Sims v. Jairret

CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Illinois
DecidedNovember 25, 2019
Docket3:18-cv-01102
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
Sims v. Jairret, (S.D. Ill. 2019).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS

TERRELL C. SIMS,

Plaintiff,

v. Case No. 3:18-CV-1102-NJR-GCS

KAREN JAIMET and MARCIA HILL,

Defendants.

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

ROSENSTENGEL, Chief Judge: Pending before the Court is the Report and Recommendation of Magistrate Judge Gilbert C. Sison (Doc. 42), which recommends the undersigned grant the Motion for Summary Judgment on the issue of exhaustion of administrative remedies filed by Defendant Marcia Hill (Doc. 27). Judge Sison further recommends that the undersigned grant summary judgment to Defendant Karen Jaimet. Plaintiff Terrell Sims filed a timely objection to the Report and Recommendation (Doc. 47). For the reasons set forth below, the Court overrules Sims’s objection, adopts the Report and Recommendation, and grants summary judgment to both Defendants. BACKGROUND Plaintiff Terrell Sims, an inmate in the Illinois Department of Corrections, filed this lawsuit on May 10, 2018, alleging Defendant Marcia Hill, LPN, was deliberately indifferent to his serious medical needs in violation of the Eighth Amendment (Doc. 1). Specifically, Sims alleges he was seen by Hill in sick call at Pinckneyville on May 18, 2017, for what he claims were symptoms of pneumonia and that Hill failed to refer him to a physician for prescription medication (Id.). Sims later amended his complaint and added a deliberate indifference claim against Warden Karen Jaimet with regard to the prison’s policy that an inmate must see a nurse three times before they can see a doctor unless it

is an emergency (Doc. 9). The only grievance in the record is an emergency grievance that Sims filed on May 19, 2017, regarding his sick call visit with Hill (Doc. 28-1 at p. 3). In his grievance, he complains that he saw “Nurse Marsha” and explained his recurring symptoms, but Nurse Marsha just told him to drink water and exercise (Id.). He also complains about the prison’s policy requiring him to see the nurse three times (and pay a $5 copay each time)

before he can see a doctor (Id.). Warden Jaimet received the emergency grievance on June 2, 2017, and on June 5, 2017, found that it was not an emergency (Id.). The grievance was returned to Sims on June 8, 2017, and he was instructed to submit it through the normal grievance channels (Id.; Doc. 28-2). An additional paragraph written by Sims appears at the bottom of the May 19,

2017 grievance, which states: “It should be noted that on 6-6-17 I mailed this grievance to Counselor Hill and it was returned to me on 6-16-17 without a response. I then sent it to the Grievance Officer on 6-17-17, it also was returned without a response or explanation on July 6.” (Doc. 28-1). Sims appealed the denial of his grievance, which was received by the

Administrative Review Board (“ARB”) on August 2, 2017 (Doc. 28-1 at pp. 2-4). The ARB denied the appeal as untimely (Id.). On January 9, 2019, Defendant Hill filed a motion for summary judgment on the issue of exhaustion of administrative remedies (Doc. 27). Hill argues that Sims did not exhaust his administrative remedies before filing this lawsuit, as his appeal to the ARB was untimely. In response, Sims asserts that after he received the denial of his emergency

grievance from Warden Jaimet, he attempted to exhaust his remedies through the normal grievance process (Id.). Sims claims that process took until July 6, 2017 (Id.). The grievance was then placed in the mailbox for delivery to the ARB that same day (Id.). Thus, he argues, he timely filed his appeal (Id.). Pavey Hearing Judge Sison held an evidentiary hearing pursuant to Pavey v. Conley, 544 F.3d 739

(7th Cir. 2008), on October 16, 2019. Sims testified that after he received the grievance back from Warden Jaimet denying the emergency nature of his grievance, he put the grievance in the mail that night, June 6, 2017, to go to the counselor (Doc. 44 at p. 8). He received it back without a response from the counselor on June 16, 2017 (Id. at p. 10). He then sent it to the grievance officer on June 17, 2017, and again received it back without a

response (Id. at p. 9). Sims testified that he wrote the additional paragraph at the bottom of his grievance on three different dates—June 6, June 16, and June 17 (Id.). Sims also testified that, around the time he received the grievance back from his counselor without a response, he asked her why she did not respond to his grievance and she told him that she did not believe she received it (Id. at p. 11). The counselor also

allegedly told him that if she received it, then she would have responded to it (Id.). Sims testified further that he had no information regarding whether a grievance officer ever received his May 19, 2017 grievance (Id. at p. 14). The Report and Recommendation On October 21, 2019, Judge Sison entered the Report and Recommendation currently before the Court (Doc. 42). Based on the evidence in the record and the testimony at the Pavey hearing, Judge Sison concluded that Sims was not a credible

witness. Judge Sison noted that, despite testifying he wrote the paragraph at the bottom of his grievance on three separate dates, the paragraph is seamlessly written without any line breaks or gaps. He further found Sims’s testimony that he sent the grievance to the counselor on June 6, 2017, to be untrue when the prison’s emergency grievance log shows it was not returned to him until June 8, 2017. Additionally, Sims admitted that the

counselor told him she did not remember receiving a grievance from him. Finally, Judge Sison found Sims’s testimony to be inconsistent when he first testified that he got the grievance back from the grievance officer without a response, but later testified that he did not know whether the grievance officer ever received his grievance (Doc. 44 at p. 14). Based on this evidence, as well as Sims’s testimony that he prefers to bypass the normal

grievance procedure in favor of filing grievances directly with the warden (Id. at p. 18), Judge Sison found that the grievance process was available to Sims but that he failed to fully exhaust the process as to Defendant Hill before filing this lawsuit. Judge Sison further found that, although Defendant Jaimet, the warden at Pinckneyville, did not file a motion for summary judgment on the issue of exhaustion,

summary judgment should also be entered in her favor. Judge Sison noted that Jaimet raised the affirmative defense of exhaustion in her answer and had not withdrawn the defense. Based on the record and the testimony during the Pavey hearing, Judge Sison found there were no grievances other than the May 19, 2017 grievance that relate to Sims’s claim against Jaimet. Because that grievance was not fully exhausted, Judge Sison found summary judgment should be entered in Jaimet’s favor pursuant to Rule 56(f), which

allows the Court to grant summary judgment for a nonmovant or after identifying material facts that are not in dispute, provided that the Court provides notice and offers an opportunity to respond. Objections Sims filed a timely objection to the Report and Recommendation (Doc. 46). Sims first objects to being subjected to a Pavey hearing without the assistance of counsel or

being adequately educated on the purpose of a Pavey hearing. He claims that had counsel been present, he would not have misspoken at the hearing. Second, Sims argues it was improper for Judge Sison to assume the bottom paragraph of his grievance was written all on the same day unless his opinion was backed by a handwriting expert. He also asserts that it defies logic that he would not have

completed the “minimal task” of putting his grievance through the normal grievance process and that defendants have more to gain by lying than he does.

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Sims v. Jairret, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sims-v-jairret-ilsd-2019.