SMITH v. HARRISON

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 14, 2022
Docket2:21-cv-05120
StatusUnknown

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

Bluebook
SMITH v. HARRISON, (E.D. Pa. 2022).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

NASHAE NAEISHA SMITH : CIVIL ACTION : v. : NO. 21-5120 : BENNETTE HARRISON, et al. :

MEMORANDUM KEARNEY, J. February 14, 2022 Nashae Naeisha Smith is frustrated with the Philadelphia child welfare system. The Commonwealth separated her three children from her and placed them in foster care. She blames a variety of persons for a court process delaying her desired reunification hearing with her three separated children and wants her three minor children properly protected while in foster homes. We certainly appreciate a parent’s primary instinct to protect and reunite her children. But federal court is not the forum to force Philadelphia child welfare professionals to meet her timeline. She does not plead a basis to compel the state court to enter her requested orders in the ongoing family court dispute. She has an adequate remedy in the state courts. Ms. Smith also pro se seeks damages from a variety of child welfare professionals. We allowed her to proceed without paying the filing fees. We now review her consolidated Complaint against three parties who she asks us to consider as state actors but only pleaded facts allowing us to infer Social Services Program Analyst Cynthia L. Everett acted under the color of law. Ms. Smith pleads no facts allowing us to plausibly infer a private assistance agency or an alleged child advocate is a state actor. Ms. Smith’s pleading confirms she can only sue Analyst Everett for civil rights claims. Ms. Smith pleads no basis to impose liability upon Analyst Everett as the only plead state actor. Ms. Smith does not allege conduct by Analyst Everett or other named parties violating her Constitutional right to the custody, care and management of her children which would “shock the conscience” necessary for a substantive due process claim. She does not plead harm or injury based on Ms. Smith’s alleged deprivations of procedural due process or impeding her access to the court under the First Amendment. We dismiss her fourth attempt at pleading civil rights claims for failing to state a claim

consistent with Congress’s mandate. We dismiss her claims without prejudice with one last leave to file a fifth amended Complaint seeking damages under this caption. I. Alleged pro se facts. Ms. Smith is the mother of three minor children seemingly separated from her under an unplead court direction. She is seeking reunification in ongoing family court matters in Philadelphia County. It appears her children are currently in foster care. She focuses on three persons/entities causing her delay in reunifying her children. She first alleges the Asociación Puertorriqueños en Marcha (“Asociación”), a Philadelphia Community Umbrella Agency, and its employees Nilda Ruiz, Keyanna Hunter, Amber Brown, Zabdiel San

Miguel, Kasey Roscoe, and Bennette Harrison “failed to provide safety and stability for [her] children,” provided inadequate medical and dental care, failed to transfer the children’s personal effects to their foster homes resulting in the children having seasonally inappropriate clothing, failed to provide mandated sibling visits, and suspended her in person visits with her children without explanation or court order.1 The Philadelphia Department of Human Services works with Community Umbrella Agencies to provide case management services for child welfare.2 Ms. Smith also sues child advocate Andre Martino.3 She alleges Advocate Martino’s failure to appear at her permanency hearings caused the court to delay the hearing, resulting in an unreasonable extension of her family separation.4 Ms. Smith sues Cynthia L. Everett, a Social Services Program Analyst in the Philadelphia Department of Human Services. Ms. Smith alleges Analyst Everett failed to ensure Asociación carried out its duties.5 She also alleges Analyst Everett exhibited “prejudice towards [her]” and attaches emails characterized as “threatening retaliatory action if [she] continued to reachout [sic] to DHS authority.”6

Ms. Smith identifies January 6, 2021 through the present as the dates of the events giving rise to her claims.7 She specifies July 21, 2021, May 29, 2021, August 29, 2021, and October 27, 2021 as significant dates but offers no further facts regarding what occurred on those dates except a “specific communication” on July 21, 2021.8 We liberally infer Ms. Smith is referring to Analyst Everett’s July 21, 2021 email asking Ms. Smith to “stop the daily emails/calls” and to “please stop adding the DHS Commissioner and Deputy Commissioners, to [her] ongoing email communications to the CUA Agency.”9 Analyst Everett told Ms. Smith failure to follow protocol “could have a negative outcome on [Ms. Smith’s] services/service delivery and how decisions are made about [her]/[her] family, in and/or outside of the Court room.”10 Analyst Everett repeated these warnings in an October 22, 2021 email

cautioning against Ms. Smith’s insistence on “sending all of these emails to everyone and/or emailing CUA/DHS about every single case matter or conflict.”11 Analyst Everett writes: I’m afraid that if you and other folks that conduct themselves in this same manner don’t ease up…, CUA/DHS will be forced to explore our options around blocking email correspondence for people who are misusing this platform by promoting negativity/slander/intimidation to the Agencies that are charged with the task of trying to ensure Children’s safety, well-being and preserving/strengthening/ empowering their families.

JSF: Katherine has been blind copied to explore the issue of blocking with the City of Philadelphia and DHS IT Team. Law Department please explore…, if Clients who continue this forced engagement is [sic] treading on slander and/or intimidation.12 Ms. Smith responded to Analyst Everett’s October 22, 2021 email three times but she does not plead the response or attach emails sent after October 22, 2021. Ms. Smith does not allege she ceased communications as advised or Analyst Everett otherwise deterred her pursuit of a reunification hearing. Ms. Smith does not plead she took action, or refrained from taking action, based on Analyst Everett’s emails.

II. Analysis Ms. Smith submits multiple pro se requests for relief. Ms. Smith claims the failure to schedule a reunification hearing caused her emotional and physical distress. She seeks compensatory damages for family therapy, special needs therapy, educational tutors, and daycare services.13 She also requests general “funds” to allow her to “be more present” when reunified with her children and for her children to “participate in age interest activities like sports, art or music.”14 Ms. Smith additionally asks for reimbursement of court costs and legal fees.15 She also requests we compel the Philadelphia Department of Human Services and the Community Umbrella Agency to begin to conduct her reunification hearing and a permanency review.16 Ms. Smith asks us to order the state court to appoint a new child advocate.17 Ms. Smith asks us to order Analyst

Everett ensure the Community Umbrella Agency team “carries out all legal and mandated duties per [her] case.”18 She also requests we reprimand Analyst Everett.19 Having previously granted Ms. Smith leave to proceed in forma pauperis, Congress directs us to study the sufficiency of her complaint under 28 U.S.C. § 1915(e)(2)(B). We must dismiss an action we determine is frivolous or malicious; fails to state a claim on which relief may be granted; or seeks monetary relief against a defendant who is immune from such relief.20 When considering whether to dismiss a complaint for failure to state a claim under section 1915(e)(2)(B)(ii), we apply the same standard used under

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SMITH v. HARRISON, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-harrison-paed-2022.