Logan Mills v. Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections

CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 24, 2020
Docket2019CA1444
StatusUnknown

This text of Logan Mills v. Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections (Logan Mills 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
Logan Mills v. Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections, (La. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION

STATE OF LOUISIANA

COURT OF APPEAL

FIRST CIRCUIT

2019 CA 1444

LOGAN MILLS # 532042

VERSUS

ROBERT TANNER, WARDEN BILLY ANDERSON, LT. COLONEL DARRYL MIZELL, AND CAPTAIN JOSHUA MILEY

Decision Rendered: JUL 2 4 2020

APPEALED FROM THE 19th JUDICIAL DISTRICT COURT, EAST BATON ROUGE PARISH, LOUISIANA DOCKET NUMBER 673, 022

HONORABLE TIMOTHY KELLEY, JUDGE

Logan Mills Plaintiff/Appellant Angie, Louisiana Pro Se

Debra Rutledge Attorney for Defendant/ Appellee Baton Rouge, Louisiana Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections

BEFORE: McDONALD, THERIOT, and CHUTZ, 33. McDONALD, J.

On review of an inmate' s petition for judicial review under the Louisiana

Corrections Administrative Remedy Procedure ( CARP), La. R. S. 15: 1177, et seq., the

district court signed a judgment ordering the Louisiana Department of Public Safety and

Corrections ( DPSC) to return a wristwatch to the inmate. After the DPSC instead

shipped the watch to the inmate' s father, the inmate appealed the judgment. We

remand.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In February 2018, Logan Mills, an inmate housed at Rayborn Correctional Center

RCC), in Angie, Louisiana, loaned his watch to Darrel Jones, a fellow inmate, to

prepare for a boxing match in the prison gym later that day. After the boxing match,

RCC officials confiscated the watch from Mr. Jones. Following many unsuccessful

attempts to get his watch back, Mr. Mills filed an administrative remedy procedure

ARP) seeking return of his watch. RCC officials assigned the ARP Number RCC -2018-

461 and rejected it as a disciplinary matter not appealable through the administrative

remedy process.

In August 2018, Mr. Mills filed the instant pro se petition for judicial review in the

1 19th Judicial District Court seeking review of RCC' s rejection of his ARP. A 19th JDC

Commissioner disagreed with RCC that Mr. Mills' ARP involved a disciplinary matter and

remanded the ARP to RCC to address it on the merits. RCC and DPSC then denied Mr.

Mills' ARP at the first and second steps. In due course, DPSC answered Mr. Mill' s

petition, requesting that the district court dismiss it, because Mr. Mills had not proven

that he owned the watch. The Commissioner determined Mr. Mills had provided RCC

officials with sufficient proof of ownership by giving them copies of the purchase

receipt; a vendor repair estimate to repair the watch; a vendor repair -completion report

showing the repaired watch was sent to Mr. Mills at Louisiana State Penitentiary, his

former address; and a Louisiana State Penitentiary inventory sheet showing the

1 Mr. Mills named multiple RCC officials as defendants in his petition for judicial review. However, the only proper defendant in a petition for judicial review under CARP is DPSC. See La. R. S. 15: 1177(A)( 1)( b).

2 repaired watch was given to Mr. Mills before he was transferred to RCC. The

Commissioner recommended that DPSC' s decision be reversed and the watch be

returned to Mr. Mills. DPSC did not traverse the Commissioner' s recommendation. See

La. R. S. 13: 713C. On July 31, 2019, the district court adopted the Commissioner's

recommendation and signed a judgment reversing DPSC' s decision of ARP RCC -2018-

461 and ordering that the watch be returned to Mr. Mills.

Instead of returning the watch, RCC officials told Mr. Mills he had to " send it

home." Although Mr. Mills protested, RCC officials required that he provide a mailing

address to where they would mail the watch. RCC officials shipped the watch to Mr

Mills' father at an address in Covington, Louisiana. By letter dated August 13, 2019,

Warden Robert Tanner explained to Mr. Mills why he was not allowed to keep the

watch:

T] he Court ruled that the watch in question belongs to you and I concede that. However, you did not get the watch in question into this prison through proper channels. It was not on your inventory when you arrived at this facility on August 28, 2017. You did not receive it through the mail nor did you purchase it through the Canteen. Perhaps a visitor gave it to you during a visit. I don' t know. But I do know that you did not come to possess the watch at this facility through proper channels.

The other issue is that when we found the watch, it was in the possession of another offender. Both you and the other offender were written up for this. Offenders are not permitted "'to borrow, lend, trade, or barter their goods," per DOPPs # 028, Item # III., A. Also, USOPPs # 28, Item # 12. C., stipulates that offenders are not permitted " to give, borrow, lend, trade, or barter personal belongings."

Because the watch was not received through proper channels and you gave/ loaned your watch to another offender, I instructed Lt. Col. Mizell to give you the opportunity to send the watch, which the Court declared belongs to you, home. You succeeded in your legal challenge that the watch belongs to you. Thus[,] you were given the opportunity to send it home. Otherwise, you would not have been allowed to retain the watch and it would have been properly disposed of.

You or your family can purchase another watch through Union Supply.

Mr. Mills then filed a ' Motion for Compliance/ Writ of Mandamus" in the district

court asking the court to order RCC to allow his father to send him the watch or have

his father buy a similar watch and have it shipped to Mr. Mills at RCC. On August 26,

2019, the district court signed an order denying Mr. Mills motion/ writ and stating that

3 Mr. Mills' relief was via an " APPEAL of the FINAL JUDGMENT in this matter." Complying,

Mr. Mills then appealed the July 31, 2019 judgment.

DPSC did not appeal the July 31, 2019 judgment nor answer Mr. Mills' appeal.

However, on September 18, 2019, the same day that Mr. Mills filed his appeal, DPSC

filed a " NOTICE OF COMPLIANCE" into the record acknowledging the district court's

order that RCC officials return the watch to Mr. Mills; explaining that RCC officials

instead gave Mr. Mills the opportunity to send the watch home " since the watch was

not received through proper channels and it was given or loaned to another offender in

violation of posted Policy 28[;]" and, stating that the watch was mailed to the

Covington address Mr. Mills had provided and was delivered there on or about July 11,

2019.

In a single assignment of error, Mr. Mills contends the district court erred by

failing to enforce its order requiring that RCC officials return his watch to him. DPSC

did not file an appellate brief.

DISCUSSION

After obtaining DPSC' s adverse decision regarding his ARP, Mr. Mills properly

filed a petition for judicial review in the 19th JDC under La. R. S. 15: 1177A( 1)( a). See

Vincent v. State, DPSC, 02- 2444 ( La. App. 1 Cir. 6/ 6/ 03), 858 So. 2d 494, 497; see also

Ball v. La. DPSC, 15- 0544 ( La. App. 1 Cir. 11/ 6/ 15), 2015 WL 6842609 * 1. In the

context of a CARP matter, the district court functions as an appellate court when it

reviews the DPSC' s final decision. See La. R. S. 15: 1177A; Brown v. La. DPSC, 15- 1958

La. App. 1 Cir. 9/ 19/ 16), 277 So. 3d 326, 329. The district court's review is confined to

the record. La. R. S. 15: 1177A( 5).

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Logan Mills v. Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/logan-mills-v-louisiana-department-of-public-safety-and-corrections-lactapp-2020.