Horton v. Cockrell ( 1995 )


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  •                   UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    for the Fifth Circuit
    _____________________________________
    No. 94-41167
    Summary Calendar
    _____________________________________
    BILLY WAYNE HORTON,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    VERSUS
    JANIE COCKRELL, ET AL.,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    ______________________________________________________
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Eastern District of Texas
    92-CV-465
    ______________________________________________________
    November 13, 1995
    Before DAVIS, BARKSDALE and DeMOSS, Circuit Judges.
    PER CURIAM:1
    Horton challenges the dismissal of his 42 U.S.C. § 1983
    complaint following a Flowers2 hearing conducted by the magistrate
    pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(l)(B) and the adoption of the
    magistrate's recommendation.   We find no error and affirm.
    1
    Local Rule 47.5 provides: "The publication of opinions
    that have no precedential value and merely decide particular
    cases on the basis of well-settled principles of law imposes
    needless expense on the public and burdens on the legal
    profession." Pursuant to that Rule, the Court has determined
    that this opinion should not be published.
    2
    Flowers v. Phelps, 
    956 F.2d 488
    (5th Cir.), modified on
    other grounds, 
    964 F.2d 400
    (5th Cir. 1992).
    I.
    Billy Wayne Horton, a Texas Department of Criminal Justice
    (TDCJ) prisoner, filed a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 complaint alleging that
    he was subject to constant threats of violence while housed at the
    Beto I Unit.        He alleged that white inmates were subject to
    extortion by black and hispanic inmates.         Horton further alleged
    that the threats were reported to defendant Warden Cockrell and
    that she refused to take any action to end the threats.
    The magistrate judge scheduled a Spears3 hearing.         Following
    the hearing, Horton filed a motion for leave to file a supplemental
    complaint, alleging that he had been repeatedly assaulted since
    filing his complaint.       The magistrate judge denied this motion.
    The   magistrate    judge   recommended   that   Horton's    complaint   be
    dismissed as frivolous and that Horton's motion to proceed in forma
    pauperis    (IFP)   be   denied.   The    district   court   adopted     the
    recommendation and dismissed the complaint.          Horton appealed the
    dismissal, and this court, in an unpublished opinion, vacated the
    district court's order in part and remanded the case for further
    proceedings.
    Following remand, the magistrate judge granted Horton's motion
    to file a supplemental complaint and directed the defendants to
    respond. In his supplemental complaint, Horton alleged that he had
    notified defendants Glimp and Ramirez that he had been threatened
    with the use of force by inmate Alcorn unless he paid extortion
    money.    Horton contended that he was assaulted a few days later by
    3
    Spears v. McCotter, 
    766 F.2d 179
    (5th Cir. 1985).
    2
    Alcorn and some other black inmates because he refused to pay the
    extortion money.   Horton also alleged that he was threatened and
    assaulted by a black inmate after being moved to the Bill Clements
    Unit of TDCJ.
    The magistrate judge recommended that the claims regarding
    incidents at the Clements Unit be severed and transferred to the
    Northern District of Texas, where the incidents had occurred.   The
    district court adopted the magistrate judge's recommendation and
    transferred the claims concerning the Clements Unit.
    After the defendants filed an answer, the magistrate judge
    scheduled an "expanded evidentiary hearing" pursuant to Flowers and
    directed the parties to submit a witness list and a brief summary
    of the proposed testimony of each witness.   The defendants filed a
    Notice of Disclosure, stating that they had provided Horton with
    the required information under the Civil Justice Expense and Delay
    Reduction Plan pursuant to the Civil Justice Reform Act of 1990.
    Horton submitted a list of three witnesses.    The magistrate
    judge ordered the marshal to produce two of the three listed
    witnesses at the hearing.   After Horton presented his witnesses at
    the hearing, the defendants moved for a dismissal of the case,
    arguing that Horton had not proved that any of the defendants had
    violated his rights.
    At the close of the hearing, Horton made an inquiry about how
    further discovery in the case would be conducted.   The magistrate
    judge stated that she would be issuing a recommendation to the
    district court and advised Horton that the hearing had "basically
    3
    been [his] trial."    Horton stated that he had understood that the
    magistrate   judge   was   merely   holding   a   hearing   and   expressed
    surprise that he would not be having a jury trial.          The magistrate
    judge responded that he had not requested a jury trial when he had
    the opportunity.     Horton objected on the basis that he had not
    consented to the trial before the magistrate judge. The magistrate
    judge agreed that he had not consented to having her try the case,
    but stated that he had agreed to appear before the district court
    and that she would be making a report to the district court.
    Following the hearing, Horton filed a motion for new trial or,
    alternatively, a motion to reopen the case.        Horton argued that he
    had not been notified that a "trial" was to be held and that he had
    not prepared for trial.       The magistrate judge granted Horton's
    motion to the extent that she allowed him to submit additional
    evidence which was relevant to the incidents occurring at the Beto
    I Unit.
    Horton filed a motion to conduct additional discovery.              He
    sought to obtain a videotape recorded in the prison on the day that
    he was assaulted and the disciplinary records of the inmates who
    had assaulted him.    The magistrate judge ordered the defendants to
    provide Horton with a copy of the videotape, but denied Horton's
    request to obtain the disciplinary histories of the inmates who
    attacked him.   The defendants advised the magistrate judge that
    they had provided the tape to Horton.
    Horton filed a motion to compel discovery, alleging that he
    had not received the tape.     He subsequently filed a second motion
    4
    to compel discovery, arguing that the defendants had not shown him
    the entire tape.       The defendant responded that Horton viewed the
    only tape that exists regarding the alleged assault incident.             The
    magistrate judge denied Horton's motion to compel and his second
    motion to compel.
    Horton then filed a motion to recuse the magistrate judge from
    further proceedings in the case, arguing that she summarily denied
    his motions without investigation and did not provide sufficient
    reasons for denying the motions.          Horton also filed a motion for
    sanctions against the defendants based on their failure to comply
    with discovery orders.        He contended that the defendants erased
    portions    of   the   requested   videotape   in    violation    of   prison
    regulations.
    Horton also filed a jury demand.             He argued that he is
    entitled to a jury trial because he had not been notified that the
    hearing would be his trial.        Horton also filed a motion to change
    discovery tracks so that he could conduct further discovery in the
    case.    The magistrate judge denied Horton's motions for recusal,
    sanctions, to change discovery tracks, and his request for a jury
    trial.
    The magistrate judge recommended that the case be dismissed
    with    prejudice.      The   magistrate    judge    determined   that    the
    defendants did not have knowledge that Horton was exposed to an
    excessive risk of harm to his health and safety.             Horton filed
    objections to the recommendation.         The district court adopted the
    5
    magistrate judge's recommendation and dismissed the complaint with
    prejudice.
    II.
    A.
    Horton argues first that the magistrate judge did not have
    jurisdiction to conduct a trial because he did not consent to her
    doing so pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 636(c)(1).                     Consent under §
    636(c)(1) is required only when the magistrate judge is to both
    conduct the proceedings and enter the judgment.
    Title 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1)(B) provides that "a judge may also
    designate a magistrate to conduct hearings, including evidentiary
    hearings, and to submit to a judge of the court proposed findings
    of fact and recommendations for the disposition . . . of prisoner
    petitions challenging conditions of confinement."                In 
    Flowers, 956 F.2d at 490
    , a hearing was conducted pursuant to § 636(b)(1).                   The
    procedure followed in Flowers is acceptable unless the plaintiff
    has properly demanded a jury trial.4            See Archie v. Christian, 
    808 F.2d 1132
    , 1135 (5th Cir. 1987).               Because, as discussed below,
    Horton   did   not   make   a   timely       demand   for   a   jury   trial,   the
    magistrate judge had the authority to conduct the evidentiary
    hearing and to submit proposed findings of fact and a dispositional
    recommendation to the district court.                 Horton, however, has not
    4
    Horton argues that he was entitled to a trial by jury
    although he failed to make a jury demand in a timely manner as
    required by Fed. R. Civ. P. 38(b). Horton argues that the delay
    was excusable because he was not aware that the evidentiary
    hearing would be the "trial" of the case.
    6
    argued that the denial of his jury demand is grounds for reversal,
    thus we need not give this argument further consideration.
    B.
    Horton argues that the magistrate judge should have granted
    him a new trial rather than just allowing him to present additional
    documentary evidence.   He argues that he was entitled to the new
    trial because he was not aware that the evidentiary hearing would
    be his "trial."
    The denial of a motion for new trial will be reversed only if
    there is a clear showing of an abuse of discretion.   Dawsey v. Olin
    Corp., 
    782 F.2d 1254
    , 1261 (5th Cir. 1986).   With    respect    to
    Horton's argument that the magistrate judge failed to notify him
    that the hearing would be the "trial" of the case, the scheduling
    order correctly described the proceeding as an expanded evidentiary
    hearing pursuant to Flowers.   The order directed the parties to
    provide a witness and exhibit list to the court and did not advise
    the parties that they were required to make only a prima facie
    case.   Any omission to more adequately warn Horton that this
    hearing would be his only opportunity to present evidence was
    harmless since the magistrate judge permitted Horton to submit
    additional evidence after the hearing was completed.
    In his motion for new trial, Horton complained that he was not
    given the opportunity to present evidence of general grievances
    that he had filed about the constant threat of violence at the Beto
    I Unit, evidence of incidents that occurred at the Clements Unit,
    7
    and a videotape recorded at the prison on the date that Horton was
    attacked by several black inmates.
    The magistrate judge allowed Horton to submit the grievances
    into evidence after the hearing. The magistrate judge also ordered
    the defendants to provide Horton with the requested videotape.
    Defense counsel responded in a letter that he had reviewed the tape
    and determined that it did not show the altercation between Horton
    and   the   other      inmates   although        it   showed   the   inmates   being
    processed after the incident was over.                  Horton filed a motion to
    compel    the    production      of   the    entire    tape.       Defense    counsel
    responded that the TDCJ officials advised that the videotape
    produced was the only tape existing regarding the incident involved
    in the suit. Thus, Horton could not have obtained further evidence
    from the tape even if he had received a new trial.
    Horton also argued in his motion that he wished to present
    evidence of incidents occurring at the Clements Unit to show that
    proper procedures were not followed by prison officials.                          The
    magistrate judge specifically precluded Horton from introducing
    evidence of the incidents occurring at the Clement Unit.                    Thus, she
    would    not    have   admitted       such   evidence    at    a   second    hearing.
    Further, this ruling was not an abuse of discretion because the
    manner in which incidents were addressed by officials at the
    Clements Unit was not relevant to the procedures followed at the
    Beto I Unit.
    Horton also argued in his motion that he would seek discovery
    of inmate Alcorn's prior disciplinary history because he believed
    8
    that   prison    officials     knew   that   Alcorn   had   assaulted    and/or
    extorted other inmates.         He argues that such evidence would have
    shown that Alcorn should have been segregated from the other
    inmates.     If Horton was correct with respect to the content of
    Alcorn's disciplinary history, such evidence may have led to the
    discovery of relevant evidence of Alcorn's proclivity to assault
    inmates,   but    it   would   not    have   established    that   the   prison
    officials had knowledge that Alcorn was a particular threat to
    Horton.    Thus, even if Horton was not afforded the opportunity to
    discover this evidence, it was not an abuse of discretion to refuse
    to grant a new trial on that basis.
    Horton also argued in his motion for new trial that he had
    intended to file a motion for class certification because it would
    then have been easier to obtain evidence that every white inmate is
    assaulted.    He also contended that he would have filed a motion for
    the appointment of counsel to represent the class.             Because Horton
    failed to prove his substantive "failure to protect" allegations,
    the issue whether the action was suitable for class certification
    is moot as is his motion for appointment of counsel to represent
    the class.
    C.
    Horton argues next that the magistrate judge abused her
    discretion in severing and transferring his claims that concerned
    incidents occurring in the Clements Unit.             Horton argues that his
    claims concerning the Clements Unit were better documented than the
    Beto I claims and would show a pattern of violence and deliberate
    9
    indifference to security occurring throughout the prison system.
    A district court may sua sponte transfer a case to any other
    district where the suit might have been brought for the convenience
    of the parties and in the interests of justice.                       28 U.S.C. §
    1404(a); Mills v. Beech Aircraft Corp., 
    886 F.2d 758
    , 761 (5th Cir.
    1989).    "Decisions to effect 1404 transfers are committed to the
    sound discretion         of    the   transferring   judge,      and   review   of a
    transfer is limited to abuse of that discretion."                 
    Mills, 886 F.2d at 761
    (internal quotations and citation omitted).
    The Bill Clements Unit is in Amarillo, Texas, which is located
    within the jurisdiction of the district court in the Northern
    District of Texas.        See 28 U.S.C. § 124(a)(5).         Horton alleged that
    the prison officials in the Clements Units did not protect him from
    an assault by a black inmate although he had reported threats made
    against him by the inmate.              The district court did not abuse its
    discretion in transferring these claims to the Northern District
    because the incidents occurred there and the defendant prison
    personnel were also presumably located in that district.
    D.
    Horton argues that his motion to recuse the magistrate judge
    should    have    been        granted    because   the    magistrate     judge   is
    predisposed to rule against prisoners.              Horton has not alleged the
    existence of any bias resulting from an extrajudicial source.
    Horton's bias argument is based on allegations of consistent
    rulings   of     the   magistrate       judge   against   him    in   the   instant
    proceeding.       Adverse rulings in a case, without more, are not
    10
    sufficient to support a recusal motion.                        United States v. MMR
    Corp.,   
    954 F.2d 1040
    ,         1045    (5th    Cir.    1992).      Further,     the
    magistrate judge granted Horton's motion to reopen the case and
    some of his subsequent discovery requests.                        Thus, the magistrate
    judge did not abuse her discretion in denying the motion for
    recusal.
    E.
    Horton argues that the defendants should have been directed to
    explain the loss of portions of the videotape in response to his
    second motion to compel.             He also requests this court to enter an
    order to show cause why sanctions should not be imposed against the
    defendants.
    Discovery matters are entrusted to the "sound discretion" of
    the   district     court      and     are    reviewed       for    an   abuse    of   such
    discretion.      King v. Dogan, 
    31 F.3d 344
    , 346 (1994); Coughlin v.
    Lee, 
    946 F.2d 1152
    , 1158 (5th Cir. 1991).                   In response to Horton's
    second motion to compel production of the entire videotape, defense
    counsel questioned TDCJ officials about the videotape and they
    responded   that    the       only    relevant      tape    in    existence     had   been
    provided to Horton.             The magistrate judge did not abuse her
    discretion in accepting this explanation and denying Horton's
    second motion to compel.             Horton has not demonstrated a basis for
    this court to impose sanctions against the defendants.
    Horton   makes      a    number       of    additional      arguments     regarding
    alleged errors of the magistrate judge in her evidentiary and
    11
    discovery rulings.   Our review of the record reveals no abuse of
    discretion in these rulings.
    AFFIRMED
    12