Alan L. GLUTH, Thomas A. Rice, Donald K. Nelson, David M.
Bandstra, Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
William E. KANGAS, Defendant,
and
Arizona Department of Corrections, Defendant-Appellant.
Alаn L. GLUTH; Thomas A. Rice; Donald K. Nelson; David M.
Bandstra, Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
ARIZONA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS, Defendant-Appellant.
Nos. 90-15735, 90-16593.
United States Court of Appeals,
Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted June 14, 1991.
Memorandum Filed July 26 1991.
Opinion Dec. 23, 1991.
Thomas Dennis, Asst. Atty. Gen. (argued), and Lynne W. Abney, Asst. Atty. Gen. (on briefs), Phoenix, Ariz., for defendants-appellants.
M. Robert Dauber, Arizona State University, Law School Clinic, Tempe, Ariz., for plaintiffs-appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Arizona.
Before: BRUNETTI and RYMER, Circuit Judges, and ZILLY,* District Judge.
ORDER
The request for publication in this case is GRANTED. The memorandum disposition filed July 26, 1991,
RYMER, Circuit Judge:
Inmates at the Arizona State Prison at Florence brought suit against the Arizona Department of Corrections under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claiming that its policies concerning the prison law library denied them meaningful access to the courts. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of the plaintiff class and issued an injunction mandating certain changes in the operation of the library. The Department now appeals the district court's grant of summary judgment for the plaintiffs, the denial of its own motion for summary judgment, and various rulings concerning class certification (No. 90-15375). The Department also claims that the injunction exceeds constitutional standards (No. 90-16593). We affirm the district court in all respects.
I. The Department's Motion for Summary Judgment
The Department moved for summary judgment on the grounds that the inmates' claims were moot, relying exclusively on its post-litigation promulgation of a new access policy. As the Department conceded at oral argument, resting a summary judgment motion on the new policy alone was indeed "overreaching." It is well established that the mere voluntary cessation of alleged unlawful activity does not render those allegations moot. Lindquist v. Idaho State Bd. of Corrections,
Moreover, the Department provided no facts to support its claim that the inmate aсcess situation had changed at all. Because the policy did not "completely and irrevocably eradicate[ ] the effects of the alleged violation," the district court was not obligated to wait and see how the new policy worked out. Id. The inmates opposed the Department's motion with affidavits detailing deficiencies in library access, legal assistant and law library clerk training, and problems with the indigency standards; they also asserted that the new policy had not been implemented. The district court did not err in concluding that summary judgment for the Department, based entirely on the mere promulgation of a new policy, was not appropriate.
II. The Inmates' Cross-Motion for Summary Judgment
In opposition to the inmates' cross-motion for summary judgment, the Department again relied solely on the argument that the new access policy rendered the claims moot. Thе Department adduced no other facts, and did not attempt to argue that a material issue of fact precluded summary judgment. We agree with the district court's observation that the Department's strategy "backfired."
The Department's new policy did not undermine any part of the factual record submitted in support of the inmates' motion for summary judgment. Because those facts remained uncontroverted and showed that unconstitutional conditions existed at the prison, the inmates were entitled to summary judgment on all three counts.
A. Count I: Inmate Legal Assistant Training
In Bounds v. Smith,
According to the inmates' undisputed statement of facts, the Department established no qualifications for legal assistants and provided no training for the position. An inmate's application to be a legal assistant will be approved if the inmate is able to read and write. "Dependence on untrained inmate paralegals as an alternative to library аccess does not provide constitutionally sufficient access to the courts." DeMallory v. Cullen,
B. Count II: Direct Library Access
Undisputed facts indicate that unreasonable restrictions prevent inmates from securing adequate access to the law library; the prison arbitrarily dеnies requests for library "turnouts" despite space availability; inmate requests for library access are lost or ignored; inmates are permitted insufficient time in the library; inmates are given inadequate notice of library turnouts; turnouts are scheduled so as to conflict with other activities; and inmates are arbitrarily removed from the library. Statistics also show that there is a one-in-four chance that an inmate's request for library access will be denied, even though the library is rarely full.
"The existence of an adequate law library does not provide for meaningful access to the courts if the inmates are not allowed a reasonable amount of time to use the library." Lindquist,
It is the state's burden to provide meaningful access and to demonstrate that its chosen method is adequate. Storseth v. Spellman,
C. Count III: Indigency Policy
Under the Department's indigency policy, an inmate may apply for indigency clаssification if his prison account balance is less than $12 and his income from all sources during the previous thirty day period has not exceeded $12. We agree with the district court's conclusion that this policy, which according to uncontroverted facts forces inmates to choose between purchasing hygienic supplies and essential legal supplies, is "unacceptable."
The uncontroverted facts show that it costs at least $46 to purchase necessary personal items and legal supplies and that inmates must purchase hygiene items to avoid punishment under prison regulations. Thus, the inmates have demonstrated that the indigency policy's $12 threshold, which has been in effect since 1983 and has never been increased, fails to accommodate those inmates who have no money to purchase legal supplies when they arе needed. See Souder v. McGuire,
III. Class Certification Issues
The Department also challenges several rulings of the district court concerning class certification and the propriety of continuing the case as a class action. These contentions are without merit.
After a pretrial status conference at which both parties apparently agreed that the case should proceed as a class action, the district court entered an order finding that Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(a) had been met and provisionally certifying a class. After each party submitted a proposed class definition, the court adopted the inmates' proposal and issued an order defining the class.3 The Department now contends that it never "agreed" that the case should proceed as a class action, and that the district court never conducted any factual investigation to determine whether Rule 23 was satisfied. In addition to the fact that the Department does not direct us to where in the record it ever objected to the district court's class certification order, "a party who does not provide the trial court with suggested amended or alternative findings on the issue to be reviewed on appeal is not in a favorable position to complain about their incompleteness." Lindquist,
The Department also contends that the district court erred in denying its motion to decertify the class when Gluth was transferred out of the Central Unit of the Arizona State Prison at Florence. It is well established that once a class is certified, if the named plaintiff had a legitimate case at the time of certification, then his transfer does not moot the case. Bell v. Wolfish,
IV. The Scope of the Injunction
The Department challenges the scope of the relief provided in the district court's injunctions. "We will scrutinize the injunction[s] closely to make sure that the remedy protects the plaintiffs' constitutional rights аnd does not require more of state officials than is necessary to assure their compliance with the constitution. Within these parameters, we will defer to the district court." Toussaint,
A. Indigency Injunction
The Department first challenges the district court's indigency standard. It points out that "[t]here is no established minimum requirement that a state must meet in order to provide indigent inmates with adequate access to the courts. Instead, a reviewing court should focus on whether the individual plaintiff before it has been denied meaningful access." King v. Atiyeh,
Next, the Department objects to being ordered to furnish а minimum number of supplies. While the Constitution does not require any particular number of pens or sheets of paper, it does require some. See Bounds,
The Department specifically objects to the requirement that it provide typing supplies, file folders, and brief covers and bindings, on the ground that no prisoner could require them for meaningful access. See Sands,
The Department's objection to postage for legal mail sent to a "pro se oppоsing party" is without merit. The injunction only requires postage for legal mail and only for letters sent to an opposing party, not for every letter an inmate wants to send to another inmate.
The Department challenges the injunction's photocopying requirement, arguing that inmates have no right to free and unlimited photocopying. See Johnson v. Moore,
Nor is the injunction unclear, as the Department argues, about which documents are covered by its photocopying requirement. The injunction refers specifically to those documents described in Section II(B) of the court's April 25, 1990 order, which describes legal papers and dоcuments as "petitions, complaints, answers, motions, affidavits, exhibits, memoranda and briefs, including attachments and appendices, and materials needed for discovery and investigation, including interrogatories and freedom of information requests."
Finally, the Department raises several objections to the request and response procedures set out in the indigency injunction. These procedures fall squarely within the district cоurt's discretion, and the Department has not shown that the district court abused its discretion in establishing them. Nothing in the injunction precludes the Department from checking the inmates' eligibility for supplies. While it might have been desirable to provide extra response time for holidays, the lack of such a provision is not so serious that it amounts to an abuse of discretion. The requirement of duplicate reports of denials of requests is a proper exercise of the district court's discretion because it helps ensure compliance with the injunction and is not overly burdensome.
B. Access injunction
The inmates contend that all of the Department's claims relating to access have been abandoned because the Department failed to make them in its appeal from the access injunction (No. 90-15735) and are not properly included in the appeal in сase No. 16593 because it is an appeal only from the indigency injunction. The Department should have raised all of its arguments regarding access in its appeal from the April order because that portion of the case was closed when the district court issued its partial final judgment. Nevertheless, as a practical matter, we see no reason to bar the Department from raising access issues in this appeal. The two appeals are now before us and are being decided together so that the only distinction left between them is that the arguments are contained in different briefs. Cf. Anderson v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
The Department objects to the ten hour minimum for law library time each week, the minimum two hour law library turnouts, and the inmates' opportunity to select their turnouts. The Dеpartment waived any objections to the ten hour minimum and the two hour turnouts. In its "Response to Special Master's Proposed Order," it stated that "[t]he requirement of ten (10) hours minimum of actual law library use each week is basically reasonable," and that it had "no objection to a 'minimum of two hours of actual library use' at each library turnout."5
The Department did properly preserve its objection to inmates selecting library turnouts, but its оbjection is meritless. Simply allowing inmates to request their preferred time slots does not deprive the Department of any authority over scheduling.
Finally, the Department challenges the district court's imposition of a training program for inmate legal assistants. Bounds requires, in the absence of adequate law libraries, "some degree of professional or quasi-professional legal assistance to prisoners."
We cannot say that the district court abused its discretion in choosing an inmate training course to provide the requisite legal assistance. Bounds specifically mentions "the training of inmates as paralegal assistants to work under lawyers' supervision," as one way of providing adequate assistance. Id. at 830,
V. Conclusion
The district court's rulings on both summary judgment motions, the class cеrtification issues, and the scope of the injunctive relief ordered are affirmed in all respects.
In both appeals, the inmates have requested attorney's fees on appeal under 42 U.S.C. § 1988. Section 1988 allows us, in our discretion, to award such fees to a prevailing party. We believe an award of fees is appropriate in this case and therefore grant the inmates' request. The inmates shall submit a bill of costs to the Clerk within thirty (30) days.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
The Honorable Thomas S. Zilly, United States District Judge for the Western District of Washington, sitting by designation
Contrary to the Department's assertion, Gluth's status as a legal assistant does not moot his claim that the prison did not provide adequate legal assistance. The fact that Gluth is a legal assistant is irrelevant to the claim regarding "indirect" library access; when Gluth himself is in "lockdown" and is denied physical access to the library, like other inmates, he is entitled to the assistance of legal assistants trained in the law. Because Gluth set forth facts showing that he has been confined to his cell on several occasions, he can assert a claim challenging the adequacy of the legal training of inmate assistants
When core Bounds requirements, such as an allegation of a denial of legal supplies, are not at issue, we must consider whether the plaintiff has alleged an "actual injury" to court access. Sands v. Lewis,
The district court did not "refuse[ ] to consider defendants' opposing 'class' definition," as the Department asserts. The district court not only "considered" the defendant's proposed definition, but also issued a three page order explaining why it was rejecting the defendant's objections to plaintiff's prоposed definition
We recognize that these items may be somewhat remote from what is necessary for access to the courts, and we do not by any means suggest that such supplies are constitutionally required. However, "a federal court may order relief that the Constitution would not of its own force initially require if such relief is necessary to remedy constitutional violations." Toussaint,
The Department maintains that it preserved all objections by objecting to the necessity of an injunction at all. The argument in this appeal, however, is about the scope of the injunction, not the propriety of its imposition in the first place. Thus, the Department's preservation of its objection as to liability is irrelevant to the question of whether it has preserved its objections to the scope of the injunction
