Stanley Boclair v. John Baldwin ( 2019 )


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  •                         NONPRECEDENTIAL DISPOSITION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 January 14, 2019*
    Decided January 15, 2019
    Before
    FRANK H. EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge
    MICHAEL S. KANNE, Circuit Judge
    DAVID F. HAMILTON, Circuit Judge
    No. 17-3291
    STANLEY BOCLAIR,                                Appeal from the United States District
    Plaintiff-Appellant,                        Court for the Northern District of Illinois,
    Eastern Division.
    v.                                       No. 17 CV 1422
    JOHN BALDWIN, et al.,                           John J. Tharp, Jr.,
    Defendants-Appellees.                      Judge.
    ORDER
    Stanley Boclair, an Illinois inmate, appeals the district court’s decision to deny a
    second post-judgment motion under Rule 60(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
    This motion repeated arguments that the district court had rejected in denying his first
    motion. In both motions, Boclair asked the court to reinstate a claim that, he argued, the
    court had mistakenly dismissed as misjoined. Because the court did not abuse its
    * We have agreed to decide this case without oral argument because the brief and
    record adequately present the facts and legal arguments, and oral argument would not
    significantly aid the court. See FED. R. APP. P. 34(a)(2)(C).
    No. 17-3291                                                                         Page 2
    discretion in rejecting the same arguments that Boclair raised for a second time, we
    affirm.
    In 2017, while incarcerated at Stateville Correctional Center, Boclair sued prison
    officials with one complaint alleging three unrelated violations of the Eighth
    Amendment. He first alleged that one set of officials forced him to drink water
    contaminated with radium. Next, he asserted, health administrators were deliberately
    indifferent to his medical needs after other inmates attacked him in May 2015. Finally,
    Boclair alleged that he slipped and fell when yet another group of prison officials
    recklessly ordered him to walk through a foot of snow and ice. (Administrative
    grievances based on these incidents were all denied.) When filing this single complaint,
    Boclair moved to proceed in forma pauperis. The district court granted that motion but
    dismissed his complaint without prejudice. It concluded that Boclair had misjoined
    claims and defendants and instructed him to amend his complaint to focus on a single
    defendant or a discrete group of related defendants.
    Boclair twice attempted to amend his complaint. In the first amendment, he sued
    only the defendants involved in his slip-and-fall incident. The district court dismissed
    this complaint too, again without prejudice to another amendment. It explained that
    Boclair did not allege that the icy path was an objectively hazardous condition or that
    the defendants knew of an easily preventable harm. In response, Boclair mailed to the
    district court an envelope with several documents. One was a “notice and motion”
    requesting leave to file the attached second amended complaint (which re-asserted the
    slip-and-fall incident and upon which he handwrote that case’s number—17 CV 1422),
    as well as an “additional complaint.” The “additional complaint” did not bear any case
    number. The clerk’s office stamped on this new complaint the number 17 CV 1422. The
    new complaint raised the medical claim that Boclair had misjoined in the original
    complaint—deliberate indifference by health officials who refused to treat his injuries
    after inmates beat him. In an attached affidavit, Boclair attested that the limitations
    period for the medical complaint would soon expire, on May 5, 2017. Boclair also filed a
    motion to file the new complaint in forma pauperis.
    The court then entered its final judgment. It again dismissed Boclair’s slip-and-
    fall complaint for failure to state a claim, and, in the same order, dismissed the new
    complaint that asserted his medical claim. The judge explained that Boclair had errantly
    put on the medical complaint the case number assigned to his slip-and-fall suit. Because
    “there can only be one operative complaint,” the judge advised Boclair to refile the
    complaint about his medical care “without a case number” along with “either the
    No. 17-3291                                                                               Page 3
    statutory filing fee or a motion to proceed in forma pauperis.” Boclair received the
    judgment on May 3, 2017, two days before the date on which he feared the limitations
    period on the medical claim would lapse.
    Within two weeks of the judgment’s entry, Boclair moved for its reconsideration
    by asking the court to reinstate the medical suit. In an unsworn statement, he asserted
    that the clerk, not he, had mistakenly inserted 17 CV 1422 on the medical complaint
    because the clerk did not realize that he intended the medical complaint to be a separate
    suit. He insisted that he knew from the court’s previous order not to misjoin the claims
    and that he had submitted a motion for leave to file the new suit in forma pauperis.
    Further, he said, in the two days between receiving the dismissal order and the lapse of
    the limitations period, he had no access to the law library, so he could not timely refile
    his medical suit. The court denied Boclair’s post-judgment motion. It stated that it was
    “irrelevant whether the Clerk of Court or [Boclair] mistakenly filed an unrelated
    complaint” under the wrong case number because it was Boclair’s responsibility to
    “initiate a separate lawsuit.” Boclair did not appeal this decision.
    In lieu of appealing, about two and a half months after the court’s ruling, Boclair
    moved again for reconsideration. He raised the same arguments as before: the clerk’s
    office erroneously stamped the wrong case number on his new complaint, which he
    sought leave to file in forma pauperis. The district judge again denied Boclair’s motion,
    “for the reasons stated previously” in its ruling on Boclair’s first motion for
    reconsideration. Boclair appealed this decision.
    We begin our analysis with two procedural observations. The first concerns the
    scope of this appeal. Boclair had 30 days to appeal the judgment dismissing his new
    medical complaint or the denial of his first post-judgment motion. See FED. R. APP. P.
    4(a)(1). (The time to appeal the former was tolled until the court denied the latter.
    See FED. R. APP. P. 4(a)(4)(A)(vi)). But he did not do so; he waited more than two months
    and appealed only within one month of the order denying his second motion for
    reconsideration. This notice thus brings up for review only the ruling on that second
    motion. See Browder v. Dir., Dep’t of Corr. of Ill., 
    434 U.S. 257
    , 262, 264–65 (1978); Stoller v.
    Pure Fishing Inc., 
    528 F.3d 478
    , 480 (7th Cir. 2008). We review that ruling for abuse of
    discretion. See Eskridge v. Cook Cty., 
    577 F.3d 806
    , 808–09 (7th Cir. 2009). Second, Boclair
    has abandoned any argument regarding the dismissal of his slip-and-fall complaint. So
    we concentrate on the district court’s rationale for refusing to reconsider (a second time)
    its dismissal of his medical complaint.
    No. 17-3291                                                                           Page 4
    Boclair argues that the district court abused its discretion in denying his second
    post-judgment motion for reconsideration. Relying on both Rules 60(a) and (b) of the
    Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, Boclair argues that this motion alerted the court to the
    clerk’s “obvious clerical mistake” of stamping his complaint with the wrong case
    number and the judge’s error in wrongly attributing the clerk’s mistake to him. These
    errors, he contends, “amounted to a fundamental miscarriage of justice.”
    Rule 60(b) is the proper lens through which to analyze Boclair’s argument. Rule
    60(a) allows a district court to correct a judgment only when it reflects a “clerical”
    mistake, like an error in transcribing the dollar amount of the judgment that the judge
    intended. See Lowe v. McGraw-Hill Cos., Inc., 
    361 F.3d 335
    , 341 (7th Cir. 2004). In contrast,
    Rule 60(b)(1) applies to an argument that the intended judgment was itself a “mistake.”
    See Wesco Prods. Co. v. Alloy Auto. Co., 
    880 F.2d 981
    , 984–85 (7th Cir. 1989). This Rule
    applies here because, in Boclair’s view, the judge mistakenly concluded that Boclair had
    not initiated “a separate lawsuit” and mistakenly failed to credit him with submitting
    an unnumbered complaint with a motion for pauper status.
    The problem for Boclair is that his first motion for reconsideration contains the
    same substance as his second motion. See Obriecht v. Raemisch, 
    517 F.3d 489
    , 493 (7th Cir.
    2008) (courts must look at substance, not labels, of post-judgment motions). In that first
    motion, Boclair asserted that (1) the clerk’s office and judge misunderstood that he used
    one envelope to enclose a hand-numbered second amended complaint and an
    unnumbered new complaint, and (2) the judge mistakenly thought that Boclair did not
    file a motion for pauper status with his new complaint. Boclair might have appealed to
    this court to argue that the district judge unreasonably rejected his explanation for the
    confusion that Boclair created by using one envelope for two cases. But as we have
    observed, Boclair never appealed that order.
    Instead, Boclair raised the same contentions in another Rule 60(b) motion. But a
    Rule 60(b) motion that reprises arguments previously made and rejected is not a
    substitute for an appeal. See 
    Stoller, 528 F.3d at 480
    . We have repeatedly held that, even
    for pro se litigants, a district court does not abuse its discretion by declining to revisit
    the same arguments that it has previously rejected. See 
    id. at 479–80.
    Otherwise a litigant
    could extend the time to appeal beyond the time limits provided in the Federal Rules.
    Bell v. Eastman Kodak Co., 
    214 F.3d 798
    , 801 (7th Cir. 2000); Cash v. Ill. Div. of Mental
    Health, 
    209 F.3d 695
    , 698 (7th Cir. 2000). And district judges would end up with less time
    to devote to first-time arguments from other litigants. Thus, when the district judge
    declined Boclair’s second request to accept his explanation for the confusion that
    No. 17-3291                                                                     Page 5
    occurred after he put documents intended for two cases into one envelope, the judge
    did not abuse his discretion.
    AFFIRMED