ORDER
LaVertis Stewart, a 58-year-old Illinois inmate, appeals from the dismissal at screening of his civil-rights suit. See 28 U.S.C. § 1915A. He claims that he suffers cruel and unusual punishment when forced to wear a security box over his handcuffs, which causes severe pain because of carpal tunnel syndrome in both wrists and chronic pain in his right shoulder. We vacate the judgment in part and remand for further proceedings.
Stewart saw Dr. Mesrobian later that day and again in May, both times emphasizing that the security box causes him severe pain, but Dr. Mesrobian refused to order an exemption. Stewart submitted a grievance in June 2009 and appealed to the Administrative Review Board when it was denied. The Board referred the matter to medical personnel for review in July 2010 (we are not told the reason for the long turnaround), and the next month Stewart received a six-month exemption from Dr. Imhotep Carter, who had replaced Dr. Mesrobian as medical director. That exemption eventually expired after several renewals, and beginning in May 2012, Stewart again was forced to wear the security box.
Stewart brought this action in July 2012 claiming that Dr. Mesrobian and several unnamed guards had been deliberately indifferent to the pain caused by the security box. He asked the district court to enlist counsel. At screening the court dismissed the suit as against the guards because, by Stewart’s account, they had responded to his reports of pain by verifying with the nurse that an exemption wouldn’t be authorized. The court also dismissed without prejudice the claim against Dr. Mesro-bian, explaining that he had died and that Stewart would need to substitute a party for him. The court denied Stewart’s request for counsel, reasoning that the case was not overly complex, and gave Stewart 45 days to amend his complaint. The court later extended that deadline.
Stewart timely submitted an amended complaint naming as a defendant the “special administrator” of Dr. Mesrobian’s estate (and asking the district court to appoint one). He also named Dr. Carter in his official capacity (although by that time Dr. Carter had been replaced as medical director), and the director of the Department of Corrections. Stewart again asked the court to enlist counsel, pointing out that Dr. Mesrobian’s death complicated his case and that he had been unable to find relevant information about the doctor’s estate. The court screened the amended complaint, which seeks damages and an injunction against use of the security box, and this time dismissed it with prejudice on the ground that Stewart’s allegations make apparent that the statute of limitations bars his claims against Dr. Mesrobi-an’s estate and the medical director. In addition, the district court concluded that the medical director could not be joined in a suit against Dr. Mesrobian’s estate. Finally, the court also rejected Stewart’s claim against the IDOC director because, it reasoned, a general policy of using secu
On appeal Stewart argues that his claim against Dr. Mesrobian’s estate was timely. The limitations clock began ticking, according to the district court, in May 2009 when Dr. Mesrobian refused to issue an exemption after Stewart complained a third time about the pain caused by the security box. The court acknowledged that Stewart had tolled the statute of limitations the following month by submitting a grievance. But the tolling period ended in July 2010, the court concluded, and thus the limitations period expired in June 2012 — a little more than two weeks before Stewart signed his original complaint.
As Stewart correctly argues, however, the district court based its calculations on the wrong starting date. He claims that he experienced severe pain every time he wore the security box; each instance represents another potential violation and a new limitations period, and when evaluating the timeliness of his claim, the last violation is what matters. See United States v. Midwest Generation, LLC,
Although the limitations period expired before Stewart amended his complaint in November 2010, that complaint will relate back if the defendants received notice of the suit within 120 days of his timely filed complaint. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(c), 4(m); Krupski v. Costa Crociere S.p.A.,
So the district court should not have dismissed as untimely the claim against Dr. Mesrobian’s estate, and looking to the merits, we conclude that Stewart’s allegations are sufficient to state a claim. Using a security box is permissible in some settings. See Bruscino v. Carlson,
This does not mean that Stewart has cleared all procedural hurdles relating to Dr. Mesrobian’s estate. The district court may appoint a “special administrator” consistent with Illinois law only if a state judge has not opened the estate already; otherwise, Stewart must sue the personal representative of the estate. See 735 Ill. Comp. Stat. 5/13—209(b); Anderson v. Romero,
As for the other defendants, Stewart argues, and we agree, that the district court erred by dismissing his claim against the medical director in his official capacity. Stewart seeks an injunction against use of the security box. He says that he wore the security box as recently as May 2012, and nothing in the record suggests that use of the security box is not ongoing and will not continue. Moreover, we disagree with the district court that the claim against the medical director is unrelated to the claim against Dr. Mesrobian’s estate and cannot be joined in the same lawsuit. The court cited George v. Smith,
We conclude, however, that the district court properly dismissed Stewart’s claim against the director of the Department of Corrections alleging that it is the departmental policy to use security boxes to “torture” inmates. The court construed this as a broad attack on the use of security boxes generally; Stewart insists that he challenges only the specific way the boxes are used at his prison — with an inmate’s wrists facing opposite directions, one up and the other down. Yet Stewart’s complaint says too little to make even this narrower theory plausible. See Ashcroft v. Iqbal,
The district court also properly dismissed Stewart’s claim against the unnamed guards. His allegations do not plausibly suggest that they were deliberately indifferent to his complaints of severe pain. See Farmer v. Brennan,
Accordingly, we VACATE the judgment dismissing the claims against Dr. Mesrobi-an’s estate and the medical director and REMAND those claims for further proceedings. In all other respects the judgment is AFFIRMED.
