Jeremy Jones v. Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 22, 2024
Docket2024CA0387
StatusUnknown

This text of Jeremy Jones v. Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections (Jeremy Jones v. Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections) 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
Jeremy Jones v. Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections, (La. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL

FIRST CIRCUIT

5L 2024 CA 0387

JEREMY JONES

VERSUS

LOUISIANA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY AND CORRECTIONS

NOV2 2 202-4 JUDGMENT RENDERED:

On Judicial Review from the Nineteenth Judicial District Court Parish of East Baton Rouge - State of Louisiana Docket Number C- 716115 - Section 30

The Honorable Tarvald A. Smith, Presiding Judge

APPELLANT Jeremy Jones D. O. C. # 365876 PLAINTIFF— In Proper Person

Louisiana State Penitentiary Angola, Louisiana

COUNSEL FOR APPELLEE Jonathan R. Vining Baton Rouge, Louisiana DEFENDANT— Louisiana

Department of Public Safety and Corrections

BEFORE: MCCLENDON, WELCH, AND ZANIER, JJ. WELCH, J.

Jeremy Jones, an inmate in the custody of the Louisiana Department ofPublic and confined to the Louisiana State Safety and Corrections (" the Department")

Penitentiary at Angola, appeals a judgment of the district court granting his petition forjudicial review of his lost property claim and ordering the Department to pay him 500.00 for his lost property. For reasons that follow, we amend the judgment to

order the Department to pay Mr. Jones the sum of $2,000.00 for his lost property, and as amended, the judgment is affirmed.

I .: i Ra ' f i

According to the allegations of Mr. Jones' s petition for judicial review, on February 19, 2021, he was notified that he was being moved from Camp D to the main prison. At that time, all of his hobby craft tools and materials from his hobby

shop in Camp D (Eagle Hobbyshop) were placed into storage at Camp D, and he was given a copy of a receipt with a detailed inventory list attached thereto from the Department showing the specific items being stored.' The inventory list was

extensive, consisting of over one -hundred hobby craft tools and accessories,

materials, and other equipment, including a sewing machine.

Upon Mr. Jones' s arrival at the main prison, he sought access to its hobby In September 2021, shop, but he was placed on a backlog list to be assigned access. Mr. Jones was assigned access to the hobby shop in the main prison, and he notified

prison security that he would need his hobby craft tools and materials that were

stored at Camp D sent to him in the main prison. However, on September 13, 2021, Mr. Jones learned that his hobby craft tools and materials could not be located by

the prison.

I The record does not reveal the reason for Mr. Jones' s transfer from Camp D to the main prison. However, Mr. Jones' s petition does allege that the Department only stores the hobby craft tools and materials of inmates that are relocated within the prison when the relocation does not involve disciplinary proceedings.

2 Thereafter, Mr. Jones filed lost property claim number LSP -2021- 2462

seeking recovery for his lost property. This claim was submitted by Mr. Jones on

September 13, 2021, and it was received by the Department' s Legal Programs

Department on September 20, 2021. 2 In Mr. Jones' s lost property claim, he attached

his copy of the receipt he received from the Department and the detailed inventory list, and he estimated that the value of his lost property was $ 4, 500. 00. Mr. Jones' s

lost property claim was initially denied by the warden, and thereafter, it was denied by the Department. The reason cited by both the warden and the Department was

that Mr. Jones' s claim was untimely, stating that it should have been filed within ten

days of his transfer from Camp D to the main prison.'

On February 17, 2022, Mr. Jones filed the instant proceeding seeking judicial review of the Department' s decision regarding his lost property claim. Mr. Jones

contended that since the Department' s regulations provide that lost property claims

must be submitted to the warden within ten days of the discovery of the loss, see

LAC 22: I.325( L)( 1)( a), and since he submitted his lost property claim within ten

days of the date he discovered the loss, the Department abused its discretion in

rejecting his claim. Mr. Jones sought reimbursement for the full cost or replacement value of all of his hobby craft tools and materials that were lost by the Department.

2 Mr. Jones alleged that he learned that his hobby craft tools and materials could not be located on September 13, 2021 and that "[ n] ine days later, on September 17, 2021, [ he] filed a [ 1] ost [p] roperty c] laim seeking recovery for the lost property." We recognize that nine days after September 13, 2021 would have been September 22, 2021, not September 17, 2021, as alleged by Mr. Jones. Nevertheless, the documentation subsequently filed into the record by the Department reflects that Mr. Jones learned that his hobby craft tools and materials could not be located on September 13, 2021, that he submitted his lost property claim to the Department on that same date, and that it was received by the Legal Programs Department (of the Department) on September 20, 2021. Despite the ambiguity in the record regarding when Mr. Jones' s lost property claim was submitted, utilizing any ofthe above submission dates (or even the date that the claim was received by the Department), it is clear that, in accordance with Department regulations, Mr. Jones filed his lost property claim within ten days of September 13, 2021, the date he discovered the loss. See LAC 22: I.325( L)( 1)( a).

See footnote 2.

91 Following the initial screening of Mr. Jones' s petition, on February 25, 2022, the district court' s commissioner that was assigned to the matter issued an order The commissioner noted that Mr. Jones' s remanding the matter to the Department. because [ the request for relief had been rejected at the first step ( with the warden) "

Department] stated [ that Mr. Jones] ` should have filed a property claim within the

first ( 10) ten days of being at [ the] [ m] ain [ p] rison"' and that it had been rejected at

the second step ( with the Department) " based upon Department Regulation OP -C-

13, which state[ d] in part [ that] `[ a] ll claims for lost property must be submitted to

See also LAC the [ w]arden within ten days a,f discovery o.f the loss. "'

22: I.325( L)( 1)( a). The commissioner then noted that Mr. Jones had alleged in his

petition for judicial review that he " filed [his] lost property claim on September 17,

2021, nine days after September 13, 2021 when [ Mr. Jones] learned that his

personal property was lost."' Therefore, the commissioner ordered that the matter

be stayed for sixty days and remanded to the Department for consideration of the merits of Mr. Jones' s lost property claim, and that upon exhaustion of that process,

either party could notify the court in writing that it was ripe for further review. Thereafter, on June 27, 2022, the Department filed an answer in the judicial

review proceeding, maintaining that Mr. Jones had exhausted his administrative remedies with regard to his lost property claim and that the Department had properly After a rejected the claim due to Mr. Jones' s failure to timely submit his claim.

status conference on August 23, 2022, with the commissioner, the warden responded

to the merits of Mr. Jones' s lost property claim on September 12, 2022, admitting

that its "[ r] ecords reflect[ ed] that [ Mr. Jones' s] property was stored ... at Camp D in

the Cell Block Property Storage Room," but " after an extensive search of any and

Thereafter, on September 30, 2022, all areas [ his] property could not be located."

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Related

Hyorth v. Louisiana Department of Corrections
460 So. 2d 22 (Louisiana Court of Appeal, 1984)

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