Hurd v. City of New York

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. New York
DecidedSeptember 26, 2019
Docket1:18-cv-03704
StatusUnknown

This text of Hurd v. City of New York (Hurd v. City of New York) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hurd v. City of New York, (E.D.N.Y. 2019).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK

----------------------------------X

DEVAR HURD,

Plaintiff,

MEMORANDUM & ORDER

-against- 18-CV-3704(KAM)(JO) CITY OF NEW YORK, et al.,

Defendants.

----------------------------------X MATSUMOTO, United States District Judge: Plaintiff Devar Hurd (“Hurd” or “plaintiff”) brought this action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 by filing a complaint on June 26, 2018, naming as defendants the City of New York, Salathia Mixon, and Stacey Fredenburgh (“Fredenburgh” or “defendant”). (See ECF No. 1, Compl.) The Complaint alleges Mixon, Fredenburgh, and the City deprived plaintiff of his constitutional rights under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments due to an error in his sentencing calculations that caused plaintiff to be imprisoned past his conditional release date. (Id. at 1.) Plaintiff filed an amended complaint on November 2, 2018, bringing largely the same claims but dropping state law claims against defendant Fredenburgh. (See ECF No. 23, Am. Compl.). On June 7, 2019, the City of New York and Mixon reached a settlement agreement with Hurd, and were subsequently dismissed from this action. (See ECF No. 53, Settlement Agreement; ECF No. 54, Order Dismissing Parties.) Plaintiff seeks monetary damages due to his alleged wrongful imprisonment in violation of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and of the Cruel and Unusual Punishment Clause of the

Eighth Amendment. Fredenburgh, the only remaining defendant, now moves this court to dismiss plaintiff’s amended complaint pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) (“Rule 12(b)(6)”) for failure to state a claim. (See ECF No. 33, Mot. to Dismiss; ECF No. 34, Def.’s Mem. (“DM”); ECF No. 35, Pl.’s Opp. (“Opp.”); ECF No. 36, Def.’s Reply (“Reply”).) For the reasons discussed below, the court GRANTS defendant’s motion and finds that plaintiff’s Fourteenth Amendment due process claim fails because he did not plead a substantive due process right, that plaintiff fails to plead a violation of his Eighth Amendment rights because he was released prior to the date his maximum sentence

expired, and that regardless of those deficiencies, defendant is entitled to qualified immunity. BACKGROUND The following facts are drawn exclusively from plaintiff’s Amended Complaint. Hurd was arrested on July 23, 2013, and charged under Indictment No. 3134-2013 (the “Indictment”), (Am. Compl. 3), and was held in the custody of New York City’s Department of Correction (“NYCDOC”), (id. at 6). On October 8, 2015, after a second trial on the Indictment, Hurd was convicted on nine of ten counts submitted to the jury; the court declared a mistrial as to the tenth count. (Id. at 4.) The nine counts of conviction were all misdemeanors,1 and on

October 23, 2015, Hurd received consecutive one-year definite sentences for each of the seven counts of criminal contempt in the second degree; a 90-day definite sentence for the count of stalking in the fourth degree; and a 90-day definite sentence for the count of harassment in the first degree. (Id.) By operation of law, however, the maximum term of incarceration Hurd could serve for these consecutive, definite sentences was two years. (Id.); see N.Y. Penal Law § 70.30(2)(b). On March 18, 2016, after a third trial on the Indictment, a jury convicted Hurd of the remaining count, stalking in the second degree, a felony (the “Felony Count”). (Id.); see N.Y. Penal Law § 120.55(2). On March 31, 2016, Hurd

received an indeterminate prison sentence, with a minimum of one-and-one-third years, and a maximum of four years, to be served in the custody of New York State’s Department of Corrections and Community Supervision (“DOCCS”), and that was required to run concurrently with his sentence on the misdemeanor counts. (Am. Compl. 5.) By operation of law,

1 The misdemeanor counts consisted of seven counts of criminal contempt in the second degree, N.Y. Penal Law § 215.50(3); one count of stalking in the fourth degree, id. § 120.45(1); and one count of harassment in the first degree, id. § 240.25. (Am. Compl. 4.) Hurd’s indeterminate sentence on the Felony Count merged with the definite sentences on the misdemeanor counts and, accordingly, Hurd’s maximum term of imprisonment for the ten counts of conviction was four years. (Id.)

On or about April 14, 2016, Hurd was transferred from NYCDOC custody to DOCCS custody at Ulster Correctional Facility. (Id. at 6.) Accordingly, NYCDOC officials issued a “Jail Time Certification” (“JTC”) certifying that Hurd was entitled to 996 days of jail-time credit under N.Y. Penal Law § 70.30(3), for time served in City custody while awaiting trial and sentencing. (Id. at 5-6.) Concurrently, Hurd alleges, DOCCS officials produced a “Legal Date Computation” indicating that Hurd was eligible for good-time credit of up to one year and four months pursuant to N.Y. Penal Law §§ 70.30(4)(a), 70.40(1)(b), and N.Y. Correct. Law § 803(1)(a)-(b). (Id. at 6-7.) Plaintiff’s Legal

Date Computation also indicated he was entitled to jail-time credit of two years, eight months, and 26 days. (Id. at 7.) Based on these two credits, the Legal Date Computation further indicated that Hurd’s conditional release date, assuming his good-time credit was approved, was March 17, 2016, i.e., nearly a month prior to the date he was actually transferred to state custody. (Id.) On April 19, 2016, DOCCS awarded Hurd the full one year and four months of good-time credit for which he was eligible. (Id.) Hurd alleges that his jail-time credit was erroneously reduced and that, as a result, he was wrongfully kept in prison past his conditional release date. (Id. at 8.) When Hurd was

not immediately released upon the April 19, 2016 approval of his good-time credit, he repeatedly complained to unidentified prison officials about his alleged wrongful imprisonment. (Id.) According to Hurd, NYCDOC employee Edwin Felicien had spoken with defendant Fredenburgh, and the two agreed to reduce Hurd’s jail-time credit so that he would not be released. (Id.) The Amended Complaint further alleges that on May 4, 2016, defendant Fredenburgh asked Mixon for her assistance in obtaining an amended JTC to reduce Hurd’s jail-time credit so that DOCCS could continue to imprison him. (Id.) Over the next few days, Mixon told Fredenburgh multiple times that Hurd was entitled to all 996 days of jail-time credit that NYCDOC

officials had certified in Hurd’s original JTC, and that Mixon even “called sentencing review” to confirm that Hurd’s original JTC was correct. (Id.) On May 6, 2016, Felicien emailed Fredenburgh an amended JTC, indicating Hurd was entitled to 507 days jail-time credit. Later that day, Felicien emailed Fredenburgh a second amended JTC, which reduced Hurd’s eligible jail-time credit to 469 days. (Id. at 9.) Fredenburgh and Mixon reviewed the JTCs but neither took any action to correct these JTCs. (Id.) Around May 13, 2016, Hurd wrote grievance letters to defendant Fredenburgh and other DOCCS officials at Ulster Correctional Facility demanding that they release him in accordance with the original, accurate JTC. (Id. at 10.) On May 24 and 25,

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