James Daher, Jr. v. Mark Sevier

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJanuary 31, 2018
Docket16-2174
StatusUnpublished

This text of James Daher, Jr. v. Mark Sevier (James Daher, Jr. v. Mark Sevier) 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
James Daher, Jr. v. Mark Sevier, (7th Cir. 2018).

Opinion

NONPRECEDENTIAL DISPOSITION To be cited only in accordance with Fed. R. App. P. 32.1

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit Chicago, Illinois 60604

Argued December 13, 2017 Decided January 31, 2018

Before

DIANE P. WOOD, Chief Judge

DANIEL A. MANION, Circuit Judge

DAVID F. HAMILTON, Circuit Judge

No. 16-2174

JAMES J. DAHER, JR., Appeal from the United States District Plaintiff-Appellant, Court for the Northern District of Indiana, South Bend Division. v. No. 3:13-cv-940 MARK R. SEVIER, Superintendent, et al., Jon E. DeGuilio, Defendants-Appellees. Judge.

ORDER

This case concerns the fairness of a hearing. A magistrate judge found, after this hearing, that James Daher, an Indiana inmate, did not exhaust his administrative remedies before suing prison officials. On appeal, Daher challenges the hearing procedure, which the magistrate judge arranged in two “steps.” In the first step, the prison officials could try to meet their burden of producing evidence that Daher failed to exhaust the prison grievance system. At the second step, Daher could try to rebut that evidence. Daher contends the magistrate judge denied him a fair opportunity to discover relevant evidence before, and submit evidence at, the second step. We conclude that the magistrate judge unreasonably denied Daher an opportunity to rebut the defendant’s case, so we vacate and remand for further proceedings. No. 16-2174 Page 2

Factual Background

Daher sued officials at Miami Correctional Facility under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. He contended that on September 6, 2011, they “reclassified” him to a higher security level, put him in segregation, and subjected him to harsh prison conditions in retaliation for filing lawsuits and grievances. The district court screened Daher’s complaint, see 28 U.S.C. § 1915A. It allowed him to proceed on the theories that the alleged retaliation violated the First Amendment and that the prison conditions violated the Eighth Amendment.

The defendants moved for summary judgment, arguing that Daher failed to exhaust administrative remedies as required by the Prison Litigation Reform Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a). Several rounds of briefing followed. The defendants contended that the prison’s electronic grievance system showed no record of any grievance from Daher complaining about his time in segregation in September 2011. Daher responded that he had submitted such grievances and that officials had rejected or returned them. He submitted three documents to prove his point. First was a grievance form, dated September 12, 2011 (six days after his placement in segregation), which he said he had filed to protest his reclassification and the conditions in segregation. Next was a form that, according to Daher, showed that the prison had rejected his grievance on November 7. (The form asserts that the prison rejected a grievance because it was “submitted on behalf of another person or a group” and was missing Daher’s inmate number.) Third, Daher submitted another grievance that he purportedly had filed on November 9 to complain about the prison’s failure to timely respond to his September 12 grievance.

The defendants replied that Daher had never filed the September 12 grievance and that the November 7 “rejection” corresponded to an unrelated grievance. They compared their copy of the November 7 rejection to a grievance that Daher filed on November 2 about toilet paper. They explained that, unlike the September 12 grievance, the toilet-paper grievance appears to be filed on behalf of a group and is missing Daher’s inmate number—the reasons given for the November 7 rejection. Further, the November 7 rejection mentions “November 2,” the date of the toilet-paper grievance. They concluded that both the September 12 grievance and Daher’s copy of the November 7 rejection form were “fabricated” and had never actually been filed.

Daher disputed this evidence in a sur-reply. He argued that defendants have an unwritten policy “of not filing or processing grievances” and that officials often reject grievances for nonsensical reasons. Therefore, Daher argued, it was reasonable to No. 16-2174 Page 3

conclude that the prison lost or mishandled his September 12 grievance, and that the November 7 rejection form may have corresponded to that grievance despite its seeming relationship to the toilet-paper grievance.

The court concluded that three disputed issues required a hearing. These were: (1) did Daher submit a grievance on September 12, (2) was the grievance rejected on November 7, and (3) did he resubmit it on November 9. The court ordered a magistrate judge to conduct a hearing under Pavey v. Conley, 544 F.3d 739 (7th Cir. 2008), to determine if Daher had exhausted his prison remedies as required.

The magistrate judge proposed a “two-step” hearing procedure. First, because it was defendants’ burden to prove Daher’s failure to exhaust, they would put on their evidence and witnesses. After that, the judge said, if Daher needed to rebut any issues, he could explain “what documents or what witnesses, in context and with specificity, he would need to call.” If needed, his rebuttal case would occur at a second hearing.

The parties agreed to this procedure. Before the hearing, Daher asked for discovery from the defendants. To prove that in the fall of 2011 the prison’s record-keeping was unreliable and that responses to grievances often did not match the grievances, Daher asked (among other things) for his own grievance records and those of other inmates in 2011. But the magistrate judge postponed those requests. He explained that Daher did not “need” discovery before “step one,” but that he could request it later if he needed to rebut the defendants’ evidence. The judge reiterated the two-step process. He said that he would go forward with the defendants’ evidence and “then determine what discovery” Daher might need if the defendants carried their burden.

Step one proceeded. The defendants presented three witnesses over two hours. They sought to prove that the November 7 rejection corresponded to the November 2 toilet-paper grievance, and thus that Daher had never filed a grievance on September 12. Daher, proceeding pro se, cross-examined those witnesses and introduced some exhibits. But the judge stopped him from proffering evidence that the Department of Correction handled other grievances unreliably, as he had argued in his filings.

Step two never occurred. When step one ended, the judge asked Daher how he “wish[ed] to proceed.” Daher replied that he wanted to “put a little evidence on” or testify. The judge did not adjourn to consider the deferred discovery requests; noting the press of other business and the passing of the lunch hour, he offered Daher only ten No. 16-2174 Page 4

minutes during which he alone could testify. Daher declined that meager offer as “not necessary.” Both sides declined the judge’s offer to receive supplemental briefs.

The magistrate judge recommended dismissing Daher’s suit for lack of exhaustion. He found that the November 7 rejection form corresponded to the November 2 toilet-paper grievance, and thus that Daher likely had fabricated the September 12 grievance after filing suit. Daher filed written objections to the recommendation and argued that he was denied a fair hearing.

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James Daher, Jr. v. Mark Sevier, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-daher-jr-v-mark-sevier-ca7-2018.