Dye, John L. v. Kingston, Phil

130 F. App'x 52
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedApril 27, 2005
Docket04-4066
StatusUnpublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 130 F. App'x 52 (Dye, John L. v. Kingston, Phil) 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
Dye, John L. v. Kingston, Phil, 130 F. App'x 52 (7th Cir. 2005).

Opinion

ORDER

Wisconsin prisoner John L. Dye, Jr., brought suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging as relevant here that prison officials withheld his religious and legal materials in violation of the First Amendment. The district court ultimately dismissed these claims for failure to exhaust administrative remedies. We affirm.

Dye’s claims stem from the failure of prison officials to return personal property after he was transferred to Columbia Correctional Institution in November 2002. Before moving to CCI, Dye packed his possessions in a box. Several days later, after staff at CCI inventoried Dye’s incoming property to ensure compliance with prison regulations, Dye received his box. When unpacking, Dye realized that several items were missing, including Bibles and legal materials. The legal materials included compilations of various statutes and rules, which appear to be available in the prison library, in addition to a Defensive and Arrest Tactics Training (DATT) Manual that Dye obtained through discovery in a pending civil case.

Dye contacted Warden Phillip Kingston, Security Director Tim Douma, Mail/Property Supervisor Jim Spangberg, and Mail/Property Sergeant Mawby (all defendants in this action) and submitted informal Interview/Information Requests asking that his missing property be returned. *54 In later correspondence with Kingston, Dye said he needed the legal materials for use in unspecified pending cases. Later, in the course of threatening litigation to win return of his “ ‘allowable’ property,” Dye also made mention in one letter of a several-month series that the withholding of his Bibles bordered “close” to a violation of his First Amendment right to free exercise of religion. Kingston responded by telling Dye to proceed through the “chain of command.” Domna also wrote Dye explaining that the DATT manual was withheld because it posed “security issues.” But if Dye verified that he had court approval to review the manual for pending litigation, added Douma, he would be allowed to “access the material in the interview room of his housing unit.”

In addition to his informal requests, in December 2002, Dye filed a timely grievance, identified as Complaint No. CCI 2002-42191, demanding the return of the same items identified in his informal requests, including deodorant, hair nets, shower caps, pens, tobacco, lotion, tennis shoes, and a television cable as well as “legal materials” and “two large print Bibles.” Dye said little about his present need for the legal materials and nothing about the missing Bibles hindering his religious observance. Officer William Noland (also a defendant) denied his grievance stating first that Dye was “fully aware of where his property” was because he “sent out” his property “on a visit.” In addition, Noland noted that the prison confiscated Dye’s publications because he had 59 more than the 25-publication limit allowed at CCI. In his grievance Dye did not name any prison staff responsible for withholding the property, but in his administrative appeal he identified Kingston, Duoma, Mawbey, and Spangberg as officials who refused “to respond” to his requests for return of legal materials “which pertain to presently pending court matters.” That appeal was denied.

Dye then attached the resolution of Complaint No. 42191 in a second grievance, Complaint No. CCI-2003-3391. Though Dye repeated his general assertions about wanting the return of his “property/legal materials,” he made no specific mention of the withheld Bibles. This grievance and Dye’s related appeals were denied, but in January 2003, Correctional Officer Ditter (a sixth defendant) did return some of Dye’s legal materials. And Ditter informed Dye that he could pay $100 to have the remaining property that was being withheld for violating the mandated limits sent out of the prison or else it would be destroyed.

Dye then brought this civil rights action complaining that the defendants were violating his First Amendment rights by withholding his legal and religious materials. (Dye also claimed the defendants were hindering his access to the courts by giving him lined paper instead of his preferred typing paper, and by refusing to authorize further loans under Wis. Admin. DOC § 309.51 so that he could pursue his legal matters; these claims are patently frivolous, and the district court correctly dismissed them on the merits. See Lindell v. McCallum, 352 F.3d 1107, 1111 (7th Cir.2003) (no subsidized right to access to the courts); Johnson v. Daley, 339 F.3d 582, 585 (7th Cir.2003) (same).) At first the district court denied the defendants’ motion seeking summary judgment for failure to exhaust administrative remedies, see 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a), explaining that the defendants had offered too little information to establish conclusively that Dye had not exhausted his First Amendment claims. The court also , denied Dye’s own request for summary judgment on his First Amendment claims, reasoning that Dye lacked evidence that the missing legal *55 materials had caused “actual injury” to his litigation efforts, or that his “exercise of religion was unduly burdened by the defendants in the absence of a reasonably related legitimate penological interest.”

The defendants later renewed their motion for summary judgment, again arguing that Dye had failed to exhaust his First Amendment claims through the administrative process. This time granting the motion, the district court concluded that Dye’s grievances about his missing property made “no specific allegations against the defendants”; rather, the court noted, Grievance No. 49121 simply presented a “laundry list” of missing items. Reasoning that Dye had not suggested “that it was prison policy to deny inmates religious and legal materials,” and that his grievances included too little information “to link any of the defendants to his missing property,” the court held that Dye had not given “notice” of his contentions, and thus failed to exhaust his administrative remedies.

On appeal Dye disputes the district court’s determination that prison officials were not given sufficient notice of his First Amendment claims. Dye argues that his grievances were “not lacking such information that the administrative system requires,” and that he gave the prison the necessary opportunity to respond to his complaint about the withheld property. And, in answer to the defendants’ argument that he could not have exhausted without specifically naming them in his grievances, Dye argues that it was enough that he identified them in his administrative appeal of Complaint No. 42191.

A purpose of the exhaustion requirement is to allow prison officials time and opportunity to respond to complaints internally before an inmate initiates litigation. Porter v. Nussle, 534 U.S. 516, 524-25, 122 S.Ct. 983, 152 L.Ed.2d 12 (2002); see Smith v. Zachary, 255 F.3d 446, 450-51 (7th Cir.2001).

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Bluebook (online)
130 F. App'x 52, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dye-john-l-v-kingston-phil-ca7-2005.