconduct regardless of whether he threatened to file a grievance, and therefore the plaintiff has not sustained his burden on summary judgment. Nor has the plaintiff established an Eighth Amendment claim. The Court therefore will reject the magistrate judge’s report in part, adopt the recommendation, sustain in part and overrule in part the plaintiffs objections, grant the defendant’s motion for summary judgment, and dismiss the case.

I.

Although the plaintiff is currently on parole, in June of 2007, he was incarcerated in the Adrian Correctional Facility serving a sentence for armed robbery. On June 1, 2007, he was working in the kitchen under the direction of the defendant, an employee of the Michigan Department of Corrections (MDOC). The defendant’s responsibilities included assigning the prison kitchen duties to prisoners. There is no dispute that the plaintiff was working as a relief worker in the food service area of the correctional facility when the defendant ordered him to wash the pots and pans. From there, however, the stories differ.

The plaintiff asserts in a declaration attached to the complaint signed under penalty of perjury that he “attempted to do the work but was unable to find safety gloves to work in the hot water that[’]s above one hundred degrees temper[a]ture hot.” Pi’s Decl. at ¶ 2. The plaintiff avers that when he told the defendant he needed gloves, she told him that she would try to find him some. She left and came back a short time later and stated “I’m giving you a direct order to go wash pots and pans.” Ibid. The plaintiff responded, “I ain’t going to put my bare hands in that hot water.” Ibid. The plaintiff and the defendant began to argue, and he says that he told her, “I am writing a grievance on you if you keep trying to force me to wash pots and pans without gloves.” Ibid. The defendant left the kitchen and reported the plaintiff to the kitchen officer, who then entered the kitchen and told the plaintiff to “take off his kitchen whites and leave the kitchen and that plaintiff is laid-in pending the outcome of the misconduct Dolce is writing.” Ibid. Later that day the defendant wrote a misconduct report charging the plaintiff with disobeying her direct order. The plaintiff alleges that the defendant retaliated against him by “falsifying a state document i.e., a major misconduct when Plaintiff informed Defendant that he will *831 file a grievance complaint on her if she continue [sic] to try to make him wash pots and pans without gloves.” Ibid.

The defendant remembers it differently. She submitted an affidavit that states, “[a]t no time did [the plaintiff] attempt to work this assignment. He became argumentative and tried to tell me what assignments he did not have to work on.” Def.’s Mot., Ex. A, Dolce Aff. at ¶ 5. The defendant maintains that after she again gave the plaintiff the direct order to wash the pots and pans, he refused, they argued, and the plaintiff then left the kitchen area. The defendant acknowledges that she issued a written charge against the plaintiff “for refusing to comply with the order and laid in from his assignment pending the hearing on the misconduct.” Id. at ¶ 7. The defendant states, “I would have written the ‘Disobeying a Direct Order’ misconduct against the plaintiff regardless of whether he was going to write a grievance because it is my belief that it is not an inmate relief worker’s prerogative to refuse to work an assigned task and walk off the assignment after being given a direct order to do so.” Id. at ¶ 9.

The plaintiff was sent to his cell immediately after this incident, and the defendant wrote a major misconduct charge the same day.

On June 20, 2007, a hearing officer found the plaintiff not guilty of the misconduct charge. He noted that the evidence did not plainly establish whether the water was dangerously hot. The hearing officer concluded that Dolce’s explanation of the events was contradictory: at one point she stated that the plaintiff refused to work, but at another point she stated that the plaintiff had asked for gloves so that he could work. Because he could not determine on that record whether the water temperature was too hot for the plaintiff to work safely without gloves, he dismissed the misconduct charge.

After exhausting his administrative remedies, the plaintiff filed his pro se complaint in this Court. He seeks damages for violation of his First Amendment constitutional right to free speech and his Eighth Amendment constitutional right not to be subjected to cruel and unusual punishment.

In her summary judgment motion, the defendant argues that there is no evidence that the plaintiff engaged in protected conduct. She acknowledges that filing a grievance amounts to protected conduct under clear Sixth Circuit precedent; however, she insists that there is no precedent that clearly holds that threatening to file a grievance constitutes protected conduct.

The magistrate judge evaluated the plaintiffs retaliation claim by applying the three element test laid out in Thaddeus-X v. Blatter, 175 F.3d 378, 394 (6th Cir.1999) (en banc). The magistrate judge assumed that the plaintiff engaged in protected conduct when he threatened to file a grievance, and also assumed that the major misconduct charge could deter a prisoner of ordinary firmness from exercising his First Amendment rights.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Flournoy v. Hemingway
E.D. Michigan, 2021
(PC) Harvey v. Barbour
E.D. California, 2021
Proctor v. Edmonds
W.D. Virginia, 2020
Brockman v. McCullick
E.D. Michigan, 2020
Montgomery v. Whidbee
M.D. Tennessee, 2020
(PC) Gleason v. Gallegos
E.D. California, 2020
John Entler v. Christine Gregoire
872 F.3d 1031 (Ninth Circuit, 2017)
Filmore v. Walker
2013 IL App (4th) 120533 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 2013)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
647 F. Supp. 2d 826, 2009 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 73729, 2009 WL 2581614, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carter-v-dolce-mied-2009.