John H. Gordon v. Jack Watson, III and George Cansler

622 F.2d 120, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 15533
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 21, 1980
Docket79-2631
StatusPublished
Cited by139 cases

This text of 622 F.2d 120 (John H. Gordon v. Jack Watson, III and George Cansler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John H. Gordon v. Jack Watson, III and George Cansler, 622 F.2d 120, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 15533 (5th Cir. 1980).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

While a pre-trial detainee, John H. Gordon filed this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against Jack Watson, III, a Florida assistant state attorney, and George Cansler, the Director of the Volusia County Jail Department of Corrections. Gordon’s complaint and amended complaint alleged that he was subjected to punitive confinement after complaining to a judge that Watson and Cansler had denied him telephone privileges. The district court granted summary judgment for the defendants, ruling that “there is no issue of fact as to punitive confinement” and that the denial of Gordon’s access to the telephone did not violate his constitutional rights. Because we find that the proffered materials are insufficient to support the grant of summary judgment, we vacate and remand.

Gordon had been in custody at the Volusia County Jail since February 1978, when he failed to post bond on an arrest for possession of a controlled substance. On March 4 or 5, according to Gordon’s allegations, Gordon was denied visitors and perhaps telephone privileges. 1 On April 5, 1978, the Volusia County grand jury returned a four-count indictment against Gordon for first degree murder, conspiracy to commit murder, possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, and use of a firearm in the commission of a felony. On April 6, Gordon was brought before a judge to be formally arrested on the above charges. At that hearing, he complained to the judge that Cansler, under the direction of Watson, had denied him telephone privileges.

When Gordon returned to the Volusia County Jail that day, Cansler, at Watson’s request, moved Gordon to the Volusia County Annex facility and limited Gordon’s access to the telephone, allowing him to call only his attorney. The next day (April 7), Cansler, again at Watson’s direction, moved Gordon from the annex back to the main facility of the Volusia County Jail, where he once again had access to the telephone.

On April 13 Gordon filed this complaint. Pursuant to court order, he amended his *122 complaint on May 12 to allege that he had been “subjected to punitive confinement and isolation confinement and [had been] placed in the hole after telling Judge Griffin of the denial of phone call [sic] by officers under George Cansler by order of Jack Watson.” He sought release from maximum security confinement, some contact visits, rules to protect other prisoners, and $300,000.00 in damages. By the time of the amended complaint (and perhaps as early as April 7) and until August 18, Gordon was incarcerated in a number of one-man cells. Over the next several months he was transferred several times back and forth between the Volusia County Jail and a state correctional facility, where he now remains. He was confined at various times in both one-man cells and so-called “population” cells during his remaining confinement at the Volusia County Jail.

After he had filed the amended complaint, Gordon moved for an order seeking his release from maximum security. The defendants filed a response to the motion, verified by Edward Froman, a Lieutenant in the Volusia County Jail and acting Chief Correctional Officer, which stated that Gordon was being held in one-man cells “due to the seriousness of the convictions and the pending charges.” Before the court ruled on the motion, Watson and Cansler moved for summary judgment, attaching affidavits of Watson and Froman. Watson’s affidavit stated that he had restricted Gordon’s telephone privileges because he was afraid that Gordon would call certain persons in possession of, or with access to, instrumentalities of the first-degree murder charge, which they might then destroy or conceal. On April 6, the affidavit continued, Watson believed he would be able to get an immediate court order restricting Gordon’s phone calls to his attorney. The next day, after researching the issue, Watson determined that such an order was unlikely and he ordered that Gordon be moved back into the county jail facilities, with telephone privileges restored. Froman’s affidavit purported to incorporate his earlier verified response to Gordon’s motion, in which he had stated that Gordon was incarcerated in one-man cells due to the seriousness of his crimes. It also recited the frequency of the telephone calls Gordon was allowed to make.

The court did not rule on the summary judgment motion but ordered the defendants to file an answer to Gordon’s amended complaint. In their answers, defendants renewed their motions for summary judgment, attaching Cansler’s affidavit stating that the entire jail is a maximum security institution, enumerating the cells in which Gordon was housed during his incarceration there, and averring that no cell in the institution is known as “the hole.”

Gordon filed no responsive affidavits. Instead, he filed an unsworn, unverified document styled “Answer to defendants Motion for Summary Judgment and Answer to Amended Civil Rights Complaint.” He asserted that Watson never sought to obtain the order restricting Gordon’s phone calls and as a skilled prosecutor knew that he had no grounds to obtain one. He also stated that Watson’s conjecture that Gordon’s friends would destroy or conceal evidence was totally without merit because Gordon’s house had already been searched. The answer further contended that the defendants had not shown that Gordon was the only one in jail charged with so serious a crime or that he had broken any rule of the facility. In particular, he objected to being placed in one-man cells, in which he was confined from March until August 1978.

In granting the defendants’ motions for summary judgment, the district court relied on the affidavits of Watson and Cansler to conclude that there was no issue of fact as to punitive confinement. The court further found that the curtailment of Gordon’s access to the telephone for two days was not a constitutional violation because “plaintiff was then represented by counsel, the restriction was for a short period of time, and the plaintiff had ample access to the telephone prior to and subsequent to the brief period of restricted access.” In view of the further fact that Gordon was never denied telephone access to his counsel we agree *123 that any deprivation was slight indeed. However, the unresolved factual basis for the constitutional issue is not the extent of deprivation, but whether the slight was deliberately imposed as punishment for bringing his condition to the attention of the court. This is not addressed by the affidavits supporting summary judgment.

The punitive confinement issue has two parts: Gordon’s transfer to the annex on April 6 and 7, and his confinement in one-man cells from April 7 to August 18. Watson’s affidavit responded to Gordon’s allegation that the transfer was for punitive reasons by demonstrating the legitimate administrative reasons for the transfer. Froman’s affidavit, on the other hand, establishes that the defendants had legitimate, non-punitive reasons for confining Gordon in one-man cells rather than populated cells only to the extent that it incorporates his earlier verified response.

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Bluebook (online)
622 F.2d 120, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 15533, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-h-gordon-v-jack-watson-iii-and-george-cansler-ca5-1980.