Porter v. Inch

CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Florida
DecidedMarch 30, 2021
Docket3:19-cv-00327
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Porter v. Inch, (M.D. Fla. 2021).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA JACKSONVILLE DIVISION

AARON C. PORTER,

Plaintiff,

v. Case No: 3:19-cv-327-BJD-JRK

MARK INCH, et al.,

Defendants. _______________________________

ORDER OF DISMISSAL WITHOUT PREJUDICE Plaintiff, an inmate of the Florida penal system proceeding pro se, initiated this action in March 2019 by filing a complaint under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (Doc. 1) and a motion for leave to proceed in forma pauperis (Doc. 2). Plaintiff is a three-strikes litigant, but the Court found he alleged facts showing he was in imminent danger of serious physical injury.1 Thus, the Court granted his motion to proceed in forma pauperis and directed him to submit fourteen copies of his complaint for service of process. See Order (Doc. 5). Plaintiff filed an amended complaint on April 11, 2019 (mailbox rule), again claiming he was in imminent danger of serious physical injury or death

1 Because Plaintiff asserted that he feared for his life, the Clerk sent the Court’s amended standing order to the Inspector General’s Office and the Warden of Plaintiff’s correctional institution. See Order (Doc. 4) (notifying the institution that an inmate claims to be in imminent physical harm). because he had an “active hit on his life” (Doc. 8). The Court directed service of process on May 13, 2019. See Order (Doc. 10). At that time, the Court advised

Plaintiff he must respond to any dispositive motions within thirty days. Id. After Defendants filed motions to dismiss, Plaintiff moved to amend his complaint (Doc. 54). The Court granted Plaintiff’s motion and directed the Clerk to docket his second amended complaint. See Order (Doc. 57).

On June 9, 2020, the Court granted Plaintiff’s second motion to amend his complaint, denied four motions to dismiss as moot, and directed the Clerk to docket Plaintiff’s third amended complaint. See Order (Doc. 105). Shortly thereafter, Defendants filed motions to dismiss the third amended complaint

(Docs. 111, 112), arguing Plaintiff did not exhaust his administrative remedies, fails to state a plausible claim, and fails to allege having sustained a physical injury. Defendants also invoke Eleventh Amendment immunity as to any damages claims against them in their official capacities, maintain Plaintiff is

not entitled to injunctive relief, and request severance of unrelated claims.2

2 In the operative pleading, Plaintiff names fourteen Defendants related to conduct that occurred at Madison Correctional Institution in 2019. He contends Defendant LeBlanc ordered gang-member inmates to place a “hit” on his life and failed to protect him from gang attacks. Plaintiff alleges he reported everything to other officers and supervisors, but they did nothing. Plaintiff alleges other Defendants threatened or beat him, failed to provide medical care, or arranged to have him harmed by inmates. Plaintiff was transferred to Hamilton Correctional Institution on March 22, 2019, but he alleges the “hit” followed him. Plaintiff is now housed at Wakulla Correctional Institution, where he was transferred in July 2019, and housed in a protective management unit. Plaintiff alleges the FDOC has a policy 2 Plaintiff did not respond to the motions to dismiss within thirty days. Accordingly, the Court directed Plaintiff to show cause why the case should not

be dismissed for his failure to respond to the motions to dismiss and directed him to so respond. See Order (Doc. 113). The Court warned Plaintiff that his failure to timely comply with the Order may result in dismissal of the action. Id. Plaintiff responded to the Order by requesting more time to file responses

to the motions to dismiss because he had contracted COVID-19 and was in lock-down (Doc. 115). The Court granted his request. See Order (Doc. 117). Thereafter, instead of submitting responses to the motions to dismiss, Plaintiff asked the Court to “adopt his previously filed” responses to

Defendants’ motions to dismiss the second amended complaint (Doc. 121). Plaintiff said he was in administrative confinement pending a protection transfer, and because of his numerous transfers, he was unable to access a legal box that contained his documents for this case. Plaintiff did not say what

documents he needed or why his inability to obtain those documents prevented him from responding to Defendants’ motions to dismiss. The Court denied Plaintiff’s request to stand on his responses to the motions to dismiss his second amended complaint, but sua sponte gave him more time to respond to

or custom to allow “gangmembers to take over the [protective management] unit,” and he was housed with gang members when he submitted his proposed third amended complaint on May 18, 2020. 3 the pending motions to dismiss. See Order (Doc. 122). In that Order, the Court cautioned Plaintiff that it “will not look favorably on future requests to extend

th[e] deadline.” Id. Despite the Court’s caution to Plaintiff, he again requested more time to respond to the motions to dismiss (Doc. 124; Jan. Motion). Plaintiff reported he still had not received his legal box, which was stored at the Santa Rosa

Correctional Institution (SRCI) Annex law library. See Jan. Motion at 1. According to Plaintiff, the Department’s failure to produce his legal box amounts to an “obstruction of justice,” because a provision of the Florida Administrative Code restricts the amount of legal documents an inmate may

possess: if legal documents will not fit in an inmate’s assigned locker, the documents must be stored in the property room or law library. Id. at 2. Plaintiff complained that his “repeated access to [the box] was hindered and many requests and grievances mishandled.” Id. Plaintiff asked the Court to compel

Defendants to produce his missing legal box. Id. at 3. Though Plaintiff did not explain why he is unable to respond to the motions to dismiss without access to his legal box, the Court again granted Plaintiff an extension of time to respond. See Order (Doc. 125). Plaintiff failed

to submit responses by the deadline, so the Court directed him to show cause why his case should not be dismissed and directed him to respond to the

4 motions. See Order (Doc. 126). The Court noted Plaintiff had “been given over eight months to respond” and warned him, “The Court will grant no further

extensions of time.” The Court also notified Plaintiff that his failure to comply may result in the dismissal of the action without prejudice. Id. Plaintiff has failed to comply with the Order by requesting yet another extension of time to respond to the motions to dismiss (Doc. 127; Pl. Motion).

Plaintiff references his January motion and attachments in support of his request for more time. He contends he still is “without his entire box #93, which has the entire case file in it.” See Pl. Motion at 2. He says the Department has either lost or misplaced his legal box, and he has been attempting to locate it.

According to grievance records Plaintiff provided with his January motion (Doc. 124-1; Pl. Ex.), he was indeed unable to access to his legal materials in August and September 2020, because of the pandemic and because he did not submit his requests in compliance with policy. A lieutenant

at SRCI wrote Plaintiff a letter in September 2020, explaining to him that if he wanted to receive his two legal boxes, he had to “submit requests to property in order to exchange” the legal materials he had in his possession, because otherwise he would have been in violation of the mandate that all personal

property fit into an inmate’s assigned locker. See Pl. Ex. at 7.

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Porter v. Inch, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/porter-v-inch-flmd-2021.