Earnest Joseph v. Lt. Darren Moody and State of Louisiana through Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections Louisiana State Penitentiary

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 9, 2020
Docket2020CA0194
StatusUnknown

This text of Earnest Joseph v. Lt. Darren Moody and State of Louisiana through Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections Louisiana State Penitentiary (Earnest Joseph v. Lt. Darren Moody and State of Louisiana through Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections Louisiana State Penitentiary) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Earnest Joseph v. Lt. Darren Moody and State of Louisiana through Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections Louisiana State Penitentiary, (La. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL

FIRST CIRCUIT

2020 CA 0194

EARNESTJOSEPH

VERSUS

V LT. DARREN MOODY AND STATE OF LOUISIANA THROUGH LOUISIANA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY AND CORRECTIONS, LOUISIANA STATE PENITENTIARY

Decision Rendered: ` NOV 0 9 2yo

APPEALED FROM THE 20th JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT WEST FELICIANA PARISH, LOUISIANA DOCKET NUMBER 23, 274

HONORABLE WILLIAM G. CARMICHAEL, JUDGE

Donna U. Grodner Attorney for Plaintiff/ Appellant Baton Rouge, Louisiana Earnest Joseph

Jeff Landry Attorneys for Defendant/ Appellee Attorney General Lt. Darren Moody and State of James L. Hilburn Louisiana through Louisiana Baton Rouge, Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Amber Mandina Babin Corrections, Louisiana State New Orleans, Louisiana Penitentiary

BEFORE: McDONALD, HOLDRIDGE, and PENZATO, Ji.

u McDONALD, J.

Earnest Joseph III is an inmate housed at Louisiana State Penitentiary in Angola,

Louisiana. Mr. Joseph and his cellmate often argued and had both asked to be moved

from the cell they shared. Mr. Joseph alleges he told Lieutenant Darren Moody that his

cellmate was acting mentally unstable. Mr. Joseph asked to be moved from the cell

before his cellmate ' snapped and attacked" him. Lt. Moody did not have authority to

move an inmate and did not obtain authority to separate the two men. The next day,

Mr. Joseph' s cellmate attacked and injured him.

After his request for an administrative remedy was denied, Mr. Joseph filed this

failure to protect" tort suit against Lt. Moody and the State of Louisiana through the

Department of Public Safety and Corrections. Following a bench trial, the district court

dismissed Mr. Joseph' s suit. The district court found that Lt. Moody knew Mr. Joseph

and his cellmate did not get along and wanted to be separated; the court further found,

however, that Mr. Joseph failed to prove that Lt. Moody's knowledge was sufficient to

place prison officials on notice of threatened harm to Mr. Joseph. Mr. Joseph appealed

the adverse judgment.

After a complete review of the record, particularly the trial testimony of Mr.

Joseph, his cellmate, and Lt. Moody, we conclude the district court properly applied the

applicable law, applied the proper standard of review, and the record provides a

reasonable factual basis for the court's findings. We adopt the district court's October

7, 2019 written reasons for judgment as our own and attach them to this decision as

Attachment I.

The district court' s judgment is affirmed. We render no cost assessment in this

pauper suit.

AFFIRMED.

0J ATTACHMENT I"

EARNEST JOSEPH NUMBER 23, 274 DIVISION B

20r,, JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT

VERSUS PARISH OF WEST FELIC LED LT. DARREN MOODY ET AL STATE OF LOUISIA8 2 9

REASONS FOR JUDGMENT 0rDJy*. rk0rCwrt J

On August 7, 2017, Earnest Joseph, an inmate at the Louisiana State Penitentiary, was

seriously injured when he was attacked by his cell mate, George Fobb. Mr. Joseph has filed this action against Lt. Darren Moody and the State of Louisiana, Department of Public Safety and Corrections seeking damages for the injuries he suffered in the attack. The matter was tried on September 16, 2019 and taken under advisement.

Mr. Joseph and Mr. Fobb were cell mates. Though it is not clear from the testimony,

they may have been related to each other or thought they were related. Lt. Moody was one of the officers in charge of the area where Mr. Joseph and Mr, Fobb were confined. Lt. Moody

testified that the two inmates were placed in the same cell at their request claiming they were

cousins. He had no objection to such a placement because it would mean less chance of

problems in that cell. Lt. Moody readily admitted that, at some time after they were placed

together, neither Mr. Joseph nor Mr. Fobb wanted to remain as cell mates. According to I. t.

Moody, Mr. Joseph asked to be moved because he couldn' t get along with Mr. Fobb, and Mr. Fobb wanted to be transferred from the penitentiary at Angola to a prison closer to his Koine. Lt.

Moody had no authority to authorize a move from the cell or a transfer from Angola, but took no action to obtain authority to separate the two itunates. On August 7, 2017 or August b, 2017, while Mr. Joseph was receiving canteen items from Sgt. Kandy Dousay, he was attacked by Mr. Fobb. Sgt. Dousay testified that Mr. Joseph said something to Mr. Fobb which site could not hear. Mr. Fobb uttered an obscenity and struck Mr. Joseph with a closed fist causing Mr. Joseph' s head to strike the cell bars. She stated that Mr. Fobb ceased the attack when she

ordered him to do so. The inmates were separated, and Mr. Joseph was taken to the hospital.

There is no dispute that Mr. Joseph was seriously injured and continues to experience difficulties

as the result of the attack. There is also no dispute that Mr. Joseph complained about Mr. Fobb to

Lt. Darren Moody before the attack.

A penal institution is not an insurer of an inmate against attacks by other inmates. The

parties agree that the correct standard in this case is that of ordinary or reasonable care. In order

1 to hold the penal authorities liable for an injury inflicted upon an inmate by another inmate, the

authorities must know or have reason to anticipate that harm will ensue and fail to use reasonable

care in preventing the harm. Mr. Joseph claims that his complaints to Lt. Moody satisfy the first part of the standard. In other words, the Defendants knew or had reason to anticipate the attack

based on Mr. Joseph' s complaints. Lt. Moody' s inaction in failing to separate Mr. Joseph from

Mr. Fobb, according to the Plaintiff, satisfies the second part of the standard.

As part of the Plaintiffs burden to show that the authorities knew of or had reason to

anticipate harm, he must show that there was reason to believe that the threatened harm was real

and actual and sufficient to place prison officials on notice to act in order to prevent it. There is

no question that Mr. Joseph and Mr. Fobb didn' t get along. They both testified that they had

disputes and arguments. They gave different reasons for the disagreements, but both testified

that they didn' t want to live together. Their desire to be separated was known to Lt. Moody. That knowledge, alone, is insufficient to place the officials on notice that there was threatened

harm. Mr. Joseph testified that he told Lt. Moody that Mr. Fobb was acting crazy, was bipolar,

and threatened hien. Lt. Moody testified that Mr. Joseph was always saying that Mr. Fobb was

crazy but " in a playing way." He also testified that Mr. Joseph, in fact, asked to be moved but

was not adamant and did not indicate that he was in fear of Mr. Fobb or that Mr. Fobb threatened

him. Lt. Moody went on to say that, had he known about a problem that placed Mr. Joseph in

danger, lie would have taken action to separate the inmates.

The testimony of Mr. Joseph and Lt. Moody is inconsistent. If Mr_Joseph ,Wade it clear

to Lt. Moody that there was a credible threat to his safety, he has satisfied the requirement to

show that the prison officials were on notice of the potential harm. If, as Lt. Moody testified,

what Mr. Joseph said was " just talk," there was no notice to the authorities of potential harm.

That determination turns on the specific facts. Though Mr. Joseph testified that lie complained

to Lt.

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Earnest Joseph v. Lt. Darren Moody and State of Louisiana through Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections Louisiana State Penitentiary, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/earnest-joseph-v-lt-darren-moody-and-state-of-louisiana-through-louisiana-lactapp-2020.