Deffendall v. Indian River County Sheriff

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Florida
DecidedJune 9, 2023
Docket2:21-cv-14201
StatusUnknown

This text of Deffendall v. Indian River County Sheriff (Deffendall v. Indian River County Sheriff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Deffendall v. Indian River County Sheriff, (S.D. Fla. 2023).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF FLORIDA

CASE NO. 21-14201-CIV-ALTMAN

MARK EUGENE DEFFENDALL,

Plaintiff,

v.

SGT. KENNETH STINSON, et al.,

Defendants. ________________________________/

ORDER Our Plaintiff, Mark Eugene Deffendall, accuses four of the Defendants—Sergeant Stinson, Officer Brown, Officer Bryant, and Officer Hamilton—of violating his constitutional rights when they “placed a knowingly [sic] violent detainee (Eddie Gibson) in the same jail cell as [Deffendall].” Amended Complaint [ECF No. 14] at 6; see also Screening Order [ECF No. 15] at 4 (“Deffendall has plausibly alleged that these four Defendants violated his Eighth Amendment rights by refusing to protect him from a violent inmate.”). Those Defendants have now filed a Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings under FED. R. CIV. P. 12(c), arguing that Deffendall “clearly failed to exhaust the available administrative remedies as it relates to the April 20, 2017 attack by inmate Gibson before filing this federal lawsuit[.]” Motion for Judgment on the Pleadings (the “MJP”) [ECF No. 67] at 10. The MJP is now fully briefed. See Response to MJP [ECF No. 74]; Reply to MJP [ECF No. 75]. After careful review, we DENY the MJP because the Defendants waived their right to rely on an exhaustion defense. * * * Under the Prison Litigation Reform Act (the “PLRA”), a prisoner is barred from bringing a federal lawsuit concerning his or her prison conditions “until such administrative remedies as are available are exhausted.” 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a). Although Deffendall said in his Amended Complaint that “he filed grievances describing the incident, which went unanswered,” a review of his grievance history in the Indian River County Jail revealed that he “filed no grievances regarding the attack by inmate Gibson . . . [or] the allegations that Defendants Brown, Bryant, Stinson, and Hamilton knew about it but failed to protect him from the attack.” MJP at 9; see also Deffendall’s Grievance History [ECF No. 67-1] at 11–279.

In response, Deffendall advances two arguments. First, he insists that he did file grievances about the Defendants’ complicity in the Gibson attack, and he’s attached copies of those grievances to his Response. See Response at 3; see also April 22, 2017 Grievance [ECF No. 74-1]; April 28, 2017 Grievance [ECF No. 74-2]; June 22, 2017 Grievance [ECF No. 74-3]. Second, he contends that he couldn’t file a proper grievance in the Indian County Jail because “[a]ny reasonable prisoner reading the Grievance Procedure would conclude that it does not apply to a failure to protect claim based on an attack by another inmate.” Response at 4. We needn’t address either of these arguments, however, because the Defendants have waived their right to an exhaustion defense. “Because exhaustion of administrative remedies is a matter of abatement and not generally an adjudication on the merits,” exhaustion defenses “should be decided [in] a Rule 12(b) motion to dismiss[.]” Bryant v. Rich, 530 F.3d 1368, 1375 (11th Cir. 2008) (emphasis added). The MJP, of course, is a Rule 12(c) motion. Normally, this wouldn’t be such a big deal because the Eleventh Circuit has

told us to reconstrue motions that advance an exhaustion defense under the PLRA as 12(b)(6) motions. See id. at 1374–75 (“[A]n exhaustion defense . . . is not ordinarily the proper subject for a summary judgment; instead, it should be raised in a motion to dismiss, or be treated as such if raised in a motion for summary judgment. (cleaned up)). The real problem is that these same four Defendants have already filed a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss, in which they argued that Deffendall’s claims were “barred by the statute of limitations[.]” Motion to Dismiss [ECF No. 36] at 3. We denied the Motion to Dismiss, finding that, under the prison mailbox rule, “Deffendall’s claims would be timely so long as he delivered his Complaint to prison officials for mailing on or before April 20, 2021,” which he had. Order Denying Motion to Dismiss [ECF No. 37] at 3. That first motion to dismiss never mentioned the central question we’re facing here—PLRA exhaustion. In any event, with that first Rule 12 motion now behind them, the Defendants run headlong into Rule 12(g)(2), which forbids a defendant from filing a second Rule 12 motion that “rais[es] a defense or objection that was available

to the party but omitted from its earlier motion.” FED. R. CIV. P. 12(g)(2). And the Eleventh Circuit has already handled a strikingly similar case. In Brooks v. Warden, 706 F. App’x 965 (11th Cir. 2017), the defendant “moved to dismiss Mr. Brooks’s complaint for failure to state a claim under [Rule 12(b)(6)]. [The defendant] did not mention the idea that Mr. Brooks failed to exhaust administrative remedies as required by the PLRA.” Id. at 967. When that first motion failed, the defendant filed a “motion for judgment on the pleadings under Rule 12(c)—arguing that Mr. Brooks’s suit should be dismissed as he failed to exhaust his administrative remedies.” Ibid. (cleaned up). The district court granted the defendant’s 12(c) motion, and Brooks appealed, arguing that the defendant had waived his exhaustion defense “because he failed to raise this defense in his earlier motions under Rule 12.” Ibid. (cleaned up). The Eleventh Circuit agreed with Brooks and reversed the district court, holding that Rule 12(g)(2) prevented the defendant from raising his exhaustion defense for the first time in a second Rule 12 motion. See id. at 969 (“Because Deputy Powell did not raise the

exhaustion defense in his first motion to dismiss under Rule 12, he ‘must not make another motion under this rule raising that defense.’” (quoting FED. R. CIV. P. 12(g)(2)).1 Since the Defendants had the

1 The Eleventh Circuit went on to explain that a PLRA exhaustion defense doesn’t qualify for any of the exceptions laid out in Rules 12(h)(2) and (h)(3). Rule 12(h)(2) doesn’t apply (the Circuit said) because an exhaustion defense “is not a failure-to-state-a-claim defense”; it is, instead, “independent from the merits of the plaintiff’s claim.” Brooks, 706 F. App’x at 969 (citing Bryant, 530 F.3d at 1376 n.12). And (the court continued), because “the PLRA exhaustion requirement is not jurisdictional,” it cannot be raised at any time under Rule 12(h)(3). Ibid. (quoting Woodford v. Ngo, 548 U.S. 81, 101 (2006)). opportunity to raise a PLRA exhaustion defense in their first Rule 12 motion (but didn’t), we find— as the Eleventh Circuit did in Brooks—that their “untimely assertion of the exhaustion defense was procedurally bared under Rule 12(g)(2)[.]” Id. at 970. We recognize (of course) that Brooks is an unpublished decision and that “[u]npublished opinions are not binding precedent.” United States v. Izurieta, 710 F.3d 1176, 1179 (11th Cir. 2013). Still, we choose to follow Brooks for three reasons. One, unpublished decisions “may [still] be cited as

persuasive authority,” especially where (as here) the factual and legal issues between the unpublished case and ours are virtually identical. United States v. Rodriguez-Lopez, 363 F.3d 1134, 1138 n.4 (11th Cir. 2004); cf. Bonilla v. Baker Concrete Constr., Inc., 487 F.3d 1340, 1345 n.7 (11th Cir. 2007) (“Unpublished opinions are not controlling authority and are persuasive only insofar as their legal analysis warrants.

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Related

United States v. Omar Rodriguez-Lopez
363 F.3d 1134 (Eleventh Circuit, 2004)
Bonilla v. Baker Concrete Construction, Inc.
487 F.3d 1340 (Eleventh Circuit, 2007)
Bryant v. Rich
530 F.3d 1368 (Eleventh Circuit, 2008)
Woodford v. Ngo
548 U.S. 81 (Supreme Court, 2006)
United States v. Yuri Izurieta
710 F.3d 1176 (Eleventh Circuit, 2013)
Fred Dalton Brooks v. Deputy Warden William Powell
706 F. App'x 965 (Eleventh Circuit, 2017)

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Bluebook (online)
Deffendall v. Indian River County Sheriff, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/deffendall-v-indian-river-county-sheriff-flsd-2023.