Green v. Lowe ( 2023 )


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  •                                861
    This is a nonprecedential memorandum opinion
    pursuant to ORAP 10.30 and may not be cited
    except as provided in ORAP 10.30(1).
    Submitted February 3, affirmed March 22, 2023
    Vyron Henry GREEN,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    Nathan LOWE,
    Collette Peters, and
    Timothy Davis,
    Defendants-Respondents,
    and
    JOHN AND JANE DOES et al,
    Defendants.
    Marion County Circuit Court
    21CV19825; A178632
    Sean E. Armstrong, Judge.
    Vyron Henry Green filed the briefs pro se.
    Ellen F. Rosenblum, Attorney General, Benjamin Gutman,
    Solicitor General, and Robert M. Wilsey, Assistant Attorney
    General, filed the brief for the respondent.
    Before Aoyagi, Presiding Judge, and Joyce, Judge, and
    Jacquot, Judge.
    JOYCE, J.
    Affirmed.
    862                                                        Green v. Lowe
    JOYCE, J.
    Plaintiff was an adult in the custody of defendant,
    the Oregon Department of Corrections (ODOC). After ODOC
    seized and then destroyed a set of platinum false teeth found
    in plaintiff’s possession, plaintiff sued ODOC for conversion
    and negligence. The trial court granted ODOC’s motion for
    summary judgment. Because we conclude that the trial
    court correctly granted defendant’s motion, we affirm.
    By rule, ODOC has listed the only personal property
    items that an inmate may possess. OAR 291-117-0080(1).
    The list includes two jewelry items: a certain type of wed-
    ding ring (for inmates who are married) and a certain type
    of watch. OAR 291-117-0080(1)(f).
    Here, ODOC officials observed plaintiff with plati-
    num teeth, also known as a “grill,” which is a type of mouth
    jewelry that is not on the list of authorized personal property
    items. An officer investigated and concluded that the teeth
    were contraband. See OAR 291-117-0008(2) (“contraband”
    includes “[a]ny article or thing * * * which [an] inmate is not
    specifically authorized to obtain or possess”). The investi-
    gating officer confiscated the teeth, prepared a misconduct
    report, and the teeth were subsequently destroyed.
    As noted, plaintiff then sued ODOC for conversion
    and negligence.1 ODOC moved for summary judgment,
    arguing that plaintiff’s conversion claim failed because he
    had failed to show that he had actual ownership in the teeth
    and the right to control them and that his negligence claim
    failed because he failed to show that he had a legally pro-
    tected interest in the teeth. See Western Radio Services Co.
    v. Verizon Wireless, LLC, 
    297 Or App 446
    , 451, 442 P3d 218,
    rev den, 
    365 Or 534
     (2019) (requiring an “actual ownership
    interest in and the right to control” property for a conversion
    claim); Fazzolari v. Portland School Dist. No.1J, 
    303 Or 1
    ,
    17, 
    734 P2d 1326
     (1987) (requiring a protected interest for a
    negligence claim). The trial court granted ODOC’s motion.
    Plaintiff now appeals.
    1
    He also asserted a claim for violation of the Vulnerable Persons Act, ORS
    124.100 - 124.140. The trial court granted ODOC’s motion for summary judgment
    on that claim, and plaintiff has not assigned error to that ruling on appeal.
    Nonprecedential Memo Op: 
    324 Or App 861
     (2023)                 863
    On appeal, plaintiff’s argument focuses on OAR
    291-117-0140(5). That rule provides:
    “Inmate personal property items that have been con-
    fiscated and held by the department as evidence in a disci-
    plinary investigation shall be returned to the inmate upon
    conclusion of the investigation and any subsequent disci-
    plinary hearing/case, if the inmate is found not to have
    violated the rules of prohibited inmate conduct, and the
    property item(s) is not classified as contraband.”
    
    Id.
    As we understand plaintiff’s argument, he asserts
    that because ODOC took his teeth as evidence in a disci-
    plinary investigation, ODOC was obligated to return the
    teeth upon the conclusion of that investigation and any
    subsequent disciplinary hearing unless that hearing deter-
    mined that he had violated a rule of conduct and that the
    teeth were contraband. In plaintiff’s view, because there
    was no hearing that resulted in findings that he violated
    the rules of prohibited conduct and that the teeth were con-
    traband, the trial court erred in granting ODOC’s summary
    judgment motion. Plaintiff does not dispute that the inves-
    tigating officer determined that the teeth were contraband
    and does not contend that that determination was wrong;
    rather, he simply argues that ODOC was required to return
    the teeth to him in the absence of a hearing confirming the
    officer’s determination.
    As ODOC observes, although plaintiff does not
    connect that argument to how the trial court incorrectly
    granted summary judgment on his claims, the import of
    his arguments appears to be that if ODOC did not follow
    its rules in concluding that the teeth were contraband, then
    plaintiff did not lose his ownership interest in the teeth or
    his right to control them, as relevant to his conversion claim,
    or his legally protected interest in the teeth, as relevant to
    his negligence claim.
    Accepting that framing, we conclude that the trial
    court correctly granted ODOC’s motion for summary judg-
    ment. At the outset, we note plaintiff’s argument on appeal
    is very narrow. He argues only that, under OAR 291-117-
    0140(5), ODOC was required to return the teeth to plaintiff.
    864                                                            Green v. Lowe
    He does not argue that due process, other ODOC rules, or
    any other source of law required ODOC to engage in a dif-
    ferent process for declaring the teeth contraband, confis-
    cating them, or destroying them. But OAR 291-117-0140(5)
    does not, as plaintiff contends, require a hearing to deter-
    mine whether he violated the rules of prohibited conduct
    and whether the teeth were contraband before ODOC could
    retain and subsequently destroy the teeth. Rather, the
    rule allows for a hearing—“any subsequent disciplinary
    hearing”—but it does not require one.2 The rule simply
    requires property to be returned at the conclusion of an
    investigation if two conditions are met: (1) the adult in cus-
    tody is not found to have violated the rules of prohibited
    conduct and (2) the property is not classified as contraband.
    The officer’s investigation here concluded that the teeth
    were contraband, and thus the rule does not require that
    they be returned.3
    Based on the arguments that plaintiff has pre-
    sented, no genuine issue of material fact existed whether
    plaintiff had an ownership interest or protected interest in
    the teeth. The trial court thus correctly granted ODOC’s
    motion for summary judgment.
    Affirmed.
    2
    We are aware of no ODOC rule that establishes a process by which ODOC
    determines whether an item constitutes contraband and confiscates it. Some of
    its rules do suggest that ODOC may conclude that items are contraband and
    confiscate them without the concomitant requirement of a hearing or other for-
    mal determination that the item is indeed contraband. OAR 291-117-0120(1) (per-
    sonal property kept in unauthorized areas “shall be considered contraband” and
    “shall result in confiscation of the item and/or disciplinary action”); OAR 291-117-
    0140(2)(a) (excess property that is not mailed out or discarded “shall be consid-
    ered contraband, and may result in confiscation of the item(s) and/or disciplinary
    action”).
    3
    The issue presented to us on appeal does not require us to address the pro-
    priety of ODOC’s destruction of the contraband after they confiscated it and we
    offer no opinion as to that action.
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A178632

Judges: Joyce

Filed Date: 3/22/2023

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 10/10/2024