Rickey Barnes v. Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections
Rickey Barnes v. Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections
Opinion
Judgment Rendered.-
Appealed from the Judicial !
In and for the Parish of East Baton Rouge State of Louisiana Docket No. 724592
Rickey Barnes t t i' t t
Uri Counsel forDefendant/ Appellee, Baton Rouge,! Louisianaof Public It Corrections IkVIIINEMM Rickey Barnes appeals the district court' s judgment dismissing his petition for judicial review, with prejudice. For the following reasons, we affirm.
Mr. Barnes alleges that, on April 20, 2022, as he was going through the intake process at Raymond Laborde Correctional Center (" RLCC"), he had teM laundry bags of personal property and had to decide which property he woull keep, mail home, or destroy. Mr. Barnes contends that after he had sorted items im FIN 11111!
threatened him. Seven boxes of Mr. Barnes' s property were mailed to his motherlM house. However, he alleges his legal documents were not in those boxes and were trashed" by prison officials. On May 14, 2022, Mr. Barnes filed a requea pursuant to Louisiana' s administrative remedy procedure (" ARP"), RLCC- 2022- 440wherein he asserted he was threatened ® his legal documents and othco personal property were destroyed. The Louisiana Department of Public Safety and
finding Mr. Barnes had time to sort through his property, stating no one witnessem the colonel curse or threaten Mr. Barnes, and denying Mr. Barnes' s ARP. A August 30, 2022, a second step response was issued, wherein the De-partment denied Mr. Barnes' s request for relief.
On October 13, 2022, Mr. Barnes filed a "' Petition for Judicial Review,
seeking review of RLCC- 2022-440.' He also sought a hearing, damages, I declaratory judgment, and an injunction. On February 9, 2023, the district court dismissed Mr. Barnes' s claim for damages without prejudice, finding that it was
1 We note Mr. Barnes also sought review of RLCC-2022- 510. A 19th Judicial District Court Commissioner issued a " Multiple Claims Order," which stated that an inmate is only entitled to seek judicial review of a single administrative record in any single lawsuit and directed Mr. Barnes to notify the court which single administrative record he sought review of under his petition for judicial review, Mr. Barnes chose to pursue RLCC- 2022- 440,
N improperly combined with a request for judicial review, filed in the wrong venue, gl
individuals named as defendants in Mr. Barnes' s petition in their individual
capacities with the Department remaining as the only defendant. The Department filed an answer on May 4, 2023, denying Mr. Barnes' s claims.
On September 1, 2023, the Commissioner recommended the district court
affirm the Department' s decision and dismiss Mr. Barnes' s appeal, with prejudice,
at Mr. Barnes' s costs. 2 The Commissioner stated that the Department' s decision was neither arbitrary or capricious, nor manifestly erroneous. Mr. Barnes filed a traversal on October 3, 2023. Mr. Barnes asserted that the Department may hal committed fraud in preparing documents that indicated he elected to send items home and keep nine bundles of legal documents because he only signed oil withdrawal form and one property sheet, but neither provided for bundles of legal iocuments or personal property. He alleged the forms were filled out after hE- signed them and the mail room decided which items to send to his mother' s house, q1I
evidence seriously, which is why he requested a hearing. On October 8, 2023, after de novo review, the district court affirmed the Department' s decision in RLCC- 2022- 440 and dismissed Mr. Barnes' s petition for judicial review, with prejudice,
The Corrections Administrative Remedy Procedure, set forth in La. R.S.
15: 1171- 1179, provides the Department may adopt an administrative remedy
2 The office of the Commissioner of the 19th JDC was created by La. R.S. 13: 711 to hear and recommend disposition of criminal and civil proceedings arising out of the incarceration of state prisoners. The Commissioner' s written findings and recommendations are submitted to a district judge, who may accept, reject, or modify them. La. R.S. 13: 713( 0)(5); Collins v. Louisiana Department of Public Safety and Corrections, 2020- 0958 ( La. App. I" Cir. 4/ 16/ 21), 2021 WL 1438718, * 1 n.2 ( unpublished), writ denied; 2021- 00706 ( La. 10/ 12/ 21), 325 So. 3d 1067.
Q procedure for receiving, hearing, and disposing of any and all complaints an'& grievances by offenders against the state, the governor, the Department, or 112 employees.
The adopted procedures are the exclusive remedy for handling ti I- complaints and grievances to which they apply. La. R.S. 15: 1171( B); see also
by the Department are set forth in LAC 22: 1. 325. Pursuant to these rules, offenders must exhaust a two-step ARP before they can proceed with a suit in state court. La
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in the 19th Judicial District Court. See La. R.S. 15: 1177( A). On review of the
9-gency decision, the district court functions as an appellate court. Brown
Cir. 9/ 19/ 16), 277 So. 3d 326, 329. The district court' s review shall be confined to
the record and limited to the issues presented in the petition for review and the
On appellate review of a district court' s judgment in a suit for judicial
review under La. R.S. 15: 1177, no deference is owed by the court of appeal to the factual findings or legal conclusions of the district court, just as no deference a owed by the Louisiana Supreme Court to factual findings or legal conclusions of the court of appeal. As such, the de novo standard of review shall be applied,
Colvin v. Louisiana Department of Public Safely and Corrections, 2023- 1175 ( La. App. I" Cir, 5/ 31/ 24), 2024 WL 2971242, * 3 ( unpublished).
Now, after a de novo review, we find that Mr. Barnes' s petition for judicial I
review was properly dismissed. The administrative record demonstrates Mr. Barnes signed an inventory form on April 20, 2022. The fonn specifies whether
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Mr. Barnes' s property was " kept," " stored," or " sent home." The form indicates that Mr. Barnes kept a belt, books, combination locks, cosmetics, earphone,3 glasses, bundles of mail, nail clippers, photo albums, a bowl, tobacco, work gloves,
and writing tablets. Further, a mail log indicates Mr. Barnes mailed seven packages of property to his mother' s house. While Mr. Barnes argues the inventory sheet was " fraudulently filled] out" and his legal documents were destroyed, there is no evidence to support his self-serving assertions. Further, even if Mr. Barnes was removed from the intake room without his property, that does not mean that his property was destroyed. The administrative record contains statements from
which indicate Mr. Barnes was given sufficient time to decide what property tM keep and what property to mail home. Colonel Nicholson, Sergeant Dauzat, arZ Sergeant Gaspard each stated Mr. Barnes was told he could keep property th4o would fit into two lockers and the remainder of his property had to be sent home.
This court' s review is limited to the administrative record and the petition
for judicial review. The burden of proof in any civil administrative appeal is with the Petitioner. See Covingtonv. Vannoy, 2019- 1518 ( La. App. 1st Cir. 8/ 3/ 20), 310 So. 3d 2K 211. The administrative record and the petition for judicial review contain conflicting assertions by Mr. Barnes and the Department, and Mr. Barnes ails to show the Department' s decision in ARP No. RLCC- 2022-440 was
arbitrary, capricious, manifestly erroneous, or that it was in violation of his
statutory or constitutional rights. Based on our thorough review of the
administrative record, we conclude the documentary evidence does not support Mr. Barnes' s claim, and we find no error in the district court' s judgment affirming the Department' s decision denying Mr. Barnes' s claim and dismissing his petition for judicial review with prejudice.
For the above and foregoing reasons, the October 8, 2023 judgment of the Nineteenth Judicial District Court is affirmed. Costs of the appeal are assessed to
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