Titus Henderson v. Cathy Jess ( 2022 )


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  •                         NONPRECEDENTIAL DISPOSITION
    To be cited only in accordance with FED. R. APP. P. 32.1
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    Chicago, Illinois 60604
    Submitted May 31, 2022 *
    Decided June 3, 2022
    Before
    FRANK H. EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge
    ILANA DIAMOND ROVNER, Circuit Judge
    AMY J. ST. EVE, Circuit Judge
    No. 21-1585
    TITUS HENDERSON,                                  Appeal from the United States District
    Plaintiff-Appellant,                        Court for the Western District of
    Wisconsin.
    v.
    No. 18-cv-680-jdp
    CATHY JESS, et al.,
    Defendants-Appellees.                         James D. Peterson,
    Chief Judge.
    ORDER
    Titus Henderson, a Wisconsin inmate, sued prison officials under a variety of
    legal theories, claiming they denied him prayer oil, religious meals, and religious books.
    The district court entered summary judgment for the defendants, rejecting the claims as
    unexhausted, moot, untimely, or barred by qualified immunity. We affirm.
    *
    We have agreed to decide the case without oral argument because the briefs and
    record adequately present the facts and legal arguments, and oral argument would not
    significantly aid the court. FED. R. APP. P. 34(a)(2)(C).
    No. 21-1585                                                                         Page 2
    I. Background
    Henderson, who is Black and Muslim, was held at the Wisconsin Secure Program
    Facility from 2003 to 2015. Because of assaults on guards and other misconduct, he was
    often housed in segregation. During bouts of segregation from 2010 to 2014, Henderson
    contends, he was denied three kinds of religious accommodations.
    First, he says the prison denied him prayer oil during the moveable holy month
    of Ramadan each year from 2010 through 2014. The prison’s policies generally allow
    inmates one ounce of oil at a time but also permit staff to deny oil for security reasons.
    At summary judgment the defendants could produce no record or recollection of
    anyone denying Henderson oil but posited that—considering his history of assaults—
    any denial would have been based on the danger that he would use oil to slip out of
    handcuffs, make the floor slick, or otherwise impede staff tasked with restraining him.
    Second, Henderson says the prison refused him a Ramadan meal schedule—two
    meals, delivered before and after sunrise, to accommodate daytime fasting—each
    Ramadan from 2010 to 2014. Though the defendants acknowledged a 2010 grievance
    alleging similar conduct, their only detailed records of a complete Ramadan-schedule
    denial concerned 2012. Over three days that year, they say, Henderson assaulted an
    officer, refused to return a meal tray, and threw his milk. The prison security director,
    Jerome Sweeney (who is not a defendant), then ordered two defendants—Todd Overbo
    (a prison chaplain) and Anthony Broadbent (a food-services administrator)—to take
    Henderson off that year’s Ramadan-meal list and place him on the default schedule.
    Third, Henderson says the prison would not let him have adequate Islamic
    reading materials while he was in segregation.
    In 2018, Henderson sued Cathy Jess (a statewide administrator for the Wisconsin
    Department of Corrections), Overbo, and Broadbent, plus other officials: two wardens,
    another chaplain, a food-services supervisor, a program supervisor, and a correctional
    officer. Henderson cited the First, Fourteenth, and Eighth Amendments, as well as the
    Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act, 42 U.S.C. § 2000cc.
    The defendants pursued two motions for judgment without trial. First, they
    moved for partial summary judgment on the ground that Henderson failed to exhaust
    administrative remedies for all claims except the Ramadan-meal theories from 2010 and
    No. 21-1585                                                                        Page 3
    2012. See 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a). The defendants’ second motion sought summary
    judgment on various other grounds for any exhausted claims.
    Henderson, for his part, requested an evidentiary hearing under Pavey v. Conley,
    
    544 F.3d 739
    , 742 (7th Cir. 2008) (en banc), to resolve any disputes about exhaustion. Yet
    he identified no particular dispute of fact, asserting only generally that the parties’
    affidavits could not be reconciled with one another.
    Henderson’s response brief opposing the defendants’ first motion also accused
    them of overlooking certain grievances, copies of which the defendants then attached to
    a reply brief. Henderson’s response brief further asserted that the reason he failed to
    administratively appeal the denial of many of his initial grievances was that he lacked
    access to postage. The defendants’ reply brief, however, included a copy of a Wisconsin
    Administrative Code provision showing that postage was available to Henderson.
    In three orders, the district court dismissed or denied all claims. The first order
    concluded that Henderson had not exhausted his Ramadan-meal claims for 2011, 2013,
    and 2014: postage had been available if Henderson sought it, so he was responsible for
    failing to administratively appeal the denials of his grievances for those years. As for
    religious texts, the court opined, Henderson had objected only wholesale to the prison’s
    default limit on the number of books inmates in segregation could possess: one
    religious text, a dictionary, two puzzle books, and two library books. Because he did not
    alert prison staff that the basis for this objection was religious, the court reasoned, his
    religious-books claim was not exhausted.
    Henderson then asked the district court to reconsider these rulings. But in a
    second order, the court denied this motion. The court rejected Henderson’s new
    argument that grievances he filed in 2010 and 2012 about the meal schedule sufficed to
    preserve any Ramadan-meal claims from 2011, 2013, and 2014. The grievances he filed
    in 2011, 2013, and 2014 alleged that his Ramadan meals were incomplete or lacking in
    calories, not that he been taken off the Ramadan schedule. In the court’s view, because
    Henderson’s difficulties during Ramadan each of those years did not stem from the
    same prison decision or policy as the issues covered by the 2010 and 2012 grievances,
    the alleged denials were not all part of one continuing violation.
    In a third order, the court entered judgment for the defendants on Henderson’s
    remaining claims. To start, the court concluded that Henderson’s claims under the
    Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act were not actionable here because
    No. 21-1585                                                                        Page 4
    the Act provides only for prospective relief against government officials, see Grayson v.
    Schuler, 
    666 F.3d 450
    , 451 (7th Cir. 2012), and there was no substantial reason to expect
    the defendants would similarly injure Henderson in the future (in large part because he
    was transferred to another prison in 2015 and claimed no misconduct after that).
    Regarding prayer oil, the court granted the defendants qualified immunity on
    Henderson’s free-exercise theory under the First and Fourteenth Amendments.
    (Because of gaps in the defendants’ records, the court assumed that this claim had been
    exhausted.) Citing the reasonableness test of Turner v. Safley, 
    482 U.S. 78
    , 89–91 (1987),
    the court questioned whether allowing Henderson a small quantity of oil would pose
    an appreciable security risk; even so, no precedent clearly established that the denial of
    prayer oil on these grounds would be unreasonable, and so the court ruled that the
    defendants were entitled to qualified immunity.
    Similarly, although Henderson argued that denying him prayer oil was so
    irrational it violated his right to equal protection, the court concluded that qualified
    immunity barred that theory as well because Supreme Court and Seventh Circuit
    precedents did not clearly establish that a prisoner could bring a class-of-one claim of
    this sort. Henderson also contended that the prison denied him oil because he was
    Black and Muslim, but the court determined that the summary judgment record
    contained no evidence from which a juror could infer intentional discrimination.
    That left Henderson’s Ramadan-meal claims from 2010 and 2012. The court held
    that Henderson’s claims about the 2010 meals—raised in 2018—were barred by
    Wisconsin’s limitation period, which in 2010 was six years. See WIS. STAT. § 893.53
    (amended to three years in 2018). As for the 2012 meals, the court ruled that Henderson
    had sued the wrong people: none of the named defendants had made the decision to
    remove him from the Ramadan-meal list. For that reason, a juror could not infer from
    the summary judgment record that any named defendant had violated his free-exercise
    rights or his right against cruel and unusual punishment. As an alternative ground for
    denying the free-exercise claim, the court cited qualified immunity.
    II. Analysis
    On appeal, Henderson makes four narrow arguments: (1) he was entitled to have
    his claims resolved by a three-judge panel of the district court under a statute that was
    repealed in the 1970s; (2) he deserved a Pavey hearing; (3) all his claims were exhausted;
    and (4) the defendants were not entitled to qualified immunity. He says nothing further
    No. 21-1585                                                                           Page 5
    about the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act, and so neither do we.
    The same goes for Henderson’s claim of intentional racial and religious discrimination
    and for the untimeliness of his 2010 meal claim.
    To start, Henderson was not entitled to a three-judge district court. Although the
    statute he cites, 
    28 U.S.C. § 2281
    , once required three district judges for some actions
    challenging the constitutionality of state regulations, the statute was repealed in 1976.
    See Shapiro v. McManus, 
    577 U.S. 39
    , 40–41 (2015). Today a three-judge panel is required
    only for certain election-law actions. See 
    28 U.S.C. § 2284
    .
    Next, Henderson was not entitled to a Pavey hearing. The purpose of an
    evidentiary hearing under Pavey is to resolve factual disputes bearing on exhaustion.
    Wagoner v. Lemmon, 
    778 F.3d 586
    , 591 (7th Cir. 2015). When two affidavits conflict, a
    hearing allows the district judge to resolve the conflict by evaluating each witness’s
    credibility. Here, though, Henderson did not dispute any specific facts in the
    defendants’ summary judgment materials; he made only a blanket assertion that the
    affidavits conflicted. Henderson’s appellate briefs offer no clarity on this point. And the
    district court appears to have accepted all of Henderson’s specific statements about his
    prison grievances but also credited the defendants’ specific statements that he did not
    contradict. The district court therefore did not need to hold an evidentiary hearing.
    Henderson also argues that he exhausted administrative remedies concerning
    religious books and problems with the 2011, 2013, and 2014 Ramadan meals. At the
    outset, he objects to the district court’s consideration of materials (grievances and
    Wisconsin regulations) attached to the defendants’ reply brief rather than submitted
    with their initial motion. But Henderson himself made these materials relevant by
    mentioning the grievances and raising his postage argument in response to the
    defendants’ first motion for summary judgment. His argument opened the door for
    defendants to submit these materials. See Balderston v. Fairbanks Morse Engine Div. of
    Coltec Indus., 
    328 F.3d 309
    , 318 (7th Cir. 2003).
    Henderson further contends that the denials of books and meals were part of a
    continuing violation, meaning he need not have filed more than one grievance for the
    duration of the violation. See Turley v. Rednour, 
    729 F.3d 645
    , 650 (7th Cir. 2013). But, for
    the continuous-violation doctrine to apply, the grievances on file must afford the prison
    notice of the precise claim at issue in the later lawsuit. 
    Id.
     And Henderson did not
    submit any grievances about a religious need for books. Instead, his grievances objected
    only on general grounds to the limits on “personal” books (one religious text, a
    No. 21-1585                                                                            Page 6
    dictionary, two puzzle books, and two library books). Though religious texts were
    included in those limits, a claim based on religious rights was not apparent.
    Henderson’s Ramadan-meal claims from 2011, 2013, and 2014 have a similar
    problem. In 2010 and 2012, Henderson objected to being taken off the Ramadan
    schedule altogether. But in 2011, 2013, and 2014, his grievances alleged issues with
    particular Ramadan meals he was given (for example, missing items and low-calorie
    counts). These grievances concerned different decisions and decision-makers than his
    alleged Ramadan-meal list denials in 2010 and 2012. See 
    id.
     For that reason, he needed to
    administratively appeal the denial of the 2011, 2013, and 2014 grievances if he wished to
    pursue related claims in federal court; appealing the 2010 and 2012 denials did not
    cover these claims.
    Finally, Henderson argues that the defendants were not entitled to qualified
    immunity—neither on his class-of-one equal-protection claims nor on his free-exercise
    claims. But even assuming his class-of-one claims may be cognizable in the abstract, the
    relevant law is not “clearly established” for purposes of qualified immunity. City of
    Escondido v. Emmons, 
    139 S. Ct. 500
    , 503 (2019) (“[T]he clearly established right must be
    defined with specificity.”). Henderson does not cite any class-of-one precedent on
    religious accommodations for inmates. Meanwhile, the Supreme Court has said that
    government employees may not use class-of-one claims to challenge employment
    decisions because of the “vast array of subjective, individualized assessments”
    involved. See Engquist v. Oregon Dep’t of Agric., 
    553 U.S. 591
    , 603–04 (2008). It is far from
    clear that an inmate of the state can bring a class-of-one claim when an employee of the
    state cannot.
    As for prayer oil, Henderson cites two cases, but neither clearly establishes a
    right to possess religious items that prison officials believe will create a security risk. In
    the first case, Charles v. Verhagen, the district court determined that a blanket ban on
    prayer oil did not violate the Free Exercise Clause but did violate the Religious Land
    Use and Institutionalized Persons Act. 
    220 F. Supp. 2d 937
    , 938 (W.D. Wis. 2002). On
    appeal we rejected the defendants’ claim that the Act exceeded Congress’s authority,
    but we had no occasion to review the district court’s First Amendment ruling. Charles v.
    Verhagen, 
    348 F.3d 601
    , 604–05 (7th Cir. 2003). In the second case, O’Lone v. Estate of
    Shabazz, the Supreme Court held that prison officials did not violate the Free Exercise
    Clause by preventing Muslim inmates from attending weekly religious services on
    Fridays. 
    482 U.S. 342
    , 352 (1987). In sum, these cases do not help Henderson overcome
    qualified immunity.
    No. 21-1585                                                                            Page 7
    As for Henderson’s 2012 meal claim, we need not resolve whether qualified
    immunity would protect the security director who ordered Henderson removed from
    the Ramadan-meal list because that person was not among the defendants. Henderson
    does not tell us why the district court’s ruling that he sued the wrong defendant is
    incorrect. In a civil-rights action under 
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    , plaintiffs must sue the people
    personally responsible for the violation. See Mitchell v. Kallas, 
    895 F.3d 492
    , 498 (7th Cir.
    2018). Henderson did not.
    AFFIRMED