MITCHELL v. FORSYTH COUNTY SHERIFF OFFICE

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. North Carolina
DecidedMarch 31, 2020
Docket1:17-cv-00879
StatusUnknown

This text of MITCHELL v. FORSYTH COUNTY SHERIFF OFFICE (MITCHELL v. FORSYTH COUNTY SHERIFF OFFICE) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
MITCHELL v. FORSYTH COUNTY SHERIFF OFFICE, (M.D.N.C. 2020).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE MIDDLE DISTRICT OF NORTH CAROLINA

JUSTIN RANDOLPH MITCHELL, ) Plaintiff, v. 1:17CV879 FORSYTH COUNTY SHERIFF OFFICE, et al., ) ) Defendants. ) MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER OF UNITED STATES MAGISTRATE JUDGE This is a pro se civil rights action filed under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 by Plaintiff Justin Randolph Mitchell, an inmate in the North Carolina Department of Correction. His central □

allegations in this case are that some of the Defendants opened and/or improperly interfered with his legal mail and searched his legal and medical papers outside his presence. Plaintiff names as Defendants 1) the Forsyth County Sheriffs Office, 2) former Sheriff of Forsyth County, North Carolina, William T. Schatzman, and 3) current or former employees at the Forsyth County Detention Center, Robert Slater, R.L. Settles, Officer Hinton, and Corporal Fleming. Following discovery in the case, Defendants filed a Motion for Summary Judgment [Doc. #48], which has now been fully briefed by the parties and is before the Coutt. Plaintiffs Claims The Complaint alleges that, on September 2, 2016, while housed at the Forsyth County Detention Center, Plaintiff received legal mail from the North Carolina Industrial Commission that had been opened and read outside his presence in violation of the Detention Center’s

mail policy. (Complaint [Doc. #1], § IV(D).) It further alleges that this occurred again on

_ November 10, 2016. (1d., Attach. Claim Two.) The Complaint further alleges that on January 20, 2017, Plaintiff was allegedly removed from his cell and placed in a multi-purpose room so that his cell could be searched. (Id., Attach., Claim Three.) Defendant Fleming allegedly passed though the multi-purpose □□□□ and searched Plaintiffs cell for half an hour before returning and questioning Plaintiff concerning how he obtained a document containing the names of medical personnel. (Id.) Plaintiff told him that he obtained it through a subpoena connected to another civil lawsuit he had filed. (Id.) The Complaint asserts that Defendant Fleming read Plaintiff's legal documents and medical records during the search. (Id., § II(D), Attach.) Plaintiffs next set of allegations concerns another suit he filed in this Court. The Complaint states that the Court sent Plaintiff legal mail connected to that case in mid-May of 2017. (d., § IVD), Attach., Claim Four.) Defendant Hinton, who was working to sort mail, sent the legal mail to a detainee on another floor. (id.) The Complaint claims that an officer on that floor opened and read the mail before giving it to the other detainee, who returned it to a guard. (Id.) An officer listed as Sgt. Ramirez then delivered the mail to Plaintiff. (1d.) The Complaint next alleges that, on July 4, 2017, Plaintiff received legal mail from an attorney representing the defendants in one of Plaintiffs other lawsuits. (Id., Attach., Claim Five.) Because that mail had also been opened outside his presence, Plaintiff called a guard and complained. (Id.) He later learned that Defendant Hinton had opened the mail because she believed she felt metal in the envelope. (1d.)

Finally, the Complaint alleges that on August 12, 2017, Plaintiff received more mail from the same attorney. (Id., Attach., Claim Six.) The mail arrived on a weekend and was held for four days until an officer not named in this lawsuit came to work on August 16, 2017. (Id.) Plaintiff then filed the present Complaint. Based on these allegations, Plaintiff is suing the Forsyth County Sheriff's Office in its individual and official capacity, Defendants Schatzman, Hinton, and Fleming in their individual and official capacities, and Defendants Slater and Settles in their official capacities (Id., § I1(B); Order [Doc. #10].) He claims that the Sheriff's Office is liable because it sets policies for the Detention Center, that Defendant Schatzman is liable because he is responsible for the Detention Center and its inmates, that Defendants Slater and Settle are liable because they met with him concerning the events in the Complaint, that Defendant Hinton opened his legal mail outside his presence and negligently sent his legal mail to another inmate, and that Defendant Fleming improperly read his legal papers and medical documents while searching his cell. (Complaint, § II(D).) Defendants’ Evidence In conjunction with their Brief [Doc. #49] supporting their Motion for Summary Judgment, Defendants provide three separate affidavits. The first is from Defendant Schatzman, who states that he was the Sheriff of Forsyth County during the relevant time petiods, that he had final policy making authority in the Forsyth County Sheriff's Office, and that it was always the policy, procedure, and custom of that office to comply with the law regarding inmate rights. (Defendant’s Brief, Attach. 1, {{] 2-6.) Defendant Schatzman hired officers certified and trained by appropriate organizations. (Id., | 8.) He also mandated that

each detention officer receive on the job training from senior officers and supervisors, including regarding policy addressing the handling of inmate mail. (Id., {] 9.) The affidavit includes a copy of that policy as Exhibit A. The policy defines “General Correspondence” and “Privileged Mail,” with the latter category including legal mail. (Policy, § 589.2.) Relevant

to the present action, it mandates that Privileged Mail “be opened and searched, but not read, in the presence of the inmate by detention staff to ensure it does not contain contraband.” (Id., § 589.8(C).) The second affidavit is from Defendant Hinton. She remains employed in the Detention Center and was so employed at the time of the incidents alleged in the Complaint. (Defendant’s Brief, Attach. 2, {| 2-3.) She states that on one occasion she did mistakenly misditect a piece of mail addressed to Plaintiff by sending it to another inmate. (Id., {/6.) She further states that she reported her mistake to a supervisor and that Plaintiff also filed a gtievance concerning the incident. ([d., [J 8, 11.) Defendant Hinton also relates that on another occasion, she mistakenly opened Plaintiff's privileged legal mail. (Id., {] 9.) She again reported this to a supervisor and relates that she also spoke to Plaintiff, apologized, and assuted him that she did not read the contents of the mail. (id.) She concludes by saying that “ovet the course of several months, [she] mistakenly opened [Plaintiffs] privileged mail outside his presence twice and misdirected it, unopened, once,” but did not read any of it. (Id., §] 12.) She also received two disciplinary warnings because of her handling of Plaintiffs mail. (Id., { 13.)

The third affidavit was submitted by Defendant Hinton’s former supervisor at the Detention center, David Ramirez. Ramirez states that on May 17, 2017, Defendant Hinton misdirected Plaintiff's unopened legal mail to another inmate. (Defendant’s Brief, Attach. 3, He further states that on July 3, 2017, he became aware that an officer other than Defendant Hinton had opened Plaintiff's legal mail by mistake, that he hand-delivered that mail to Plaintiff, and that he explained that the mail was not opened by Defendant Hinton. (Id., {| 4-6.) Based on some of the problems involving Defendant Hinton and Plaintiffs mail, Ramitez counseled Defendant Hinton on proper legal mail procedures, gave her a disciplinary warning, and briefly assigned her to other duties. (Id., fff] 8-10.) In addition to the three affidavits just discussed, Defendants also submitted a document from Forsyth County Superior Court denying Plaintiff's request to proceed as an indigent in a civil case in that court on September 11, 2017. (Defendant’s Brief, Attach.

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Bluebook (online)
MITCHELL v. FORSYTH COUNTY SHERIFF OFFICE, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mitchell-v-forsyth-county-sheriff-office-ncmd-2020.