Vincent Lilly v. Texas Department of Criminal Justice

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedAugust 4, 2015
Docket14-14-00343-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Vincent Lilly v. Texas Department of Criminal Justice (Vincent Lilly v. Texas Department of Criminal Justice) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vincent Lilly v. Texas Department of Criminal Justice, (Tex. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

Affirmed and Majority and Dissenting Opinions filed August 4, 2015.

In The

Fourteenth Court of Appeals

NO. 14-14-00343-CV

VINCENT LILLY, Appellant

V. TEXAS DEPARTMENT OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE AND BILL PIERCE, Appellees

On Appeal from the 412th District Court Brazoria County, Texas Trial Court Cause No. 74682I

OPINION

Appellant Vincent Lilly appeals from the trial court’s order granting summary judgment in favor of appellees the Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ) and Bill Pierce based on limitations. We affirm.

BACKGROUND

According to his petition, Lilly is a member of the House of Yahweh, a religion that prohibits its members from eating pork and using cooking or eating utensils that have been used to prepare and serve pork. The TDCJ imprisoned Lilly from February 2011 until June 2013 at its Stringfellow Unit, where it operates a kosher kitchen in full compliance with Lilly’s dietary restrictions. On March 16, 2011, Lilly requested that his name be added to the Stringfellow Unit’s kosher kitchen list. Rabbi Goldstein, who maintained the list, denied Lilly’s request, stating: “Per TDCJ policy, [t]he kosher kitchen is restricted to the Jewish community only.”

Lilly filed a Step 1 offender grievance form on March 24, 2011, complaining that the TDCJ’s failure to provide him a kosher diet violated his constitutional rights. Lilly requested that, to resolve his complaint, the TDCJ add his name to the kosher kitchen list. The warden responded to Lilly’s grievance on April 27, 2011, stating: “Your grievance has been reviewed. In order to address your concerns appropriately, the unit Chaplain has submitted HQ150 form to the Religious Practice Committee in Huntsville. Wait for their disposition.”

Lilly filed a Step 2 offender grievance form on June 8, 2011.1 Lilly asserted on his form that he was dissatisfied with the TDCJ’s resolution of his Step 1 offender grievance form because more than 40 days had elapsed since the warden’s response and the Religious Practice Committee had not returned its decision. Pierce, who was the director of the TDCJ’s Chaplaincy Department, responded to Lilly’s Step 2 offender grievance form on June 24, 2011, stating: “Your complaint has been received and investigated. Your grievance was answered appropriately in Step 1. The Religious Practice Committee (RPC) has your request and it is scheduled for review the next time they meet on June 24, 2011. The RPC meets every 90 days. No further action is warranted at this time.”

Lilly filed additional grievances over the next several months by submitting

1 The Step 2 offender grievance form lists the date received as June 8, 2011. Lilly alleges that he filed his grievance form on June 7, 2011. The exact date is not dispositive of this appeal. We state the date listed on the grievance form as the date Lilly filed his grievance and resolve similar discrepancies in the same manner by stating the dates listed on the grievance forms.

2 Step 1 and Step 2 offender grievance forms. On July 25, 2011, Lilly filed a grievance complaining that the TDCJ did not provide him with adequately sanitized eating utensils for his kosher diet; he requested that he be allowed to bring his commissary-purchased bowl, cup, and spoon to the dining hall. Lilly filed another grievance on August 25, 2011, complaining that he had observed kitchen staff serve non-Jewish inmates and officers kosher meals on disposable trays; Lilly requested that he be provided the TDCJ’s Kosher Kitchen Policy for review. Lilly filed a fourth grievance on December 5, 2011, complaining that his dietary requirements had not been met; he requested “[d]isposable eating ware and cooking ware where no [p]ork has been used, in comports with my religious belief, like Judaic faith [o]ffenders.”

The TDCJ responded to Lilly’s additional grievances stating in its various Step 1 and Step 2 replies that Lilly could not bring his personal items to the dining hall; “utensils, trays (plates) and cups [were] adequately cleaned and sanitized to remove all contamination of pork or any other food items served in the Offender Dining Hall;” and “[t]he Administration ha[d] no plans of providing disposable eating wares for offenders.” The TDCJ did not provide its Kosher Kitchen Policy to Lilly for review.

Lilly received the Religious Practice Committee’s disposition regarding his first-filed grievance on February 1, 2012. According to Lilly, the committee stated: “The [p]ork-free/[m]eat-free meals provided by the Agency meets [sic] the requirements of the scriptures you presented.”

Lilly wrote Pierce regarding the committee’s interpretation of scriptures after receiving the committee’s disposition. Lilly questioned why Jewish inmates, relying on the same scriptures, were provided the kosher diet Lilly requested. Pierce did not respond to Lilly’s letter.

3 Lilly resumed filing grievances. On July 16, 2012, Lilly complained that the Stringfellow Unit’s Kosher Kitchen Policy was discriminatory and requested permission to read the policy. Pierce responded on March 1, 2013: “You present no new facts for consideration. You may request to read the Kosher Kitchen [P]olicy through the Open Records Act. No further action is warranted.”

Lilly filed another grievance on March 20, 2013, citing the Texas Religious Freedom Restoration Act section 110.006(g), and requesting that Pierce provide the Religious Practice Committee’s rationale “as to why the Scriptures cited does [sic] not prohibit eating from utensils contaminated by [p]ork.” See Tex. Civ. Prac. & Rem. Code § 110.006(g) (Vernon 2011). Pierce responded on April 26, 2013: “The pork-free/meat[-]free meals provided by TDCJ meet the requirements of the scriptures you have provided.”

Lilly sent an open records request to the Stringfellow Unit’s law library supervisor on April 1, 2013, to review the Kosher Kitchen Policy. The law library supervisor denied Lilly’s request. Lilly filed a Step 1 offender grievance form on April 1, 2013, complaining that the law library supervisor had disregarded Lilly’s request that he be allowed to review the Kosher Kitchen Policy. The warden responded to Lilly’s Step 1 offender grievance form on May 10, 2013, stating: “Your grievance has been reviewed . . . . Offenders are not allowed to have copies or review the policy requested for. No further action warranted.” Lilly filed a Step 2 offender grievance offense form on May 15, 2013. The warden rescinded his Step 1 response, and provided the following corrected Step 1 response: “Regarding your request to review the Kosher [K]itchen Policy. The Policy[,] Reassignment Procedures to a Jewish Designated Unit[,] is in the Chaplaincy Manual, policy number 07.02. You may review this policy in the Unit Law Library.”

The TDCJ transferred Lilly from the Stringfellow Unit to the James Allred 4 Unit in June 2013. At the time of his transfer, Lilly had not received the TDCJ’s response to his May 15, 2013 Step 2 offender grievance form. Lilly filed a separate grievance complaining that he had not received the TDCJ’s response. The TDCJ provided Lilly a copy of its Step 2 response on September 30, 2013. The TDCJ’s response stated: “Your grievance was investigated and disclosed that offenders are permitted to review the Kosher Diet [P]olicy in the law library. Submit an I-60 to the law library. No further action warranted.”

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Vincent Lilly v. Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vincent-lilly-v-texas-department-of-criminal-justice-texapp-2015.