Precedential: Circuit Judges
Precedential: Circuit Judges
Precedential: Circuit Judges
For a host of reasons, the District Court did not find credible
Smalls assertion that he did not receive a handbook before
2007, including the undisputed fact that CCCF issues a
handbook during the intake process, and so it was
unbelievable that Small never received even one despite his
several readmissions to CCCF. The Court also found that
even if Small had never been given a handbook, they were
readily available at CCCF and he could easily have obtained
one.
11
(Id. at 156).
Similarly, the District Court properly discounted letters
Small wrote that were not submitted in compliance with
CCCFs requirements for the proper filing of grievances (e.g.,
they were not directed to the grievance officer or any
corrections staff, were not filed within 15 days of the alleged
incident, or failed to identify the specifics of the incident);
indeed, the majority of those letters were sent to individuals
outside of prison administration, thus failing to serve the
basic purpose of the grievance filing mechanism, which is to
notify officials of a problem and provide an opportunity for
efficient correction. With respect to the grievances, the
subject of Smalls letters and Sick Call Request forms, the
Court correctly concluded that Smalls efforts were not
substantially compliant with CCCFs grievance procedures
and so could not serve as a basis for satisfying the PLRAs
exhaustion requirement.
We believe, however, that the District Court erred
insofar as it found that although grievances had been
submitted in compliance with CCCFs procedures as to the
incidents of June 18, 2005 and June 28, 2005, those
grievances should nonetheless be dismissed because Small
did not file an appeal as to either one.8 The Court concluded
that Smalls failure to appeal rendered his efforts
noncompliant with CCCFs procedures and, therefore, that his
administrative remedies as to them were unexhausted. There
is no dispute, however, that there was no decision as to either
of those grievances (or, we note, any of the others now before
us), and we disagree with the Court that substantial
compliance with CCCFs procedures requires appealing nondecisions. CCCFs procedures discuss only the appeal of a
decision with which the inmate is not satisfied, and do not
mention what must or even could be done by the inmate when
a decision is never made: If the inmate is not satisfied with
the grievance officers decision, He/She may appeal to the
Warden . . . . (J.A. 675). Thus, the Court erroneously read
8
an additional
procedures.9
requirement
into
CCCFs
grievance
IV. Conclusion
We will vacate the order of the District Court
dismissing the grievances arising from the incidents of June
18, 2005 and June 28, 2005, and remand for further
proceedings consistent with this Opinion. We will, in all
other respects, affirm the order of the District Court
dismissing the complaint.
___________
APPENDIX
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INMATE GRIEVANCE PROCEDURE1
It is the policy of this Department to provide to its inmates an
internal grievance mechanism for the resolution of
Complaints arising from institutional matters, so as to reduce
the need for litigation and afford everyone the opportunity to
have input in the improvement of the facility operations.
This inmate grievance procedure is an internal administrative
means for the resolution of complaint and the identification of
potentially problematic areas. This procedure is designed to
supplement, but not replace, the informal communication
process or the institutional disciplinary procedure.
An inmate may file a grievance at any time to bring a
problem to the attention of staff or to appeal a specific action.
An inmate may file a grievance only for him/herself, although
an inmate may assist another inmate in filing a grievance.
Only one grievance may be filed at one time on a single
incident or item of concern. An inmate may withdraw a
previously filed grievance at any time.
No staff member may retaliate against an inmate for filing or
withdrawing a grievance.
A grievance may be initiated for any one the following
reasons:
An alleged criminal or prohibited act by a staff
member