Crosby v. Strafford County Department of Corrections, Superintendent, et al
Filing
48
///ORDER re 30 Motion for Summary Judgment. Counts I, II and IV are dismissed due to Crosby's failure to exhaust the administrative remedies available to him. Defendants' request for dismissal of Crosby's st ate-law claims is denied, and the case remains on track for trial of Counts VI, VII-A, VII-B, VIII, and IX. Crosby has seven days from the date of this order to show cause why (1) his claims against Sgt. McGowen should not be dismissed pursuant to Rule 4(m) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure; and (2) Count VIII should not be dismissed. So Ordered by District Judge Landya B. McCafferty.(gla)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
Christopher Crosby
v.
Civil No. 12-cv-383-LM
Opinion No. 2014 DNH 182
Strafford County Department of
Corrections, Correction Officer
Leonard Nadeau, Correction
Officer Joseph Darko-Meusha,
Correction Officer Brent Chapel,
Correction Officer David Baggs,
Lt. Donna Roy, Sgt. Edward
McGowen, Cpl. Gary Cormier, and
Jacob Braley
O R D E R
Plaintiff is a former pre-trial detainee at the Strafford
County House of Corrections (“SCHOC”).
He has sued nine
defendants in eight counts, asserting three federal and five
state claims, all arising out of a beating he received from
Jacob Braley, a fellow inmate at the SCHOC.
Before the court is
a motion for summary judgment filed by all defendants other
than: (1) Sgt. Edward McGowen, who appears never to have been
served; and (2) Jacob Braley.
Specifically, the movants seek
summary judgment on plaintiff’s federal claims and ask the court
to decline to exercise supplemental jurisdiction over his statelaw claims.
Plaintiff objects.
summary judgment is granted.
For the reasons that follow,
The court, however, retains
jurisdiction over plaintiff’s state-law claims.
Summary Judgment Standard
“Summary judgment is appropriate when there is no genuine
issue of material fact and the moving party is entitled to
judgment as a matter of law.”
Ponte v. Steelcase Inc., 741 F.3d
310, 319 (1st Cir. 2014) (quoting Cortés–Rivera v. Dept. of
Corr., 626 F.3d 21, 26 (1st Cir. 2010)); see also Fed. R. Civ.
P. 56(a).
When ruling on a motion for summary judgment, the
court must “view[] the entire record ‘in the light most
hospitable to the party opposing summary judgment, indulging all
reasonable inferences in that party’s favor.’”
Winslow v.
Aroostook Cnty., 736 F.3d 23, 29 (1st Cir. 2013) (quoting Suarez
v. Pueblo Int’l, Inc., 229 F.3d 49, 53 (1st Cir. 2000)).
“The nonmovant may defeat a summary judgment motion by
demonstrating, through submissions of evidentiary quality, that
a trialworthy issue persists.”
Sánchez-Rodríguez v. AT&T
Mobility P.R., Inc., 673 F.3d 1, 9 (1st Cir. 2012) (quoting
Iverson v. City of Boston, 452 F.3d 94, 98 (1st Cir. 2006)).
Thus, “[c]onclusory allegations, improbable inferences, and
unsupported speculation, are insufficient to establish a genuine
dispute of fact.”
Travers v. Flight Servs. & Sys., Inc., 737
F.3d 144, 146 (1st Cir. 2013) (quoting Triangle Trading Co. v.
Robroy Indus., Inc., 200 F.3d 1, 2 (1st Cir. 1999)).
“Rather,
the party seeking to avoid summary judgment must be able to
2
point to specific, competent evidence to support his [or her]
claim.”
Sánchez-Rodríguez, 673 F.3d at 9 (quoting Soto-Ocasio
v. Fed. Ex. Corp., 150 F.3d 14, 18 (1st Cir. 1998)) (internal
quotation marks omitted).
Background
Unless otherwise indicated, the facts recited in this
section are undisputed.
Christopher Crosby entered the SCHOC on September 13, 2011,
as a pre-trial detainee.
custody unit.
He was housed in the protective-
Between September 24 and September 28, Braley
told Crosby that “he would kick [Crosby’s] butt . . . but . . .
he was afraid [that Crosby would] tell on him.”
Defs.’ Mem. of
Law, Ex. A (doc. no. 30-2), Crosby Dep. 34:7-9, Mar. 10, 2004.
In his deposition, Crosby testified that this was the only
threat that Braley ever made against him prior to the incident
that gives rise to this suit.
See id. at 35:3-6.
Between
September 13 and October 20, 2011, various other inmates also
made threats against Crosby and harassed him, in ways that are
not well specified in Crosby’s complaint or in the summaryjudgment record.
There is evidence to suggest that the
animosity toward Crosby was based upon the other inmates’
perception of him as a sex offender.
Crosby made oral reports
of the threats and harassment to most of the correction officer
3
defendants.1
Some or all of them responded by telling Crosby
that there was nothing they could do unless they witnessed the
conduct that Crosby was complaining about.
At some point before October 20, Crosby directed an inmate
request slip to the jail’s classification officer, David Baggs,
complaining about threats and harassment by various inmates.
response, Officer Baggs spoke with Crosby.
In
Shortly thereafter,
Officer Baggs “came to the pod and he announced that if . . .
the harassment and the threats on the pod . . . didn’t stop,
that there was going to be some type of punishment.”
Dep. 67:7-12.
Crosby
However, according to Crosby, Officer Baggs
“didn’t mention any names or anything.”
Id. at 67:8-9.
On October 20, while Crosby was playing basketball with
Braley, Braley initiated a physical confrontation that resulted
in a variety of injuries to Crosby.2
Crosby described the events
leading up to his assault this way:
1
Those reports appear to have been somewhat imprecise. For
example, when asked at his deposition to report what he said to
Cpl. Gary Cormier about Braley’s threat, Crosby responded: “I
just said he was harassing me and threatening me. I didn’t say
exactly what he said.” Crosby Dep. 103:3-4.
2
In his deposition, Crosby testified that he had played
basketball with Braley on several occasions prior to October 20,
and that he had done so without incident. See Crosby Dep. 89:
14-20. Moreover, he testified that in the recreation yard, he
got along with all the inmates who allegedly harassed and
threatened him on the pod. See Crosby Dep. 89: 2-13.
4
I was winning. And then [Braley] scored 1 after that.
And then . . . I scored the next 2. On the sixth
basket, he said . . . “Crosby, if you make this next
basket, I am going to choke you out.”
Id. at 76:1-5.
In his affidavit, Crosby describes the genesis
of Braley’s actions in the following way:
Officer Baggs’ announcement had the effect of
informing the entire pod that I had reported the
threats and harassment. That announcement made the
threats and harassment worse. Within a week of Baggs’
announcement, Braley assaulted me. Since the threats
and harassment got worse after Officer Baggs’
announcement, resulting in Braley’s assault, I believe
Baggs’ announcement contributed to the assault.
I was afraid to ask for help from SCHOC after the
beating because, when I made a report to Officer
Baggs, he made an announcement that worsened the
threats and harassment and resulted in Braley
assaulting me.
Pl.’s Obj., Ex. 1, Crosby Aff. (doc. no. 35-2) ¶¶ 7 & 8.
On December 9, 2011, Crosby directed an inmate request slip
to Captain Bruce Pelkie in which he inquired about the status of
the criminal charges that had been brought against Braley as a
result of the incident on October 20.
While Crosby was incarcerated in the SCHOC, the jail’s
inmate handbook, which Crosby received, described a grievance
procedure that included both: (1) provisions for verbal/informal
resolution of inmate complaints; and (2) a formal three-step
process for the submission and resolution of written complaints.
The policy required initiation of the informal process “within
5
seven days (7) of the discovery of a grievable issue,” Defs.’
Mem. of Law, Pelkie Aff., Ex. B (doc. no. 30-5), at 29, and
required submission of a “written/formal grievance within
fourteen (14) days of discovery of the grievable issue,” id.
Here, it is undisputed that Crosby did not attempt to use either
of the two grievance procedures available to him to complain
about his assault within the time allotted in the inmate
handbook.
In this suit, Crosby asserts the following claims: (1) a
claim against all seven correction officers, for failing to
protect him, in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment to the
United States Constitution (Count I);3 (2) a claim against Lt.
Donna Roy, Sgt. McGowen, and Cpl. Gary Cormier, under a
supervisory-liability theory, for failing to protect him, in
violation of the Fourteenth Amendment (Count II); (3) a claim
against the Strafford County Department of Corrections (“SCDC”),
under a municipal-liability theory, for failing to protect him,
in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment (Count IV); (4)
negligence, under the common law of New Hampshire, against all
seven correction officers (Count VI); (5) negligent supervision,
under the common law of New Hampshire, against the SCDC (Count
3
Crosby has brought this claim, and his two other federal
constitutional claims (Counts II and IV), under the aegis of 42
U.S.C. § 1983.
6
VII-A); (6) negligent failure to protect, under the common law
of New Hampshire, against the SCDC (Count VII-B); (7) respondeat
superior, against the SCDC (Count VIII); and (8) assault and
battery, against Braley (Count IX).
Discussion
The six correction officers who have been served and the
SCDC (hereinafter “defendants”) move for summary judgment on
Crosby’s federal claims on four grounds: (1) Crosby failed to
exhaust the administrative remedies available to him; (2)
defendants Nadeau, Darko-Meusha, Chapel, Baggs, Roy, and Cormier
are protected by qualified immunity; (3) Crosby’s supervisoryliability claim, stated in Count II, fails as a matter of law;
and (4) Crosby’s municipal-liability claim, stated in Count IV,
fails as a matter of law.
Defendants’ first argument is
persuasive, and dispositive.
A. Exhaustion
According to the Prison Litigation Reform Act of 1995
(“PLRA”), “[n]o action shall be brought with respect to prison
conditions under section 1983 of this title . . . by a prisoner
confined in any jail, prison, or other correctional facility
until such administrative remedies as are available are
exhausted.”
42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a).
Claims for which
administrative remedies have not been exhausted are subject to
7
dismissal.
See Medina-Claudio v. Rodríguez-Mateo, 292 F.3d 31,
36 (1st Cir. 2002).
“[F]ailure to exhaust is an affirmative defense under the
PLRA.”
Jones v. Bock, 549 U.S. 199, 216 (2007).
“must be raised and proved by the defense.”
As such, it
Cruz Berríos v.
González-Rosario, 630 F.3d 7, 11 (1st Cir. 2010) (citing Jones,
549 U.S. at 216).
Finally, “the PLRA's exhaustion requirement
applies to all inmate suits about prison life, whether they
involve general circumstances or particular episodes, and
whether they allege excessive force or some other wrong.”
Porter v. Nussle, 534 U.S. 516, 532 (2002) (citing Wilson v.
Seiter, 501 U.S. 294, 299 n.1 (1991)).
However, under certain circumstances a prisoner’s failure
to exhaust may be excused.
Specifically:
Depending on the inmate’s explanation for the alleged
failure to exhaust, the court must ask whether
administrative remedies were in fact “available” to
the prisoner. Abney v. McGinnis, 380 F.3d 663 [(2d
Cir. 2004)]. The court should also inquire as to
whether the defendants may have forfeited the
affirmative defense of non-exhaustion by failing to
raise or preserve it, Johnson v. Testman, 380 F.3d 691
[(2d Cir. 2004)], or whether the defendants’ own
actions inhibiting the inmate’s exhaustion of remedies
may estop one or more of the defendants from raising
the plaintiff’s failure to exhaust as a defense,
Ziemba [v. Wezner], 366 F.3d [161,,] 163 [(2d Cir.
2004)].
8
Hemphill v. New York, 380 F.3d 680, 686 (2d Cir. 2004) (parallel
citation omitted).4
In addition, the Hemphill court explained
that “there are certain ‘special circumstances’ in which, though
administrative remedies may have been available and though the
government may not have been estopped from asserting the
affirmative defense of non-exhaustion, the prisoner’s failure to
comply with administrative procedural requirements may
nevertheless have been justified.”
380 F.3d at 689.
Here,
Crosby invokes the theories of unavailability and estoppel,
along with the doctrine of special circumstances.
1. A Preliminary Matter
This case arises out of Crosby’s assault, and defendants
argue that Crosby took no steps, either formal or informal, to
grieve that incident.
In response to defendants’ exhaustion
argument, Crosby devotes most of his attention to explaining why
he did not
formally grieve either: (1) the harassment and
4
“[T]he First Circuit does not appear to have had an
opportunity to rule on whether the failure to exhaust may be
excused in the context of a prisoner section 1983 claim.” Bean
v. Barnart, No. 1:13-cv-00196-NT, 2014 WL 1922845, at *5 (D. Me.
May 13, 2004). This court, like several others in this district
and circuit, regards Hemphill as persuasive authority. That
said, Judge Torresen has recently noted that in Amador v.
Andrews, 665 F.3d 89, 102 (2d Cir. 2011), “[t]he Second Circuit
. . . questioned whether the doctrines of estoppel and special
circumstances survived the Supreme Court’s decision in Woodford
[v. Ngo, 548 U.S. 81, 93 (2006)], requiring proper exhaustion.”
Bean, 2014 WL 1922845, at *5 n.4.
9
threats he claims to have suffered in the weeks leading up to
his assault; and/or (2) the responses of various correction
officers to his attempts to informally grieve those incidents.
The only questions before the court, however, are whether Crosby
exhausted the administrative remedies available to him with
regard to his assault and, if not, whether he was excused from
doing so.
As for the first question, it is undisputed that Crosby did
not attempt to use the informal grievance process within seven
days of his assault nor did he attempt to use the formal
grievance process within fourteen days of his assault.
Thus,
Crosby has not exhausted the administrative remedies available
to him.
The only question, then, is whether, under the
circumstances of this case, Crosby was excused from the
exhaustion requirement.
2. Unavailability and Estoppel
Crosby relies upon both the alleged unavailability of
administrative remedies and the allied theory of estoppel.
See
Ojo v. Medic, No. 11-cv-210-JL, 2012 WL 7150497 (D.N.H. Dec. 17,
2012), report and recommendation approved, 2013 WL 593485
(D.N.H. Feb. 14, 2013) (pointing out the convergence between the
theories of unavailability and estoppel).
argument this way:
10
He frames his
Crosby reasonably became afraid to ask for help from
the SCHOC after the beating because Baggs’
announcement worsened the harassment and threats,
resulting in a beating. Crosby Aff. ¶ 8. Between the
Correction Officers’ refusal to take action, the
supervisor’s reiteration of the same policy of
inaction, and Baggs’ announcement to the pod, the
SCHOC defendants rendered the grievance process
unavailable to Crosby.
Pl.’s Mem. of Law (doc. no. 35-1) 13.
Application of either the unavailability theory or the
estoppel theory typically entails a focus on the actions or
inactions of corrections officers, and a determination of
whether their conduct prevented a prisoner from exhausting his
or her administrative remedies.
See Thompson v. Gordon, No. 09-
cv-82-SM, 2010 WL 2629416, at *2 (D.N.H. June 28, 2010)
(“estoppel principles may nullify the exhaustion requirement,
but that type of estoppel must be based upon what the defendants
themselves said or did”).
Generally, the calculus requires
affirmative misconduct on the part of a corrections employee,
see Kaba v. Stepp, 458 F.3d 678, 684 (7th Cir. 2006) (quoting
Dole v. Chandler, 438 F.3d 804, 809 (7th Cir. 2006)), and
further requires that the misconduct was sufficient to cause “‘a
similarly situated individual of ordinary firmness’ [to] have
deemed [administrative remedies] [un]available,” Hemphill, 380
F.3d at 688 (quoting Davis v. Goord, 320 F.3d 346, 353 (2d Cir.
2003)).
Examples of affirmative misconduct include: (1)
11
threatening a prisoner with retaliation for filing a grievance,
see Hemphill, 380 F.3d at 688; (2) failing to respond to a
grievance of the issue underlying the prisoner’s suit, see id.
at 687 n.6 (citing Jernigan v. Stuchell, 304 F.3d 1030, 1032
(10th Cir. 2002); Lewis v. Washington, 300 F.3d 829, 833 (7th
Cir. 2002); Foulk v. Charrier, 262 F.3d 687, 698 (8th Cir.
2001); Underwood v. Wilson, 151 F.3d 292, 295 (5th Cir. 1998));
(3) failing to transmit a grievance to an appropriate
decisionmaker, see Ojo, 2012 WL 7150497, at *6; (4) failing to
provide a prisoner with the forms on which to file a grievance,
see Dale v. Lappin, 376 F.3d 652, 656 (7th Cir. 2004); and (5)
providing a prisoner with misinformation about the grievance
process on which the prisoner relied to his detriment, see Brown
v. Croak, 312 F.3d 109, 111-12 (3d Cir. 2002).
Crosby has neither alleged nor produced evidence of conduct
by any correction officer or other official, with respect to his
ability to complain about his assault, that resembles any of the
conduct described in the cases cited above.
The only conduct by
jail employees that Crosby identifies as preventing him from
grieving his assault is Officer Baggs’s visit to the pod,
approximately a week before the incident, to admonish prisoners
against harassing or threatening one another.
While Crosby may
not agree with the steps that Officer Baggs took in response to
12
his complaint, that response does not rise to the level of
affirmative misconduct that prevented Crosby from grieving his
assault, especially in light of Crosby’s own testimony that
Officer Baggs did not mention any names when he addressed the
pod.
Because Crosby can identify no affirmative misconduct by
jail employees, he is not entitled to excusal from the
exhaustion requirement on grounds of unavailability or estoppel.
3. Special Circumstances
While there is some overlap between Crosby’s two arguments,
his principal argument for excusal from the exhaustion
requirement relies upon the doctrine of special circumstances.
Crosby argues that because the grievance he filed with Officer
Baggs resulted in his beating, he was justified in deciding not
to grieve the beating itself, based upon a reasonable fear that
another grievance would result in another beating.
Pl.’s Mem.
of Law (doc. no. 35-1) 15.
In Hemphill, the court identified two kinds of special
circumstances that might justify a prisoner’s failure to
exhaust.
The first is when a prisoner’s failure to comply with
his jail’s grievance procedure is based upon an interpretation
of the jail’s procedures that is erroneous, but reasonable.
380 F.3d at 689-90.
See
The other special circumstance contemplated
13
by the Hemphill court comes into play when corrections officials
threaten a prisoner in a manner that does not rise to the level
of making administrative remedies actually unavailable but,
still, is sufficient to support a reasonable fear of retaliation
by corrections officials.
See id. at 690.
This case involves neither of the two special circumstances
described in Hemphill.
Crosby does not argue that his failure
to grieve his assault was the result of an erroneous but
reasonable interpretation of SCHOC regulations.
And, he does
not identify any threat of retaliation by correction officers
that prevented him grieving his assault.
Thus, this case falls
outside the boundaries of the doctrine described in Hemphill,
and this court is not inclined to extend that doctrine to cover
the circumstances of this case, principally because the conduct
on which it is based, i.e., Officer Baggs’s meeting with the
prisoners on Crosby’s pod, cannot be reasonably characterized as
affirmative misconduct with respect to Crosby’s ability to
grieve future incidents.
However, even if the court were to extend the specialcircumstances doctrine to cover claims based on conduct by
corrections officers other than threats, such as Officer Baggs’s
meeting on Crosby’s pod, Crosby’s claim would still fail.
With
regard to the special circumstance of threats of retaliation,
14
the operative legal standard is “whether a similarly situated
individual of ordinary firmness would have been deterred from
following regular procedures.”
Hemphill, 380 F.3d at 690
(citation, internal quotation marks, and punctuation omitted).
The court presumes that a similar standard would apply to a
claim such as the one Crosby is advancing here.
Even accepting
as true Crosby’s theory that his beating resulted from the
meeting that Officer Baggs conducted in response to his
grievance,5 a person of ordinary firmness would not have been
deterred from grieving the October 20 assault by the aftermath
of Officer Baggs’s meeting on the pod.
The impediment to Crosby’s ability to satisfy this test is
that the circumstances surrounding the Baggs meeting and
Crosby’s beating are materially dissimilar.
That is, the
situation involving the report to Officer Baggs involved inmates
retaliating against Crosby due to their perception of him as a
“rat” or informant.
The situation involving the October 20
assault is dissimilar in that the assault was out in the open,
5
For purposes of the exhaustion analysis, the court will
presume this theory to be true. As a factual matter, however,
there is nothing the record to support the idea that Braley was
motivated to assault Crosby because of anything that Officer
Baggs said on the pod. Rather, Crosby’s own deposition
testimony establishes that he and his alleged antagonists were
able to set aside their differences while on the basketball
court and that Braley’s assault resulted from anger over losing
a basketball game to Crosby.
15
correction officers witnessed it, and outside law enforcement
became involved.
Thus, it is hard to see how the alleged
retaliation, by inmates, that followed the Baggs meeting might
have dissuaded a hypothetical “individual of ordinary firmness”
who suffered from a public assault from utilizing the SCHOC
grievance process.
In short, because the subject of the
complaint to Officer Baggs was so different from any possible
complaint Crosby could have made in response to his assault,
Officer Baggs’s response to the earlier complaint would not have
deterred a person of ordinary firmness from grieving the October
20 assault.
Finally, the court notes that Crosby attempts to analogize
this case to Marquez v. Antilus, No. 08-cv-522-SM, 2010 WL
2629409 (D.N.H. June 28, 2010), in which Judge McAuliffe denied
the defendants’ motion for summary judgment for failure to
exhaust in reliance upon the special-circumstances doctrine and
the plaintiff’s production of evidence that corrections officers
threatened to retaliate against him if he reported their
conduct.
In short, because Crosby has produced no evidence that
any correction officer ever threatened him with retaliation,
this case is materially distinguishable from Marquez.
Rather,
it has more in common with Thompson, 2010 WL 2629416, in which
Judge McAuliffe granted summary judgment to the defendants on
16
exhaustion grounds, over the plaintiff’s estoppel-based
objection.
As Judge McAuliffe explained:
A generalized, unspecific, and subjective belief
or fear of retaliation on the part of an inmate cannot
give rise to estoppel excusing exhaustion — estoppel
principles may nullify the exhaustion requirement, but
that type of estoppel must be based upon what the
defendants themselves said or did. If an inmate’s
generalized subjective fear of retaliation,
unsupported by objective evidence of a threat, or
other reliable grounds to fear retaliation, was
sufficient to negate the exhaustion requirement, the
requirement would be substantially undermined,
contrary to the Supreme Court’s holding in Porter, 534
U.S. at 532.
Id. at *2.
So too here.
Calling Crosby’s fear of further
assaults at the hands of fellow inmates a special circumstance
excusing exhaustion wound run counter to Porter and the intent
of Congress in enacting the PLRA with its strict exhaustion
requirements.
The bottom line is this.
Defendants are entitled to
dismissal of Crosby’s federal claims because it is undisputed
that Crosby failed to exhaust the administrative remedies
available to him for complaining about his assault, and Crosby
has not proffered a valid justification for failing to do so.
B. Supplemental Jurisdiction
Presuming that the court would grant them summary judgment
on Counts I, II, or IV, defendants ask the court to decline to
exercise supplemental jurisdiction over Counts VI, VII-A, VII-B,
17
and VIII, which arise under state law.
Plaintiff objects.
A “district court[ ] may decline to exercise supplemental
jurisdiction over a claim [arising under state law] . . . if
. . . [it] has dismissed all claims over which it has original
jurisdiction.”
28 U.S.C. § 1367(c)(3).
As the court of appeals
has recently explained:
The district court has considerable authority whether
to exercise this power, considering factors such as
judicial economy, convenience, fairness to litigants,
and comity. [Newman v. Burgin, 930 F.2d 955, 963 (1st
Cir. 1991).]
When a plaintiff’s anchor claim is a federal
cause of action and the court unfavorably disposes of
the plaintiff’s federal claim at the early stages of a
suit, well before trial, the court generally dismisses
any supplemental state-law claims without prejudice.
Rodriguez v. Doral Mortg. Corp., 57 F.3d 1168, 1177
(1st Cir. 1995); see also Martinez v. Colon, 54 F.3d
980, 990 (1st Cir. 1995) (affirming dismissal without
prejudice of pendent claims when the district court
determined “far in advance of trial that no legitimate
federal question existed”).
Ramos-Echevarría v. Pichis, Inc., 659 F.3d 182, 191 (1st Cir.
2011) (emphasis added).
That said,
a district court must exercise “informed discretion”
when deciding whether to assert supplemental
jurisdiction over state law claims. Roche v. John
Hancock Mutual Life Ins. Co., 81 F.3d 249, 256–57 (1st
Cir. 1996). No categorical rule governs the analysis;
a court must weigh concerns of comity, judicial
economy, convenience, and fairness. See id. at 257;
Carnegie–Mellon [Univ. v. Cohill], 484 U.S. [343,] 350
[(1988)] (observing that this analysis is prescribed
by [United Mine Workers of Am. v.] Gibbs[, 383 U.S.
715 (1966)]).
18
Redondo Const. Corp. v. Izquierdo, 662 F.3d 42, 49 (1st Cir.
2011) (parallel citation omitted).
In Roche, the court of appeals held that the district court
acted “squarely within the realm of its discretion,” 81 F.3d at
257, when it retained supplemental jurisdiction over state
claims in a case where “[t]he litigation had matured well beyond
its nascent stages, discovery had closed, the summary judgment
record was complete, the federal and state claims were
interconnected, and powerful interests in both judicial economy
and fairness tugged in favor of retaining jurisdiction.”
Id.
In contrast, in Redondo, the court of appeals held “that it was
not within the district court’s permissible range of discretion
to decline to exercise jurisdiction over [the plaintiff’s] local
law claims,” 662 F.3d 50, where “[t]he district court declined
to exercise supplemental jurisdiction only four days before
trial was scheduled to begin, when the action had been pending
in federal court for more than six years, the summary judgment
record had been complete for nearly a year, and the parties were
almost completely prepared for trial,” id. at 49.
In this case, discovery has closed, trial is scheduled for
the September 16, 2014, trial period, pre-trial materials have
been filed by Crosby, and pre-trial motion practice is underway.
19
Not only does Crosby have a reasonable interest in the
expeditious resolution of his claims, so, too, does Braley have
an interest in the speedy resolution of Crosby’s claim against
him.
Under these circumstances, judicial economy, convenience,
and fairness all weigh in favor retaining jurisdiction over
Crosby’s state-law claims.
Accordingly, the court does not
accept defendants’ invitation to decline to exercise
supplemental jurisdiction over those claims.
Conclusion
For the reasons detailed above, Counts I, II, and IV are
dismissed due to Crosby’s failure to exhaust the administrative
remedies available to him.
But, defendants’ request for
dismissal of Crosby’s state-law claims is denied, and the case
remains on track for trial of Counts VI, VII-A, VII-B, VIII, and
IX.
The court concludes by addressing two loose ends.
First,
it does not appear that Sgt. McGowen has ever been served.
Second, Count VIII of Crosby’s complaint, captioned “Respondeat
Superior,” appears to duplicate the negligence claim stated in
Count VII-B.
Crosby has seven days from the date of this order
to show cause why: (1) his claims against Sgt. McGowen should
20
not be dismissed pursuant to Rule 4(m) of the Federal Rules of
Civil Procedure; and (2) Count VIII should not be dismissed.
SO ORDERED.
__________________________
Landya McCafferty
United States District Judge
September 3, 2014
cc:
Jacob Braley, pro se
Jacob John Brian Marvelley, Esq.
Daniel J. Mullen, Esq.
Robert A. Shaines, Esq.
21
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