Collins v. Stalder
This text of 335 F. App'x 450 (Collins v. Stalder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
Pro se Plaintiff-Appellant Renode Collins is an inmate at the Louisiana State Penitentiary at Angola (“Angola”). In February 2006, Collins brought this suit against a number of Angola officials and employees (“Defendants”) pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, claiming that prison officials disregarded medical restrictions limiting the type of work he could do. The case took a series of procedural twists and turns until April 2008 when the magistrate judge (“MJ”) determined that the suit should be dismissed because Collins had not exhausted the available administrative remedies before filing suit. When the MJ filed her recommendation with the district court, the court failed to notify Collins. As a result, he did not file objections within the requisite ten-day window. After that window closed, the district court adopted the MJ’s findings and dismissed the suit. Collins timely filed a notice of appeal. We reverse and remand for further proceedings.
I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
The incident giving rise to Collins’s suit occurred in March 2005, following which he properly filed a Step One grievance pursuant to prison procedure. Almost a year later, in February 2006, Collins filed suit in the district court for the Middle
*452 District of Louisiana while his grievances were still under consideration and therefore unexhausted. 1 Within a few months, this suit was dismissed without prejudice because Collins had failed to describe the steps he had taken to exhaust his administrative remedies, then failed to respond to the district court’s notice that he must do so. On October 3, 2006, Collins’s Step Two grievance was denied, concluding the administrative proceedings and satisfying his exhaustion requirement. In June 2007, Collins’s suit was reinstated following his successful appeal. 2 Defendants filed their answer in December 2007.
Defendants then moved for summary judgment on the basis of Collins’s purported failure to pursue administrative remedies. The MJ agreed, and recommended that the district court dismiss the suit. Notified by mail of the MJ’s recommendation (the “First Recommendation”), Collins filed objections during the statutory ten-day response period, 3 asserting that indeed he had sought administrative remedy through the prison grievance procedure. On the basis of Collins’s objection, the district court rejected the MJ’s First Recommendation and returned the case to the MJ for further proceedings. The MJ then filed a supplemental recommendation (the “Second Recommendation”) suggesting that Defendants be granted summary judgment because Collins’s suit had been filed before he exhausted his administra-five remedies. The district court failed to notify Collins of the MJ’s Second Recommendation, however, so — unsurprisingly— Collins filed no objections during the ten-day window. The district court adopted the MJ’s Second Recommendation and granted summary judgment to Defendants. Only then did Collins receive a notice by mail that the district court had dismissed his case. Collins timely filed this appeal.
II. ANALYSIS
The gravamen of Collins’s appeal is that the district court erred in dismissing his suit without affording him the opportunity to object to the MJ’s Second Recommendation. We agree.
A. Standard of Review
We review a grant of summary judgment de novo: 4 In doing so, we review the district court’s legal conclusions de novo, but its factual conclusions only for clear error. 5 As Collins is appearing pro se, we construe his brief liberally. 6
B. Magistrate Judge’s Recommendation
It is beyond dispute that when an MJ files a recommendation to the district court on a matter dispositive to the proceedings, the district court must notify the *453 parties that they have ten days within which to file objections to the MJ’s report. 7 Notification of the parties is mandatory. 8
At Angola, legal mail to prisoners is logged in by addressee, date, and sender. Collins has submitted a copy of this log for the period in question. It shows that no legal mail was received by Collins from the district court between April 9, 2008 (the date of the MJ’s recommendation) and May 6, 2008 (the date Collins received the district court’s ruling). 9 We presume that there were no irregularities in the prison’s mailroom procedures that month — and Defendants allege none. We therefore conclude that the MJ’s Second Recommendation was never sent to Collins.
Not having been notified by the court of the MJ’s Second Recommendation, Collins had no opportunity to object to the MJ’s findings and recommendations. Indeed, he was apparently unaware that the proceedings had been conducted and completed until he was informed that the district court had granted summary judgment against him. Given the presence of some confusion in the case law as to whether harmless-error review is required when the court fails to notify a party, 10 we pre-termit such an analysis here and instead hold that, on the facts of this case, the district court’s failure to notify Collins of the MJ’s Second Recommendation and the ten-day period for filing objections was “harmful” per se. 11 That decision was rendered on grounds that Collins had not been afforded an opportunity to rebut. Indeed, his successful rebuttal of a very similar argument in his objection to the First Recommendation, supra, would have indicated that the particular issue had *454 been resolved (in his favor). 12
C. Change of Venue
Collins also requests a change of venue to avoid future errors, noting that he has twice had to pay filing fees because of the district court’s error and our reversal at an earlier stage in this proceeding. We reject Collins’s request for a change of venue, 13 but instruct the district court to waive any further filing fees or charges associated with the reinstatement of Collins’s lawsuit as a result of this appeal.
III. CONCLUSION
We REVERSE the district court’s dismissal of Collins’s action and REMAND this case to that court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
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335 F. App'x 450, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-stalder-ca5-2009.