Pine v. Annucci

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJune 24, 2019
Docket7:18-cv-06158
StatusUnknown

This text of Pine v. Annucci (Pine v. Annucci) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pine v. Annucci, (S.D.N.Y. 2019).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK --------------------------------------------------------------x JAMES R. PINE, SR., : Plaintiff, : v. : OPINION AND ORDER : ANTHONY J. ANNUCCI, : 18 CV 6158 (VB) Acting Commissioner NYS DOCCS, : Defendant. : --------------------------------------------------------------x

Briccetti, J.: Plaintiff James R. Pine, Sr., proceeding pro se and in forma pauperis, brings this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against defendant Anthony J. Annucci, Acting Commissioner of the New York State Department of Corrections and Community Supervision (“DOCCS”). Plaintiff asserts a First Amendment claim for denial of access to the courts, and a Fourteenth Amendment due process claim. Now pending is defendant’s motion to dismiss the complaint pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6). (Doc. #17).1 For the reasons set forth below, the motion is GRANTED. The Court has subject matter jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1331. BACKGROUND For the purpose of ruling on the motion to dismiss, the Court accepts as true all well- pleaded factual allegations in the complaint and its exhibits and draws all reasonable inferences in plaintiff’s favor, as summarized below.

1 Plaintiff has moved “to amend the . . . caption” to include the New York State Attorney General. (Doc. #25 at 1). As the Court has previously held, plaintiff’s claims against the New York State Attorney General are barred by the Eleventh Amendment. (See Doc. #10 at 2). Thus, the Court DENIES plaintiff’s motion to amend the caption. Plaintiff was a convicted inmate housed at Green Haven Correctional Facility (“Green Haven”) at all relevant times. On May 25, 2016, plaintiff alleges he made a phone call from Green Haven to his sister. During the phone call, plaintiff alleges an unknown prison employee made two announcements stating “time was up.” (Doc. #2 (“Compl.”) at 26).2

Plaintiff alleges he did not hear these announcements “due to his documented hearing impairment . . . and the amount of background noise.” (Compl. at 26).3 Allegedly, a correction officer then approached plaintiff and yelled in a clear voice, “Pine, get off the phone.” (Id.). Plaintiff alleges he heard the command and “immediately hung up the phone.” (Id.). Plaintiff alleges the officer nevertheless filed a misbehavior report against plaintiff for failing promptly to hang up the phone.4 Plaintiff claims he faced four disciplinary charges arising from this incident. During the ensuing disciplinary hearing, plaintiff alleges he requested six witnesses to testify about his hearing disability: two inmates, two correction officers, plaintiff’s sister, and plaintiff’s “last seen Primary care provider.” (Compl. at 27). Plaintiff alleges the disciplinary hearing officer,

nonparty Lt. Murphy, initially “would not allow [plaintiff] to call any witnesses while trying to substantiate [his] claim of being hearing impaired.” (Id. at 42). However, Lt. Murphy then “relented” and permitted plaintiff’s four non-inmate witnesses to testify at the hearing. (Id.; see id. at 30).

2 Citations to the complaint reference page numbers assigned by the Court’s Electronic Case Filing system.

3 Plaintiff claims an audiologist evaluated plaintiff in July 2016 and concluded he is “legally deaf.” (Compl. at 44).

4 Plaintiff asserts Green Haven policy permits inmates to make fifteen-minute phone calls, and that defendant violated that policy by limiting plaintiff’s phone call to fourteen minutes. The Court need not address this allegation, which plainly does not state a constitutional claim. Plaintiff claims Lt. Murphy improperly denied plaintiff’s requests to call the two inmate witnesses. Namely, plaintiff alleges Lt. Murphy failed to provide plaintiff and to incorporate into the hearing record a form explaining Lt. Murphy’s refusal to hear the inmate witnesses, as allegedly required by New York law. Additionally, plaintiff alleges Lt. Murphy stated plaintiff

had failed to provide the “exact names or [cell] locations” of the inmate witnesses, despite that plaintiff allegedly had, in fact, provided the inmates’ cell information. (Compl. at 28). Plaintiff claims Lt. Murphy also wrongly rejected plaintiff’s hearing disability defense, relying on testimony of a primary care doctor to whom plaintiff was assigned “one day prior” to the hearing. (Compl. at 42). Plaintiff claims the new doctor “had no knowledge of [plaintiff’s] hearing problem” or that plaintiff “was scheduled to meet with a hearing specialist.” (Id. at 27). After the disciplinary hearing, plaintiff was found to have committed two violations, placed on keeplock status for eleven days, and moved from the honor block into the general population, where he allegedly lost certain privileges for an unspecified time. Plaintiff asserts he unsuccessfully appealed the disciplinary decision to Green Haven’s superintendent.

Plaintiff then filed an Article 78 petition in Supreme Court, Albany County, naming defendant Annucci as the sole respondent. There, plaintiff argued (i) the two disciplinary infractions should be reversed, (ii) Lt. Murphy violated plaintiff’s due process rights during the disciplinary hearing, and (iii) prison officials violated DOCCS policy by “not allowing [plaintiff] the allowable (15 minutes) of time on the phone.” (Compl. at 25). Plaintiff failed properly to serve the Article 78 petition on Annucci. The Supreme Court then issued an order to show cause requiring plaintiff to serve “the petition, exhibits and any supporting affidavits . . . upon each named respondent at their respective address . . . on or before September 23, 2016” by “ordinary First Class Mail.” (Doc. #18-1 at 1) (emphasis omitted).5 After plaintiff failed to do so, the court dismissed plaintiff’s petition for lack of personal jurisdiction. The court also held plaintiff’s “vague and unsupported assertion that understaffing in the prison mail room may have resulted in the lack of service is insufficient to establish that

imprisonment presented an obstacle to his compliance.” (Doc. #18-2 at 3). The court relied on, among other things, a DOCCS employee’s testimony that a search of DOCCS files “indicate[d] that no papers relative to this proceeding were received.” (Id. at 2). Plaintiff unsuccessfully appealed the Supreme Court’s judgment. In the instant case, plaintiff alleges he took the requisite steps properly to serve the Article 78 petition on Annucci, but Annucci evaded or otherwise impeded service. Plaintiff maintains he placed a “legal envelope containing [his] papers” into “the Facility mailbox as legal mail” on September 21, 2016, and that the papers were then sent to Annucci by “pouch” or interdepartmental mail. (Compl. at 14). In support, plaintiff alleges he has documentation of a “disbursement” charged to his prison account for a mailing fee in connection with serving the

Article 78 petition on Annucci, and that plaintiff’s affidavit of service in the Article 78 proceeding further shows he complied with the Supreme Court’s order to show cause. (Id.). Plaintiff also asserts the Green Haven mailroom is understaffed and dysfunctional, “repeatedly affect[ing] out-going and incoming mail.” (Compl. at 13). Plaintiff argues any failure to serve the Article 78 petition on Annucci therefore was outside plaintiff’s control.

5 The Court takes judicial notice of the Supreme Court’s orders as public records. See, e.g., Staehr v. Hartford Fin. Servs. Grp., Inc., 547 F.3d 406, 425 (2d Cir. 2008) (collecting cases). Matters subject to judicial notice are properly considered on a motion to dismiss. See id.

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Bluebook (online)
Pine v. Annucci, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pine-v-annucci-nysd-2019.