Joan Mullin v. Karen Balicki

875 F.3d 140
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedNovember 6, 2017
Docket16-2896
StatusPublished
Cited by273 cases

This text of 875 F.3d 140 (Joan Mullin v. Karen Balicki) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joan Mullin v. Karen Balicki, 875 F.3d 140 (3d Cir. 2017).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

FUENTES, Circuit Judge.

A little over two years into the civil-rights suit brought by Joan Mullin (“Mul-lin”) over the tragic prison suicide of her son, Robert Mullin (“Robert”), Mullin’s attorney received a discovery document with the potential to reshape the case. A previously undisclosed investigative report about, the night Robert died contained statements by fellow New Jersey inmates about a prison guard who allegedly refused Robert’s requests for psychiatric assistance—and urged Robert to kill himself instead. But while Mullin’s attorney received this report mid-case, it was not reviewed in a timely fashion. Instead, due to a clerical error, the disc containing the relevant disclosures was misfiled, and not fully accessed until about ten months later. By that time, Mullin’s operative complaint—premised on a less direct knew-or-should-have-known theory of Robert’s vulnerability to suicide—had already been dismissed in large part. The District Court denied Mullin’s request for leave to amend her complaint, due in part to the delay caused by counsel’s error and, after additional motion practice, granted summary judgment in favor of the one remaining defendant, bringing the litigation to a close.

Mullin’s appeal encompasses both the dismissal of her operative complaint and the order denying further leave to amend. The latter is the focus of this opinion. For the reasons set forth below, we conclude that the decision denying leave to amend amounted to an impermissible exercise of discretion. Some of the factors relied upon to deny leave are not supported by the record or are at odds with our case law. And while we do not intend to minimize counsel’s mistake, it does not, standing alone, support denying leave to amend. Accordingly, we will vacate the order denying leave to amend and will remand for further proceedings.

I. Background 1

A. Robert’s Death and Mullin’s Initial Investigation

During the early morning hours of January 17, 2009, New Jersey prisoner Robert Mullin hanged himself with a bedsheet that he had fashioned into a noose. The twenty-nine-year-old Robert had been in and out of prison for the better part of a decade, in part due to his ongoing struggles with substance abuse. While serving out his latest sentence at a halfway house, Robert was found in possession of contraband. As a result, he was transferred to New Jersey’s Central Reception & Assignment Facility (“Assignment Facility”), where he was assessed and assigned to an area of the facility that did not feature extensive or individualized supervision by staff. It was there, in his Assignment Facility cell, that he took his own life—less than- a day after entering the Facility.

In the aftermath, Robert’s mother, Joan Mullin,' sought answers. -What few were given, however, were incomplete and at times inaccurate. In one instance, she was told that her son had died at a completely different facility, the Trenton Psychiatric Hospital—an error repeated on his death certificate. Despite some slow progress, she continued to lack key information about the final days and hours of Robert’s life and the people and entities to whom his care was entrusted.

B. Mullin Files the Original Complaint in January 2011

Despite this state of affairs, Mullin filed suit in the District of New Jersey shortly before the two-year mark of Robert’s death, 2 raising state tort claims and constitutional vulnerability-to-suicide claims (the latter of which is a variation on a constitutional claim alleging deliberate indifference to a serious medical need). The complaint focused on the defendants’ alleged failure to provide Robert with the level of care, treatment, and monitoring that he needed, and that was required by prison policy for someone with his history of depression, self-harm,- and substance abuse; Mullin alleged that Robert was placed in a cell that was inadequately supervised and altogether inappropriate for a person with a history of suicide attempts—a decision .made all the-more inexcusable by the medical history and recent relapse into drug addiction that his custodians failed to properly review or otherwise heed.

Mullin named a variety of defendants, several of whom were employed by the State of New Jersey and represented by the New Jersey Attorney General’s office. We will refer to these as the “State Defendants.”

C. Mullin Twice Amends Her Complaint

Mullin twice amended her complaint to both flesh out the facts—in part to account for interim discovery she, received. from non-State defendants—and to modify the list of defendants. In particular, Mullin sought to add Officer Nicholas Dimler, the Assignment Facility, guard who, according to the medical examiner’s report, was the last person (who wasn’t a fellow inmate) to see Robert alive—and the one who later discovered his body.

Mullin’s first - attempt to amend, filed in response to the defendants’ initial Rule 12 motions, was granted in part and denied in part. Among other things, the Magistrate Judge determined that the proposed amended complaint lacked sufficient detail of Dimler’s involvement in Robert’s death and did not state a plausible claim for relief against him. Under these constraints, Mullin filed her first amended complaint (“FAC”) in December 2011,

- After obtaining ■ additional discovery, Mullin again asked to amend in July 2012, arguing in part that she Could now plead a' viable claim against Officer Dimler. Mullin alleged essentially that Officer Dimler knew or should have known of Robert’s history of-suicide and psychiatric illness; that Dimler failed to review records that would have alerted him to Robert’s condition; and-that Dimler failed to follow prison policies and reasonable practices pertaining to inmates with Robert’s vulnerabilities. This time, the Magistrate Judge allowed Muffin's amendment-to include the revised allegations against Officer Dimler, .finding them to be “plausible” instead of merely possible. 3 Muffin’s Second Amended Complaint (“SAC”), the operative complaint for the remainder of the litigation in the District Court, was then filed in September 2012. The SAC, like its predecessors, was met with Rule 12 motions to dismiss.

D. While the Motions to Dismiss are Pending, Mullin Receives New Evidence in Discovery

Although Muffin had obtained some discovery by the time the SAC was filed— almost two years into the litigation—she -had received no disclosures from the State Defendants and, by extension, from the Department of Corrections or the State itself. The State Defendants finally made two separate document disclosures, pursuant to an amended pretrial scheduling order, while their motion to dismiss was pending. Both sets bear on Muffin’s later attempt at améndment, although for very different reasons.

One set of disclosures, from July 2013 (the “July 2013 disclosures”), contained information on various prison policies regarding suicide watch, close custody, and screening procedures employed by thé Assignment Facility.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
875 F.3d 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joan-mullin-v-karen-balicki-ca3-2017.