Norman Dean v. Sgt. S. Jackson Sgt. Jackson Sgt. Williams and State of Louisiana through the Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections Louisiana State Penitentiary ( 2022 )


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  •                              NOT DESIGNATED FOR PUBLICATION
    STATE OF LOUISIANA
    COURT OF APPEAL
    FIRST CIRCUIT
    2021 CA 0987
    NORMAN DEAN
    Iv                                                  VERSUS
    SERGEANT SAMANTHA JACKSON, SERGEANT DEMOND McCOY,
    W SERGEANT PHILLIP WILLIAMS, AND                      STATE OF LOUISIANA THROUGH
    LOUISIANA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY AND CORRECTIONS,
    V\
    LOUISIANA STATE PENITENTIARY
    Judgment Rendered:            MAR 0 7 2022
    On Appeal from the
    Twentieth Judicial District Court
    In and for the Parish of West Feliciana
    State of Louisiana
    Trial Court No. 23141
    The Honorable Kathryn E. Jones, Judge Presiding
    Donna U. Grodner                                         Attorney for Plaintiff/Appellant
    Baton Rouge, Louisiana                                   Norman Dean
    Jeff Landry                                              Attorneys for Defendants/ Appellees
    Attorney General                                         Sgt. Samantha Jackson, Sgt. Phillip
    Baton Rouge, Louisiana                                   Williams, and the State of Louisiana,
    through the Department of Public
    Jabrina C. Edwards                                       Safety and Corrections
    Assistant Attorney General
    Shreveport, Louisiana
    Wm. David Coffey
    Assistant Attorney General
    New Orleans, Louisiana
    BEFORE:         WHIPPLE, C. J., PENZATO, AND HESTER, JJ.
    c- S o n s
    4 e5f        3.         s Se,^ r s    a ^,    al s 5)     q%
    J
    PENZATO, J.
    Plaintiff appeals a summary judgment that dismissed his claims seeking
    recovery for injuries sustained as the result of an altercation with a fellow inmate at
    Louisiana State Penitentiary in Angola, Louisiana. For the following reasons, we
    affirm the trial court judgment.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    On December 20, 2016, plaintiff, Norman Dean, an inmate housed at the
    Louisiana State Penitentiary in Angola, Louisiana, was asleep in his cell when a
    fellow inmate threw scalding liquid on him.            Dean was assigned to Cell Block D,
    which contained a gate and dorm doors that he alleged were to remain locked at all
    times. However, on the date ofthe incident, the gate and doors were unlocked, which
    allowed the fellow inmate to enter Cell Block D and injure Dean.
    Dean filed suit against the State of Louisiana, through the Department of
    Public Safety and Corrections ( State), and several individual defendants, including
    Sergeant Samantha Jackson and Sergeant Phillip Williams, alleging they were
    negligent in failing to protect him from the attack by his fellow inmate.'              Dean
    contented that the defendants failed to provide a safe place to reside, failed to lock
    the doors and gates that were supposed to be locked, failed to maintain security,
    failed to provide safety precautions,         and were inattentive and reckless in the
    workplace.
    The defendants filed a motion for summary judgment contending that a non-
    party inmate, Justin Savoy, threw scalding hot water and/ or bleach' on Dean while
    both were incarcerated and that the State' s actions or inactions do not show that it
    had reasonable cause to anticipate harm to Dean prior to the incident and had
    A third individual defendant, Sergeant Demond McCoy, was also named in the petition, but
    Dean was unable to effect service upon him.
    2 In his petition, Dean alleged that scalding bleach was thrown on him. During his deposition,
    Dean also referred to hot water being thrown on him.
    2
    sufficient time to act.       In support of its motion for summary judgment, the State
    attached excerpts from Dean' s deposition, the petition, and a copy of Dean' s enemy
    list.,
    Dean opposed the motion for summary judgment and relied on excerpts from
    his deposition; defendants' discovery responses, including photographs of Dean' s
    injuries and Penitentiary Directive No. 09.007/ 13 regarding the use of restraints; and
    Dean' s discovery responses, including the DPSC Department Regulation No. C- 02-
    013 entitled " Field Operations," DPSC Corrections Services Employee Manual, and
    Certified Directive No. 13. 019 entitled " Suicide Prevention, Suicide Intervention
    and Post Suicide Management."
    A hearing on the motion for summary judgment was held on March 24, 2021.
    At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court granted the defendants'               motion,
    finding no genuine issues of material fact and stating:
    Because I cannot get past the first prong of the mandated analysis
    in Parker [ v. State, 
    282 So. 2d 483
     ( La. 1973)] that the State knows or
    should have reason to anticipate that harm would ensue. I cannot find
    that [ their]— thenegligent actions of the guards in not following policy
    as to keeping doors or gates locked like they should have. I cannot find
    that that is going to put liability on the State.
    In conformance with the ruling, the trial court signed a judgment on May 10, 2021,
    dismissing Dean' s claims against the defendants.         It is from this judgment that Dean
    appeals.
    ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    Dean asserts two assignments of error on appeal: ( 1) the trial court erred in
    failing to apply a duty -risk analysis and finding that Dean was required to give notice
    to the State of a threat of harm from a specific inmate,              and (   2) the trial court
    incorrectly applied Parker.        We address these interrelated assignments of error
    simultaneously.
    s Dean' s " enemy list" is a list of inmates, compiled from a screening of Dean' s inmate record,
    with whom Dean has had problems in the past.
    Q
    APPLICABLE LAW
    Standard of Review
    A motion for summary judgment is a procedural device used to avoid a full-
    scale trial when there is no genuine issue of material fact.           Lewis v. Safeway
    Insurance Company of Louisiana, 2020- 0999 ( La. App. 1st Cir. 4/ 16/ 21),        
    324 So. 3d 121
    , 124- 25.   After an opportunity for adequate discovery, a motion for summary
    judgment shall be granted if the motion, memorandum, and supporting documents
    show there is no genuine issue as to material fact and that the mover is entitled to
    judgment as a matter of law. La. C. C. P. art. 966( A)( 3). A "genuine" issue is a triable
    issue. An issue is genuine if reasonable persons could disagree.        Conversely, if on
    the state of the evidence, reasonable persons could reach only one conclusion, there
    is no need for a trial on that issue.     A fact is "   material"   when its existence or
    nonexistence may be essential to plaintiff' s cause of action under the applicable
    theory of recovery.      Washington v. Guillotte, 2018- 0301 ( La.         App.   1st Cir.
    12/ 21/ 18), 
    268 So. 3d 1048
    , 1053. Because it is the applicable substantive law that
    determines materiality, whether a particular issue in dispute is material can be seen
    only in light of the substantive law applicable to the case.             Georgia-Pacific
    Consumer Operations, LLC v. City of Baton Rouge, 2017- 1553 ( La. App. 1 st Cir.
    7/ 18/ 18), 
    255 So. 3d 16
    , 22, writ denied, 2018- 1397 ( La. 12/ 3/ 18), 
    257 So. 3d 194
    .
    The burden of proof rests on the mover. Nevertheless, if the mover will not
    bear the burden of proof at trial on the issue that is before the court on the motion
    for summary judgment, the mover' s burden on the motion does not require him to
    negate all essential elements of the adverse party' s claim, action, or defense, but
    rather to point out to the court the absence of factual support for one or more
    elements essential to the adverse party' s claim, action, or defense.      The burden is
    then on the adverse party to produce factual support sufficient to establish the
    M
    existence of a genuine issue of material fact or that the mover is not entitled to
    judgment as a matter of law. La. C. C. P. art. 966( D)( 1).
    In reviewing a trial court' s ruling on a motion for summary judgment, an
    appellate court reviews the evidence de novo using the same criteria that govern the
    trial court' s determination of whether summary judgment is appropriate. Bourg v.
    Safeway Insurance Company of Louisiana, 2019- 0270 ( La. App.            1 st Cir. 3/ 5/ 20),
    
    300 So. 3d 881
    , 888. Thus, appellate courts ask the same questions: whether there
    is any genuine issue of material fact and whether the mover is entitled to judgment
    as a matter of law. Jones v. Anderson, 2016- 1361 (      La. App. 1st Cir. 6/ 29/ 17),   
    224 So. 3d 413
    , 417.
    Application of Parker and Duty -Risk Analysis
    Dean' s deposition testimony evidences that on December 20, 2016, the date
    of this incident, he was on suicide watch in the lockdown area of the prison known
    as Cell Block D.    Earlier in the day, Dean attended disciplinary court at the prison
    and informed Major Willie Roscoe that he had enemies who were trying to get him
    because those enemies had confused him with his brother, Noel Dean, who is also a
    prisoner.   Dean also testified that he requested that Major James Oliver contact the
    social worker to let her know that his life was in danger. Dean explained that inmates
    from other cellblocks were permitted to work in the lockdown area as orderlies and
    that threatening messages were sent to him through the orderlies under the false
    impression that Dean was his brother. However, Dean could not identify any person
    or persons who sent the threatening messages. Dean also stated that he reported the
    threatening messages to Major Oliver but agreed that he did not add any names to
    his enemy list.
    Around lunchtime, a third inmate with the nickname of "Freddy Krueger" spit
    on Savoy,    one of the   orderlies.   Later,    intending to retaliate against " Freddy
    Krueger,"   Savoy mistakenly threw scalding hot water and/ or bleach on Dean.         Dean
    5
    admitted that he and Savoy had never spoken before the incident and that Savoy had
    not previously threatened him. Dean was sleeping at the time of the incident and
    stated that Savoy mistook him for " Freddy Krueger" — " This        dude [   Savoy]   came
    later onto retaliate. He just came to the wrong cell."   Dean admitted that the incident
    had " nothing to do with [his] brother."
    Dean testified that the tier door to Cell Block D was unlocked at the time of
    the incident and that other gates and doors were also unlocked. Dean explained that
    an inmate, assigned to be a " tier walker," walks the length of the tier, presses clocks
    positioned at each end, goes through a door to go upstairs, walks the length of the
    upper tier, and presses other clocks.   This requires the " tier walker" to go through
    multiple doors, which are kept unlocked. Dean asserted that the tier doors, which
    should have been locked, were left unlocked to make the tier walk' s job easier. Dean
    also maintained that no one was at the security desk at the time of the incident.
    Otherwise,   that person would have been in a position to observe Savoy,               the
    offending inmate, heating up the bleach and/ or water.
    The State asserts that under Parker, the Louisiana Supreme Court has set forth
    a two -prong test when deciding inmate injury cases. According to the State, the first
    prong requires Dean to show the defendants either knew or had reason to anticipate
    that the offending inmate would attack Dean, while the second prong requires Dean
    to show the defendants failed to exercise reasonable care to protect him.             Dean
    counters that the trial court misapplied Parker, that the trial court disregarded the
    totality of the facts of this case, and that Parker " may no longer be controlling law
    in this State, where the duty risk analysis has been applied since the 1980s to
    negligence cases ...."
    Parker clearly states:
    A penal institution is not an insurer of an inmate against attacks by other
    inmates. The standard is that of reasonable or ordinary care. The
    majority rule is that in order to hold the penal authorities liable for an
    2
    injury inflicted upon an inmate by another inmate, the authorities must
    know or have reason to anticipate that harm will ensue and fail to use
    reasonable care in preventing the harm.
    Parker, 
    282 So. 2d at 486
    . In Parker, the penal institution received notice that the
    plaintiff feared an attack from a particular fellow inmate. The court held that "[ s] uch
    a notice alone, however, is insufficient to support liability under the above rule."   
    Id.
    The court further recognized that "[ s]   cores of reports ofthis kind are received weekly
    in the prison environment.   For liability, the law requires at least adequate reason to
    anticipate harm and failure to take reasonable action to avert it." 
    Id.
    This court in Walden v. State, 
    430 So. 2d 1224
    , 1227 ( La. App. 1 st Cir.), writ
    denied, 
    435 So. 2d 430
     ( La. 1983), reiterated that Parker sets forth the correct legal
    duty imposed upon penal authorities for the protection of inmates against attacks by
    other inmates, which this court noted is often called the " bad blood" rule. This court
    held that even though the guards may have violated policies designed to keep
    inmates out of each other' s cells, no legal standard of care was violated when there
    was no reason to anticipate an altercation between the victim inmate and the
    offending inmate.   
    Id.
    Under circumstances similar to Parker, an inmate had his throat cut and was
    stabbed by a fellow inmate in State ex rel. Jackson v. Phelps, 95- 2294 ( La. 4/ 8/ 96),
    
    672 So. 2d 665
    .   The Louisiana Supreme Court noted that the injured inmate never
    told prison officials that he was in fear of an attack by the fellow inmate.
    Furthermore,   prison officials had no notice of any animosity between the two
    inmates. Jackson, 672 So. 2d at 666.        Determining the prison had no liability, the
    Louisiana Supreme Court stated:
    While a penal institution is not an insurer of an inmate against attacks
    by other inmates, penal authorities have a duty to use reasonable care
    in preventing harm after they have reasonable cause to anticipate it.
    Whether the state breached its duty will depend on the facts and
    circumstances    of each   case.    Thus, we must determine whether the
    penal authorities at [ the prison] had reasonable cause to anticipate harm
    h
    to plaintiff and, if so, whether they failed to use reasonable care in
    preventing such harm.
    Jackson, 672 So. 2d at 667 ( emphasis added; citations omitted).
    Based on the above cases, we agree with the trial court that the inmate must
    first show that the prison officials had reasonable cause to anticipate harm to that
    inmate before reaching the inquiry of whether the prison officials failed to use
    reasonable care in preventing the harm. The facts in the record reflect that fellow
    inmates often confused Dean with his brother,        that Dean received threatening
    messages intended for his brother, and complained to Major Oliver about these
    threats. However, Dean could not identify any sender of those threatening messages
    and did not add any individual to his enemy list.
    Dean admitted that the incident involving Savoy was unrelated to the threats
    against him, which were intended for his brother.     Instead, the incident involving
    Savoy occurred because Savoy mistakenly believed Dean was a third inmate,
    Freddy Krueger." It is undisputed that Savoy intended to retaliate against " Freddy
    Krueger" and did not intend to harm Dean.      Dean had no relationship with Savoy
    prior to the incident and the two had never spoken.     There is no evidence in the
    record that Dean felt threatened by Savoy or that he ever informed the prison
    officials that he thought he might be harmed by Savoy.     Therefore, DPSC had no
    notice that harm might come to Dean by Savoy, and it could not reasonably
    anticipate such harm.
    Dean argues that Parker "may no longer be controlling law in this State, where
    the duty risk analysis has been applied since the 1980s to negligence cases...."   As
    noted by the State, the duty -risk analysis was adopted by the Louisiana Supreme
    Court in 1962 in Dixie Drive It Yourself System New Orleans,        Co. v. American
    Beverage Co., 
    137 So. 2d 298
     ( La. 1962).      Parker was decided in 1973,     over a
    decade later, also by the Louisiana Supreme Court.
    n.
    Furthermore, Dean relies upon several cases that are either distinguishable
    from the present case or support the State' s position, like Norred v. Litchfield, 2006-
    2156 ( La. App. 1 st Cir. 11/ 2/ 07), 
    977 So. 2d 1004
    . Norred supports the trial court' s
    analysis that Dean must first demonstrate that the State had reasonable cause to
    anticipate the harm before addressing the issue of whether prison officials violated
    a duty of reasonable care. The court in Norred stated:
    Our law provides, and [ the Sheriff) generally acknowledges, that prison
    authorities owe a duty to exercise reasonable care to protect inmates
    from harm. This duty, however, is qualified by a requirement that penal
    authorities have reasonable cause to anticipate the harm: "           penal
    authorities have a duty to use reasonable care in preventing harm after
    they have reasonable cause to anticipate it."
    Norred, 977 So. 2d at 1006 (       quoting Jackson,   672 So. 2d at 677; emphasis in
    original; citation omitted).   The Norred court determined that the evidence presented
    by the inmate did not suggest that the Sheriff had any cause to anticipate that the
    inmate would fall out of the bed and harm himself.           Id.   Therefore, summary
    judgment in favor of the Sheriff was affirmed.
    Dean also asserts that Pete v. State, Department of Corrections, 2017- 1131
    La. App. 3rd Cir. 5/ 9/ 18), 
    247 So. 3d 1084
    , applied the duty -risk analysis to an
    inmate case.   However, the court relied upon the following language of Jackson,
    w]hile a penal institution is not an insurer of an inmate against attacks by other
    inmates, penal authorities have a duty to use reasonable care in preventing harm after
    they have reasonable cause to anticipate it." Id. at 1095 ( quoting Jackson, 672 So.
    2d at 667). The issue before the court was " whether, based on the record evidence,
    the Sheriff had reasonable cause to anticipate an inmate could be harmed by the
    throwing of limestone aggregate and,        if so, whether the Sheriff failed to use
    reasonable care in preventing this harm."   Pete, 247 So. 3d at 1095 ( emphasis added).
    The court in Pete found that the Sheriff had reasonable cause to anticipate that
    limestone aggregate in the trustee yard could be used as a weapon. Id. Therefore,
    0
    Pete supports the State' s argument in the present case that an inmate must first show
    that DPSC had reasonable cause to anticipate an inmate could be harmed.
    Dean also relies on Marsellus v. Department ofPublic Safety and Corrections,
    2004- 0860 (   La. App.   1st Cir. 9/ 23/ 05), 
    923 So. 2d 656
    , 661, in support of his
    argument that,    when a correctional officer fails to follow the rules at a penal
    institution, the officer has reasonable cause to anticipate harm to someone.         In
    Marsellus, an officer at the correctional facility challenged the disciplinary action
    taken after the officer was accused of sleeping while on duty.       The opinion does
    include language that "prison security officers who are inattentive to their duties ``for
    even a few minutes' create unacceptable safety risk."       Id. at 661.   However, the
    matter was not an inmate injury case, so the court did not discuss the applicability
    of Parker. Therefore, we find Marsellus is inapplicable.
    Dean further relies on Patterson v. Allain, 2012- 1365 (    La. App.    1st Cir.
    4/ 26/ 13), 
    116 So. 3d 732
    , 736- 37, writ denied sub nom. Patterson ex rel. Haggan v.
    Allain, 2013- 1223 ( La. 9/ 13/ 13),   
    120 So. 3d 701
    .   There, the court considered
    whether the actions of the officers, who admitted they were negligent in not frisking
    and removing a belt from an inmate who committed suicide, arose to the level of
    deliberate indifference sufficient to state of cause of action pursuant to 42 U.S. C. §
    1983.   As the court noted, to succeed with a deliberate indifference claim under the
    Eighth Amendment, there must be more than ordinary lack of due care for the
    prisoner' s safety. Id. at 736. The present case does not involve a claim of deliberate
    indifference sufficient to state a cause of action pursuant to 42 U.S. C. § 1983, and
    the analysis contained in Patterson does not apply.
    Dean also cites Breaux v. State, 
    326 So. 2d 481
    , 482- 83 ( La. 1976),    which
    found the State liable for the negligence of the prison guards who failed to protect
    an inmate while escorting a younger inmate to another dormitory.          The Louisiana
    Supreme Court applied Parker and held that the State should have reasonably
    10
    anticipated an attack after it had been reported that particular inmates had threatened
    the younger inmate. Breaux, 
    326 So. 2d at 482
    .            The Court specifically stated, "     We
    find that, even under this standard enunciated by Parker, the state is here liable for
    its employee' s failure to use reasonable care in preventing harm after they had
    reasonable cause to anticipate it."        
    Id.
     ( italics added).    In contrast, in the present
    case, there has been no evidence that the State had any reasonable cause to anticipate
    Savoy' s attack. Therefore, the issue of whether the State failed to use reasonable
    care in preventing harm is not reached.4
    Dean further maintains that the State' s argument that it had no reasonable
    cause to anticipate that a specific inmate, Savoy, would harm Dean is untenable.
    However, this court has consistently held that where there is no evidence that prison
    officials should anticipate an altercation, the State has no reasonable cause to
    anticipate harm and there can be no liability.        In McGee v. State Through Louisiana
    Department of Corrections, 
    417 So. 2d 416
    , 418 ( La. App. 1 st Cir.),               writ denied,
    
    420 So. 2d 981
     ( La. 1982) (         emphasis added),   the court noted that a dispute arose
    spontaneously, and "[      t]here was no evidence at the hearing indicating the prison
    officials knew of prior threats or previous confrontations between these two
    inmates."     Therefore, this court held that the State had no reason to anticipate that
    harm would ensue.         
    Id.
        This court, in Shields v. State Through Department of
    Corrections, 
    380 So. 2d 123
    , 125 ( La. App. 1st Cir. 1979), writ denied, 
    382 So. 2d 164
     ( La. 1980),    also determined that the prison officials had no warning that the
    injured inmate was in danger and " no reason to anticipate that [ the offender] might
    attack him."
    In the more recent case            of Harrison v. Natchitoches          Parish Sheriffs
    Department, 2004- 928 (         La. App. 3rd Cir.    12/ 15/ 04), 
    896 So. 2d 101
    ,       105,   writ
    4 Dean cites numerous other cases pertaining to the duty -risk analysis, which do not involve
    inmates injured at a penal facility or the application of the Parker two -prong test. Therefore, we
    find these cases are inapplicable.
    11
    denied, 2005- 0133 ( La. 4/ 1/ 05), 
    898 So. 2d 349
    , the court held that the inmate' s
    evidence was insufficient to defeat summary judgment in favor of the Sheriff. The
    court noted that the Sheriff must know or have reason to know that harm will ensue.
    Although the offender had a propensity for unprovoked outbursts of violence, this
    information was not shared with the Sheriff.        There was no evidence of prior
    animosity between the offender and the injured inmate to place prison officials on
    notice.   Absent such evidence, the court concluded that the injured inmate was
    unable to establish that prison officials knew or had reason to anticipate harm to " the
    injured inmate] by [ the offender], and failed to use reasonable care to prevent the
    harm." 
    Id.
    We find the evidence submitted by Dean insufficient to defeat a motion for
    summary judgment. Based on the jurisprudence, the State must know or have reason
    to anticipate harm will ensue. The facts reflect that even Dean himself had no reason
    to anticipate the harm which occurred; thus, we conclude that Dean will not be able
    to establish that prison officials had reason to anticipate harm to him by Savoy.
    Therefore, we affirm the decision of the trial court.
    CONCLUSION
    For the reasons set forth above, the May 10, 2021 judgment of the trial court
    granting summary judgment in favor of defendants, the State of Louisiana, through
    the Department of Public Safety and Corrections, Sergeant Samantha Jackson, and
    Sergeant Phillip Williams, and dismissing the claims of plaintiff, Norman Dean, is
    affirmed.   All costs are assessed against Norman Dean.
    EVOT1I9 0-M-13
    12
    STATE OF LOUISIANA
    COURT OF APPEAL
    FIRST CIRCUIT
    2021 CA 0987
    VERSUS
    SERGEANT SAMANTHA JACKSON, SERGEANT DEMOND McCOY,
    SERGEANT PHILLIP WILLIAMS, AND STATE OF LOUISIANA THROUGH
    LOUISIANA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC SAFETY AND CORRECTIONS,
    LOUISIANA STATE PENITENTIARY
    C- \A lA
    HESTER, J. dissenting,
    I respectfully disagree with the decision of the majority. The State is obligated
    to provide facilities and environments reasonably calculated to protect inmates from
    the danger of an armed attack by fellow inmates.    Herein, Norman Dean, who was
    in protective custody in a maximum -security prison, reported threats he had received
    from unknown inmates to multiple officers because other inmates mistook him for
    his white supremacist brother. In addition, he told one officer that he feared for his
    life. Even so, the required security procedures ofkeeping the gates locked to prevent
    inmates from entering different tiers of the prison were not followed, which allowed
    the orderly, Justin Savoy to be on Dean' s tier and pour hot bleach on him.   With the
    benefit of hindsight, we now know that Savoy attacked Dean because he thought he
    was the inmate that spit on him earlier, and there were no prior issues between Savoy
    and Dean. However, hindsight is not the test, and the decisions of the prison officials
    must be considered using the information existing at the time of the incident.     See
    Parker v. State, 
    282 So. 2d 483
    , 487 ( La. 1973).    At the time of the incident, the
    officers were aware that Dean was in fear of being attacked, and the failure to follow
    security measures of locking the gate enabled Dugas to attack Dean. Considering
    this evidence, genuine issues of material fact remain as to whether the officers had
    at least an adequate reason to anticipate harm to Dean and failed to take reasonable
    action to avert it. See Parker, 
    282 So. 2d at 486
    . For these reasons, I dissent.