IN THE
TENTH COURT OF APPEALS
No. 10-14-00116-CV
ISAAC MAHURON,
Appellant
v.
TDCJ,
Appellee
From the County Court at Law
Walker County, Texas
Trial Court No. 11568-CV
CONCURRING OPINION
This appeal involves a question of statutory construction. It is not about
substantial compliance. There is no question the inmate did not comply: not even
close. He could not comply. The State made compliance impossible.
The question is what is the alternative to compliance if the ability to comply with
one statute is prevented by the opposing party? Here, another statute provides a
remedy; but is it an available remedy if the first statute does not provide for the use of
the remedy? The question thus becomes whether the two statutes are in conflict or
whether they can be reconciled in some manner.
Chapter 14 provides:
(a) An inmate who files a claim that is subject to the grievance system
established under Section 501.008, Government Code, shall file with
the court:
(1) an affidavit or unsworn declaration stating the date that the
grievance was filed and the date the written decision described by
Section 501.008(d), Government Code, was received by the inmate; and
(2) A copy of the written decision from the grievance system.
(b) A court shall dismiss a claim if the inmate fails to file the claim before
the 31st day after the date the inmate receives the written decision
from the grievance system.
(c) If a claim is filed before the grievance system procedure is complete,
the court shall stay the proceeding with respect to the claim for a
period not to exceed 180 days to permit the completion of the
grievance system procedure.
TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM. CODE ANN. § 14.005 (West 2002) (emphasis added).
Mahuron asserts that the State frustrated his efforts to exhaust his Step 2
grievance by never ruling on it. In fact, he alleges that notwithstanding that he
personally handed his Step 2 grievance to the UGI (Unit Grievance Investigator) C.
Brewer, the State reports no “computer” record of having received it, much less having
decided it.
Mahuron, then unable to comply with Chapter 14, only knew one thing to do—
file suit. He did. Fortunately for Mahuron, there is another statue that addresses the
Mahuron v. TDCJ Page 2
same issues as Chapter 14 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code. The Texas
Government Code provides:
(a) The department shall develop and maintain a system for the resolution of
grievances by inmates housed in facilities operated by the department or
under contract with the department that qualifies for certification under
42 U.S.C. Section 1997e and the department shall obtain and maintain
certification under that section. A remedy provided by the grievance
system is the exclusive administrative remedy available to an inmate for a
claim for relief against the department that arises while the inmate is
housed in a facility operated by the department or under contract with the
department, other than a remedy provided by writ of habeas corpus
challenging the validity of an action occurring before the delivery of the
inmate to the department or to a facility operated under contract with the
department.
(b) The grievance system must provide procedures:
(1) for an inmate to identify evidence to substantiate the inmate’s claim;
and
(2) for an inmate to receive all formal written responses to the inmate’s
grievance.
(c) A report, investigation, or supporting document prepared by the
department in response to an inmate grievance is considered to have been
prepared in anticipation of litigation and is confidential, privileged, and
not subject to discovery by the inmate in a claim arising out of the same
operative facts as are alleged in the grievance.
(d) An inmate may not file a claim in state court regarding operative facts for
which the grievance system provides the exclusive administrative remedy
until:
(1) the inmate receives a written decision issued by the highest authority
provided for in the grievance system; or
(2) if the inmate has not received a written decision described by Subdivision (1),
the 180th day after the date the grievance is filed.
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(e) The limitations period applicable to a claim arising out of the same
operative facts as a claim for which the grievance system provides the
exclusive remedy:
(1) is suspended on the filing of the grievance; and
(2) remains suspended until the earlier of the following dates:
(A) the 180th day after the date the grievance is filed; or
(B) the date the inmate receives the written decision described by
Subsection (d)(1).
(f) This section does not affect any immunity from a claim for damages that
otherwise exists for the state, the department, or an employee of the
department.
TEX. GOV’T CODE ANN. § 501.008 (West 2012) (emphasis added).
These two statutes address a number of the same activities. Our attention is on
the requisites of the inmate’s filing in State court to avoid dismissal as it relates to
exhaustion of administrative remedies. Thus, we note that Texas Civil Practice and
Remedies Code section 14.005(a)(2) requires that “a copy of the written decision from
the grievance system” must be filed with the trial court clerk. TEX. CIV. PRAC. & REM.
CODE ANN. § 14.005(a)(2) (West 2002). It allows for nothing less. Failure to file a copy
of the written decision can result in dismissal. Id. (b). The statutes presumes the
grievance system will always result in a written decision.
Texas Government Code section 501.008(d)(2) does not make such a
presumption. Instead, it provides the remedy: if the inmate has not received the
Mahuron v. TDCJ Page 4
written decision by the 180th day after the date the grievance was filed, the inmate can
proceed to file suit. See TEX. GOV’T CODE ANN. § 501.008(d)(2) (West 2012).
So, are the two statutes in conflict? It may initially appear so. Can the statutes be
reconciled? Sure they can. Quite easily.
An inmate cannot file what is never provided. The State cannot require an
impossible act when it controls the ability to comply. When the inmate alleged the State
had failed to comply with the grievance system by not providing a written decision of
his Step 2 grievance, he took himself out of the need to comply with a portion of section
14.005(a)(1) and (2) and from any claim that the proceeding could be dismissed on that
basis. The inmate’s relief from the State’s failure to provide the written decision is to
proceed to the filing of the claim in State court pursuant to Texas Government Code
section 501.008(d)(2).
It may be important to understanding this analysis to know that the Attorney
General’s Office, representing the State, never denied receiving the Step 2 grievance and
offered no evidence to rebut Mahuron’s assertion that the properly completed Step 2
grievance was hand delivered to the UGI. The State only asserted there was no
“computer record” that a Step 2 grievance was filed. There was no affidavit by the UGI
or other evidence denying that the Step 2 grievance was hand delivered as Mahuron
contends.
Mahuron v. TDCJ Page 5
Thus, we reserve for another day what the procedure would be if there is a
disputed fact issue about whether an inmate timely filed the Step 2 grievance.
Likewise, it is of no importance in this proceeding that the suit was filed well before the
180 day period specified in the Government Code. The remedy for a prematurely filed
suit is a stay until the period expires, not dismissal of the suit. See TEX. CIV. PRAC. &
REM. CODE ANN. § 14.005(c) (West 2002). In this instance, it was not dismissed for
failure to comply with Chapter 14 until long after the 180 day period had expired.
The cases cited as a basis for the determination that the inmate “substantially
compiled” with the filing requirement of Chapter 14 are not on point or are easily
distinguishable; but there is no reason to do so herein.
Finally, I note that one of the arguments made by Mahuron is that the State
should not be allowed the ability to use its failure to comply with the grievance system
to have the suit against it dismissed. Without actually using the words, the argument
made by Mahuron is that the State should be estopped from obtaining a dismissal
because it did not timely provide the inmate with a written decision to the inmate’s Step
2 grievance. To allow such would stand the concepts of access to the courts and due
process on their ear. The State completely fails to address this argument.
If you look only to Chapter 14 of the Texas Civil Practice and Remedies Code for
the resolution to this case, the estoppel argument must be addressed. To some extent,
that appears to be what the Court has done, albeit under the label of “substantial
Mahuron v. TDCJ Page 6
compliance.” However, because the Government Code provides a remedy when the
State fails to comply with its own grievance system, the issue of estoppel need not be
resolved in this opinion.
CONCLUSION
Because Mahuron is expressly authorized by Texas Government Code section
501.008(d)(2) to file suit when the State has failed to provide a written decision to an
inmate’s Step 2 grievance, the trial court erred in granting the State’s motion to dismiss
Mahuron’s claim for failure to comply with Chapter 14 of the Texas Civil Practice and
Remedies Code. Because this analysis yields the same judgment as that supported by
the Court’s opinion, I respectfully concur in that judgment but not in the Court’s
opinion.
TOM GRAY
Chief Justice
Concurring opinion delivered and filed October 15, 2015
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