Santos v. White ( 2021 )


Menu:
  • Case: 20-30048      Document: 00516096581           Page: 1    Date Filed: 11/17/2021
    United States Court of Appeals
    for the Fifth Circuit                                  United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    November 17, 2021
    No. 20-30048
    Lyle W. Cayce
    Clerk
    Darvin Castro Santos,
    Plaintiff—Appellant,
    versus
    Craig White, Major; John Wells, Captain;
    Allen Verret, Colonel; Ashley Martell, Lieutenant,
    Defendants—Appellees.
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Middle District of Louisiana
    No. 3:16-CV-598
    Before Smith, Stewart, and Willett, Circuit Judges.
    Jerry E. Smith, Circuit Judge:
    Darvin Santos, an inmate at the Elayn Hunt Correctional Center in
    Louisiana, sued prison officials under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    , asserting that they
    had used excessive force against him in violation of his constitutional rights.
    The district court granted summary judgment for the defendants, deter-
    mining that Santos’s claims were barred by Heck v. Humphrey, 
    512 U.S. 477
    (1994). In doing so, the court relied on prison disciplinary reports that con-
    tradicted Santos’s allegations.
    Santos appeals both the district court’s determination based on Heck
    Case: 20-30048      Document: 00516096581          Page: 2     Date Filed: 11/17/2021
    No. 20-30048
    and its consideration of the disciplinary reports, which he claims are hearsay.
    For the reasons given below, we affirm the district court’s decision to admit
    the reports but vacate and remand for further proceedings with regard to the
    application of Heck.
    I.
    Santos was walking to his cell when, he alleges, he witnessed six prison
    officers beating another inmate. Santos intervened, imploring the officers to
    stop the beating. The officers, including Colonel Allen Verret, Major Craig
    White, and Lieutenant Ashley Martell, told him to mind his business before
    ultimately turning their attention to him as the focus of their beating. He
    claims that he was knocked to the ground, hit, kicked, choked, handcuffed
    and dragged in a manner that caused his head to hit poles in the walkway. He
    was then placed in a shower cell, where Captain John Wells sprayed him in
    the face with a chemical agent, ordered him to strip naked, and sprayed him
    again with the chemical agent in the genitals and anus. After prohibiting
    Santos from taking a shower to wash off the chemical, the officers ordered
    him to put on his jumpsuit and escorted him to another area, where Wells cut
    Santos with a knife and threatened to kill him. Santos was ultimately trans-
    ferred to a medical center where, he alleges, he was denied any real medical
    attention.
    This version of events is contradicted by the findings of prison officials
    who investigated. According to their narrative, Santos approached the offi-
    cers in a threatening manner and then physically attacked them. Despite ini-
    tially being restrained, he remained uncooperative and violent, at one point
    striking Wells hard enough to break his dentures. His actions necessitated
    the use of a chemical agent to gain compliance, though after it was used he
    ceased resisting. Based on the incident, a prison disciplinary board concluded
    that Santos was guilty of nine violations: three “Defiance” violations, four
    “Aggravated Disobedience” violations, one “Property Destruction” viola-
    2
    Case: 20-30048      Document: 00516096581          Page: 3    Date Filed: 11/17/2021
    No. 20-30048
    tion, and one “Unauthorized Area” violation. He was disciplined accord-
    ingly, including by the forfeiture of 180 days of good-time credit.
    II.
    Having exhausted his administrative remedies within the prison
    system, Santos sued White, Wells, Verret, and Martell under § 1983, claim-
    ing that they had subjected him to corporal punishment and excessive force
    while seizing and detaining him, thus violating his Fourth, Eighth, and Four-
    teenth Amendment rights. He sought money damages.
    The defendants moved for summary judgment, averring that the
    incompatibility between Santos’s claims and the findings of the disciplinary
    board meant that the suit was barred by Heck. Santos opposed the motion
    and moved to strike the investigative and disciplinary reports as hearsay.
    Granting summary judgment for the defendants, the court first con-
    cluded that, because Santos’s disciplinary violations resulted in the loss of
    good-time credits, those findings were “convictions” for purposes of the
    Heck bar. It considered the contradictions between Santos’s allegations and
    the reports that had accompanied his disciplinary sanctions and concluded
    that a ruling in Santos’s favor “would directly challenge the validity of his
    convictions.” Heck thus barred the consideration of Santos’s claims in a
    § 1983 suit.
    The district court also denied Santos’s motion to strike the prison
    officers’ reports. The court reasoned that those reports were not offered for
    the truth of their contents but rather to provide a record of the disciplinary
    board’s findings.
    III.
    On appeal, Santos challenges the summary judgment with regard to
    his Eighth Amendment claims. He contends that his claims are not barred
    by Heck and that the court erred by not excluding the prison disciplinary
    3
    Case: 20-30048      Document: 00516096581           Page: 4    Date Filed: 11/17/2021
    No. 20-30048
    reports as hearsay. Summary judgment is a determination of law that we
    review de novo. Austin v. Kroger Tex., L.P., 
    864 F.3d 326
    , 328 (5th Cir. 2017)
    (per curiam). In doing so, we view all facts in the light most favorable to the
    non-moving party, here Santos, and draw all reasonable inferences in his
    favor. Coleman v. Hous. Indep. Sch. Dist., 
    113 F.3d 528
    , 533 (5th Cir. 1997).
    We conclude that the district court was correct in its decision to consider the
    disciplinary reports, but we vacate and remand its determination that San-
    tos’s claims were Heck-barred.
    IV.
    The application of Heck to § 1983 claims by prisoners is a subject that
    we examine today in No. 20-30218, Gray v. White, and a fuller discussion can
    be found in Part IV of that opinion. Here, we only briefly summarize the
    governing law before applying it to Santos’s claims.
    Section 1983 creates a cause of action against individuals who, under
    color of state law, deprive the plaintiff of his constitutional rights. To decide
    an Eighth Amendment claim based on excessive force, a court must deter-
    mine “whether force was applied in a good-faith effort to maintain or restore
    discipline, or maliciously and sadistically to cause harm.” Hudson v. McMil-
    lan, 
    503 U.S. 1
    , 7 (1992). But under Heck, a prisoner may not “seek[] dam-
    ages in a § 1983 suit” if “a judgment in favor of the plaintiff would necessarily
    imply the invalidity of his conviction or sentence.” Heck, 
    512 U.S. at 487
    .
    The fundamental rationale behind the Heck bar is that “[c]hallenges to the
    validity of any confinement or to particulars affecting its duration are the
    province of habeas corpus,” whereas “requests for relief turning on circum-
    stances of confinement may be presented in a § 1983 action.” Muhammad v.
    Close, 
    540 U.S. 749
    , 750 (2004) (per curiam) (emphasis added).
    Because Heck applies to the duration of confinement, it applies not
    just to criminal convictions but also to prison disciplinary rulings that “re-
    sult[] in a change to the prisoner’s sentence, including the loss of good-time
    4
    Case: 20-30048      Document: 00516096581            Page: 5   Date Filed: 11/17/2021
    No. 20-30048
    credits.” Clarke v. Stalder, 
    154 F.3d 186
    , 189 (5th Cir. 1998) (en banc). Heck
    therefore bars claims that would, if accepted, “negate” a prison disciplinary
    finding that had resulted in the loss of good-time credits. Bourne v. Gunnels,
    
    921 F.3d 484
    , 491 (5th Cir. 2019).
    Meanwhile, Heck is not “implicated by a prisoner’s challenge that
    threatens no consequence for his conviction or the duration of his sentence.”
    Muhammad, 
    540 U.S. at 751
    . Rather, a claim is barred only if granting it
    “requires negation of an element of the criminal offense or proof of a fact that
    is inherently inconsistent with one underlying the criminal conviction.” Bush
    v. Strain, 
    513 F.3d 492
    , 497 (5th Cir. 2008). The resulting inquiry is “fact-
    intensive” and dependent on the precise nature of the disciplinary offense.
    Aucoin v. Cupil, 
    958 F.3d 379
    , 382 (5th Cir.) (quoting Bush, 
    513 F.3d at 497
    ),
    cert. denied, 
    141 S. Ct. 567
     (2020).
    It is unclear, from the record, whether any of Santos’s claims are
    barred by Heck. In his disciplinary proceeding, Santos was found guilty of
    nine rules violations: three “Defiance” violations, four “Aggravated Dis-
    obedience” violations, one “Property Destruction” violation, and one “Un-
    authorized Area” violation. Though the disciplinary reports list factual find-
    ings, the elements required to find a prisoner guilty of those violations do not
    appear anywhere in the record. It is thus impossible to determine which facts
    were necessary to the disciplinary board’s conclusions. It may be that the ele-
    ments of, for instance, aggravated disobedience would be logically incompati-
    ble with some of Santos’s claims of excessive force, but the record does not
    currently permit that inference.
    Furthermore, not all of the disciplinary board’s findings implicate
    Heck. The board imposed a forfeiture of 180 days of good time for one count
    each of aggravated disobedience, defiance, and property destruction, all aris-
    ing from Santos’s assault on Wells in the Fox-6 D-Tier area of the prison; his
    other violations, including all of those in the shower, resulted in sanctions
    5
    Case: 20-30048         Document: 00516096581        Page: 6    Date Filed: 11/17/2021
    No. 20-30048
    such as loss of canteen and phone privileges. Disciplinary sanctions of that
    type bear on the “circumstances of confinement,” rather than on that con-
    finement’s “validity” or “duration,” and are thus not barred by Heck.
    Muhammad, 
    540 U.S. at 750
    . Moreover, the disciplinary board imposed no
    sanctions at all on Santos for actions after the administration of the chemical
    agent in the shower, and it noted that he “complied with orders” after that
    point. Thus, Heck does not bar Santos’s claims from that point onward.
    It is not sufficient to deem Santos’s claims to be “intertwined” with
    his loss of good-time credits. Rather, in applying Heck, a court must bar only
    those claims that are “necessarily at odds with” the disciplinary rulings, and
    only with those rulings that resulted in the loss of good time credits. Aucoin,
    958 F.3d at 383. The defendants have thus not met their burden for summary
    judgment on the current record. Whether the board’s findings related to the
    assault on Wells bar the corresponding claims by Santos must be determined
    by a fact-specific analysis informed by the elements necessary to establish
    those violations.
    V.
    Santos also appeals the ruling on the defendants’ exhibits, contending
    that they were inadmissible hearsay. To be considered on summary judg-
    ment, materials must be of a type that can be “presented in a form that would
    be admissible in evidence.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c)(2); see also LSR Consult-
    ing, LLC v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., 
    835 F.3d 530
    , 534 (5th Cir. 2016). Evi-
    dentiary rulings by trial courts are affirmed unless they constitute abuses of
    discretion. See, e.g., United States v. Pruett, 
    681 F.3d 232
    , 243 (5th Cir. 2012)
    (per curiam).
    A statement is hearsay if it is not made while testifying and a party
    “offer[s it] in evidence to prove the truth of the matter asserted” in the
    statement. Fed. R. Evid. 801(c). The reports submitted by the defendants
    were offered to demonstrate that the disciplinary board had found Santos
    6
    Case: 20-30048      Document: 00516096581           Page: 7     Date Filed: 11/17/2021
    No. 20-30048
    guilty of various offenses, not to prove the truth of the matter, that is, that he
    actually had committed the offenses. As with criminal convictions, the Heck
    bar does not, in theory, assume that the prison disciplinary board’s determin-
    ations were true, but only that they cannot be challenged through § 1983. Cf.
    Heck, 
    512 U.S. at 487
     (noting that § 1983 may be used to challenge a con-
    viction or sentence that “has already been invalidated”). The district court
    did not err in considering the exhibits.
    ***
    In sum, although the district court was correct in considering the doc-
    uments, Santos’s claims cannot be dismissed as Heck-barred without further
    development of the record to determine which of his allegations would be
    necessarily incompatible with the prison board’s ruling that deprived him of
    good time credits. In light of these conclusions, the summary judgment is
    VACATED and REMANDED. We place no limitation on the matters
    that the court can address and decide on remand. Nor do we suggest how the
    court should rule on which claims are precluded by Heck.
    7
    Case: 20-30048          Document: 00516096581              Page: 8   Date Filed: 11/17/2021
    No. 20-30048
    Don R. Willett, Circuit Judge, concurring in the judgment.
    This case involves an all-too-common set of facts: Appellant (a
    prisoner) claims that Appellees (prison officers) spontaneously and
    unlawfully abused him. Appellees, on the other hand, insist they used lawful
    force to control Appellant’s misbehavior. Though the majority opinion
    reaches the correct conclusion—the district court erred in its unqualified
    dismissal under Heck—I write to emphasize two points of departure.
    I
    First, my colleagues punt on Heck when a hand-off is warranted.
    Could the record have more information? Absolutely. Do we need more? No.
    Heck does not categorically compel an element-by-element inquiry, and the
    majority opinion needlessly complicates things by concluding that the record
    precludes analysis.
    This case is Aucoin redux. 1 Appellant maintains he was subject to
    unprovoked, unlawful violence at every stage of the encounter. 2 But if true,
    he “cannot be guilty of [the offenses for which he lost good-time credit]—in
    direct conflict with his disciplinary conviction.” 3 So we need not dwell on the
    component elements of Appellant’s conviction to determine that most of his
    claims are incompatible with the disciplinary board’s findings.
    Take the claims arising from the pre-shower salvo. The majority
    implies that some of these claims may not be Heck barred. 4 Sure, Heck is not
    “implicated by a prisoner’s challenge that threatens no consequence for . . .
    1
    See Aucoin v. Cupil, 
    958 F.3d 379
     (5th Cir. 2020).
    2
    Cf. 
    id. at 383
     (noting plaintiff-appellant “challenge[d] the conviction by
    maintaining his innocence in the events that led up to his disciplinary conviction”).
    3
    
    Id.
    4
    Ante at 5–6.
    8
    Case: 20-30048        Document: 00516096581              Page: 9       Date Filed: 11/17/2021
    No. 20-30048
    the duration of his sentence.” 5 But all of Appellant’s pre-shower claims turn
    on the same narrative: He was attacked without provocation. This is
    fundamentally inconsistent with the officers’ account, which prompted
    Appellant’s loss of good-time credit for property destruction, aggravated
    disobedience, and defiance. Most of Appellant’s suit thereby “challenges the
    factual determination that underlies his conviction[s],” 6 meaning most of his
    claims fail.
    But most does not mean all. A portion of Appellant’s suit alleged
    violence unrelated to any supposed need to gain control. Appellant pleaded
    an excessive-force claim against Captain Wells for ordering him to “spread
    his butt cheeks” and spraying him “in the anus with pe[p]per spray.”
    Appellant also pleaded that Captain Wells threatened and cut him with a
    knife after he was “no longer resisting or attempting to flee or, otherwise,
    commit any crime.” These are not trivial details. Neither the incident report
    nor any other summary-judgment evidence provides an iota of justification
    for this alleged force. We are thus left with no circumstance where these
    claims, if proven true, would conflict with Appellant’s disciplinary
    conviction—let alone those portions that impacted the duration of his
    confinement. 7 This is not to say that the elements underlying an
    5
    Muhammad v. Close, 
    540 U.S. 749
    , 750–51 (2004) (per curiam) (observing that
    punishments of this type bear on the “circumstances of confinement” rather than its
    “validity” or “duration”); see also, e.g., Bourne v. Gunnels, 
    921 F.3d 484
    , 491 (5th Cir.
    2019).
    6
    
    Id.
    7
    As the majority correctly observes, Appellant was found guilty of nine prison rule
    violations, yet only three (property destruction, aggravated disobedience, and defiance—
    each arising from the initial salvo) resulted in the loss of good-time credit. Ante at 6.
    9
    Case: 20-30048           Document: 00516096581           Page: 10       Date Filed: 11/17/2021
    No. 20-30048
    administrative offense are categorically irrelevant under Heck. 8 But no case,
    until today, suggests this information is an analytical prerequisite. 9
    I nonetheless join the judgment because, as was the case in Aucoin,
    “the district court erred in dismissing all of [Appellant’s] claims under
    Heck.” 10
    II
    I must also depart from the majority opinion’s hearsay analysis,
    though my colleagues again reach the correct conclusion. No one seriously
    disputes that “[t]he reports . . . were offered to demonstrate that the
    disciplinary board had found Santos guilty of various offenses, not to prove
    . . . that he actually had committed the offenses.” 11 But this does little more
    than invite the question presented: Why is this not hearsay?
    A prison disciplinary report is an out-of-court statement, 12 and the
    report here was offered by the Appellees “to provide a record of Plaintiff’s
    prison disciplinary convictions” and thus “establish . . . that the Heck
    doctrine bars [relief].” This, at bottom, points to the truth of the matter
    asserted in the disciplinary report: Appellant was found guilty of (and
    punished for) his administrative offenses. Needless to say, the disciplinary
    8
    See, e.g., Ballard v. Burton, 
    444 F.3d 391
    , 397–99 (5th Cir. 2006) (analyzing
    elements to determine whether the plaintiff’s prior conviction was fundamentally
    inconsistent with his claim of excessive force).
    9
    The majority’s belief otherwise casts a jaundiced eye on Aucoin, which was
    decided just last year and offered nary a mention of the elements underlying the
    administrative offenses at issue there. See Aucoin, 958 F.3d at 383–84. But our silence was
    understandable: The appellant claimed total innocence, which was “necessarily
    inconsistent with the validity of the [administrative] conviction.” Id. at 383.
    10
    Id. at 383–84.
    11
    Ante at 7.
    12
    See Fed. R. Evid. 801(a) (defining “statement”); cf., e.g., United States v.
    Jimenez, 275 F. App’x 433, 437 n.1 (5th Cir. 2008) (“Police reports are generally excludable
    as hearsay.”).
    10
    Case: 20-30048        Document: 00516096581                 Page: 11       Date Filed: 11/17/2021
    No. 20-30048
    report would be irrelevant if it did not accurately communicate the board’s
    findings. The majority opinion nonetheless suggests that there is only one
    way to offer these statements for their truth: by claiming Appellant actually
    committed the offenses. I disagree. The truth asserted here is that Appellant
    was found guilty and lost good-time credit—not whether this outcome was
    justified.
    But we mustn’t lose the forest for the trees. In the end, the majority
    opinion correctly observes that evidence need not be in admissible form at
    summary judgment. 13 I would thus hold that the defendants could have later
    admitted the challenged evidence under any number of theories. 14 This low
    bar does not compel reversal.
    *        *         *
    It is believed that Solon, one of the Seven Sages of Greece, once
    observed that justice would not come to Athens until the unaggrieved were
    as indignant as the oppressed. Whether this case merits indignance is not
    before us. 15 But we are called to determine whether Appellant’s claim is
    13
    See, e.g., LSR Consulting, LLC v. Wells Fargo Bank, N.A., 
    835 F.3d 530
    , 534 (5th
    Cir. 2016); accord Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(c)(2).
    14
    Cf., e.g., Autin v. La. Dep’t of Pub. Safety & Corr., No. 20-CV-1214, 
    2021 WL 1210471
    , at *5 (E.D. La. Mar. 31, 2021) (Heck-bar case, admitting disciplinary reports as
    public records); Aucoin v. Cupil, No. 16-00373-BAJ-RLB, 
    2018 WL 6332831
    , at *1 n.2
    (M.D. La. Dec. 4, 2018) (Heck-bar case, judicial notice of disciplinary convictions), rev’d
    and remanded on other grounds, 
    958 F.3d 379
     (5th Cir. 2020).
    15
    If faced with this question, perhaps we might pause to note Captain Wells’s
    apparent familiarity with the impact of Heck on civil rights claims. See, e.g., Jacobs v. Wells,
    16-CV-00865-BAJ-EWD, 
    2019 WL 4170185
    , at *1 (M.D. La. Sept. 3, 2019) (granting Heck
    dismissal, § 1983 claim against Captain Wells for unlawful use of chemical agents and force
    resulting in a broken ankle and leg); Johnson v. Sharp, No. 05-1244-A, 
    2007 WL 580667
    , at
    *2 (M.D. La. Feb. 13, 2007) (granting Heck dismissal, § 1983 claim against then-Sergeant
    Wells for an unprovoked, “vicious beating”); see also, e.g., Gray v. White, __ F.4th __ (5th
    Cir. 2021) (involving Captain Wells, again).
    11
    Case: 20-30048     Document: 00516096581            Page: 12   Date Filed: 11/17/2021
    No. 20-30048
    beyond the reach of § 1983. It is not. Appellant has the right to present his
    case to a jury, and the district court’s belief otherwise was error.
    12