JOHN J. SULLIVAN v. SUPERINTENDENT, MASSACHUSETTS CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTION, SHIRLEY, & others.

196 N.E.3d 760, 101 Mass. App. Ct. 766
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 2022
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 196 N.E.3d 760 (JOHN J. SULLIVAN v. SUPERINTENDENT, MASSACHUSETTS CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTION, SHIRLEY, & others.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
JOHN J. SULLIVAN v. SUPERINTENDENT, MASSACHUSETTS CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTION, SHIRLEY, & others., 196 N.E.3d 760, 101 Mass. App. Ct. 766 (Mass. Ct. App. 2022).

Opinion

SULLIVAN vs. SUPERINTENDENT, MASSACHUSETTS CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTION-SHIRLEY, 101 Mass. App. Ct. 766

JOHN J. SULLIVAN vs. SUPERINTENDENT, MASSACHUSETTS CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTION, SHIRLEY, & others. [Note 1]

101 Mass. App. Ct. 766

March 15, 2022 - September 27, 2022

Court Below: Superior Court, Middlesex County

Present: Rubin, Kinder, & Ditkoff, JJ.

No. 19-P-1734.

Imprisonment, Grievances. Administrative Law, Prison disciplinary proceeding, Judicial review. Libel and Slander. Due Process of Law, Prison disciplinary proceedings. Constitutional Law, Equal protection of laws. Civil Rights, Supervisory liability. Declaratory Relief. Practice, Civil, Judgment on the pleadings.

Discussion of the availability of judicial review under G. L. c. 30A, § 14, despite the inapplicability of most administrative procedures under G. L. c. 30A, including those governing the conduct of adjudicatory proceedings, of a final decision with respect to a grievance against a prison outside the context of an inmate disciplinary hearing. [771-772]

Judgment improperly entered dismissing the plaintiff prison inmate's challenge to the denial of his grievance of his termination as a prison law clerk after a typewriter motor was stolen from the prison library, where the prison's institutional grievance coordinator neither interviewed the plaintiff nor collected the documents that the plaintiff mentioned in the grievance form in accordance with Department of Correction regulations; and where, given that the plaintiff might well have been reinstated to his library law clerk position without loss of pay or seniority had he been interviewed, had the documents been reviewed, and had the institutional grievance coordinator concluded that the plaintiff was not involved with the theft, the unlawful procedure may have prejudiced the plaintiff's substantial rights. [772-774]

Judgment properly entered dismissing the plaintiff prison inmate's challenge to the denial of his grievance arising from an eleven-day delay in mailing the plaintiff's complaint for judicial review challenging the denial of an underlying grievance, where, although defendant prison employees did not dispute that the delay was unreasonable, there was no need to resolve the question of timeliness given that the Superior Court and the parties treated the

Page 767

plaintiff's complaint as timely filed on the day that it was deposited in the prison mail system; thus, the plaintiff failed to demonstrate that his substantial rights were prejudiced; moreover, the defendant superintendent of the prison functionally provided the plaintiff with his requested relief (assurance that the circumstances would not occur again). [774-775]

A Superior Court judge properly dismissed the plaintiff prison inmate's defamation claim alleging that the defendant deputy superintendent of the prison made an implicit false statement of fact asserting that the plaintiff had been involved in a theft from the prison library where he worked, where, although the plaintiff was not defamation-proof as a matter of law for purposes of a motion to dismiss, the defamation claim was barred by the conditional privilege, in that the defendant enjoyed a conditional privilege as a workplace investigator and as a public official, and even in the light most favorable to the plaintiff, the excessive disclosure of the accusation was the result of the plaintiff's actions and not of recklessness by the defendant, and the plaintiff alleged no facts that could support a finding of knowing falsehood or reckless disregard for truth or falsity. [775-779]

Judgment properly entered dismissing the plaintiff prison inmate's claims arising from his asserted statutory right to prison employment on the ground that the State in which he was convicted of murder prior to being incarcerated in Massachusetts provided such, and the New England Interstate Corrections Compact (compact) entitled him to any legal rights that he enjoyed in that State, where there was no claim that the plaintiff was entitled to any specific job under the compact, and the prison agreed to work with him to secure him alternate employment; accordingly, his procedural due process claim failed, as did his derivative common-law wrongful discharge claim. [779-780]

In a civil action arising from the plaintiff prison inmate's termination as a prison law clerk after a typewriter motor was stolen from the prison library, judgment properly entered dismissing his claims that lacked merit, where, even if his termination had been arbitrary, his equal protection claim would not have risen above the constitutional threshold [780]; where the plaintiff complained about the prison library staffing as an employee, rather than a citizen speaking on a matter of public concern, and thus his retaliation claim under the First Amendment to the United States Constitution failed [780-781]; where the plaintiff's substantive due process claim failed, given that he did not allege any government action that shocked the conscience or interfered with rights implicit in the concept of ordered liberty [781]; where the plaintiff's claim of denial of access to the courts failed, given that he did not allege that the deficiencies in his access to the courts hindered his efforts to present a nonfrivolous legal claim [781]; where the plaintiff's two claims of supervisory liability under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 failed, given that for a supervisor to be liable under § 1983 for the actions of a subordinate, the subordinate's conduct must have amounted to a § 1983 violation [781]; and finally, where, given that nothing in the record suggested that the prison disputed the entitlement of the plaintiff to a fair and impartial adjudication of his grievances in accordance with regulations, there was no actual controversy to support the entry of a declaratory judgment [781-782].


Civil action commenced in the Superior Court Department on March 1, 2018.

Page 768

The case was heard by Christopher K. Barry-Smith, J., on motions for judgment on the pleadings.

John J. Sullivan, pro se.

Timothy M. Pomarole for the defendants.


DITKOFF, J. The plaintiff, inmate John J. Sullivan, filed a complaint against five employees of the Massachusetts Correctional Institution at Shirley (MCI-Shirley or prison) seeking judicial review of the denial of two prison grievances and asserting additional legal claims, all arising out of the plaintiff's termination as a prison law clerk after a typewriter motor was stolen from the prison library. We conclude that the plaintiff's first grievance, challenging his termination, was improperly denied because the prison failed to follow its own regulatory procedures in investigating it, and that the error may have affected the result. We further conclude that the plaintiff's claim for defamation against a correction officer for implicitly calling him a thief in front of other correction officers and inmates was properly dismissed. Although the plaintiff, a convicted murderer, is not defamation-proof against accusations of theft, the correction officer had a conditional privilege to explain hiring and firing decisions which was not lost by the fact that the statement was incidentally overheard by others. Concluding that the plaintiff's other claims lack merit, we affirm in part and reverse in part.

1. Background. [Note 2] a.

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196 N.E.3d 760, 101 Mass. App. Ct. 766, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-j-sullivan-v-superintendent-massachusetts-correctional-institution-massappct-2022.