Quintin Orpiano v. Gene M. Johnson, Quintin Orpiano v. Terrell Don Hutto, Director, Virginia Department of Corrections, Richmond, Virginia Gene M. Johnson, Superintendent, Mecklenburg Correctional Center, Boydton, Virginia Fred L. Finkbeiner, Assistant Superintendent, Mecklenburg Correctional Center, Etc. Captain Harold Catron, Chief of Security, Mecklenburg Correctional Center, Etc. Lieutenant W. L. Henry, Mecklenburg Correctional Center, Etc. Lieutenant R. R. Smith, Mecklenburg Correctional Center, Etc. Alexander Logan, Correctional Officer, Mecklenburg Correctional Center, Etc. W. R. Speede, Correctional Officer, Mecklenburg Correctional Center, Etc. J. E. Lindsey, Correctional Officer, Mecklenburg Correctional Center, Etc. M. A. Talley, Correctional Officer, Mecklenburg Correctional Center, Etc., Quintin Orpiano v. Terrell Don Hutto, Director, Virginia Department of Corrections, Richmond, Virginia

632 F.2d 1096, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 13984
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 17, 1980
Docket79-6821
StatusPublished

This text of 632 F.2d 1096 (Quintin Orpiano v. Gene M. Johnson, Quintin Orpiano v. Terrell Don Hutto, Director, Virginia Department of Corrections, Richmond, Virginia Gene M. Johnson, Superintendent, Mecklenburg Correctional Center, Boydton, Virginia Fred L. Finkbeiner, Assistant Superintendent, Mecklenburg Correctional Center, Etc. Captain Harold Catron, Chief of Security, Mecklenburg Correctional Center, Etc. Lieutenant W. L. Henry, Mecklenburg Correctional Center, Etc. Lieutenant R. R. Smith, Mecklenburg Correctional Center, Etc. Alexander Logan, Correctional Officer, Mecklenburg Correctional Center, Etc. W. R. Speede, Correctional Officer, Mecklenburg Correctional Center, Etc. J. E. Lindsey, Correctional Officer, Mecklenburg Correctional Center, Etc. M. A. Talley, Correctional Officer, Mecklenburg Correctional Center, Etc., Quintin Orpiano v. Terrell Don Hutto, Director, Virginia Department of Corrections, Richmond, Virginia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quintin Orpiano v. Gene M. Johnson, Quintin Orpiano v. Terrell Don Hutto, Director, Virginia Department of Corrections, Richmond, Virginia Gene M. Johnson, Superintendent, Mecklenburg Correctional Center, Boydton, Virginia Fred L. Finkbeiner, Assistant Superintendent, Mecklenburg Correctional Center, Etc. Captain Harold Catron, Chief of Security, Mecklenburg Correctional Center, Etc. Lieutenant W. L. Henry, Mecklenburg Correctional Center, Etc. Lieutenant R. R. Smith, Mecklenburg Correctional Center, Etc. Alexander Logan, Correctional Officer, Mecklenburg Correctional Center, Etc. W. R. Speede, Correctional Officer, Mecklenburg Correctional Center, Etc. J. E. Lindsey, Correctional Officer, Mecklenburg Correctional Center, Etc. M. A. Talley, Correctional Officer, Mecklenburg Correctional Center, Etc., Quintin Orpiano v. Terrell Don Hutto, Director, Virginia Department of Corrections, Richmond, Virginia, 632 F.2d 1096, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 13984 (4th Cir. 1980).

Opinion

632 F.2d 1096

Quintin ORPIANO, Appellant,
v.
Gene M. JOHNSON, Appellee.
Quintin ORPIANO, Appellee,
v.
Terrell Don HUTTO, Director, Virginia Department of
Corrections, Richmond, Virginia; Gene M. Johnson,
Superintendent, Mecklenburg Correctional Center, Boydton,
Virginia; Fred L. Finkbeiner, Assistant Superintendent,
Mecklenburg Correctional Center, etc.; Captain Harold
Catron, Chief of Security, Mecklenburg Correctional Center,
etc.; Lieutenant W. L. Henry, Mecklenburg Correctional
Center, etc.; Lieutenant R. R. Smith, Mecklenburg
Correctional Center, etc.; Alexander Logan, Correctional
Officer, Mecklenburg Correctional Center, etc.; W. R.
Speede, Correctional Officer, Mecklenburg Correctional
Center, etc.; J. E. Lindsey, Correctional Officer,
Mecklenburg Correctional Center, etc.; M. A. Talley,
Correctional Officer, Mecklenburg Correctional Center, etc.,
Appellants.
Quintin ORPIANO, Appellant,
v.
Terrell Don HUTTO, Director, Virginia Department of
Corrections, Richmond, Virginia, et al., Appellees.

Nos. 78-6537, 79-6821 and 79-6822.

United States Court of Appeals,
Fourth Circuit.

Argued June 5, 1980.
Decided Sept. 17, 1980.

David McC. Estabrook, Annandale, Va. (Gattsek, Tavenner & McConnell, Annandale, Va., on brief), and Professor William A. Reppy, Jr., Durham, N. C., Legal Research Program, Duke Law School (Lawrence C. Blazer, Neil P. Clain, Jr., Third Year Law Students on brief), for appellant in No. 78-6537 and No. 79-6822, and for appellee in No. 79-6821.

Guy W. Horsley, Jr., Asst. Atty. Gen., Richmond, Va. (Marshall Coleman, Atty. Gen., Richmond, Va., Thomas D. Bagwell, Asst. Atty. Gen., Richmond, Va., on brief), for appellee in No. 78-6537, and for appellees in No. 79-6822, and for appellants in No. 79-6821.

Before BUTZNER and RUSSELL, Circuit Judges, and WILLIAM M. KIDD, United States District Judge for the Southern District of West Virginia, sitting by designation.

DONALD RUSSELL, Circuit Judge:

The plaintiff, a state prisoner, filed two actions. The first was a claim brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 in which he sought damages for alleged physical and mental injuries sustained by him on the morning of September 22, 1977, as a result of an alleged beating suffered by him at the hands of four guards at the maximum security treatment institution, where he was incarcerated. In addition to the four guards allegedly involved in the beating, the plaintiff joined as defendants the director of the Virginia Department of Corrections on the theory that he was "legally responsible for the overall operations of (all) the correctional centers" in the State, the Superintendent of the specific correctional institution where the plaintiff claimed he was assaulted because "he (was) legally responsible for the operations (of such institution) and for the safety and welfare of all the prisoners, (in) said prison," and the correctional officer who was the immediate superior of the four guards. The other proceeding by the plaintiff-a habeas action-initially began as a State action in which he alleged that he had been abused and beaten since his arrival at the Mecklenburg Correctional Center and was for that reason entitled to release from confinement. In his State petition the plaintiff had emphasized that his attack was not upon the lawfulness of his confinement but upon the conditions of his confinement. That proceeding was dismissed on July 5, 1978, the court noting that "the Petitioner admits that he is not questioning the lawfulness of his confinement but only complains of two separate incidents of alleged mistreatment." The plaintiff then filed his habeas petition in the District Court.

After joining the plaintiff in the waiver of a jury trial, the defendants in the § 1983 action filed an initial motion for summary judgment. That motion was denied by the District Court. In its order the District Court set the case, involving what the Court stated to be "a clear dispute as to whether plaintiff was the victim of an unjustified physical attack on September 22," for a plenary hearing, appointed counsel to represent the plaintiff and permitted the plaintiff to amend his complaint no later than 20 days before hearing in order to state his claim "in a succinct and orderly manner." At the same time, the District Court referred the action involving such dispute to a United States Magistrate for a "hearing." The plaintiff, assisted by court-appointed counsel, filed an amended complaint in which he enlarged upon his original complaint with an allegation that it was "the pattern and practice" of the officials at the institution from the time of his arrival at the institution until the filing of the action "to remove (him) from his cell . . . , take him shackled by handcuffs attached to a belt around the inmate's waist, to a small, isolated room known as the 'work room,' and in the work room in the presence of one or more guards and employees and out of the hearing and view of other inmates, guards and employees in cell pod, to harass, intimidate and beat, physically abuse, and injure (the plaintiff) if he had failed to conform his behavior to the arbitrary wishes and desires of the guards and other employees."

The Magistrate had a hearing, after which he filed findings of fact and conclusion of law. In these, he found that the defendants Logan, Speede, Talley and Lindsey (the four guards sued) were responsible for inflicting on the plaintiff "on September 22, 1977, unnecessary and unjustified physical force and corporal punishment and threats of institutional retaliation . . . with the express approval and prior knowledge of Defendant Smith (the immediate superior of the guards) and had done so with the acquiescence of the Defendants Johnson and Finkbeiner in their official capacity as Superintendent and Assistant Superintendent (of the institution) in that they knew or should have known of such practices by correctional officers under their supervision amounting to their deliberate indifference to the safety of the Plaintiff." He recommended judgment in favor of the plaintiff in the amount of $25,000 against the defendants, Johnson, Finkbeiner, Smith, Logan, Speede, Lindsey and Talley, jointly and severally.

The District Court, in reviewing the report of the Magistrate, noted at the outset that the reference of the case to the Magistrate was "to conduct an evidentiary hearing on an alleged beating of the plaintiff which occurred on September 22, 1977" but that, after the hearing commenced, the case "seemed to 'take off' " with an inquiry into "a wide range of conditions at the institution where the alleged beatings took place," thereby encumbering the record with much evidence extraneous to the real issue in the case, i. e., the alleged beating on September 22, 1977.1 It proceeded to conduct a de novo review of the evidence relevant to the specific issue in the case. It first found that the Magistrate had erroneously refused to admit in evidence certain testimony and records offered by the defendants but determined that the error was harmless. It rejected a number of the Magistrate's findings as "irrelevant, . . .

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632 F.2d 1096, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 13984, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quintin-orpiano-v-gene-m-johnson-quintin-orpiano-v-terrell-don-hutto-ca4-1980.