Sawyer v. Charles

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Louisiana
DecidedMarch 1, 2024
Docket2:21-cv-00482
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Sawyer v. Charles, (E.D. La. 2024).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT EASTERN DISTRICT OF LOUISIANA MATTHEW CALEB SAWYER CIVIL ACTION VERSUS NO. 21-482 KECIA CHARLES, ET AL. SECTION “O”

ORDER AND REASONS

Before the Court is the motion1 of Defendant Warden Alvin Robinson for summary judgment dismissing pro se Plaintiff Matthew Caleb Sawyer’s 42 U.S.C. § 1983 retaliation claim—the only claim left in this lawsuit. Sawyer submits that Warden Robinson failed to stop a third party from transferring Sawyer to another

prison in retaliation for Sawyer’s prison-grievance filing. But in response to Warden Robinson’s properly supported summary-judgment motion, Sawyer failed to present evidence from which a reasonable jury could infer the existence of the retaliatory- intent, causation, and retaliatory-adverse-act elements of Sawyer’s Section 1983 retaliation claim. Sawyer has therefore failed to show a genuine dispute of material fact on at least three independent grounds. For these independent reasons and for those that follow, Warden Robinson’s motion for summary judgment is GRANTED.

1 ECF No. 72. I. BACKGROUND This is a prisoner-civil-rights suit. It arises from prisoner Matthew Caleb Sawyer’s claim that Nelson Coleman Correctional Center Warden Alvin Robinson

unlawfully retaliated against Sawyer when Warden Robinson failed to stop a third party—the Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections—from transferring Sawyer to a prison supposedly ill-suited to treat Sawyer’s medical needs. Sawyer is a prisoner in the custody of the Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections.2 He was housed at Nelson Coleman Correctional Center under the supervision of Warden Robinson until February 2021.3 While there, Sawyer

submitted a November 2020 grievance complaining that prison medical staff failed to tell him that he had tested positive for Hepatitis C several years earlier.4 He appealed the prison’s first and second responses to that grievance in early January 2021.5 Before Sawyer’s grievance was resolved, however, the Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections issued a January 29 notice listing Sawyer among the 21 prisoners the Department would be transferring to another prison—a minimum- security facility known as “LA Workforce”—on February 2.6 Warden Robinson did not

read that notice and thus did not know the Department would be transferring Sawyer (or any other Nelson Coleman prisoner) to LA Workforce on February 2.7

2 ECF No. 72-5 at ¶ 1. 3 Id. at ¶ 2. 4 ECF No. 22-18 at 1. 5 Id. at 2. 6 ECF No. 22-14 at 1. 7 ECF No. 72-2 at 4 (responses to interrogatories 1 & 2) Sawyer’s transfer went as scheduled on February 2. Before that transfer, Sawyer never spoke to Warden Robinson.8 The only apparent interaction between the two men came in February 1 correspondence about Sawyer’s grievance; Warden

Robinson wrote Sawyer that “[y]our grievance will be submitted to Medical for a follow-up review of your request,” and Sawyer acknowledged the message.9 Although Warden Robinson’s February 1 message appears towards the end of a message chain that includes Sawyer’s original November 2020 grievance,10 Warden Robinson did not know about Sawyer’s medical condition because Warden Robinson “does not individually review HIPPA protected information of inmates.”11

Displeased with both the transfer and the medical care he received at Nelson Coleman, Sawyer sued Warden Robinson and others under Section 1983.12 After various preliminaries, another section of this Court dismissed under Rule 12(b)(6) all but one of Sawyer’s claims, leaving only a Section 1983 retaliation claim against Warden Robinson.13 The thrust of this claim is that Warden Robinson allegedly failed to stop the Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections from transferring Sawyer to LA Workforce in retaliation for Sawyer’s grievance filing.14 By Sawyer’s

lights, that transfer to LA Workforce amounts to retaliation because LA Workforce is a “minimal facility” that “was unable to provide for [Sawyer’s] health concerns.”15

8 ECF No. 72-4 at 2 (response to request for admission 4). 9 ECF No. 22-18 at 3. 10 Id. at 1–2 (original grievance) & 3 (Warden Robinson’s message). 11 ECF No. 72-2 at 7 (answer to interrogatory 8). 12 ECF Nos. 3 (original complaint) & 32 (amended complaint). 13 ECF No. 54 at 26–27. 14 ECF No. 32 at 15–17 ¶¶ 14–21. 15 Id. at 15 ¶ 14. Now, Warden Robinson moves for summary judgment dismissing Sawyer’s Section 1983 retaliation claim.16 Sawyer failed to file a timely response.17 Warden Robinson’s motion was noticed for submission on January 26, 2024. ECF No. 72.

Sawyer’s response was due on January 16. See LOCAL CIVIL RULE 7.5. When Sawyer failed to file a response by then, the Court granted him more time—until February 16—to respond.18 In its order, the Court specifically “caution[ed] [Sawyer] that, if he fails to file an opposition by February 16, he will forfeit his right to have the Court consider any arguments he may wish to raise in opposition to the motion.”19 Sawyer failed to file an opposition by his extended deadline of February 16,

and his “pro se status d[oes] not excuse him from following the local rules.” Thorn v. RaceTrac Petroleum, Inc., No. 21-30492, 2022 WL 965095, at *1 (5th Cir. Mar. 30, 2022) (per curiam) (citing Hulsey v. Tex., 929 F.2d 168, 171 (5th Cir. 1991)). Although the Court may not grant Warden Robinson’s motion “simply because there is no opposition,” Hibernia Nat. Bank v. Administracion Cent. Sociedad Anonima, 776 F.2d

16 ECF No. 72. 17 It was incumbent upon Sawyer to notify the Court of a change of address. See LOCAL CIVIL RULE 41.3.1 (empowering the Court to dismiss an action for failure to prosecute if a pro se litigant fails to timely notify the Court of a change of address); LOCAL CIVIL RULE 11.1 (explaining that “[e]ach attorney and pro se litigant has a continuing obligation promptly to notify the court of any address or telephone number change”). Sawyer last notified the Court that his address changed in April 2023, when he was transferred to the Morehouse Parish Detention Center. ECF No. 68 at 1. In early February 2024, however, two docket entries mailed to Sawyer’s last reported address—an order cancelling a status conference, ECF No. 74, and a docket-entry-correction notice, ECF No. 73—were returned to the Clerk’s Office as “undeliverable.” See ECF Nos. 75 & 77. After those mailings were returned, the Clerk’s Office undertook its own research to try to determine Sawyer’s current address; it concluded that Sawyer might now be housed at Avoyelles Correctional Center. Accordingly, in an abundance of caution, the Clerk’s Office re-mailed both the motion for summary judgment—which has not been returned as undeliverable—and the order extending Sawyer’s response deadline to Sawyer at Avoyelles Correctional Center. Sawyer nonetheless failed to file a summary-judgment response. 18 ECF No. 76 at 1. 19 Id. 1277, 1279 (5th Cir. 1985), the Court may “accept[] as undisputed the facts so listed in support of the motion,” Eversley v. MBank Dall., 843 F.2d 172, 173–74 (5th Cir. 1988); accord White v. Coffield Med. Staff, No. 21-40211, 2022 WL 1056103, at *2 (5th

Cir. Apr. 8, 2022) (per curiam) (“Where, as here, a plaintiff does not file an opposition to a defendant’s motion for summary judgment, a district court may properly take the facts put forward by defendant in support of his motion for summary judgment to be undisputed.”); see also FED. R. CIV. P. 56(e)(3) (“If a party . . . fails to properly address another party’s assertion of fact as required by Rule 56(c), the court may . . .

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Sawyer v. Charles, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sawyer-v-charles-laed-2024.