NOT RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION
File Name: 10a0297n.06
No. 09-1457
FILED
May 13, 2010
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
LEONARD GREEN, Clerk
FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
JERAL PEOPLES, )
)
Plaintiff-Appellant, )
)
v. ) ON APPEAL FROM THE UNITED
) STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE
BRIAN HOOVER, et al., ) WESTERN DISTRICT OF MICHIGAN
)
Defendants-Appellees. )
)
Before: KENNEDY, MOORE and SUTTON, Circuit Judges.
SUTTON, Circuit Judge. Jeral Peoples, proceeding pro se, appeals the dismissal of his
§ 1983 claim and asks us to appoint counsel to represent him. Because Peoples forfeited his
arguments by not raising them as objections to the magistrate’s report and recommendation, we
affirm the district court’s dismissal and deny his motion to appoint counsel.
I.
While incarcerated in a state prison in Michigan, Peoples filed a state-court complaint against
prison official Brian Hoover, alleging that Hoover unlawfully retaliated against him for filing a
grievance about Hoover’s conduct. Peoples tried to serve his state-court complaint on Hoover and
the Michigan Attorney General on June 21 and June 28, 2007, using the prison’s expedited mail
service for legal mail. According to Peoples, Lincoln Marshall, the prison official making the mail
No. 09-1457
Peoples v. Hoover
rounds on those days, processed the mail addressed to the Attorney General but refused to process
the mail addressed to Hoover.
On August 29, 2007, the Michigan Attorney General’s Office sent Peoples a letter informing
him that it could not accept service on Hoover’s behalf. The letter instructed Peoples to serve
Hoover “in accordance with the Court rules,” R.1-2, 1, which, in Michigan state court, means serving
the defendant personally or through “registered or certified mail, return receipt requested,” Mich. Ct.
R. 2.105(A). Peoples apparently did not heed the AG’s advice in time, because the state court
dismissed his complaint on September 24, 2007, for failure to serve Hoover. Unaware of the state-
court dismissal, Peoples tried to serve Hoover again on September 27, 2007, but prison official
James LeClaire allegedly thwarted his effort.
Several months later, on January 4, 2008, Peoples filed this § 1983 action against Hoover,
LeClaire and Marshall in federal court. Peoples claimed that LeClaire and Marshall violated his
right of access to the courts and denied him due process and equal protection by refusing to process
the legal mail addressed to Hoover. In a separate “declaration” submitted with his amended
complaint, Peoples claimed that Marshall and LeClaire “conspired to retaliate against” him. R.41,
8. His federal-court complaint raised no specific allegations against Hoover, though the attached
declaration reiterates Peoples’ state-court claim that Hoover unlawfully retaliated against Peoples
and discriminated against him on the basis of race.
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The magistrate judge issued a report and recommendation dismissing Hoover as a defendant
and granting summary judgment to Marshall and LeClaire. Peoples’ amended complaint, the
magistrate found, raised no allegations against Hoover. The magistrate determined that Marshall
was entitled to summary judgment with respect to the access-to-courts claim because Peoples had
not followed prison procedures when he gave the mail to Marshall, preventing Marshall from
verifying the mail as legal and from treating it as such. And LeClaire’s conduct, the magistrate
concluded, could not have contributed to the state-suit dismissal, which occurred three days before
Peoples presented his letter to LeClaire. The report and recommendation did not address Peoples’
equal protection, due process, retaliation or racial discrimination claims.
Peoples filed lengthy objections to the magistrate’s report. But the objections, the district
court determined, did not contest the grounds on which the magistrate disposed of his claims against
Marshall and LeClaire. The court thus adopted the report and recommendation.
II.
Peoples argues that the district court erred in dismissing his retaliation and access-to-courts
claims. Yet Peoples forfeited appellate review of these arguments by not raising them in his
objections to the magistrate’s report. See Howard v. Sec’y of Health & Human Servs., 932 F.2d 505,
508 (6th Cir. 1991). In objecting to the magistrate’s report, Peoples addressed only the magistrate’s
refusal to add new parties and new claims to his suit. He re-alleged the facts that formed the basis
of his complaint, but nowhere took issue with two dispositive considerations: Peoples had not
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Peoples v. Hoover
followed prison procedures in submitting his mail to Marshall, and Peoples had submitted his mail
to LeClaire after his state suit was dismissed (and therefore Peoples could not have suffered any
injury from the alleged failure of LeClaire to process the mail). Nor did Peoples say anything about
the magistrate’s decision not to address his equal protection, due process, retaliation and race-
discrimination claims.
Parties, we have long held, forfeit appellate review of arguments not raised as objections to
a magistrate’s report. See United States v. Walters, 638 F.2d 947, 949–50 (6th Cir. 1981); Frontier
Ins. Co. v. Blaty, 454 F.3d 590, 596–97 (6th Cir. 2006) (“[O]nly [the] specific objections to the
magistrate’s report made to the district court will be preserved for appellate review; making some
objections but failing to raise others will not preserve all the objections a party may have.”) (quoting
Smith v. Detroit Fed’n of Teachers, Local 321, 829 F.2d 1370, 1373 (6th Cir. 1987)). “[B]y
precluding appellate review of any issue not contained in objections” to a magistrate’s report, this
rule of preservation “prevents a litigant from ‘sandbagging’ the district judge by failing to object and
then appealing.” Thomas v. Arn, 474 U.S. 140, 147–48 (1985) (approving the Sixth Circuit’s rule).
Even though we give the benefit of the doubt to pro se pleadings and generally hold pro se litigants
to less stringent requirements than represented parties, the preservation requirement is a more
difficult one to excuse, as suggested by the difficulty of explaining to a district court why it should
be reversed based on a ground never presented to it and as confirmed by the reality that we have
enforced this rule regularly against pro se litigants. See Spencer v. Bouchard, 449 F.3d 721, 724–25
(6th Cir. 2006); Kensu v. Haigh, 87 F.3d 172, 176 (6th Cir. 1996); Thomas v. Arn, 728 F.2d 813, 814
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(6th Cir. 1984), aff’d Thomas, 474 U.S. 140; see also Javaherpour v. United States, 315 F. App’x
505, 509 (6th Cir. 2009); Stockard v. Astrue, 293 F. App’x 393, 394–95 (6th Cir. 2008); McCready
v. Kamminga, 113 F. App’x 47, 49 (6th Cir. 2004); Abner v. Gen. Motors, 103 F. App’x 563, 565
(6th Cir. 2004); Ingram v. Harry, 97 F. App’x 20, 21 (6th Cir. 2004); James v. Hurley, 93 F. App’x
744, 746 (6th Cir. 2004); Young v. S.E. Johnson Cos., 89 F. App’x 576, 577 (6th Cir. 2004). Just
as the Supreme Court generally does not reverse our decisions based on arguments never presented
to us, see Credit Suisse Securities (USA) LLC v. Billing, 551 U.S. 264, 275 (2007), we generally will
not reverse district court decisions based on arguments never presented to them.
Peoples’ forfeiture below is not his only problem. His appellate briefs fail to contest the
district court’s finding that he did not challenge the dispositive aspects of the magistrate’s report.
He complains about the court’s disposition of the case, to be sure, but he does not explain how the
court erred by directing us to any place in his lower-court objections where he addressed the central
issues in the case. What is more, he does not urge us to excuse his forfeiture either because of his
pro se status or because of some “exceptional circumstance[]” that might justify “disregarding the
rule.” Stockard, 293 F. App’x at 394. This double forfeiture precludes us from reversing this aspect
of the district court’s decision.
The dissent maintains that we should excuse Peoples’ failure to object based on “exceptional
circumstances.” But, with respect, Peoples has given us no basis for doing so. Peoples knew about
the objection requirement, as he filed more than 20 pages of detailed objections to the magistrate’s
report and recommendation. Any suggestion “that his pro se status . . . should excuse his failure to
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Peoples v. Hoover
object [is] self-defeating because he filed numerous and lucid objections to other sections of the
magistrate’s R& R.” Javaherpour, 315 F. App’x at 510. Peoples thus was not blind-sided by the
objection requirement, his lengthy objections failed to address the critical issue in the case, and
nothing about the objections he did make gave the court any reason to think that the magistrate had
erred.
Nor was there anything to the state court lawsuit that Marshall allegedly refused to serve.
Prison officials did not treat Hoover’s allegedly retaliatory charge against Peoples for possession of
stolen material as a major misconduct violation. Rather, prison officials placed Peoples in
administrative segregation for a series of five misconduct charges, ones in which Hoover apparently
played no role, or at least Peoples never alleges that he played any role in them. No doubt, a
meritless lawsuit may form the basis for an access-to-courts claim, Bell v. Johnson, 308 F.3d 594,
607 (6th Cir. 2002), but any damages Peoples could have received in this § 1983 action would be
nominal at best. It therefore is difficult to maintain that this case presents the kind of “manifest
injustice” for which the “exceptional circumstances” doctrine is reserved. See United States v.
Markwood, 48 F.3d 969, 974 (6th Cir. 1995).
Peoples, moreover, had a chance to remedy Marshall’s refusal to serve Hoover properly
before the state court dismissed his suit. One month before the state-court dismissal, the Attorney
General informed Peoples that service by ordinary mail was insufficient, but Peoples took no action
to correct the improper service. While Peoples’ missed opportunity might not in itself be dispositive,
it too counsels against finding that exceptional circumstances require us to overlook his forfeiture.
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As to the argument that Peoples preserved below—that the district court erred in not allowing
him to add new parties and new claims—he is mistaken. Peoples did not show that the parties and
claims he sought to add were related to his claim that prison officials interfered with his legal mail.
The district court accordingly did not abuse its discretion in denying his requests. See Evans v.
Pearson Enters., Inc., 434 F.3d 839, 853 (6th Cir. 2006).
Because appointing counsel to address unpreserved or otherwise meritless claims would
serve no useful purpose, we deny Peoples’ motion to appoint counsel.
III.
For these reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court and deny Peoples’ motion to
appoint counsel.
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KAREN NELSON MOORE, Circuit Judge, dissenting in part. I dissent from the
majority’s conclusion that Peoples forfeited appellate review of his access-to-courts claim by failing
to object to the magistrate judge’s report and recommendation because I believe that exceptional
circumstances exist to excuse his forfeiture and that we should reverse the district court’s grant of
summary judgment to Marshall and remand for further proceedings. I concur in the judgment that
Peoples forfeited appellate review of his retaliation claim and that his other claims are meritless.
I agree with the majority’s conclusion that Peoples’s objections to the magistrate judge’s
report and recommendation were inadequate to preserve appellate review of his arguments related
to his access-to-courts claim. However, even if his objections are inadequate, we must still analyze
whether exceptional circumstances exist to excuse this forfeiture. “[W]e decline to apply the waiver
rule where the district court’s error is so egregious that failure to permit appellate review would work
a miscarriage of justice.” United States v. 1184 Drycreek Road, 174 F.3d 720, 725–26 (6th Cir.),
cert. denied, 528 U.S. 987 (1999); see Thomas v. Arn, 474 U.S. 140, 155 & n.15 (1985); United
States v. Poole, 407 F.3d 767, 773 (6th Cir.) (holding that waiver of appeal from failure to raise
issues as objections to the magistrate judge’s report may be excused “‘in exceptional circumstances’
or where application of the rule would result in a ‘plain miscarriage of justice’”), cert. denied, 546
U.S. 913 (2005).
The magistrate judge committed plain error in making its finding, accepted by the district
court, that the letter Peoples handed to Marshall and attempted to place in legal mail was sealed and
thus did not qualify as legal mail under the prison policy. Although Peoples’s initial filing never
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stated whether the envelope he handed to Marshall was sealed or not—stating only that he submitted
an envelope addressed to Hoover, Dist. Ct. Doc. (“Doc.”) 41 (Amended Compl. at 3)—Peoples’s
responses to the defendants’ motion for summary judgment clearly stated that Peoples disagreed with
Marshall’s statement that the envelopes were sealed, Doc. 67 (Pl.’s Response to Summ. J. Mot. at
7–8), Doc. 69 (Pl.’s Supplement to Response at 3). But the magistrate judge’s report accepted
Marshall’s affidavit statement that Peoples presented his letters for Hoover in sealed envelopes, and
the magistrate judge neither discussed nor acknowledged any dispute that Peoples had raised
regarding this statement. Doc. 109 (Magistrate Judge Report and Recommendation at 10–11).
Having accepted Marshall’s statement of this dispositive fact, the magistrate judge recommended
granting summary judgment to Marshall on Peoples’s access-to-court claim. I believe that Peoples’s
clear statements in his filings, coupled with his objections to the magistrate judge’s report, show that
the magistrate judge’s report is obviously incorrect because Peoples did dispute the facts stated in
Marshall’s affidavit. This plain error, repeated by the district court, is an exceptional circumstance
that justifies excusing Peoples’s waiver of appellate review, and, because a genuine issue of material
fact did exist, summary judgment was improper.
I respectfully disagree with the majority’s assertion that the magistrate judge’s plain error in
ignoring the genuine issue of material fact raised in Peoples’s summary judgment opposition filings
is not an error “so egregious that failure to permit appellate review would work a miscarriage of
justice.” 1184 Drycreek Road, 174 F.3d at 725–26. The magistrate judge’s error, repeated by the
district court, effectively terminated a potentially meritorious pro se suit. Contrary to the majority’s
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assertion, Peoples’s complaint against Hoover does allege that the prior misconduct charge that
Hoover filed influenced the later decision to place Peoples in administrative segregation. Peoples
alleges that Hoover unlawfully filed the theft charges in retaliation for Peoples’s prior complaints
to MDOC officials and targeted Peoples because of his race. Peoples alleges that this theft charge
on his record was then used by the reclassification committee in its decision to reclassify him to
administrative segregation for later misconduct charges.
I also disagree with the majority’s contention that we should consider whether “Peoples took
no action to correct the improper service,” Majority Op. at 6, after receipt of the Attorney General’s
letter. Peoples asserts that he properly attempted to serve Hoover through the prison’s legal mail
procedures but that Marshall refused to process the envelope presented through any process other
than the prison’s ordinary internal department mail process. The Attorney General’s letter did no
more than to reassert that internal department mail could not be used to effect service, with reference
to the Michigan Court Rules. Because Peoples had twice attempted to perfect proper service through
the prison’s legal mail procedures, he did not have a reason to “t[ake] . . . action to correct the
improper service” after receipt of the Attorney General’s letter. Marshall’s refusal to accept
Peoples’s envelope for legal mail processing is the crux of Peoples’s suit against Marshall, and I do
not believe that receipt of the Attorney General’s letter affects Peoples’s suit.
Furthermore, I cannot agree with the majority’s conclusion that Peoples committed a “double
forfeiture” because his “appellate briefs fail to contest the district court’s finding that he did not
challenge the dispositive aspects of the magistrate’s report.” Majority Op. at 5. Peoples clearly
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states in his Supplemental Brief to this court that the district court overlooked his genuine issues of
material fact that he raised with regard to Marshall’s refusal to process his legal mail. Pl.’s
Supplemental Br. at 4. And a review of the record confirms that Peoples did address the central
issues for his access-to-courts claim sufficiently to show that the district court erred in granting
summary judgment to Marshall.
From my review of Peoples’s district-court filings, I cannot agree that he is subject to a
“double forfeiture” of his access-to-courts claim. For these reasons, I respectfully dissent from that
part of the judgment that affirms the district court’s grant of summary judgment to Marshall, and I
would vacate the district court’s order in that respect and remand for further proceedings.
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