Robinson v. Schult

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Wisconsin
DecidedAugust 26, 2025
Docket2:24-cv-00789
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Robinson v. Schult, (E.D. Wis. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF WISCONSIN ______________________________________________________________________________ CORTEZ ROBINSON,

Plaintiff, v. Case No. 24-cv-789-pp

TAMI J. SCHULT,

Defendant. ______________________________________________________________________________

ORDER GRANTING DEFENDANT’S MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT (DKT. NO. 16) AND DISMISSING CASE _____________________________________________________________________________

Plaintiff Cortez Robinson, who is incarcerated and is representing himself, is proceeding under 42 U.S.C. §1983 on an Eighth Amendment claim against an official at Racine Correctional Institution. The defendant has moved for summary judgment. Dkt. No. 16. The plaintiff opposes the motion. Dkt. No. 26. The defendant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law; the court will grant her motion and dismiss this case. I. Facts A. Procedural Background On June 24, 2024, the court received the plaintiff’s complaint asserting that the defendant, Racine Food Service Administrator Tami J. Schult, had violated his right to adequate food. Dkt. No. 1. The court screened the complaint and allowed the plaintiff to proceed on a claim under the Eighth Amendment. Dkt. No. 7. On October 28, 2024, the court issued a scheduling order setting deadlines for the parties to complete discovery and file dispositive motions. Dkt. No. 11. On May 12, 2025, the defendant moved for an extension of the deadline to file dispositive motions on the merits. Dkt. No. 14. The court granted that

motion and extended the deadline to May 21, 2025. Dkt. No. 15. At that deadline, the defendant filed her motion for summary judgment. Dkt. No. 16. The next day—May 22, 2025—the court issued an order requiring the plaintiff to respond to the defendant’s motion by June 20, 2025. Dkt. No. 22. The court gave the plaintiff instructions for responding to the defendant’s brief and proposed findings of fact. Id. The court instructed the plaintiff that he “must respond to each of the defendant’s proposed findings of fact (Dkt. No. 18), either by agreeing with the proposed fact or explaining why he disagrees

with the proposed fact. . . . The plaintiff must support every disagreement with a proposed fact by citing to evidence.” Id. at 1. The court explained that the plaintiff could support his disagreements “by relying on documents that he attaches to his response or by telling the court his version of what happened in an affidavit or an unsworn declaration under 28 U.S.C. §1746.” Id. at 1–2. On June 23, 2025, the court granted the plaintiff’s motion for an extension of time and ordered him to file opposition materials by July 21, 2025.

Dkt. No. 24. The plaintiff timely filed his opposition materials. Dkt. No. 25–27. The motion now is fully briefed and ready for the court’s decision. B. Factual Background The plaintiff responded to the defendant’s proposed findings of fact and states that he disagrees with several of those facts. Dkt. No. 25. But he has not supported his disagreements by citing to evidence in the record, as the court

instructed him to do in its May 22, 2025 order. See Dkt. No. 22 at 1. His response to the defendant’s proposed facts is not signed, dated or verified as true under penalty of perjury, so the court will not treat it as an affidavit or an unsworn declaration. Because the plaintiff failed to comply with the court’s order and has not supported his factual disagreements by citing to evidence in the record, the court will consider the defendant’s proposed facts to be undisputed and admitted for purposes of this decision. See Civil Local Rules 56(b)(2)(B)(i), 56(b)(4) (E.D. Wis.); Smith v. Lamz, 321 F.3d 680, 683 (7th

Cir. 2003) (“[A] failure to respond by the nonmovant as mandated by the local rules results in an admission.”). 1. The Complaint In its August 23, 2024 screening order, the court recounted the allegations of the plaintiff’s complaint: The plaintiff alleges that at around 5:00 to 5:45 p.m. on February 25, 2024, he was eating a chocolate bar that was served as part of his dinner. The plaintiff says he “noticed a sharp pain on the upper left side of [his] mouth” and noticed that his “teeth and gums were bleeding.” He showed Sergeant Kennedy (not a defendant) what he “had found inside the chocolate bar,” and Kennedy told the plaintiff to show Food Service. . . . The plaintiff says he had a “metal shaving stuck in [his] mouth” until the next morning, when he saw Dr. Yang (not a defendant) to remove the 1mm shaving. The plaintiff wrote to Schult about the incident, and she responded that “she was sorry for what had happened to [him] and the issue ha[d] been investi[g]ated and corrective action ha[d] been in place.” Dkt. No. 7 at 3–4 (internal citations omitted). The plaintiff attached exhibits to his complaint, including an incident report, pictures of the peanut butter bar and medical requests and grievances the plaintiff had filed afterward. Id. at 4. In the screening order, the court observed that some of those exhibits “add detail to the plaintiff’s complaint.” Id. For example, the incident report reflected that the plaintiff told Sergeant Kennedy that “he ate a piece and it felt like metal.” Kennedy contacted kitchen staff and sent the plaintiff to show them the contaminated bar. Staff told Kennedy “there was something in there and they did not know what it was but they were sending [the plaintiff] back to the unit with some apples.” . . . One of the plaintiff’s open records requests notes that the metal was in the chocolate bar “from the constant scraping of the pan.” The report from the plaintiff’s dentist appointment notes that the metal shavings found in the bar “were tiny and glittering,” and that he “could feel an object” between the plaintiff’s teeth during the examination. Finally, the complaint report on the plaintiff’s administrative complaint notes that Schult responded to an Interview/Information Request about the incident on February 28, 2024, stating, “At this time the issue has been investigated and corrective action has been in place. Thank you.”

Id. at 4–5 (internal citations omitted). The screening order explained that the plaintiff’s allegations were limited to “one occasion in February 2024” when he claimed that he had eaten “contaminated chocolate bars that contained metal shavings, which cut his mouth and gums and caused him pain.” Id. at 6. The court cited cases holding that “‘[a] single instance of contaminated food is insufficient to state a claim of deliberate indifference.’” Id. at 7 (quoting Morris v. Buege, Case No. 23-cv-11- pp, 2023 WL 2465882, at *4 (E.D. Wis. Mar. 10, 2023), and citing others). The court also discussed Conley v. Schult, Case No. 24-cv-725-la, in which Judge Adelman dismissed a complaint alleging nearly identical harm from the same incident on February 25, 2024. Id. at 7–8. Judge Adelman dismissed that complaint because the plaintiff had alleged nothing to suggest that “‘this was a recurring issue or that prison officials were aware that the peanut butter bars

were contaminated.’” Id. at 8 (quoting Conley, Dkt. No. 14 at 5). The screening order recounted that although in this case the plaintiff similarly “has not alleged a pattern of contaminated food,” he did allege “that Schult ‘knew from previous complaints about objects being found inside food’ and failed ‘to take heed and order new pans.’” Id. (quoting Dkt. No. 1 at 3–4).

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Robinson v. Schult, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-schult-wied-2025.