Gomez v. Ercole et al
Filing
155
AMENDED MEMORANDUM ORDER ACCEPTING THE REPORT OF THE MAGISTRATE JUDGE, ADOPTING THE REPORT AS THE OPINION OF THE COURT, GRANTING DEFENDANTS' MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT, AND DIRECTING THE CLERK OF COURT TO ENTER JUDGMENT DISMISSING THE CASE for 149 Report and Recommendations. I have reviewed the Report. I accept it and adopt it as the opinion of the court. For the reasons herein, The Clerk of the Court shall enter judgment in favor of the remaining Defendants dismissing the compla int, and terminate the motion at Docket #131 and any other pending motions. Plaintiff has thirty days from the entry of judgment to appeal to the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit; he commences an appeal by filing a Notice of A ppeal with the Clerk of this court (not the Clerk of the Court of Appeals). This amended decision is the operative order in this case. It constitutes the decision and order of the court. (Signed by Judge Colleen McMahon on 6/9/2015) Copies Mailed By Chambers. (kgo)
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
SOUTHERN DISTRICT OF NEW YORK
USDCSDNY
DOCUMENT
ELECTRONICALLY FILED
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JUAN C. GOMEZ,
Plaintiff,
11 Civ. 6844 (CM)(JLC)
-againstRABBI CHILL and R. KOSLOWSKI,
Defendants.
AMENDED MEMORANDUM ORDER ACCEPTING THE
REPORT OF THE MAGISTRATE JUDGE, ADOPTING THE
REPORT AS THE OPINION OF THE COURT, GRANTING
DEFENDANTS' MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT, AND
DIRECTINGTHE CLERK OF COURT TO ENTER JUDGMENT
DISMISSING THE CASE
McMahon, J.:
The court has received the Report and Recommendation of The Hon. James L. Cott,
U.S.M.J., filed April 17, 2015.
No objections have been filed. To complete the Magistrate Judge's detailed story of
Plaintiff's dilatoriness with regard to this case (which concerns matters that took place in 2008!):
Mr. Gomez had until May 4 to file objections to the Report. Instead, he sent the court a letter
(Docket #150), which he legended "Notice of Appeal and Request for Stay," seeking an
indefinite stay of proceedings, on the ground that he had been forced to send certain unspecified
legal materials home (but nowhere explaining either what those materials were or why, upon
receipt of the Report, he had not taken steps to retrieve them from home). This court entered an
order on April 30, 2015, denying Gomez' request for a stay (which was essentially the same
request he had unsuccessfully made to Magistrate Judge Cott- twice - as recounted in the
Report). I did Grant Gomez an extension of time until June 5 to file substantive objections to the
Report.
On June 4, the Pro Se Office received a letter from Mr. Gomez, dated May 20, 2015. In
that letter, Mr. Gomez complained about being robbed, losing the court's "letter," and asking for
an additional extension of time of two months so he could go to the Law Library to make
Copies~faxed/handed to counsel on l1..1J /S
"copies" of the "proof that I was robbed." Plaintiff also indicated that the environment in prison
was "not conductive to me healing from my multiple traumas," and that while he was having
difficulty focusing on any of his various pending legal matters, he needed to "address the
imperative issues in my instant criminal case and that is my main and first priority." He also
stated that he found it "impossible for me to go at your pace." Finally Plaintiff insisted that a stay
of proceedings with respect to the motion for summary judgment was needed because he wanted
to appeal an earlier decision of Magistrate Judge Cott to the "Court of Appeals, 2d Circuit [sic]
Court," and that he "c[ould] not try to appeal and do this case at the same time."
None of the above entitles Plaintiff to any further stay of these overly old proceedings.
The request for an additional two months, over and above all the time that he has been granted,
both by Magistrate Judge Cott and myself, is denied. 1
I am sorry that Mr. Gomez lost the April 30 order, but it is obvious, from the text of his
May 30 letter, that he knows what it said: you have until June 5 to file objections to the Report.
He did not need to have a copy of the April 30 order in hand in order to file objections to Judge
Cott's Report, and he does not indicate in the May 30 letter that he lost his copy of the Report.
Gomez's complaint about being the victim of theft makes no sense. For one thing, the
theft he complains of is a theft of food - not of anything that is relevant to this case.
Furthermore, Mr. Gomez previously told the court that his relevant legal materials had been sent
home, so they could not have been stolen from him at the prison. Once again, Plaintiff does not
indicate that he has made the slightest effort to have someone at home send those materials back
to him so that he could file objections to the Report.
Plaintiff may prefer to expend his limited energies on his criminal case, but he initiated
this civil action, which relates to events that took place seven years ago and which has been on
this court's calendar for four years. Plaintiff has been shown every courtesy; he has been granted
repeated extensions of time; as a result, this action has been allowed to drag on far longer than
necessary. In the final analysis, Plaintiff does not get to set the pace at which his civil action
proceeds; the court sets the pace. So far, in deference to Plaintiff, this case has proceeded at a
snail's pace. Even that seems to be too much for Mr. Gomez. But the defendants have rights, too;
and the time has come to bring this matter to a close.
Finally, Plaintiff asks for a stay so he can take an appeal to the Second Circuit. But
staying these proceedings will only delay his ability to petition the Court of Appeals, since the
court needs to enter a final judgment in order for him to appeal. I am happy to facilitate Mr.
1 It bears noting that plaintiff has a history of asking for and being granted extensions of time, only to file no papers.
As Judge Cott noted in the Report (page 6), the court granted Gomez several extensions to time to file papers in
opposition to the motion to dismiss (which was granted in part and denied in part), but Gomez never filed anything
with the court. He was also granted one extension of time to file papers in opposition to the motion for summary
judgment by Judge Cott, but filed nothing. I have no reason to believe that Mr. Gomez would ever file proper
objections to the Report, even if he were given yet another extension beyond the one I have already given him.
Gomez' quest to get this matter before the Court of Appeals; I will do so by accepting the Report
as the opinion of the court without further ado, and directing the Clerk to enter judgment
dismissing this case.
I have reviewed the Report. I accept it and adopt it as the opinion of the court.
The Report concludes Deputy Warden Koskowski should have summary judgment
dismissing Plaintiffs Eighth Amendment claim of deliberate indifference to medical needs
because (1) the undisputed facts reveal that Gomez received adequate medical care; (2) Gomez'
injuries are not sufficiently serious to form the basis of an Eighth Amendment claim; and (3) the
record establishes that Koskowski was not subjectively indifferent to Gomez's medical needs.
While I agree that the record amply supports a judgment in Koskowski' s favor on any one of
these grounds, it is plainly the case that pain resulting from his injury (a contusion on the right
thigh, with no fracture) is not a sufficiently serious injury so that deprivation of medical
treatment qualifies as cruel and unusual punishment for Eighth Amendment purposes.
The learned Magistrate Judge analyzed Plaintiffs First Amendment claim against Rabbi
Chill for allegedly denying Gomez the right to attend Jewish services in two tranches: the period
before he was sent to the SHU and the period after he was sent to the SHU. The dividing date
was September 23, 2008.
As to the former tranche, the learned Magistrate concluded that Plaintiff failed to his
exhaust administrative remedies. I concur with that assessment; there is absolutely no record
that plaintiff ever filed a grievance concerning any alleged failure to allow him to attend Jewish
services before he was admitted to the SHU on September 23, 2008, and plaintiff has neither
pleaded nor testified to any circumstances that would have caused administrative remedies to be
unavailable to him during that period. 2
As to the latter tranche, Magistrate Judge Cott concluded that there were questions of fact
concerning exhaustion and whether Rabbi Chill actually prevented Plaintiff from attending
services, but nonetheless recommended that the motion for summary judgment be granted
because, on the undisputed facts, (1) prison regulations bar inmates who are in SHU from
attending communal events including congregate religious services, and (2) there were legitimate
penological reasons to keep Gomez in the SHU from and after September 23, 2008 until he could
2
This court believes that the Second Circuit's so-called Hemphill test for whether an inmate's failure to exhaust
administrative remedies can be excused or justified did not survive, and could not logically have survived, the
Supreme Court's decision in Woodford v. Ngo, 548 U.S. 81 (2008). The Second Circuit has consistently refused to
opine on that issue, however, leaving those of us at the district court level in limbo. However, in this case that is of
no moment, because I agree with Judge Cott that Gomez has not pointed to a single fact that would have rendered
his failure to exhaust challengeable under Hemphill (See Report at 12). The Circuit has indicated its belief that,
where administrative remedies are actually unavailable to a prisoner, there is no requirement to exhaust. Johnston v.
Maha, 460 F. Spp'x 11, 15 n.6 (2d Cir. 2012). Magistrate Judge Cott believed that there were genuine issues of
material fact as to the availability of administrative remedies; as mentioned in the text, I need not grapple with the
issue.
be transferred out of Green Haven. While I would conclude that Plaintiff did not exhaust this
aspect of his First Amendment claim either, on the basis of Woodford-which I believe to be the
controlling authority -- I recognize that there is no need to reach this issue, because the learned
Magistrate Judge is plainly correct on the merits.
Finally, Judge Cott dismissed Plaintiffs First Amendment claim concerning a lack of
kosher meals because the undisputed facts demonstrate that Plaintiff began receiving kosher
meals more than three years before the commencement of this lawsuit, so that any claim he
might conceivably assert would be time-barred. I concur.
The Clerk of the Court shall enter judgment in favor of the remaining Defendants
dismissing the complaint, and terminate the motion at Docket #131 and any other pending
motions. Plaintiff has thirty days from the entry of judgment to appeal to the United States Court
of Appeals for the Second Circuit; he commences an appeal by filing a Notice of Appeal with the
Clerk of this court (not the Clerk of the Court of Appeals).
This amended decision is the operative order in this case. It constitutes the decision and
order of the court.
Dated: June 9, 2015
U.S.D.J.
BY ECF TO THE ATTORNEY GENERAL
BY FIRST CLASS MAIL TO PLAINTIFF AT THE FOLLOWING ADDRESS
Juan C. Gomez
01-A-0483
Marcy Correctional Facility
P.O. Box 3600
Marcy, New York 13403-3600
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