Armentero v. Sisto et al
Filing
70
ORDER signed by Magistrate Judge Gregory G. Hollows on 1/11/2013 ORDERING that defendant's 64 motion to file a second dispositive motion is DENIED; plaintiff's pretrial statement and any motions necessary to obtain trial witnesses due on or before 4/12/2013, defendants' pretrial statement due on or before 4/26/2013; Pretrial Conference is set for 5/10/2013 before Magistrate Judge Gregory G. Hollows, to be conducted on the file only; Final Pretrial Conference is set for 9/12/2013 at 10:00 AM and Jury Trial is set for 1/13/2014 at 09:00 AM in Courtroom 9 (GGH) before Magistrate Judge Gregory G. Hollows.(Yin, K)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
9
FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA
10
LUIS LORENZO ARMENTERO,
11
Plaintiff,
12
13
No. CIV S-08-2790 GGH P
vs.
S. WILLIS,
14
ORDER
Defendant.
15
/
16
Plaintiff, a state prisoner proceeding pro se, seeks relief pursuant to 42 U.S.C. §
17
1983. Pending before the court is defendant’s motion for leave to file a second dispositive
18
motion, filed on June 28, 2012. Dkt. 64. Plaintiff filed an opposition to this motion on July
19
5,2012 and defendant replied on July 12, 2012. Dkts. 65, 68. Upon consideration of the briefs in
20
support of and opposing the motion the court now finds as follows:
21
BACKGROUND
22
In the order and findings and recommendations dated July 12, 2011, the
23
undersigned granted defendant’s motion for summary judgment as to plaintiff’s Fourteenth
24
Amendment claim and denied the motion as to plaintiff’s Eighth Amendment claim. Dkt. 33 at
25
\\\\\
26
\\\\\
1
1
17.1 Thus the action proceeds only as to plaintiff’s claim that he was subjected to a violation of
2
his rights under the Eighth Amendment by defendant Willis who confiscated his identification
3
card for ten days which interfered with his psychiatric treatment.2 Id. Specifically, the court
4
found the following material issues in dispute: whether defendant intentionally interfered with
5
plaintiff’s psychiatric care, whether he knew that plaintiff was being denied treatment; and
6
whether plaintiff was, in fact, being denied treatment. Id at 7. Defendant claims to now have
7
before it an “expanded factual record” which justifies a second summary judgment motion and
8
the opportunity to defeat plaintiff’s remaining claim.
9
Defendant raises three factual matters that, if shown to be true, defendant claims
10
would compel summary judgment in its favor. Defendant does not claim that this new evidence
11
was unavailable at the time it first moved for summary judgment or that anything precluded
12
defendant from obtaining the evidence. Rather, defendant explains that in light of the court’s
13
July 12, 2011 order addressing these factual matters still in dispute, defendant undertook a
14
further inquiry to “address some of the factual questions the Court believed had gone
15
unanswered.” Dkt. 64 at 2.
16
Plaintiff responds that the purportedly new evidence does not compel summary
17
judgment on any of the disputed facts already considered by the court. The court will address
18
each factual matter raised by defendants to determine whether or not a successive summary
19
judgment motion is warranted.
20
DISCUSSION
21
22
In addressing the issue of whether defendant presents new evidence that might
compel summary judgment on plaintiff’s Eighth Amendment claim, it is useful to recall the
23
24
25
1
The findings and recommendations were adopted in full, with the exception of the text
on pages 6:26 through 7:10, by the district judge on September 26, 2011. Dkt 35.
2
26
A more detailed statement of the allegations giving rise to this claim is laid out in this
court’s July 12, 2011 order and findings and recommendations. Dkt. 33 at 2-4.
2
1
elements of an Eighth Amendment violation under § 1983, for which defendant must produce
2
sufficient evidence showing that there is no genuine factual dispute. Here, defendant must
3
demonstrate the absence of a material fact that defendant was deliberately indifferent to
4
plaintiff’s need for psychiatric treatment. See Estelle v. Gamble, 429 U.S. 97, 105 (1976). This
5
requires a showing that defendant disregarded a substantial risk of serious harm of which he was
6
actually aware. See Farmer v. Brennan, 511 U.S. 825, 838-42.
7
Defendant is reminded that plaintiff’s burden to show the presence of a genuine
8
issue of fact does not require him to establish a fact conclusively in his favor. Rather, he need
9
only present evidence from which a reasonable jury might return a verdict in his favor. See T.W.
10
Elec. Serv., Inc. v. Pacific Elec. Contractors Ass’n., 809 F.2d 626, 631 (9th Cir. 1987).
11
The Court’s Discretion to Allow Successive Summary Judgment Motions
12
Defendant likens his request to the “expanded factual record” which justified a
13
second summary judgment motion in Hoffman v. Tonnemacher, 593 F.3d 908, 911 (9th Cir.
14
2010). Dkt. 64 at 3. But the analogy is misplaced. It is true that a district court has wide
15
discretion to permit successive motions for summary judgment, which is particularly appropriate
16
on an expanded record and to foster the “just, speedy, and inexpensive resolution” of lawsuits. Id
17
at 911-12. The court, however, also cautioned of the potential for abuse of this procedure and
18
reiterated the discretion maintained by district courts to “weed out frivolous or simply repetitive
19
motions.” Id at 911. The court finds defendant’s motion more akin to the latter rather than the
20
former.
21
In Hoffman, defendant was permitted a second summary judgment motion after a
22
mistrial on the merits was declared. Id at 910. The expanded factual record — which justified
23
the successive motion — included testimony from the trial, testimony of an expert deposed after
24
the deadline for filing the initial dispositive motions, and the testimony of a new expert witness
25
whom the court allowed to be added after the mistrial. Id at 912. None of those facts, or any
26
similar circumstances, are present here. Although defendant treats the court’s order on summary
3
1
judgment as an invitation to submit further briefing, it was not. The “expanded factual record”
2
that defendant claims to now have before it does not include any evidence that could not have
3
been obtained and included in defendant’s first motion for summary judgment. Indeed, all of the
4
factual bases cited by defendant for allowing a successive motion were before the court and
5
referred to in its July 12, 2011 order.
Plaintiff’s Need for an ID Card
6
7
The gravamen of plaintiff’s allegations is that defendant confiscated plaintiff’s
8
identification card, without explanation, for ten days which interfered with plaintiff’s ability to
9
receive the psychiatric treatment that he was required to undergo. Dkt. 12 at 3. As a result,
10
plaintiff suffered “severe emotional distress, mental anguish, worry, anger, depression, grief and
11
inability to sleep.” Id at 42-44. A material issue of fact, therefore, is the extent to which plaintiff
12
required his identification card in order to receive his psychiatric medication and whether
13
defendant and plaintiff were aware of the requirements for obtaining plaintiff’s medication.
14
In the summary judgment order, this very issue was addressed. Although
15
defendant averred that he did not intentionally interfere with plaintiff’s ability to take his
16
psychiatric medication, the court found that the evidence of a notice outside the facility’s pill line
17
clinic window reading “No ID Card, No Medication,” together with plaintiff’s averment that
18
defendant knew plaintiff was a psychiatric patient and was required to ensure that he received his
19
medication, raised a genuine issue of material fact that could not be resolved on summary
20
judgment. See Dkt. 33 at 12; 14-15. That defendant now offers evidence of other ways for
21
plaintiff to get his medication and that defendant was aware of these alternatives when he
22
confiscated plaintiff’s identification card, does not negate the prior evidence plaintiff put forth. It
23
only furthers the court’s finding that the availability of plaintiff’s medication is, indeed, a
24
genuine issue of material fact.
25
////
26
////
4
1
Plaintiff’s Ability to Replace his ID Card
2
Defendant claims to have evidence — in the form of third-party declarations —
3
showing that plaintiff might have easily replaced his own identification card during the time in
4
which defendant had confiscated his. Dkt. 64 at 4. But such evidence is more akin to an
5
affirmative defense that plaintiff had a duty but failed to mitigate his damages rather than a
6
dispositive liability issue for which plaintiff bears the burden of proving at trial. See Celotex
7
Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 323 (1986). To the extent that the issue is meant to be one of
8
causation, “no harm-no foul” issues of fact remain; such as the time in which plaintiff could have
9
availed himself of this alternative procedure, whether plaintiff should have known of this
10
procedure and so forth. It is somewhat analogous to a deliberate indifference claim arising from
11
a botched prison surgical procedure to which plaintiff objected in the first place but that
12
defendant then claims could have been avoided if plaintiff had utilized a procedure beforehand to
13
request an outside physician. Interesting, but hardly dispositive. Accordingly, there is no reason
14
to allow summary judgment evidence on this issue.
15
16
Medical Administration Records
Defendant claims that since this court’s summary judgment order, and in response
17
to the disputed fact of whether or not plaintiff had been denied medical treatment, counsel has
18
located medical administration records showing that plaintiff in fact received his medication
19
during the ten days his identification card was confiscated. See Dkt. 64 at 5. In a successive
20
summary judgment motion, defendant offers the declarations of six nurses explaining the
21
identification procedure of inmates and how they initialed the records. Id. Whether or not
22
plaintiff was denied medical treatment was specifically considered by this court in its July 12,
23
2011 summary judgment order. That issue, along with whether defendant knew plaintiff was
24
being denied treatment, was determined to be in dispute by looking to plaintiff’s declaration that
25
defendant intentionally failed to ensure that plaintiff received his psychiatric medication,
26
exposing plaintiff to a substantial risk of serious harm. See Dkt. 33 at 7;14-15. Defendant’s
5
1
attempt to now offer competing declarations on this point does not change that the matter is in
2
dispute. See T.W. Elec. Serv., Inc. , 809 F.2d at 631 (issue need not be established conclusively
3
in either party’s favor, but evidence must show differing versions of the truth).
4
None of the evidence defendant now seeks to put forth was unavailable or could
5
not otherwise be brought at the time defendant moved for summary judgment. Additionally,
6
none of the purportedly new evidence would compel summary judgment on a genuine issue of
7
material fact. Accordingly, because summary judgment in this matter has been resolved, the
8
court will reset a schedule for this litigation.
9
10
Further Scheduling Order
The parties will be required to file pretrial statements in accordance with the
11
schedule set forth below. In addition to the matters already required to be addressed in the
12
pretrial statement in accordance with Local Rule 281, plaintiff will be required to make a
13
particularized showing in his pretrial statement in order to obtain the attendance of witnesses.
14
Plaintiff is advised that failure to comply with the procedures set forth below may result in the
15
preclusion of any and all witnesses named in his pretrial statement.
16
At the trial of this case, the plaintiff must be prepared to introduce evidence to
17
prove each of the alleged facts that support the claims raised in the lawsuit. In general, there are
18
two kinds of trial evidence: (1) exhibits and (2) the testimony of witnesses. It is the plaintiff’s
19
responsibility to produce all of the evidence to prove his case, whether that evidence is in the
20
form of exhibits or witness testimony. If the plaintiff wants to call witnesses to testify, he must
21
follow certain procedures to ensure that the witnesses will be at the trial and available to testify.
22
23
24
I. Procedures for Obtaining Attendance of Incarcerated
Witnesses Who Agree to Testify Voluntarily
An incarcerated witness who agrees voluntarily to attend trial to give testimony
25
cannot come to court unless this court orders the warden or other custodian to permit the witness
26
to be transported to court. This court will not issue such an order unless it is satisfied that:
6
1
1. The prospective witness is willing to attend;
2
and
3
2. The prospective witness has actual knowledge of relevant facts.
4
With the pretrial statement, a party intending to introduce the testimony of
5
incarcerated witnesses who have agreed voluntarily to attend the trial must serve and file a
6
written motion for a court order requiring that such witnesses be brought to court at the time of
7
trial.
8
The motion must:
9
1. State the name and address of each such witness;
10
and
11
2. Be accompanied by affidavits showing that each witness is willing to
12
testify and that each witness has actual knowledge of relevant facts.
13
The willingness of the prospective witness can be shown in one of two ways:
14
1. The party himself can swear by affidavit that the prospective witness
15
has informed the party that he or she is willing to testify voluntarily
16
without being subpoenaed. The party must state in the affidavit when and
17
where the prospective witness informed the party of this willingness; or
18
2. The party can serve and file an affidavit sworn to by the prospective
19
witness, in which the witness states that he or she is willing to testify
20
without being subpoenaed.
21
22
The prospective witness’ actual knowledge of relevant facts can be shown in one
of two ways:
23
1. The party himself can swear by affidavit that the prospective witness
24
has actual knowledge. However, this can be done only if the party has
25
actual firsthand knowledge that the prospective witness was an eyewitness
26
or an ear-witness to the relevant facts. For example, if an incident
7
1
occurred in the plaintiff’s cell and, at the time, the plaintiff saw that a
2
cellmate was present and observed the incident, the plaintiff may swear to
3
the cellmate’s ability to testify.
4
Or
5
2. The party can serve and file an affidavit sworn to by the prospective
6
witness in which the witness describes the relevant facts to which the
7
prospective witness was an eye- or ear-witness. Whether the affidavit is
8
made by the plaintiff or by the prospective witness, it must be specific
9
about what the incident was, when and where it occurred, who was
10
present, and how the prospective witness happened to be in a position to
11
see or to hear what occurred at the time it occurred.
12
The court will review and rule on the motion for attendance of incarcerated
13
witnesses, specifying which prospective witnesses must be brought to court. Subsequently, the
14
court will issue the order necessary to cause the witness’ custodian to bring the witness to court.
15
II. Procedures for Obtaining Attendance of Incarcerated Witnesses Who Refuse
16
to Testify Voluntarily
17
If a party seeks to obtain the attendance of incarcerated witnesses who refuse to
18
testify voluntarily, the party should submit with his pretrial statement a motion for the attendance
19
of such witnesses. Such motion should be in the form described above. In addition, the party
20
must indicate in the motion that the incarcerated witnesses are not willing to testify voluntarily.
21
22
III. Procedures for Obtaining Attendance of Unincarcerated Witnesses Who
Agree to Testify Voluntarily
23
It is the responsibility of the party who has secured an unincarcerated witness’
24
voluntary attendance to notify the witness of the time and date of trial. No action need be sought
25
or obtained from the court.
26
\\\\\
8
1
2
IV. Procedures for Obtaining Attendance of Unincarcerated Witnesses Who
Refuse to Testify Voluntarily
3
If a prospective witness is not incarcerated, and he or she refuses to testify
4
voluntarily, not earlier than four weeks and not later than two weeks before trial, the party must
5
prepare and submit to the United States Marshal a subpoena for service by the Marshal upon the
6
witness. Also, the party seeking the witness’ presence must tender an appropriate sum of money
7
to the witness through the United States Marshal. In the case of an unincarcerated witness, the
8
appropriate sum of money is the daily witness fee of $40.00 plus the witness’ travel expenses.
9
A subpoena will not be served by the United States Marshal upon an
10
unincarcerated witness unless the subpoena is accompanied by a money order made payable to
11
the witness for the full amount of the witness’ travel expenses plus the daily witness fee of
12
$40.00. As noted earlier, because no statute authorizes the use of public funds for these expenses
13
in civil cases, the tendering of witness fees and travel expenses is required even if the party was
14
granted leave to proceed in forma pauperis.
15
CONCLUSION
16
Good cause appearing, pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 16(b), THIS COURT ORDERS
17
AS FOLLOWS:
18
1.
19
20
Defendant’s motion for leave to file a second dispositive motion (dkt. 64) is
DENIED.
2.
Plaintiff shall file and serve his pretrial statement and any motions necessary to
21
obtain the attendance of witnesses at trial on or before April 12, 2013. Defendants
22
shall file their pretrial statement on or before April 26, 2013. The parties are
23
advised that failure to file a pretrial statement may result in the imposition of
24
sanctions, including dismissal of this action.
25
26
3.
Pretrial conference (as described in Local Rule 282) is set in this case for May 10,
2013, before the magistrate judge. The pretrial conference shall be conducted on
9
1
the file only, without appearance by either party.
2
4.
3
a.m.
4
5.
5
6
The final pretrial conference is set in this case for September 12, 2013 at 10:00
This matter is set for jury trial before the Honorable Gregory H. Hollows on
January 13, 2014 at 9:00 a.m.
DATED: January 11, 2013
7
/s/ Gregory G. Hollows
UNITED STATES MAGISTRATE JUDGE
8
9
10
11
ggh9
12
arme2790.req for2nd SJ
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
10
Disclaimer: Justia Dockets & Filings provides public litigation records from the federal appellate and district courts. These filings and docket sheets should not be considered findings of fact or liability, nor do they necessarily reflect the view of Justia.
Why Is My Information Online?