Pеtitioner Roger Laubach appeals the summary denial of his pro se petition for relief. We affirm in part and dismiss in part.
The material facts are as follows:
In late 1999, the petitioner sought medical treatment for poor eyesight. He was referred to Dr. Ziemianski, a retinal specialist, who indicated that the petitioner’s retinas functioned within the normal limits. In February of 2000, the petitioner was examined
In April of 2001, Dr. Reifschneider again examined the petitioner and found no objective cause for the petitioner’s claimed vision loss. The degree of cataract in the petitioner’s eyes diminished his vision to 20/50, but optico-ldnetic nystagmus and mirror tests indicated that the petitioner did fixate and track well with each eye.
Eventually, the petitioner stopped attending his sexual abuse treatment program (SATP). One of the program administrators notified the petitioner that petitioner’s lack of attendance would require petitioner’s terminatiоn from the program unless he began to regularly attend program sessions. Instead of returning to the program, the petitioner signed a voluntary termination form. The form provided:
“I, Roger Laubach KDOC #59642, have freely chosen to terminate my commitment to the SATP/DCCCA, Inc. as of this date 4-18-01.
“I have been advised by David Serena, SATP Staff member, that it is in my best interest to participate in the Sexual Abuse Treatment Program. Although my failure to follow the advice I have recеived may [a]ffect my parole eligibility status, I nevertheless choose to terminate my commitment to this program. I assume the risks and consequences involved with this decision.
“I choose to terminate from the Sexual Abuse Treatment Program (SATP) for the following reason(s): I can [sic] see to fill this out.
“I further understand that by signing this termination, my name will be removed from the waiting list. If I change my mind at a later date, the only way I will be considered for аcceptance into the SATP again is to submit a Form 9 to both my Unit Team and SATP no earlier than 60 days from termination. My assignment to this program will then be on a space availability basis only.” (Emphasis added.)
Although the petitioner indicated that he could not see, a notation by David Serena at the bottom of the acknowledgment indicates the above form had been read to the petitioner and that the petitioner voluntarily terminated the program.
Sometime later, the petitioner was transferred from Lansing, a minimum security facility to Ellsworth, a medium security facility.
Later, the petitioner submitted a request to the deputy warden for the return of his incentives because he had been removеd from the treatment program solely because of his inability to read the required materials. Although this record contains no response to the petitioners request, the warden of the Ellsworth facility did respond to the petitioner’s inmate complaint filed on June 6,2001. After investigating the complaint and receiving a memorandum from the treatment program, the warden opined the petitiоner’s termination of the treatment program was completely voluntaiy and that the treatment program makes reasonable accommodations for inmates with physical and mental limitations.
On June 27, 2001, the petitioner filed an appeal to the Secretary of Corrections, claiming that petitioner did not voluntarily withdraw from the treatment program but that he was forced to terminate because of poor eyesight. On July 13, 2001, the Secretary of Corrections affirmed the warden’s response to the petitioner’s grievance complaint.
Before receiving the Secretaiy’s response, however, the petitioner filed another inmate request demanding cataract surgeiy, which petitioner claims had been scheduled for November 2000, but which he had never received. Petitioner filed another inmate complaint on July 8, 2002, alleging that his eye surgery was improperly canceled by the regional medical director after the ophthalmologist recommended surgeiy. The unit team response indicated that the medical procedure was denied by the regional medical director because the director believed the bеnefit of the surgeiy to the petitioner was slight and the risk of injury to the eye as a result of the surgeiy was, therefore, not warranted. This re
Meanwhile, despite the Secretary’s determination, the petitioner continued to seek a return of his incentive privilegеs. Petitioner filed two separate inmate requests and received two responses recommending that the petitioner return to the treatment program. The petitioner filed another complaint based upon the prison’s refusal to transfer him to another section of the prison to house with a friend who offered to assist the petitioner in reading and writing.
The unit team response to the petitioner’s request to transfer indicated that the petitioner had not demonstrated a medical need for a transfer. While acknowledging the petitioner needs assistance with reading and writing due to poor eyesight, the unit team response suggested the prison had made reasonable accommodations to the petitioner’s physical limitation by providing the pеtitioner with his own copy of the canteen list, by permitting the petitioner to move into any cell within the same section of the prison, if he could locate a prisoner who would be willing to help him with reading and writing, and by offering assistance of prison employees to read official notices upon request by the petitioner.
The petitioner appealed this determination tо the warden, who affirmed the unit team response. The record does not contain a further appeal of this issue to the Secretary of Corrections.
On November 25, 2002, the petitioner filed an action pursuant to “K.S.A. 60-209; K.S.A. 21-3905; K.S.A. 21-3803; K.S.A. 21-805; K.S.A. 21-3902, Kansas and § 1983 Federal Civil Rights Statutes Act; Supreme Court Rule 170; Kansas Bill of Rights V; and Title II ADA American Disabilities Act.” The petitioner claimed the respondents collectively violated his constitutional rights as well as violating the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) 42 U.S.C. § 12101 et seq., by terminating the petitioner from the sex offender treatment program merely because of his inability to read and by preventing the petitioner from obtaining the medical attention his eyes required. The petitioner also sought a jury trial.
On February 6, 2003, the Department of Corrections and its officers in their official and individual capacities moved to dismiss
On May 8, 2003, the petitioner filed a motion with the district court to permit an inmate to act as a reader for the petitioner at his hearing and requested an order for both the petitionеr’s and the reader’s attendance at the hearing. The district court denied the petitioner’s request to permit the inmate to act as a reader for the petitioner, and the petitioner filed a motion for the recusal of the presiding judge.
On August 6, 2003, the district court summarily dismissed the petitioner’s petition and denied the motion for recusal. The petitioner appeals.
First, we must decidе if the district court improperly dismissed the petitioner’s claims without holding an evidentiary hearing.
In appealing the summary dismissal of his action, the petitioner claims his action is supported by K.S.A. 60-209; K.S.A. 21-3905; K.S.A. 21-3803 (repealed 1983); K.S.A. 21-805 (repealed 1974); K.S.A. 21-3902; 42 U.S.C. § 1983; Supreme Court Rule 183 (2003 Kan. Ct. R. Annot. 213); the Kansas Constitution Bill of Rights § 5; and Title II of the ADA American Disability Act.
In evaluating the claims of a pro se prisoner, courts should broadly construe thе petition to ascertain whether the prisoner has articulated any basis upon which relief may be granted. See
Haines v. Kerner,
In any civil action against a correctional facility in Kansas, an inmate is required to exhaust all available administrative remedies established by regulation before seeking redress in a Kansas court.
K.S.A. 75-52,138 requires an inmate to attach proof to his or her petition that administrative remedies have been exhausted. While the petitioner attached some grievance forms to his petition, none of the forms demonstrate an appeal to the Secretary of Corrections. Here, the petitioner has not strictly complied with the statutory requirements fоr filing a civil action against the Department of Corrections and its officers.
However, in this case, the petitioner raised three separate grievances: (1) removal of the petitioner from the SATP because of his poor vision; (2) preventing the petitioner from obtaining needed medical care; and (3) failure to accommodate the petitioner s medical nеeds by permitting a housing transfer. Along with their motion to dismiss, the respondents attached grievance forms which establish that the petitioner sought review by the Secretary of Corrections on the complaint related to his removal from the SATP. Consequently, although the district court properly dismissed the petitioner’s claims that the respondents prevented him from obtaining needed medical care and that the respondents failed to accommodate him by transferring him to another cell unit, this court may consider the petitioner’s complaint the respondents violated his constitutional and federal statutory rights by involuntarily removing him from the SATP because of his vision impairment.
Although neither party raises the issue because the petition was not clearly filed pursuant to K.S.A. 2003 Supp. 60-1501, this record indicates a lack of jurisdiction, which this court must consider on its own initiative. See
State v. Verge,
The Secretary of Corrections considered the only issue before this court on July 13, 2001. The petition was filed on November 15, 2002. Thus, to the extent that the petition seeks relief from unconstitutional conditions of confinement, this court lacks jurisdiction to consider the matter, and such claim must be dismissed. See
Verge,
Concerning the district court’s summary dismissal of the petitioner’s § 1983 and ADA claims, however, the petitioner is not subject to the 30-day filing requirements of K.S.A. 2003 Supp. 60-1501(b). Where а district court has dismissed a civil claim, other than a claim for habeas relief, an appellate court must assume the facts alleged by the petitioner to be true, along with any reasonable inferences to be drawn therefrom, in determining whether the petitioner has stated any claim upon which relief may be granted. See
McCormick v. Board of Shawnee County Comm'rs,
Here, however, the respondents relied upon evidence outside of the petitioner’s claims in seeking a dismissal. Although the district court’s journal entry, which dismissed the petitioner’s claims, is extremely conclusory, the court indicated it had reviewed the files and considered the arguments of the respondents. Where a district court is presented with matters outside the pleadings and the court considers such matters, the motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim will be treated as a motion for summary judgment. See
Goldbarth v. Kansas State Board of Regents,
Our standard of review for summary judgment is well established. If the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, admissions on file, and affidavits demonstrate an absence of any genuine issue of material fact, judgment as a matter of law is proper. The court must resolve any conflicting evidence and inferences to be drawn from the evidence in favor of the nonmoving party. On appeal, this court applies the same standard. See
Bracken v. Dixon Industries, Inc.,
It is impossible to determine from the scant rеcord on appeal whether the staff members of the SATP/DECCA, who terminated the petitioner from the treatment program, are persons within the meaning of 42 U.S. C. § 1983.
See Lower v. Board of Dir. of Haskell County Cemetery Dist.,
In order to establish a cognizable claim for a due process violation, the petitioner must establish a valid liberty or property interest in his or her incarceration status which has been infringed by the State without due process of law. See
James v. Quinlan,
In
Stansbury v. Hannigan,
The allegations of the petitioner do not support a § 1983 claim for a violation of the Eighth Amendment. The United States Supreme Court has declared that the deliberate indifference to an inmate’s medical needs violates the prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment encapsulated within the Eighth Amendment.
While the petitioner’s claims contain some evidence of a serious medical need, there is nothing to indicate that the prison officials ignored an excessive risk to the inmate’s health or sаfety nor is there evidence that the treatment program staff was aware of the petitioner’s poor eyesight. According to David Serena, the staff member responsible for discharging the petitioner from the program, the petitioner never attended the SATP sessions at which die staff could have assessed the petitioner’s need for accommodations to assist with his poor eyesight. There is no evidence that removing the petitioner from the treatment program created an excessive risk of harm to the petitioner’s health or safety.
For similar reasons, the petitioner’s claim for relief under the ADA must fail. An equal protection claim arising from disability-based discrimination is enhanced by the ADA. See
Schall v. Wichita State University,
In requiring equal access to government programs, the ADA demands more than mere physical access. An administrator of a government program must рrovide meaningful access to the program, which may require reasonable accommodations. See
Chaffin
Rather than seeking some reasonable accommodation to assist with the reading and writing requirements of the trеatment program, the petitioner simply chose to withdraw. Perhaps petitioner feels that he was forced to withdraw because of his physical disability, but, without demonstrating a request for some reasonable accommodation which was denied, the petitioner fails to establish a violation of Title II of the ADA.
Because the record fails to support the petitioner’s allegation that he was improperly dismissed from the SATP due to his poor eyesight, the district court properly dismissed the petition.
Finally, the petitioner complains the district court judge erroneously failed to recuse himself at the petitioner’s request. Where a district court judge has refused to honor a criminal defendant’s motion for recusal, an appellate court reviews the reсord to determine whether the judge had a duly to recuse because of bias, prejudice, or partiality. If the judge possessed a duty to recuse and did not, the appellate court will reverse only upon a showing that the judge’s failure to recuse actually biased or prejudiced the criminal defendant. See
State v. Brown,
Because the petitioner’s claims possess no merit and the distriсt court properly dismissed the claims without holding an evidentiaiy hearing, the issue of the district court’s claimed partiality is moot. Even if this court concluded that the district judge should have recused himself, such determination would have no effect on the resolution of the case or affect the rights of the petitioner. See
State v. Hatchel,
Affirmed in part and dismissed in part.
