United States Court of Appeals
For the First Circuit
No. 11-1052
ANGEL LUIS FELICIANO-HERNÁNDEZ,
Plaintiff, Appellant,
v.
MIGUEL A. PEREIRA-CASTILLO, Former Secretary of the Department of
Corrections and Rehabilitation and Director of Corrections of the
Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, JANE DOE; CONJUGAL PARTNERSHIP
PEREIRA-DOE; VÍCTOR M. RIVERA GONZÁLEZ, Former Secretary of the
Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation and Director of
Corrections for the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico; JANE DOE #2;
CONJUGAL PARTNERSHIP RIVERA-DOE #2; ZOÉ M. LABOY-ALVARADO, Former
Secretary of the Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation and
Director of Corrections of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico; JOHN
DOE; CONJUGAL PARTNERSHIP DOE-LABOY; NYDIA M. COTTO-VIVES, Former
Director of Corrections of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico; JOHN
DOE #2; CONJUGAL PARTNERSHIP DOE #2-COTTO; JOSEPH COLÓN-MORALES,
Former Director of Corrections of the Commonwealth of Puerto
Rico; JANE DOE #3; CONJUGAL PARTNERSHIP COLÓN-DOE #3; DEPARTMENT
OF CORRECTIONS AND REHABILITATION FACILITIES SUPERINTENDENTS JOHN
POE #1 THROUGH #5,
Defendants, Appellees.
APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO
[Hon. Juan M. Pérez-Giménez, U.S. District Judge]
Before
Lynch, Chief Judge,
Torruella and Thompson, Circuit Judges.
Federico Lora-López, with whom José J. Nazario De La Rosa was
on brief, for appellant.
Carlos Lugo-Fiol, with whom Irene S. Soroeta-Kodesh, Solicitor
General of Puerto Rico, Leticia Casalduc-Rabell, Deputy Solicitor
General, and Zaira Z. Girón-Anadón, Deputy Solicitor General, were
on brief for appellees Zoé M. Laboy-Alvarado and Víctor M. Rivera-
González.
December 9, 2011
LYNCH, Chief Judge. In 1981, Angel Luis Feliciano-
Hernández, a habitual offender with a record of sexual abuse and
rape, was convicted of crimes and sentenced by a Puerto Rico court
to a term of perpetual imprisonment for treatment until his
rehabilitation, to last a minimum of twelve years. That twelve-
year minimum sentence ended in 1993, and Feliciano-Hernández was
not released from prison until 2008, fifteen years later.
On June 23, 2009, Feliciano-Hernández brought suit in
federal court under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The defendants are five
named former Secretaries of the Puerto Rico Department of
Corrections and their spouses and conjugal partnerships, as well as
five unnamed Superintendents of prison facilities in the
Commonwealth, identified as "John Poe" defendants.
The complaint alleged that the defendant officials had
incarcerated Feliciano-Hernández beyond the lawful term of his
imprisonment, asserting that this violated the Fifth, Eighth, and
Fourteenth Amendments. The complaint sought compensatory damages
in excess of $5 million and punitive damages in excess of $2
million.
On motion, the district court dismissed the complaint as
to all defendants, in a thoughtful opinion and order, under Rule
12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, for failure to
state a claim upon which relief could be granted. See Feliciano
Hernández v. Pereira Castillo, Civ. No. 09-1569, 2010 WL 3372527
-3-
(D.P.R. Aug. 24, 2010). After the complaint was dismissed and
judgment was entered on August 24, 2010, Feliciano-Hernández on
September 6, 2010, filed a motion for reconsideration and for leave
to file an amended complaint, purportedly under Rules 52(b) and
59(a). The district court denied the motion by a short opinion and
order, Feliciano Hernández v. Pereira Castillo, Civ. No. 09-1569,
2010 WL 5072567 (D.P.R. Dec. 8, 2010), and this appeal followed.
We hold that the complaint failed to state a claim under
the pleading standard set forth by the Supreme Court in Ashcroft v.
Iqbal, 129 S. Ct. 1937 (2009), and Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly,
550 U.S. 544 (2007), and that the district court did not abuse its
discretion in denying reconsideration, including denying leave to
file a belated amended complaint. We affirm the dismissal.
I.
The following facts are taken from Feliciano-Hernández's
complaint of June 23, 2009, the 1982 opinion of the Supreme Court
of Puerto Rico affirming his underlying conviction, People v.
Feliciano Hernández, 13 P.R. Offic. Trans. 481, 113 P.R. Dec. 371
(1982), and the 2008 order of the Puerto Rico Court of First
Instance regarding plaintiff's petition for a Puerto Rico writ of
habeas corpus, People v. Feliciano Hernández, Crim. No. G 80 605
606 (P.R. Ct. of First Instance Apr. 25, 2008). We treat as true
the well-pleaded facts in the complaint. SEC v. Tambone, 597 F.3d
-4-
436, 438 (1st Cir. 2010) (en banc). We also consider other Puerto
Rico court documents on which plaintiff relied.
On April 14, 1981, a Puerto Rico court sentenced
Feliciano-Hernández for his convictions on two counts of committing
lewd and indecent acts, P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 33, § 4067; two counts
of aggravated restraint of liberty, id. § 4172; and one count of
unlawful carrying and use of a weapon, P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 25,
§ 414, as the law then stood. Feliciano-Hernández had also been
charged with attempt to commit rape, but the court ordered
acquittal of that count. The court took judicial notice of
Feliciano-Hernández's two previous convictions for rape and one
conviction each for repeated rape and for attempt to commit
statutory rape. It sentenced him as a habitual offender to
"[p]erpetual imprisonment, for treatment until his social
rehabilitation is accomplished" and "adjudged that the minimum
imprisonment [would] be 12 years."
We do not repeat the complaint's allegations that
Feliciano-Hernández took steps while in prison to rehabilitate
himself because they are not material to the ultimate issues in
this case. We focus on the allegations which are pertinent to
whether the individual defendants were ever given or put on
adequate notice of the claims that Feliciano-Hernández must be
released under the terms of his original sentence, so as to support
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a § 1983 claim of deliberate indifference to a violation of
constitutional rights.
After his minimum sentence was completed in 1993, the
Parole Board reviewed Feliciano-Hernández's case annually, and each
year it denied his request for parole. The complaint alleges that
each year the Parole Board did not "notify the Administration of
Correction of the nature of the plaintiff's sentence and of his
rights to be released from imprisonment." Feliciano-Hernández does
not claim that he personally provided the Department of Corrections
or any particular official with such notice. In 1996 he was
reclassified to minimal custody status, which he maintained until
his release.
In 1998, Feliciano-Hernández filed a pro se pleading with
a Puerto Rico court requesting a writ of habeas corpus to secure
his release. The court entered an order on June 23, 1998,
requiring the Department of Corrections to explain the reasons for
Feliciano-Hernández's continued incarceration in light of the April
14, 1981 judgment. The Department of Corrections opposed the
habeas petition and informed the court that Feliciano-Hernández's
case was before the Parole Board. The court denied the request for
habeas relief.
On August 16, 1998, the Parole Board again denied
Feliciano-Hernández's request for parole and again did not give the
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Department of Corrections notice of the nature of his sentence and
his right to be released.
The complaint alleges, without subsidiary factual
support, that during 2003 and 2004 unnamed employees of the
Department of Corrections informed their unnamed supervisors of
Feliciano-Hernández's unlawful incarceration and noted specifically
that he had been imprisoned in excess of twenty-two years, he had
been in "minimum custody" for eight years, he did not require
further therapy, and his work was uninterrupted and satisfactory.
There is no allegation that any of the individual named or "John
Poe" defendants were so notified and there are no supporting facts
as to any such notice.
Feliciano-Hernández alleges that the Department of
Corrections' records indicated that he was imprisoned for rape or
attempted rape, which adversely affected his evaluations, rights,
and privileges during his incarceration. While he did have prior
convictions for those crimes, which led to his categorization as a
habitual offender, the offenses for which he was sentenced in 1981
did not themselves include rape or attempted rape. To address this
mischaracterization issue, in 2005 Feliciano-Hernández initiated
pro se mandamus proceedings in the Puerto Rico Court of First
Instance, moving the court to order the Department of Corrections
to correct its records to show Feliciano-Hernández was not
incarcerated for rape or attempted rape. The court granted the
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petition and so ordered. There is no allegation that the
Department of Corrections failed to comply with the court order.
Nor is there any allegation that Feliciano-Hernández sought as
relief release from prison or asserted any constitutional claim.
In his federal complaint, Feliciano-Hernández alleges, without
further support, that the Department of Corrections "nevertheless"
continued to deny him his rights and privileges under the reasoning
that he had been sentenced to "perpetual imprisonment."
Feliciano-Hernández filed a petition for habeas corpus
with the Puerto Rico Court of First Instance in Mayagüez on May 29,
2007.1 That petition also did not assert any constitutional claim.
Instead, it evidently claimed that Feliciano-Hernández had been
rehabilitated and that annual evaluations of his progress toward
rehabilitation had never taken place. On April 25, 2008, the
court, after hearing testimony, accepted the recommendation of
counsel and of "the Public Ministry" that Feliciano-Hernández be
transferred to a halfway house within thirty days, that he remain
there for no less than six months and no longer than a year, and
that he be referred to the Pre-Release Services to assist him with
reintegration into the community. He was also ordered to register
with the Sexual Offender Registry and to complete special therapies
for sexual offenders offered by the Department. On June 24, 2008,
1
He was represented by counsel from an organization which
has provided legal services to Puerto Rico prisoners since the mid-
1990s.
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by separate order, the Department was ordered to immediately
release Feliciano-Hernández.
II.
On June 23, 2009, Feliciano-Hernández filed his complaint
in federal district court. The complaint's § 1983 claims are
premised on a theory of supervisory liability and allege violations
of the Eighth Amendment's prohibition of cruel and unusual
punishment and of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments' Due Process
Clauses. This is the first time these defendants2 have ever had
any federal constitutional claims asserted against them by the
plaintiff. The complaint also includes supplemental claims under
Puerto Rico law, which were dismissed without prejudice.
On September 23, 2009, former Secretary Laboy-Alvarado
filed a motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6). She raised
six arguments in the motion: Feliciano-Hernández's claims were
time-barred; the official capacity claims were barred by the
Eleventh Amendment; the Fifth Amendment claims were inapplicable to
2
The complaint contains allegations against five named and
five unnamed defendants. The named defendants are former
secretaries of the Department of Corrections: Miguel A. Pereira-
Castillo for events that took place on or before June 24, 2008;
Victor M. Rivera-González for January 2001 through December 2002;
Zoé M. Laboy-Alvarado for September 1998 through December 2000;
Nydia M. Cotto-Vives for January 1997 through June 1998; and Joseph
Colón-Morales from December 1994 through December 1996. The
complaint also includes as defendants the named defendants' spouses
and conjugal partnerships. The unnamed "John Poe" defendants are
"Department of Corrections and Rehabilitations Facilities"
superintendents who were in charge of the different Department of
Corrections facilities where Feliciano-Hernández was confined.
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her as a state actor; abstention, under Colorado River Water
Conservation District v. United States, 424 U.S. 800 (1976), was
required; she was entitled to qualified immunity; and the
supplemental claims under Puerto Rico law should be dismissed as
well. Feliciano-Hernández filed an opposition to the motion to
dismiss on October 6, 2009.
On October 9, 2009, defendant Rivera-González answered
the complaint, asserting as an affirmative defense that the
complaint did not state a claim upon which relief could be granted,
that the complaint failed to state specific acts on Rivera-
González's part that could amount to a violation of Feliciano-
Hernández's rights, and that Rivera-González was not personally
involved in any alleged violation of Feliciano-Hernández's rights.
The plaintiff did not file any response to Rivera-González's
answer.3
On August 24, 2010, the district court entered an opinion
and order in which it dismissed the complaint as to all of the
defendants for failure to state a claim. Feliciano Hernández, 2010
WL 3372527, at *12. It did not reach Laboy-Alvarado's other
arguments for dismissing the complaint. As said, the district
3
As to the other named defendants, the district court
entered default against Pereira-Castillo on October 8, 2009, and
against Cotto-Vives and Colón-Morales on June 23, 2010, but later
entered judgment for all defendants. Feliciano-Hernández never
identified any of the unnamed "John Poe" defendants, although the
names of the Superintendents of particular correctional
institutions were most likely publicly available.
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court dismissed the federal claims with prejudice and dismissed the
Puerto Rico law claims without prejudice. Id. That same day the
court entered final judgment in the case.
Roughly two weeks later, Feliciano-Hernández filed a
motion for reconsideration and for leave to file an amended
complaint on September 6, 2010, and tendered his amended complaint
that same day without having been given leave to do so. The
amended complaint was tendered almost a year after Laboy-Alvarado
filed her motion to dismiss. The district court granted Laboy-
Alvarado and Rivera-González's joint motion to strike the amended
complaint on September 16, 2010. On December 8, 2010, it entered
an opinion and order denying Feliciano-Hernández's motion for
reconsideration. Feliciano Hernández, 2010 WL 5072567. This
timely appeal followed.
III.
Feliciano-Hernández appeals both the district court's
dismissal of his complaint and its denial of his motion for
reconsideration and for leave to file an amended complaint. We
address each issue in turn.
A. Dismissal of the complaint
We review de novo the grant of a motion to dismiss under
Rule 12(b)(6), "accepting as true all well-pleaded facts, analyzing
those facts in the light most hospitable to the plaintiff's theory,
and drawing all reasonable inferences for the plaintiff." New York
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v. Amgen Inc., 652 F.3d 103, 109 (1st Cir. 2011) (quoting United
States ex rel. Hutcheson v. Blackstone Med., Inc., 647 F.3d 377,
383 (1st Cir. 2011)).
We review the dismissal of the complaint in the context
of the defendants' assertion of their entitlement to qualified
immunity and to dismissal under the Supreme Court's decision in
Iqbal. The defendants are entitled to qualified immunity unless
(1) "the facts alleged or shown by the plaintiff make out a
violation of a constitutional right" and (2) such right was
"'clearly established' at the time of the defendant[s'] alleged
violation[s]." Maldonado v. Fontanes, 568 F.3d 263, 269 (1st Cir.
2009) (quoting Pearson v. Callahan, 129 S. Ct. 808, 815 (2009)).
"A right is clearly established only if 'it would be clear to a
reasonable officer that his conduct was unlawful in the situation
he confronted.'" Soto-Torres v. Fraticelli, 654 F.3d 153, 158 (1st
Cir. 2011) (quoting Brosseau v. Haugen, 543 U.S. 194, 199 (2004)).
Qualified immunity "provides defendant public officials an immunity
from suit and not a mere defense to liability." Maldonado, 568
F.3d at 268.
The first prong of the immunity analysis requires that a
plaintiff state a claim of violation of a constitutional right.
Id. at 269. In determining whether such a claim has been stated
under Iqbal, we first recognize that "the tenet that a court must
accept as true all of the allegations contained in a complaint is
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inapplicable to legal conclusions. Threadbare recitals of the
elements of a cause of action, supported by mere conclusory
statements, do not suffice." Iqbal, 129 S. Ct. at 1949. "Nor does
a complaint suffice if it tenders 'naked assertion[s]' devoid of
'further factual enhancement.'" Id. (alteration in original)
(quoting Twombly, 550 U.S. at 557).
Second, "only a complaint that states a plausible claim
for relief survives a motion to dismiss." Id. at 1950.
Determining whether a complaint states a plausible claim for relief
is a "context-specific task that requires the reviewing court to
draw on its judicial experience and common sense." Id. "[W]here
the well-pleaded facts do not permit the court to infer more than
the mere possibility of misconduct, the complaint has alleged --
but it has not 'show[n]' -- 'that the pleader is entitled to
relief.'" Id. (second alteration in original) (quoting Fed. R.
Civ. P. 8(a)(2)).
Feliciano-Hernández's complaint fails under Iqbal to
plead adequately that the individual defendants violated his
constitutional rights and so fails the first prong of the qualified
immunity analysis. As such, he necessarily fails the second prong
as well: an objectively reasonable public official situated as
defendants would not be on notice of violations of any
constitutional rights.
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The named defendants are very high-level officials, each
of whom, as Secretary of the Department of Corrections, had vast
responsibilities. The Secretary oversees many correctional
institutions, hundreds of employees, and thousands of prisoners.
For example, in 2000, the system-wide prison population was
approximately 16,000. Morales Feliciano v. Roselló González, Civ.
No. 79-4, slip op. at 103 (D.P.R. Jan. 25, 2000). There are prison
complexes in, among other places, Bayamón, Vega Alta, Guayama, and
Ponce. See Morales Feliciano v. Acevedo Vila, Civ. No. 79-4, 2007
WL 4404730, at *4 (D.P.R. Dec. 13, 2007); see also Morales
Feliciano v. Romero Barcelo, 672 F. Supp. 591, 595 (D.P.R. 1986)
(in 1986, the Department of Corrections administered institutions
at San Juan, Río Piedras, Bayamón, Arecibo, Aguadilla, Ponce,
Guayama, Humacao, Vega Alta, and Miramar, in addition to
agricultural camps and halfway houses). The unnamed "John Poe"
defendants are also high-level officials, being directors of
individual correctional facilities.
The Supreme Court has held that "[g]overnment officials
may not be held liable for the unconstitutional conduct of their
subordinates under a theory of respondeat superior." Iqbal, 129 S.
Ct. 1948. "[A] supervisor may not be held liable for the
constitutional violations committed by his or her subordinates,
unless there is an 'affirmative link between the behavior of a
subordinate and the action or inaction of his supervisor . . . such
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that the supervisor's conduct led inexorably to the constitutional
violation.'" Soto-Torres, 654 F.3d at 158 (omission in original)
(quoting Maldonado, 568 F.3d at 275). Additionally, "the plaintiff
must show that the official had actual or constructive notice of
the constitutional violation." Rodríguez-García v. Miranda-Marín,
610 F.3d 756, 768 (1st Cir. 2010), cert. denied, 131 S. Ct. 1016
(2011) (quoting Rodriguez-Garcia v. Municipality of Caguas, 495
F.3d 1, 10 (1st Cir. 2007)) (internal quotation marks omitted).
The complaint sets forth a series of conclusions. It
alleges that "[i]n keeping the plaintiff confined beyond the term
of his sentence, each defendant acted with deliberate indifference
and/or reckless disregard of the plaintiff's Eighth Amendment
rights and due process of law" and that "[e]ach defendant[]
unjustifiabl[y] deprived plaintiff of liberty in violation of his
Eighth Amendment rights and due process of law."4 The complaint
states as to each of the former-Secretary defendants that he or she
"is being sued on the basis of his [or her] deliberate indifference
and/or reckless disregard" of the plaintiff's rights. It alleges
among other conclusions that the defendants "failed in their duty
to assure adequate monitoring, disciplining, evaluating, training
4
To resolve this case, we need not detail the substantive
law under these asserted constitutional rights. We do, however,
agree with the district court that it is "highly doubtful that
Plaintiff would be able to state a plausible Eighth Amendment
violation" against any of the defendants. Feliciano Hernández v.
Pereira Castillo, Civ. No. 09-1569, 2010 WL 3372527, at *11 (D.P.R.
Aug. 24, 2010).
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and supervising any and all personnel under their charge, to assure
that all inmates were properly classified and released upon
completion of their sentence." It relatedly alleges that "[h]ad
the defendants complied with their supervisory duties, they would
have identified those employees that did not properly register the
plaintiff's classification and inaccurately categorized the crimes
for which he had been sentenced." None of these conclusory
allegations suffice to establish a claim.
These are exactly the sort of "unadorned,
the-defendant-unlawfully-harmed-me accusation[s]" that both we and
the Supreme Court have found insufficient. Iqbal, 129 S. Ct. at
1949. Indeed, in Sanchez v. Pereira-Castillo, 590 F.3d 31 (1st
Cir. 2009), we held that such allegations failed to state a claim
against Puerto Rico administrative correctional defendants, most of
whom were at a lower level than the Secretary. We dismissed the
claims against those defendants because they did "little more than
assert a legal conclusion about the involvement of the
administrative correctional defendants in the underlying
constitutional violation" and simply "[p]arrot[ed] our standard for
supervisory liability in the context of Section 1983." Id. at 49.
In other cases after Iqbal, we have repeatedly held that
similarly broad allegations against high-ranking government
officials fail to state a claim. See Soto-Torres, 654 F.3d at 160
(allegations against FBI Special Agent in Charge of field office
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insufficient under Iqbal because complaint failed to allege facts
showing defendant had knowledge of alleged violations of
constitutional rights); Leavitt v. Corr. Med. Servs., Inc., 645
F.3d 484, 502 (1st Cir. 2011) (Regional Medical Director of
Correctional Medical Services in Maine cannot be held responsible
for the conduct of his subordinates under a theory of respondeat
superior); Peñalbert-Rosa v. Fortuño-Burset, 631 F.3d 592, 595 (1st
Cir. 2011) (allegations against governor insufficient under Iqbal
because complaint failed to allege facts showing governor
participated in violation of constitutional rights); Maldonado, 568
F.3d at 274-75 (allegations against mayor insufficient under Iqbal
because complaint failed to allege facts showing an "affirmative
link" between mayor and alleged violations of constitutional
rights).
There are a number of other specific deficiencies in the
complaint. We start (and end) with the failure to plead that any
of the named defendants, each a former Secretary of the Department
of Corrections, had any individual notice that plaintiff's
incarceration beyond 1993 was a violation of his constitutional
rights, much less that there was an affirmative link to them or
that they were deliberately indifferent to those notices of alleged
violations of his rights. Actual or constructive knowledge of a
rights violation is a prerequisite for stating any claim. See
Rodríguez-García, 495 F.3d at 768; Lipsett v. Univ. of P.R., 864
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F.2d 881, 902 (1st Cir. 1988) ("An important factor in making the
determination of liability is whether the official was put on some
kind of notice of the alleged violations, for one cannot make a
'deliberate' or 'conscious' choice to act or not to act unless
confronted with a problem that requires the taking of affirmative
steps." (citation omitted) (quoting Pembaur v. City of Cincinnati,
475 U.S. 469, 483-84 (1986))).
There are two main strands to Feliciano-Hernández's
allegations that the individual Secretaries were on notice of his
allegedly unconstitutional confinement and a constitutional
imperative to release him. The first is his general allegation
that "[d]uring 2003 and 2004, Department of Corrections[] employees
informed their supervisors of the plaintiff's unlawful
incarceration." This allegation fails to state who these
"employees" were, what the information was, who the "supervisors"
were to whom these employees made such a report, and whether and
how such information made it to the defendants, or why his
confinement violated constitutional requirements as opposed to any
claims under state law. It fails under Iqbal.
The second strand is focused on the notice purportedly
given to the named defendants by various court proceedings, some
involving plaintiff personally and some not. As to the latter,
Feliciano-Hernández argues that Laboy-Alvarado was put on notice of
the alleged violations of his rights by an unrelated case in which
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the district court had held that Laboy-Alvarado had been aware of
other constitutional deficiencies in the Puerto Rico prison system,
including those related to the classification of inmates. See
Morales Feliciano, Civ. No. 79-4 (D.P.R. Jan. 25, 2000). That case
concerned prison conditions, such as health care, use of force,
security, inmate supervision, and sanitation. Id. at 1. The
allegations plaintiff makes here regarding incarceration allegedly
beyond a period when release was required by state law were not at
issue in that case. Further, the portion of Morales Feliciano that
dealt with "classification" had to do with classifying inmates
according to their "propensity for violence as well as [their]
emotional and physical health," id. at 91, pursuant to Puerto Rico
law, see P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 4, § 1121. That law does not impose
any specific duties on the Secretary. Morales Feliciano had
nothing to do with classifying inmates as eligible for release from
a perpetual sentence upon their rehabilitation. Nothing in Morales
Feliciano put Laboy-Alvarado or any other defendant on notice of
any purported violation of plaintiff's constitutional rights as
alleged here.
As to the Puerto Rico court proceedings involving him,
Feliciano-Hernández relies first on his 1998 pro se habeas petition
and second on a 2005 mandamus proceeding. Some of the named
defendants were not even in office at the time of the filings in
1998 and 2005 and so could not plausibly have been put on notice.
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The only named defendants in office during the course of the 1998
habeas proceedings were Cotto-Vives and Laboy-Alvarado. The only
named defendant in office at the time of the 2005 mandamus
proceeding was Pereira-Castillo. The plaintiff could not plead
facts showing these proceedings gave individual notice of his
allegations to the defendants who held office before the
proceedings even commenced, and he makes no attempt to plead facts
showing they put on individual notice the defendants who took
office after these proceedings concluded. Feliciano-Hernández's
complaint contains no allegation that any defendant was put on
notice of alleged violations of constitutional rights by the 1998
habeas petition or by any of the other court proceedings the
complaint describes.
Nor did Feliciano-Hernández make any such argument in his
opposition to Laboy-Alvarado's motion to dismiss, so he has waived
the argument. Not until his motion for reconsideration and his
amended complaint -- both filed after the district court entered
judgment dismissing the complaint -- did Feliciano-Hernández
allege, even then insufficiently, that the 1998 habeas action put
Laboy-Alvarado on notice of the violations of his rights alleged
here. Even if the argument were not waived, as it has been, it
would fail.
The complaint fails to connect any of the named or "John
Poe" defendants to either the 1998 habeas proceeding or the 2005
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mandamus proceeding and makes no allegation that either proceeding
put any of the defendants on notice that Feliciano-Hernández's
constitutional rights were, as alleged here, being violated.
Iqbal requires dismissal here. In Iqbal, the plaintiff
alleged that Attorney General Ashcroft and FBI Director Mueller
"knew of, condoned, and . . . agreed to subject" the plaintiff to
harsh conditions of confinement. 129 S. Ct. at 1951. The Supreme
Court deemed those similarly bare allegations to be too conclusory
to be "entitled to the assumption of truth." Id.
Even beyond failing to show notice to the individual
defendants, the complaint fails on other grounds. Feliciano-
Hernández "would still have to go further, for 'not every official
who is aware of a problem exhibits deliberate indifference by
failing to resolve it.'" Feliciano Hernández, 2010 WL 3372527, at
*11 (quoting Moore v. Tartler, 986 F.2d 682, 686 (3d Cir. 1993)).
The complaint contains no factual allegations to support even a
minimal showing of deliberate indifference.
B. The denial of plaintiff's motion to reconsider
We review the district court's denial of Feliciano-
Hernández's motion for reconsideration for abuse of discretion.
See Meléndez-García v. Sánchez, 629 F.3d 25, 34 (1st Cir. 2010);
see also ACA Fin. Guar. Corp. v. Advest, Inc., 512 F.3d 46, 55
(2008) ("District courts enjoy considerable discretion in deciding
Rule 59(e) motions, subject to circumstances developed in the case
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law."). Feliciano-Hernández's motion states it is "pursuant to
Rules 52(b) and 59(a)." Rule 52(b) provides for a motion to amend
or make additional findings; Rule 59(a) provides for a motion for
a new trial or further action after a non-jury trial. See Fed. R.
Civ. P. 52(b), 59(a). On appeal, Feliciano-Hernández states that
his motion was actually under Rule 59(e), and that "Rule 59(a)" in
his papers is a typographical error. Regardless of which Rule of
Civil Procedure plaintiff intended to move under, it is clear from
the district court's December 8, 2010 opinion and order denying the
motion that the court considered Feliciano-Hernández's arguments
both for amending the August 24, 2010 opinion's findings and for
reconsidering the conclusion of that opinion. "Because of the
close relationship between Rule 59(e) and Rule 52(b), we do not
think that it is of dispositive significance that the district
court relied on 52(b) rather than 59(e)." Nat'l Metal Finishing
Co. v. BarclaysAmerican/Commercial, Inc., 899 F.2d 119, 122 (1st
Cir. 1990).
The motion for reconsideration argued that the dismissal
order was based on inaccurate facts and was erroneous as to Laboy-
Alvarado and improperly sua sponte as to the other defendants.5
5
The district court rejected this "sua sponte" argument
because it had "no doubt that Plaintiff understood that his
complaint could be dismissed due to his failure to adequately
adduce that the Defendants met the requirements for liability under
Section 1983" and any doubt was "further eliminated by Feliciano's
inability to demonstrate that Defendants were liable under Section
1983 in his motion for reconsideration." Feliciano Hernández v.
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The district court did not abuse its discretion in
denying the motion to reconsider. The factual allegations that
Feliciano-Hernández argues were not considered by the district
court are either legal conclusions couched as facts or are facts
that the court did indeed include in its opinion. The court was
also acting within its discretion in refusing to reconsider
arguments that the plaintiff had already made or to consider new
arguments that he could have made earlier. A motion to reconsider
should not "raise arguments which could, and should, have been made
before judgment issued." ACA, 512 F.3d at 55 (quoting FDIC v.
World Univ. Inc., 978 F.2d 10, 16 (1st Cir. 1992)) (internal
quotation marks omitted); see also Wright & Miller, Federal
Pereira Castillo, Civ. No. 09-1569, 2010 WL 5072567, at *4 (D.P.R.
Dec. 8, 2010). On appeal, plaintiff failed to develop an argument
in his opening brief that the district court was wrong as a matter
of law or abused its discretion as to this issue. Any argument
that the district court improperly dismissed the complaint sua
sponte is therefore waived. See Braintree Labs., Inc. v. Citigroup
Global Mkts. Inc., 622 F.3d 36, 43-44 (1st Cir. 2010) (citing
United States v. Zannino, 895 F.2d 1, 17 (1st Cir. 1990) ("[I]ssues
adverted to in a perfunctory manner, unaccompanied by some effort
at developed argumentation, are deemed waived.")).
Even if plaintiff's sua sponte dismissal argument had not
been waived, the district court had the power to dismiss the
complaint as to Pereira-Castillo, Cotto-Vives, and Colón-Morales,
after it entered default against them, because they were in a
similar (or better) posture than the responding defendants as to
the allegations of the complain. Further, a district court may,
after entry of default, still conclude that a complaint fails to
state a claim. See Ramos-Falcón v. Autoridad de Energía Eléctrica,
301 F.3d 1, 2 (1st Cir. 2002) (per curiam) (after entry of a
default judgment, the district court "may examine a plaintiff's
complaint, taking all well-pleaded factual allegations as true, to
determine whether it alleges a cause of action").
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Practice and Procedure § 2810.1 (2d ed. 2011) ("The Rule 59(e)
motion may not be used to relitigate old matters, or to raise
arguments or present evidence that could have been raised prior to
the entry of judgment." (footnotes omitted)).
The motion also requested that the court allow Feliciano-
Hernández to file an amended complaint, to which we now turn.
C. The denial of plaintiff's motion to file an amended
complaint
Feliciano-Hernández argues that the district court should
have allowed him to belatedly amend his complaint pursuant to Rule
15(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Feliciano-Hernández
is incorrect for a number of reasons: (1) the court lacked
authority to accept a post-judgment amendment; (2) the amended
complaint was untimely, coming after the court granted a motion to
dismiss filed a year earlier; (3) the Puerto Rico court documents
attached to the amended complaint reinforce that plaintiff failed
to state a claim.
Feliciano-Hernández requested leave to file his amended
complaint on September 6, 2010, after the district court had
already entered final judgment on August 24, 2010, dismissing the
complaint, and almost a full year after Laboy-Alvarado filed her
motion to dismiss.
The law in this circuit is clear that a district court
may not accept an amended complaint after judgment has entered
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unless and until the judgment is set aside or vacated under Rules
59 or 60, and the district court here denied the motion to vacate
the judgment. See Fisher v. Kadant, Inc., 589 F.3d 505, 509 (1st
Cir. 2009) (describing as "black-letter law" the rule that
"[u]nless postjudgment relief has been granted, the district court
lacks power to grant a motion to amend the complaint under Rule
15(a)" (quoting Acevedo-Villalobos v. Hernandez, 22 F.3d 384, 389
(1st Cir. 1994))).
Independently, the district court acted within its
discretion in denying plaintiff leave to file an amended complaint
first made after it entered its dismissal order. "[T]he district
court enjoys significant latitude in deciding whether to grant
leave to amend," and "[w]e defer to the district court's decision
'if any adequate reason for the denial is apparent on the record.'"
ACA, 512 F.3d at 55 (quoting LaRocca v. Borden, Inc., 276 F.3d 22,
32 n.9 (1st Cir. 2002)). Among the grounds for denial are "undue
delay, bad faith or dilatory motive . . . repeated failure to cure
deficiencies by amendments previously allowed, undue prejudice to
the opposing party . . . [and] futility of amendment." Id.
(alteration and omissions in original) (quoting Foman v. Davis, 371
U.S. 178, 182 (1962)) (internal quotation marks omitted). The
district court had good reason for disallowing filing the amended
complaint: it was far too late. It was also futile, as we explain
below.
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The complaint was first filed on June 23, 2009. Laboy-
Alvarado filed a motion to dismiss on September 23, 2009, and
Rivera-González answered the complaint on October 9, 2009.
Feliciano-Hernández could have moved to amend then, but did not.
Instead, plaintiff waited to move to amend until September 6, 2010,
nearly a year after the motion to dismiss was filed, and after the
court had dismissed the case. We have stated that "[r]egardless of
the context, the longer a plaintiff delays, the more likely [a]
motion to amend will be denied, as protracted delay, with its
attendant burdens on the opponent and the court, is itself a
sufficient reason for the court to withhold permission to amend."
Id. (alterations in original) (quoting Steir v. Girl Scouts of the
USA, 383 F.3d 7, 12 (1st Cir. 2004)) (internal quotation marks
omitted).
Furthermore, we agree with the district court's
determination that the amended complaint would not have altered its
conclusions and so was futile. As the district court stated in the
course of ruling that it would not reconsider its judgment, the
plaintiff was unable "to demonstrate that Defendants were liable
under Section 1983 in his motion for reconsideration," to which his
amended complaint was attached. Feliciano Hernández, 2010 WL
5072567, at *4.
The amended complaint contained several attachments
purportedly "obtained during discovery, and as result of
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investigation." These attachments, which were filed with the
district court in Spanish in violation of the local rules, are
largely those court filings and related publicly available
documents which were referred to in the original complaint but not
then provided. The failure to provide English translations of the
documents also doomed the amended complaint.6
Turning to the content of the amended complaint, it again
makes conclusory allegations that the individual defendants must
have had knowledge of each of Feliciano-Hernández's Puerto Rico
court filings, but, with one exception, it fails to provide facts
as to why this would be so. The defendants were high-level
officials in charge of institutions holding thousands of inmates,
the running of a number of different facilities, and the employment
of numerous personnel. Some defendants were not even in office at
the time of the filings in 1998 and 2005.
The amended complaint contains just the type of
allegations that are so "speculative that they fail to cross 'the
line between the conclusory and the factual'" and so must be
6
The local rules of the District of Puerto Rico and a
federal statute require federal litigation in Puerto Rico to be
conducted in English. See D.P.R. Civ. R. 5(g); 48 U.S.C. § 864;
Estades-Negroni v. Assocs. Corp. of N. Am., 359 F.3d 1, 2 (1st Cir.
2004) (per curiam) ("The law incontrovertibly demands that federal
litigation in Puerto Rico be conducted in English."). Only on
appeal did plaintiff provide English translations of these
documents. "However, translation after the fact cannot
retrospectively alter the record." Estades-Negroni, 359 F.3d at 2.
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disregarded. Peñalbert-Rosa, 631 F.3d at 595 (quoting Twombly, 550
U.S. at 557 n.5).
The amended complaint does allege that Feliciano-
Hernández's 1998 pro se habeas petition put Secretary Laboy-
Alvarado on notice of the alleged violations of his rights.7 The
English translations of the Spanish-language documents filed with
this court establish otherwise: even if Laboy-Alvarado had been
personally served the petition, which was evidently concerned only
with Puerto Rico law, it would not have put her on notice of any
claimed constitutional violations. Further, the decision of the
Puerto Rico court denying habeas would have informed Laboy-
Alvarado, contrary to plaintiff's theory, that there was no
violation of law in his continued confinement because it was an
appropriate matter for the Parole Board which had justifiably
denied relief.
As to notice of that decision, the decision and order of
the Puerto Rico Court of First Instance dated June 3, 1998, and
captioned "The People of Puerto Rico vs. Angel L. Feliciano
Hernandez" directed that the order and the petition for habeas
corpus and its attachments be "notified to the Department of
Justice, to the Legal Division of the Correction Administration and
7
The amended complaint pleads that Laboy-Alvarado was
Secretary of the Department of Corrections from September 1998
through December 2000, and further pleads that from March 11, 1997,
to June 30, 1998, she occupied the position of Corrections
Administrator.
-28-
also to its administrator." But the Department of Correction's
response indicated that Feliciano-Hernández did not fully comply
with the order.
In response to the June 3, 1998 court order, an attorney
at the Ponce Correctional Complex filed an informative motion,
stating that the Department of Corrections had not received a copy
of the petition and did not know about its content. The
informative motion also stated that Feliciano-Hernández was
referred to the Parole Board once he served his minimum sentence,
that the Parole Board had denied him the privilege of release, and
it attached the last two resolutions of the Parole Board. Those
documents from the Parole Board show that in 1997 the Board denied
parole, stating that Feliciano-Hernández had not submitted a
required alternate housing plan or a structured exit plan, that
because of the length of his sentence the Board wanted additional
time to review his adjustment, and concluded he was not prepared at
that time for parole. The Parole Board said he would be reviewed
the next year and required reports be submitted to it by the
Department of Corrections.
The June 30, 1998 judgment of the Court of First Instance
denied the habeas petition on the grounds that Feliciano-Hernández
"has available the administrative ordinary and appellate
proceedings (before the Parole Board)" and the Board had not
released him. The court directed that its order be "entered and
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notified to the parties and the Secretary of the Department of
Rehabilitation and Correction."
Even if plaintiff could sufficiently allege that the June
30, 1998, judgment reached the desk of Laboy-Alvarado, all that
judgment would have lead a reasonable administrator to conclude was
that there was no error in the Parole Board's being the appropriate
vehicle for accomplishing a prisoner's release on rehabilitation
under such sentences and that there had been no procedural or
substantive violations of law in not releasing a prisoner when the
Parole Board had not allowed his release. Under no reasonable
interpretation could the June 30, 1998 judgment be seen as notice
to Laboy-Alvarado that plaintiff's constitutional rights were being
violated. The judgment was to the contrary and so undercuts the
allegations of notice of any constitutional violation, much less
deliberate indifference.
As to the 2005 action, it was, as stated by the Puerto
Rico Court of First Instance, an action for mandamus, not a
petition for habeas corpus, and it did not seek Feliciano-
Hernández's release. The Department of Corrections was the
respondent, not any of the individual defendants here. The
Department of Corrections was ordered to correct the petitioner's
file "to reflect the reality of his penal convictions. The
Petitioner must notify the court of any deviation to the Order
entered herein." There is no claim that the Department of
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Corrections did not comply or that Feliciano-Hernández ever
notified the court of any deviation. Nor does plaintiff plead any
facts showing that any of the defendants here individually knew of
the 2005 mandamus proceeding or its outcome. Plaintiff has pled
that only Pereira-Castillo was in office at that time.
Finally, Feliciano-Hernández has not alleged that his
2007 petition for habeas corpus or the Puerto Rico court orders in
that case put any of the defendants on notice that his
constitutional rights were being violated. Again, only Pereira-
Castillo was in office when the April 25, 2008, order was issued.
That order states that under Puerto Rico law as it stood at the
time Feliciano-Hernández was sentenced, the court understood that
"annual evaluations of the petitioner should have taken place in
order to determine when the imposed security measure would cease,
but this was not done." (Citing P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 33, § 3391).
Contrary to plaintiff's characterization of the order in the
amended complaint, the court did not state that the Department of
Corrections had failed to comply with any duty, and the court
certainly did not state that any of the individual defendants here
did not comply with any duty.
After hearing testimony, the court accepted the
recommendation of counsel and of "the Public Ministry" that
Feliciano-Hernández be transferred to a halfway house within thirty
days, that he remain there for no less than six months and no
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longer than a year, and that he be referred to the Pre-Release
Services to assist him with reintegration into the community. He
was also ordered to register with the Sexual Offender Registry and
to complete special therapies for sexual offenders offered by the
Department. On June 24, 2008, by separate order, the Department
was ordered to immediately release Feliciano-Hernández.
The order does not state that Feliciano-Hernández's
rights under the U.S. Constitution were violated, that the
Department of Corrections had violated any constitutional rights,
or that any of the defendants in this case violated his
constitutional rights or knew or should have known his rights were
being violated. None of the defendants in this case were parties
to the 2008 habeas proceedings, and there is no allegation that any
of them were even notified of the proceedings.
Feliciano-Hernández makes an argument on appeal never
made to the district court. He has shifted his theory of the case
to an argument that Articles 75 and 76 of the Puerto Rico Penal
Code -- as those provisions read when he was sentenced in 1981 --
imposed a duty upon the unnamed defendant superintendents of the
institutions in which he was incarcerated from 1993 to 2008 to
provide the court with yearly reports on his rehabilitation
process. This argument was available to plaintiff at the time he
filed his complaint, but was not made. He did not make the
argument to the district court until his motion for reconsideration
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and for leave to file an amended complaint, and then in only a
cursory fashion. So it is doubly waived.
Even so, the argument again provides no support for his
claim of constitutional violation by the defendants. It is not
clear whether Article 75, which was repealed in 2005, applied after
the date of repeal. Article 75 by its terms imposed a duty on the
court,8 and while the court could obtain a report from the director
of the establishment of confinement,9 it is far from clear under
Puerto Rico law that the director had a statutory duty to produce
annual reports absent a request from the courts.
Nor is it clear that the mechanism for annual review
concerning release did not include the Parole Board, and the
plaintiff has offered no citations to Puerto Rico law to the
contrary. In fact, the Parole Board is to consider the prisoner's
8
As it read at the time of plaintiff's conviction, Article
75 stated that "[t]he court shall annually advise as to the
maintenance, modification or termination of the security measure
imposed . . . . In the case of a habitual criminal, the review
shall not take place until the minimum term of the security measure
imposed has elapsed." P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 33, § 3391 (West 1988)
(repealed 2005). A 1988 amendment deleted the reference to
habitual criminals.
9
As it read at the time of plaintiff's conviction,
subsection (b) of Article 76 stated that for the purposes of
Article 75, "[i]n the case of security measures for habitual
criminal it shall be necessary to have . . . a report from the
director of the establishment where the convict is serving the
security measure." P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 33, § 3392(b) (West 1988)
(repealed 2005). A 1988 amendment deleted this subsection.
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rehabilitation among other factors in determining whether to grant
parole. See P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 4, § 1503.
Regardless of any purported duty on the "directors," the
named former-Secretary defendants cannot be held liable under
§ 1983 for the supposed omissions of their subordinates. "In a
§ 1983 suit . . . each Government official, his or her title
notwithstanding, is only liable for his or her own misconduct."
Iqbal, 129 S. Ct. at 1949. Moreover, the plaintiff does not allege
any facts that would have put either the named or the unnamed
defendants on individual notice that his incarceration was not
being reviewed annually as required by law.
Even had the argument under Articles 75 and 76 not been
waived, its consideration would not have altered the outcome of
dismissal under Iqbal. Rather, it would have enhanced defendants'
claims for dismissal. We also add that even were there some
violations by someone of duties under Puerto Rico law, that still
does not suffice to establish a violation of federal constitutional
rights. Berríos-Romero v. Estado Libre Asociado de P.R., 641 F.3d
24, 25-26 (1st Cir. 2011).
IV.
That plaintiff has failed to state a federal claim in
this case does not mean he has no claims under Puerto Rico law.
The district court dismissed those claims without prejudice.
We affirm. No costs are awarded.
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