Hadley v. Quinn

524 F. App'x 290
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedApril 25, 2013
DocketNo. 12-3282
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 524 F. App'x 290 (Hadley v. Quinn) 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
Hadley v. Quinn, 524 F. App'x 290 (7th Cir. 2013).

Opinion

ORDER

Willie Hadley, a former Illinois inmate, filed this suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 principally claiming that he was incarcerated on an invalid conviction and then, after being paroled, unlawfully reimprisoned for infractions that occurred only after his parole term had expired. Hadley’s complaint includes other claims as well, but all of them rest on the same premise. The district court allowed some of Hadley’s claims to reach summary judgment before finally resolving the case in favor of the defendants, but the suit is frivolous and should have been dismissed immediately. We affirm the judgment and warn Hadley that further litigation of this sort will lead to sanctions.

Hadley killed an elderly man during a 1976 armed robbery in St. Clair County, Illinois, and pleaded guilty to first-degree murder. In exchange for his plea, prosecutors promised not to offer aggravating evidence at sentencing. Hadley was sentenced to 24 to 74 years in prison, and he asserts that the judge who imposed that sentence based it partly on aggravating evidence in the presentence report. Had-ley thought the judge’s reliance on this aggravating evidence violated the plea agreement.

In May 2007 he was released on a three-year term of mandatory parole. One condition of that parole was that Hadley not leave Illinois without his parole agent’s permission. Hadley did not comply with that condition. In December 2009 his parole agent, Julie Davinroy, discovered that Hadley possessed a library card for the public library in St. Louis, Missouri. When confronted about this card, Hadley admitted to Davinroy that he had been violating his parole by leaving Illinois to spend nights with his sister in St. Louis. Davinroy and her supervisor, Angela Chaney, issued a violation report, and parole agent Dale Engelman arrested Hadley the same day. His parole was revoked, and he was reincarcerated until April 2010. While serving that term Hadley wrote the governor of Illinois demanding immediate release because, he said, his parole term had expired in July 2008 (before his travels to St. Louis) due to the accumulation of good-conduct credits. The governor did not respond.

Hadley did not file a collateral attack challenging the revocation, but after his release from prison he filed this suit alleging that Davinroy, Chaney, and Engelman had caused him to be reimprisoned for conduct occurring after his parole term had expired. The governor was liable for this conduct, Hadley added, because he did not correct the unlawful detention. Had-ley’s complaint also revived his 30-year-old claim (one already litigated and rejected in federal habeas-corpus proceedings, [292]*292see Hadley v. Haws, No. 97 C 6636, 1998 WL 698939 (N.D.Ill. Oct. 5, 1998)) that his underlying conviction had been void because the plea agreement was breached. Consequently, Hadley maintained, he was falsely imprisoned for 33 years and was entitled to damages from the Illinois Department of Corrections and from the jails in St. Clair County and Monroe County where he served portions of his sentence (Hadley’s complaint identifies the municipal defendants as the jails, not the two counties or their jail administrators). He also named as defendants Monroe County and its Board of Commissioners, which allegedly had discouraged public defenders from adequately investigating their clients’ eases, as well as the Office of the State Appellate Defender, which, he claimed, had violated his right to the effective assistance of counsel. Hadley sought compensatory and punitive damages to the tune of $70 million from each named defendant as well as injunctions requiring the destruction of his criminal files and DNA markers, the restoration of a confiscated firearm owner’s identification card, and an apology for wrongfully convicting him published on the front page of eight periodicals.

On the defendants’ motions, the district judge (adopting a magistrate judge’s recommendation) dismissed as barred by the Eleventh Amendment Hadley’s claims against the Department of Corrections, the Office of the State Appellate Defender, and, in their official capacity, the governor, Davinroy, Chaney, and Engelman. The court also dismissed Hadley’s claims naming Monroe County, its Board of Commissioners, and the two jails; even if those defendants have capacity to be sued, the court reasoned, the claims naming them were untimely.

Hadley then moved to amend his complaint. He sought to add as defendants the man serving as director of the Department of Corrections when his parole was revoked in 2010, along with an Assistant State Appellate Defender and several other people whose actions, he said, caused the revocation. Hadley also sought to expand his suit to include claims under the First Amendment and the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The district court denied this motion on the ground that the new defendants would be prejudiced by the delay in adding them.

What survived the defendants’ motions to dismiss were Hadley’s individual capacity claims against Davinroy, Chaney, En-gelman, and the governor arising from the revocation of his parole. On cross motions for summary judgment, the district judge (again adopting a magistrate judge’s recommendation) concluded that Davinroy, Chaney, and Engelman were entitled to qualified immunity because, the judge said, Hadley did not have a clearly established right to avoid reimprisonment for a violation that occurred within three years of his first release on parole. And the governor, the judge added, was not personally involved in the revocation process.

In his complaint Hadley never asserted that these four individuals were responsible for his imprisonment on the underlying murder conviction, yet the district court went on to say that Hadley’s attempt to impugn that conviction was barred by the Roolcer-Feldman doctrine because the claim would require review of a state-court judgment. See Exxon Mobil Corp. v. Saudi Basic Indus. Corp., 544 U.S. 280, 283-84, 125 S.Ct. 1517, 161 L.Ed.2d 454 (2005); Dist. of Columbia Ct. of Appeals v. Feldman, 460 U.S. 462, 482-83, 103 S.Ct. 1303, 75 L.Ed.2d 206 (1983); Rooker v. Fidelity Trust Co., 263 U.S. 413, 415-16, 44 S.Ct. 149, 68 L.Ed. 362 (1923). The district court also considered whether a challenge to Hadley’s murder conviction would be [293]*293barred under Heck v. Humphrey, 512 U.S. 477, 114 S.Ct. 2864, 129 L.Ed.2d 383 (1994), but concluded that there is “probably an exception to the Heck bar” for litigants who cannot bring habeas corpus petitions because they no longer are “in custody.”

On appeal Hadley first argues that the district court erred in concluding that the Rooker-Feldman doctrine limited its subject-matter jurisdiction. Hadley is mistaken. Under Rooker-Feldman the lower federal courts lack jurisdiction to review state-court judgments except to the extent authorized by 28 U.S.C. § 2254. See Sides v. City of Champaign, 496 F.3d 820, 824 (7th Cir.2007); Buckley v. Ill.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
524 F. App'x 290, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hadley-v-quinn-ca7-2013.