Williams v. Sgt. for Riverdale Police
Filing
21
MEMORANDUM Opinion and Order: Plaintiff's Motion To Vacate, Set A Side or Reconsider Any Order Dismissing the Riverdale Sergeant To Grant Leave to Re-Instate Riverdale Sergeant for Good Cause Shown 20 is denied. Signed by the Honorable Milton I. Shadur on 12/18/2015:Mailed notice(clw, )
IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF ILLINOIS
EASTERN DIVISION
JOHN WILLIAMS,
Plaintiff,
v.
A SERGEANT FOR RIVERDALE POLICE,
Defendant.
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Case No. 15 C 6134
MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
On November 24, 2015, following a series of efforts by this Court to assist pro se
prisoner plaintiff John Williams ("Williams") in pursuing his 42 U.S.C. § 1983 ("Section 1983")
action that charged a deprivation of his constitutional rights -- efforts to which Williams
consistently paid no heed 1 -- this Court issued a memorandum order (Dkt. No. 17) that, citing
well-established Seventh Circuit caselaw, finally dismissed both Williams' Complaint and this
action with prejudice. On November 30, demonstrating a level of diligence that had been totally
lacking during the pendency of the case, Williams filed a handprinted document (Dkt. No. 20)
captioned "Motion To Vacate, Set A Side or Reconsider Any Order Dismissing the Riverdale
______________________________
1
As the opening sentence in this Court's October 1, 2015 memorandum order (Dkt. No.
11) stated:
It is difficult to understand how a pro se plaintiff who has filed a 42 U.S.C. § 1983
action that clearly states a deprivation of his constitutional rights can then proceed
to pay less attention to his lawsuit than the judge to whom his case has been
assigned.
Sergeant To Grant Leave to Re-Instate Riverdale Sergeant for Good Cause Shown" 2 (the
"Motion). 3
But as the ensuing discussion will reflect, the Motion is totally without merit. To that
end, a brief review of the bidding is in order:
1.
On July 12, 2013 Williams sustained the mistreatment described in this
fashion in his Complaint ¶ 10:
That on July 12, 2013 with out warrning the Rivedale police
fired a shot at the plaintiff. These actions prompted the plaintiff
to flee . . . as a resalt and consequence of the plaintiff
fleeing . . . upon his apprehension the plaintiff was beaten and
one sgt
as the plaintiff hands was cuffed he was
repeatedly tazed with a hand tazer in the testicles by
sgt
. I passed out from the pain. 4
As the blank spaces in that recital reflect, at that point Williams was in full
possession of all the facts required to state a Section 1983 claim except for
the identity of the alleged constitutional miscreant.
2.
Williams' current Motion ¶ 1 states:
From the time that the plaintiff assult by Riverdale Sergeant, he
was immediately tooken in to custody by Riverdale and sent
down state to Illinois Department of Corrections Pinckeny C.C.
within 7 days of his arrest.
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2
Here, as in all other places in this opinion where documents authored by Williams are
quoted, the quotation is verbatim. Any errors are attributable to Williams himself, not to any
typographical or other mistakes on the part of this Court's judicial assistant.
3
No copy of the Motion was delivered to this Court in the ordinary course. It learned of
the Motion's existence only through having obtained its periodic printout of all motions pending
in cases assigned to, or previously assigned to, its calendar.
4
[Footnote by this Court] This Court, as it has throughout the case, credits Williams'
allegations -- but without, of course, making any factual findings.
-2-
Although Motion ¶ 2 goes on to state "The plaintiff remained in custody
for (17) months without any opportunity to retrieveing the true identity of
the sergeant," nothing prevented Williams' prompt institution of a Section
1983 action with the selfsame allegations that he ultimately set out in his
Complaint in this case. Yet for no apparent reason Williams waited until
July 10 of this year to file suit (just a few days short of two years after the
incident that forms the gravamen of his claim).
3.
On July 15, 2015, just a few days after Williams' lawsuit papers arrived in
the Clerk's Office, copies of the Complaint and its accompanying In
Forma Pauperis Application ("Application") were delivered to this Court's
chambers. This Court immediately reviewed the papers and issued a July
15 memorandum order (Dkt. No. 6) that (a) granted the Application and
(b) transmitted to Williams copies of another Clerk's-Office-supplied
form, the Motion for Attorney Representation, for him to complete and
submit (although Williams had checked off, in the Application form, the
statement that it was "in support of my motion for appointment of
counsel," he had not included any such motion in his papers).
4.
With a full four weeks thereafter having elapsed without any response
from Williams, this Court issued a brief sua sponte August 14
memorandum order (Dkt. No. 8) that once again sent him copies of the
Motion for Attorney Representation to be completed and returned so that
-3-
Williams could have the necessary assistance of a lawyer to pursue his
action, with that August 14 memorandum order concluding in this fashion:
If the required papers have not been received here on or before
September 11, 2015, this Court would be constrained to dismiss
this action for want of prosecution.
5.
Another month passed without this Court receiving any response at all
from Williams. With such apparent total silence on Williams' part, it is
scarcely surprising that on September 15 this Court issued another brief
one-page memorandum order (Dkt. No. 9) that referred to the earlier July
15 and August 14 orders and concluded:
With September 11 having come and gone without any response
from Williams, no reason appears to justify any further
extension. As forecast in Order II, 5 this action is indeed
dismissed for want of prosecution.
6.
As it turned out, however, this time Williams had in fact prepared and
transmitted a response, received in the Clerk's Office just a day after the
September 15 dismissal. As this Court stated in its ensuing October 1
memorandum order (Dkt. No. 11):
But just a day later the Clerk's Office received from Williams a
completed form of Motion for Attorney Representation that
reported his having communicated with a single law firm to
seek representation but stated nothing as to why that contact had
been unsuccessful or as to any other efforts he had made.
Despite the substantive inadequacy of that submission and the fact that it
had been prepared and sent by Williams after the September 11 deadline
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5
[Footnote by this Court] "Order II" refers to the earlier-described August 14, 2015
memorandum order.
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date, this Court (a) vacated the dismissal of the action for want of
prosecution, (b) obtained the name of a member of the District Court trial
bar to represent Williams and (c) issued this Court's customary scheduling
order.
7.
That however proved to be only a temporary reprieve for Williams, for
after the designated counsel had looked into the matter thoroughly he
moved to withdraw, filing the civil case equivalent of an Anders motion.
This Court looked into the issue independently and issued the initiallyreferred-to November 24 memorandum order (Dkt. No. 17) that found that
our Court of Appeals' consistent teaching has been that Fed. R. Civ. P.
15(c) does not permit the relation back of any amendment to a complaint
that seeks to identify an originally unidentified defendant, so that "the
untimeliness of this action in limitations terms is both incontrovertible and
incurable." And that being so, the November 24 memorandum order
dismissed both the Complaint and this action, this time with prejudice.
It is painfully obvious that Williams' wound in suffering the loss of his lawsuit is totally
self-inflicted. None of the things said in his current Motion provide any predicate for equitable
tolling or other relief from the result inexorably reached by this Court. Accordingly the Motion
(Dkt. No. 20) is denied.
December 18, 2015
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Milton I. Shadur
Senior United States District Judge
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