Gonzalez v. Hasty ( 2011 )


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  • 07-1787-pr
    Gonzalez v. Hasty
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
    _______________________
    August Term, 2008
    (Argued:            April 24, 2009            Decided: June 22, 2011)
    Docket No. 07-1787-pr
    _______________________
    ESTEBAN GONZALEZ,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    -v.-
    WARDEN DENNIS W. HASTY, WARDEN GREGORY PARKS, ASSOCIATE
    WARDEN PERKINS, ASSOCIATE WARDEN JAMES SHERMAN, ASSOCIATE
    WARDEN POWERS, AGENT JOHN FEENEY, SPECIAL INVESTIGATIVE,
    CAPTAIN NELSON APONTE, CAPTAIN SALVATORE LOPRESTI,
    LIEUTENANT BARRY, LIEUTENANT GURINO, DEPUTY CAPTAIN
    VENERONI, STEVEN BARRERE, LIEUTENANT RODRIGUEZ, PSYCHOLOGIST
    DR. KAWERSKI, PSYCHOLOGIST DR. HESS, LIEUTENANT WHITE,
    LINTON THOMAS KUCHARSKI,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    _______________________
    Before:        DENNIS JACOBS,
    Chief Judge,
    ROSEMARY S. POOLER,
    PETER W. HALL,
    Circuit Judges.
    Plaintiff-Appellant Esteban Gonzalez appeals from an
    order of the United States District Court for the Southern
    District of New York (Berman, J.) granting defendants’
    motion to dismiss. We hold that an inmate is entitled to
    -1-
    equitable tolling of the statute of limitations for a civil
    action while he is exhausting administrative remedies as
    prescribed by the Prison Litigation Reform Act. VACATED and
    REMANDED.
    Judge Jacobs concurs in a separate opinion.
    _______________________
    MICHAEL A. YOUNG, New York, New York, appearing for
    Plaintiff-Appellant.
    BRIAN M. FELDMAN (David S. Jones, on the brief), for
    Preet Bharara, United States Attorney for the
    Southern District of New York, New York, New York,
    appearing for Defendants-Appellees.
    _______________________
    HALL, Circuit Judge:
    Esteban Gonzalez appeals from the judgment of the
    United States District Court for the Southern District of
    New York (Berman, J.) granting defendants-appellees’ motion
    to dismiss Gonzalez’s claims brought pursuant to 
    18 U.S.C. § 1983
     and Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents of Federal
    Bureau of Narcotics, 
    403 U.S. 388
     (1971).    Gonzalez claims
    that the district court erred in finding that the statute of
    limitations had run on the first of his two causes of action
    and in dismissing his second cause of action for improper
    venue.   We VACATE and REMAND on the grounds that claims
    brought by an inmate under the Prison Litigation Reform Act
    (“PLRA”), 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a), are entitled to equitable
    tolling during the time-period the inmate is exhausting his
    -2-
    administrative remedies, as required by the PLRA.     We also
    VACATE the judgment insofar as it dismissed some of
    Gonzalez’s claims for improper venue and REMAND with
    instructions that the court transfer those claims to the
    United States District Court for the Eastern District of New
    York if the court deems it proper to do so upon
    reexamination of all of Gonzalez’s claims.
    BACKGROUND
    Beginning on February 28, 1999, Esteban Gonzalez, an
    inmate in the Metropolitan Correction Center (“MCC”) in
    lower Manhattan, was confined to the MCC’s special housing
    unit (“SHU”).   Gonzalez maintains that he was confined in
    the SHU for two and a half years, after which he was
    transferred to the Metropolitan Detention Center (“MDC”), in
    Brooklyn, New York, on July 24, 2001.     Upon arriving at the
    MDC, Gonzalez alleges that he was immediately confined in
    that facility’s SHU, and remained there until his transfer
    out of the MDC nearly ten months later.     Gonzalez claims
    that he was unlawfully confined in SHU for almost eleven
    hundred consecutive days.
    A “special housing unit” separates inmates from the
    general population either via “administrative detention” or
    -3-
    “disciplinary segregation.”   
    28 C.F.R. §§ 541.20
    , 541.22.
    Gonzalez was placed in administrative detention, a “non-
    punitive” form of separation, 
    28 C.F.R. § 541.21
    , whereby,
    Gonzalez claims, inmates are confined to their cells for 23
    hours per day, privileges are limited, and handcuffs are
    mandatory whenever the SHU inmate is outside of his cell.
    3] Administrative detention is used when “the inmate’s
    continued presence within the general population would pose
    a serious threat to life, property, self, staff or other
    inmates, or to the security or orderly running of the
    institution.”   
    28 C.F.R. § 541.22
    (a).
    In order to ensure inmates are placed in a SHU for
    cause, and once there, only for a limited period of time,
    federal regulations governing the Bureau of Prisons (“BOP”)
    designate that a Segregation Review Officer (“SRO”) be
    responsible for conducting a review of the administrative
    detention within three work days of its commencement, hold a
    hearing for each inmate confined for over seven continuous
    days, and “thereafter review these cases on the record (in
    the inmate’s absence) each week, and hold a hearing and
    review these cases formally at least every 30 days.”     
    28 C.F.R. § 541.22
    (c)(1).   Whenever administrative detention
    -4-
    extends beyond 30 days a psychiatric or psychological
    assessment is required in order to assess whether the inmate
    poses a threat to himself or others.   
    Id.
       Administrative
    detention should only be imposed for short periods of time
    except when it is for the inmate’s protection or there are
    exceptional circumstances concerning security or complex
    investigations, in which case a monthly report is required.
    
    Id.
       “The SRO shall release an inmate from administrative
    detention when reasons for placement cease to exist.”     
    Id.
    Gonzalez, pro se, filed a Bivens complaint in the
    United States District Court for the Southern District of
    New York on May 31, 2005 against Dennis Hasty, warden of the
    MCC during Gonzalez’s confinement, who then became the
    warden of MDC shortly before Gonzalez was transferred to
    that institution.   Gonzalez also named as defendants
    correctional and mental health staff in both facilities.
    The verified complaint alleged, inter alia, that the
    defendants failed to conduct segregation review hearings
    during Gonzalez’s SHU confinement in the MCC and the MDC,
    falsely completed and furnished Gonzalez records of hearings
    that never occurred, and at no point conducted meaningful
    psychological assessments.   The complaint raised two
    -5-
    separate claims, the first addressing his treatment at the
    MCC (in Manhattan), and the second focusing on the MDC (in
    Brooklyn).   Gonzalez alleged that the reason for this
    mistreatment by two separate penal facilities was a
    conspiracy engineered by Hasty as retribution for Gonzalez’s
    allegations that Hasty was a racist.     The consequence of the
    defendants’ conspiratorial activities, Gonzalez pleaded,
    were numerous violations of his First, Fifth and Eighth
    Amendment rights.     Gonzalez alleged that he exhausted his
    administrative remedies on August 8, 2002.
    Following a substantial delay arising from Gonzalez’s
    failure to effect proper service, Defendants moved to
    dismiss Gonzalez’s MCC claims as time-barred by a three-year
    statute of limitations, and the MDC claims on the grounds of
    improper venue.     They asserted that the last date upon which
    Gonzalez could base any of his claims against the MCC
    defendants was July 2001 when he was transferred to the MDC,
    and that the statute of limitations, therefore, expired in
    July of 2004.     Gonzalez, through counsel, argued in response
    that his claims were timely under the continuing violation
    doctrine, adding that he “was compelled to exhaust his
    -6-
    administrative remedies prior to filing his lawsuit.”1
    Gonzalez pointed to the PLRA, which mandates that “[n]o
    action shall be brought with respect to prison conditions
    under section 1983 of this title, or any other Federal law,
    by a prisoner . . . until such administrative remedies as
    are available are exhausted.”   
    42 U.S.C. § 1997
    (e)(a).   And
    relying on the Fifth Circuit’s decision in Harris v. Hegman,
    
    198 F.3d 153
    , 157-59 (5th Cir. 1999) (reversing the
    dismissal of a prisoner’s civil rights suit on grounds that
    his exhaustion of administrative remedies tolled the
    applicable statute of limitations), he argued that he had
    complied with the PLRA and that this “had the effect of
    1
    Gonzalez asserted that because Warden Hasty was the
    “thread that tie[d] all of the[] allegations together,” the
    continuous violation began with his February 1999
    incarceration at the MCC and continued until his transfer
    out of the MDC in May 2002. See Nat’l R.R. Passenger Corp.
    v. Morgan, 
    536 U.S. 101
    , 118 (2002) (holding that in the
    context of a hostile work environment claim filed under
    Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 only one incident
    comprising the hostile work environment need fall within the
    relevant limitations period because the continuing violation
    doctrine will render the entire claim timely); see also
    Shomo v. City of New York, 
    579 F.3d 176
    , (2d Cir. 2008)
    (applying the continuing violation doctrine to deliberate
    indifference claims brought under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    ). We
    decline to decide on this record, however, whether the
    continuing violation doctrine allows the two confinements to
    be aggregated in order to preserve MCC claims that might
    otherwise have been lost absent prolonged tolling, and to
    lengthen the period of confinement in SHU.
    -7-
    tolling the limitations period.”     As for the defendants’
    allegations of improper venue, Gonzalez argued that his
    injuries suffered in the MDC were a continuation of those
    begun in the MCC, and that dismissal would result in a
    miscarriage of justice.
    In February 2007, Magistrate Judge Ellis issued a
    report and recommendation stating that Gonzalez’s
    “allegations of a conspiracy at the MCC . . . would be
    barred by the three year statute of limitations,” and “any
    conspiracy to deprive [Gonzalez] of his constitutional
    rights at the MDC would constitute a new conspiracy, and the
    Southern District would not be the proper venue.”     The
    magistrate judge also found that Gonzalez “fail[ed] to
    establish a provable claim.”    Gonzalez filed an objection to
    the report, arguing that: (1) under the continuing violation
    doctrine his claims were still timely, (2) venue was proper
    because of a “sufficient connection between the offending
    conduct and the district in which the action [had] been
    filed,” and (3) he had made sufficient factual allegations
    to support his causes of action.
    The district court found that, even assuming Gonzalez
    had shown the “compelling circumstances” necessary to
    -8-
    prevail on a continuing violation theory, his MCC claim
    nonetheless ripened when he was transferred out of the MCC
    on July 24, 2001, and any constitutional violations that
    allegedly occurred at the MDC would constitute a new
    conspiracy.    Gonzalez, 
    2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 21668
    , at *8, 9
    (S.D.N.Y. Mar. 27, 2007).   The court declined to reach
    Gonzalez’s exhaustion of administrative remedies argument
    “because, as noted . . . , the Southern District of New York
    is not the proper venue for determination of the MDC Claim.”
    
    Id.
     at *10 n.5.   The district court failed to address,
    however, whether tolling of the statute of limitations
    should apply to Gonzalez’s MCC claims, which arose in
    Manhattan and where venue was proper.    The district court
    dismissed Gonzalez’s MDC’s claims for improper venue,
    finding that none of the events or occurrences giving rise
    to the claims occurred in the Southern District of New York.
    
    Id. at *11
    .
    DISCUSSION
    A.   Standard of Review
    We review de novo a district court’s grant of a motion
    to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil
    Procedure, accepting as true all allegations in the
    -9-
    complaint and drawing all reasonable inferences in favor of
    the non-moving party.   Vietnam Ass’n for Victims of Agent
    Orange v. Dow Chem. Co., 
    517 F.3d 104
    , 115 (2d Cir. 2008).
    When the district court makes a venue determination on the
    basis of the pleadings and affidavits, we review de novo the
    legal question of whether petitioner has established a prima
    facia case that venue was proper.     Gulf Ins. Co. v.
    Glasbrenner, 
    417 F.3d 353
    , 355 (2d Cir. 2005).
    B.   Tolling the Statute of Limitations
    Gonzalez was transferred from the MCC to the MDC on
    July 24, 2001, and his complaint was not received by the
    court until May 31, 2005.     Absent tolling, therefore, his
    claims against the MCC officials would be barred by the
    three-year statute of limitations applied by federal courts
    sitting in New York to Bivens claims.     See Kronisch v.
    United States, 
    150 F.3d 112
    , 123 (2d Cir. 1998) (“Federal
    Courts in New York apply a three-year statute of limitations
    period to Bivens claims.”).     Gonzalez asserts that the
    statute of limitations should be tolled for the time period
    during which he was actively exhausting his administrative
    remedies, and that because he filed his complaint less than
    -10-
    three years after he had exhausted all of his administrative
    remedies, all of his claims are timely.
    A statute of limitations provides an affirmative
    defense, and the burden is on the defendant to establish
    when a federal claim accrues.    See Fed. R. Civ. P. 8(c).
    Notwithstanding that exhaustion is an affirmative defense
    not required to be pleaded in an inmate’s complaint, Jones
    v. Bock, 
    549 U.S. 199
    , 216 (2007), Gonzalez did plead it.
    See Complaint ¶ 30.    We thus accept as true that on the
    stated date, August 8, 2002, Gonzalez exhausted his
    administrative remedies.    See Dow Chem. Co., 
    517 F.3d at 115
    .
    We have not previously determined whether the statute
    of limitations in a civil action by an inmate should be
    tolled during the time it takes the inmate to exhaust his
    administrative remedies under the PLRA.    See Sims v. Goord,
    151 F. App’x 12, 14 (2d Cir. 2005) (unpublished summary
    order) (recognizing that is unsettled in this Circuit
    whether a statute of limitations for a civil rights claim
    should be tolled while an inmate exhausts his administrative
    remedies).    “Statutes of limitations are generally subject
    to equitable tolling where necessary to prevent unfairness
    -11-
    to a plaintiff who is not at fault for her lateness in
    filing.”   Veltri v. Bldg. Serv. 32B-J Pension Fund, 
    393 F.3d 318
    , 322 (2d Cir. 2004).     “Equitable tolling is an
    extraordinary measure that applies only when plaintiff is
    prevented from filing despite exercising that level of
    diligence which could reasonably be expected in the
    circumstances.”   
    Id.
     (emphasis added).    Our sister circuits
    that have squarely confronted the question presented here
    have answered in the affirmative, holding that tolling is
    applicable during the time period in which an inmate is
    actively exhausting his administrative remedies.        See Brown
    v. Valoff, 
    422 F.3d 926
    , 942-43 (9th Cir. 2005); Clifford v.
    Gibbs, 
    298 F.3d 328
    , 332 (5th Cir. 2002); Johnson v. Rivera,
    
    272 F.3d 519
    , 522 (7th Cir. 2001); Brown v. Morgan, 
    209 F.3d 595
    , 596 (6th Cir. 2000).2
    2
    We note that as opposed to tolls that result in an
    entirely “intact” statute of limitations, e.g., a minority
    toll wherein once a claimant reaches the age of majority he
    still retains the entire statute of limitations applicable
    to the underlying claim, courts that toll PLRA claims apply
    the toll only to the time period in which the inmate is
    actively exhausting his administrative remedies, and not the
    anterior time period in between the accrual of the claim and
    when the prisoner initiated the administrative remedy
    process. See, e.g., Brown, 
    209 F.3d at 596
     (“[T]he statute
    of limitations which applied to Brown’s civil rights action
    was tolled for the period during which his available state
    remedies were being exhausted.” (emphasis added)). For
    example, if an inmate’s claim accrues on January 1, 2010,
    -12-
    Defendants assert that we need not decide whether to
    adopt an exhaustion toll for claims filed under the PLRA.
    Assuming arguendo equitable tolling is applicable,
    defendants argue that Gonzalez’s claim still fails because
    BOP regulations provide an administrative remedy period, “at
    the long end of the spectrum,” of one hundred and forty days
    from the filing of a remedy request, while Gonzalez’s claim
    implicates an administrative remedy period in excess of
    three hundred days.   The PLRA’s administrative remedy
    program for inmate grievances, 
    28 C.F.R. §§ 542.11-542.18
    ,
    requires that an inmate first attempt resolution of his or
    her grievance through informal channels before submitting a
    Request for Administrative Remedy (“RAR”). 
    28 C.F.R. § 542.13
    (a).   Should informal remedies prove unsuccessful, the
    inmate has twenty days from the occurrence of the incident
    to submit an RAR, although an extension may be allowed where
    the inmate demonstrates a valid reason for delay.    28 C.F.R.
    and the inmate does not begin pursuing administrative
    remedies until December 1, 2010, any subsequent tolling that
    may be applicable would not include this eleven month
    period. Cf. Smith v. McGinnis, 
    208 F.3d 13
    , 17 (2d Cir.
    2000) (explaining that for habeas petitioners filing under
    
    28 U.S.C. § 2254
     the “tolling provision excludes time during
    which properly filed state relief applications are pending,
    but does not reset the date from which the one-year statute
    of limitations begins to run”).
    -13-
    § 542.14.    The warden has 20 calendar days to respond to an
    RAR and, if not satisfied with the warden’s response, the
    inmate may appeal to the appropriate regional director
    within 20 calendar days of the date the warden signs the
    response.    
    28 C.F.R. §§ 542.15
    (a), 542.18.     If not satisfied
    with the regional director’s response, the inmate may appeal
    to the general counsel within 30 calendar days of the date
    the regional director signs the response.       
    28 C.F.R. § 542.15
    (a).    Once an appeal is filed, the regional director
    must respond within 30 calendar days and the general counsel
    within 40 calendar days, and if the time to respond is
    insufficient, it may be extended once by 20 days at the
    institution level, 30 days at the regional level, and 20
    days at the central office level.       
    28 C.F.R. § 542.18
    .
    Upon the inmate’s showing of a valid reason for delay, all
    the deadlines may be extended.       
    28 C.F.R. § 542.15
    (a).
    Under this latter provision, therefore, the time for
    achieving a resolution under the PLRA could be considerably
    longer than 140 days.    In some instances, it is certainly
    possible that a full three years could pass while an inmate
    exhausts his administrative remedies.       Cf. Abney v.
    McGinnis, 
    380 F.3d 663
    , 667 (2d Cir. 2004) (“[E]xhaustion
    -14-
    may be achieved in situations where prison officials fail to
    timely advance the inmate’s grievance or otherwise prevent
    him from seeking his administrative remedies . . . .”).
    Defendants’ assertion that there is a statutory maximum
    time-period beyond which equitable tolling will not save a
    claim thus finds no support in the applicable regulations,
    and certainly not in juxtaposition to the allegation in the
    complaint that Gonzalez’s administrative remedies were not
    exhausted until August 8, 2002.
    As noted, the Ninth, Fifth, Seventh, and Sixth Circuits
    have all adopted the rule that equitable tolling is
    applicable to the time period during which a prisoner-
    plaintiff is exhausting his administrative remedies pursuant
    to the PLRA.       See Brown, 
    422 F.3d at 942-43
    ; Clifford, 
    298 F.3d at 332
    ; Johnson, 
    272 F.3d at 522
    ; Brown, 
    209 F.3d at 596
    .3       “The ‘catch-22’ . . . is self-evident: the prisoner
    who files suit . . . prior to exhausting administrative
    remedies risks dismissal based upon § 1997e; whereas the
    prisoner who waits to exhaust his administrative remedies
    risks dismissal based upon untimeliness.” Johnson, 
    272 F.3d 3
    The Tenth Circuit has also adopted this rule, although
    not in a published opinion. See Roberts v. Barreras, 109 F.
    App’x 224 (10th Cir. 2004).
    -15-
    at 522.   Indeed, the exhaustion requirement in some
    circumstances may be nothing other than a “legal cause which
    prevent[s] the courts or their officers from taking
    cognizance of or acting on [a] plaintiff's action.”     Harris,
    
    198 F.3d at 158
     (quoting Burge v. Parish of St. Tammany, 
    996 F.2d 786
    , 788 (5th Cir. 1993) (internal quotations
    omitted)).   Furthermore, any other interpretation of the
    PLRA could “permit [prison officials] to exploit the
    exhaustion requirement through indefinite delay in
    responding to grievances.”   Lewis v. Washington, 
    300 F.3d 829
    , 833 (7th Cir. 2002) (internal quotations omitted).     For
    these reasons, we join our sister circuits and hold “that
    the applicable statute of limitations must be tolled while a
    prisoner completes the mandatory exhaustion process.”
    Brown, 
    422 F.3d at 943
    .
    Applying this rule here raises a problem, however.
    Although we accept as true Gonzalez’s allegation that he
    exhausted all of his administrative remedies by August 8,
    2002, the record is devoid of any facts indicating when
    Gonzalez first raised his administrative claims, thus
    initiating the exhaustion process.   And because the date on
    which Gonzalez first raised his administrative claims
    -16-
    demarcates the commencement of the period of time during
    which he was actively exhausting those claims, this
    fact—which is absent from the record—controls whether
    Gonzalez’s MCC claims are timely.    That is, under the rule
    we articulate today, the applicable three-year statute of
    limitations is tolled only during that exhaustion period and
    not during the period in between the accrual of those claims
    and when Gonzalez began the administrative remedy process.
    See Brown, 
    209 F.3d at 596
    .
    We cannot resolve this issue on the existing record.
    But because it is entirely possible that Gonzalez raised his
    administrative claims sufficiently in advance of August 8,
    2002, so as to render his MCC claims timely, we vacate the
    district court’s dismissal of those claims and remand with
    instructions that the court determine when Gonzalez
    initiated his administrative proceedings and whether, based
    on that date, his MCC claims are timely.4
    4
    Assuming that Gonzalez’s MCC claims accrued on July
    24, 2001 (the date he was transferred out of the MCC), those
    claims are timely only if the three-year statute of
    limitations period was tolled for at least 312 days, since
    Gonzalez filed his complaint on May 31, 2005 and, absent
    tolling, the limitations period expired on July 24, 2004
    (July 24, 2004 to May 31, 2005 = 312 days). Accordingly,
    assuming that Gonzalez finished exhausting his
    administrative remedies on August 8, 2002, the length of
    that exhaustion period—i.e., the period of time between when
    -17-
    C.      Venue
    Under 
    28 U.S.C. § 1406
    (a), district courts are
    instructed to dismiss an action brought in the wrong venue
    “or if it be in the interest of justice, transfer such case
    to any district or division in which it could have been
    brought.”    In a Bivens action, venue is governed by 
    28 U.S.C. § 1391
    (b), which provides that where jurisdiction is
    not founded on diversity of citizenship, a civil action may
    be brought only in “a judicial district in which a
    substantial part of the events or omissions giving rise to
    the claim occurred.”    We held in Daniel v. American Board of
    Emergency Medicine, 
    428 F.3d 408
    , 436 (2d Cir. 2005), that
    while “[c]ourts enjoy considerable discretion in deciding
    whether to transfer a case in the interest of justice . . .
    [a] ‘compelling reason’ for transfer is generally
    acknowledged when a plaintiff’s case, if dismissed, would be
    time-barred on refiling in the proper forum.”    Nonetheless,
    we should abstain from fashioning such a remedy when that
    Gonzalez initiated his administrative claims and when he
    exhausted those claims on August 8, 2002—must be at least
    312 days so as to render his MCC claims timely; that would
    be the length of time during which the three-year statute of
    limitations would be tolled.
    -18-
    case is a “sure loser.”    Moreno-Bravo v. Gonzalez, 
    463 F.3d 253
    , 263 (2d Cir. 2006).
    In dismissing Gonzalez’s MDC claims on the grounds of
    improper venue, the district court found that “any
    conspiracy to deprive Gonzalez of his constitutional rights
    at the MDC would constitute a new conspiracy . . . involving
    a different time period and a different group of
    Defendants.”   Gonzalez, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS, at *9.
    Clearly, if the claims must be re-filed in the Eastern
    District of New York, the only forum in which a substantial
    part of Gonzalez’s MDC claims arose, the action would be
    time-barred regardless of the time it has taken him to
    exhaust administrative remedies.     Gonzalez alleges nearly
    eleven hundred uninterrupted days of SHU confinement.     In
    light of BOP regulations stipulating that “[a]dministrative
    detention is to be used only for short periods of time
    except where an inmate needs long-term protection . . ., or
    where there are exceptional circumstances” we decline to
    find that Gonzalez’s case is a “clear loser.”     
    28 C.F.R. § 541.22
    (c); Moreno-Bravo, 
    463 F.3d at 263
    .     We instruct the
    district court on remand, therefore, that if on
    reexamination of the entirety of plaintiff’s claims it
    -19-
    determines that venue for the MDC claims is still improper
    in the Southern District of New York, then it shall transfer
    Gonzalez’s MDC claims to the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of New York.
    CONCLUSION
    For the foregoing reasons, we VACATE the District
    Court’s grant of defendants-appellees motion to dismiss, and
    REMAND for factual findings on the length of the
    administrative exhaustion period, its effect on the
    applicable statute of limitations, and for such further
    action as may be appropriate.   In addition, the District
    Court shall transfer Gonzalez’s MDC claim to the United
    States District Court for the Eastern District of New York
    if it deems it proper to do so upon reexamination of
    Gonzalez’s claims.
    -20-
    DENNIS JACOBS, Chief Judge, concurring:
    I concur in the very thorough opinion of the Court, and
    I write separately to register my view that, at this
    juncture, it would not be premature to affirm the dismissal
    as to all of the defendants other than Warden Hasty, on the
    alternative ground that the allegations of conspiracy are
    conclusory and perfunctory.
    It is sound craft to affirm on the alternative grounds,
    just as it is likewise sound for my colleagues to limit
    themselves to the grounds stated by the district court.     At
    the same time, the conspiracy claims that link other
    officials and employees of the prison to the warden are
    wholly insufficient, and appear based on nothing but the
    fact that all of these people worked for Warden Hasty at
    some time or another.   See, e.g., Gallop v. Cheney, --- F.3d
    ----, 
    2011 WL 1565858
    , at *3 (2d Cir. Apr. 27, 2011) (“It is
    well settled that claims of conspiracy ‘containing only
    conclusory, vague, or general allegations of conspiracy to
    deprive a person of constitutional rights cannot withstand a
    motion to dismiss.’” (quoting Leon v. Murphy, 
    988 F.2d 303
    ,
    311 (2d Cir. 1993))).   I do not consider the allegations
    against Warden Hasty to be actually insufficient because
    1
    Gonzalez was confined in SHU at MCC and MDC, and Warden
    Hasty was the warden at both prisons at the time the
    Gonzalez was so confined.
    2
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 07-1787

Filed Date: 6/22/2011

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/3/2016

Authorities (18)

Alfred Veltri v. Building Service 32b-J Pension Fund and ... , 393 F.3d 318 ( 2004 )

Kevin Smith v. Michael McGinnis Superintendent, Southport ... , 208 F.3d 13 ( 2000 )

Gulf Insurance Company v. David Glasbrenner and Susan ... , 417 F.3d 353 ( 2005 )

Franklin Antonio Moreno-Bravo v. Alberto R. Gonzales , 463 F.3d 253 ( 2006 )

Vietnam Ass'n for Victims of Agent Orange v. Dow Chemical ... , 517 F.3d 104 ( 2008 )

gloria-kronisch-of-the-estate-of-stanley-milton-glickman-v-united-states , 150 F.3d 112 ( 1998 )

Shaun R. Johnson v. Officer Ruben Rivera, Officer Matthew ... , 272 F.3d 519 ( 2001 )

Roger Anthony Brown v. James Morgan, Warden James B. ... , 209 F.3d 595 ( 2000 )

david-drew-clifford-v-ron-gibbs-etc-jack-strain-in-his-official-and , 298 F.3d 328 ( 2002 )

Peter Lewis v. Odie Washington, Director, Illinois ... , 300 F.3d 829 ( 2002 )

Gerald Burge v. Parish of St. Tammany , 996 F.2d 786 ( 1993 )

Harris v. Hegmann , 198 F.3d 153 ( 1999 )

horace-abney-v-john-mcginnis-superintendent-mario-malvarosa-doctor-paul , 380 F.3d 663 ( 2004 )

donald-leon-v-john-murphy-as-acting-executive-director-of-the-new-york , 988 F.2d 303 ( 1993 )

peter-brown-v-j-valoff-robert-hall-v-jw-fairman-jr-and-j , 422 F.3d 926 ( 2005 )

Bivens v. Six Unknown Fed. Narcotics Agents , 91 S. Ct. 1999 ( 1971 )

National Railroad Passenger Corporation v. Morgan , 122 S. Ct. 2061 ( 2002 )

Jones v. Bock , 127 S. Ct. 910 ( 2007 )

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