OPINION
This appeal arises from a suit brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and Maryland state law by the Maryland American Civil Liberties Union (“ACLU”), the Maryland ACLU Foundation (“ACLUF”) and Monica Chester, an ACLU paralegal (collectively “Appellees”, “the ACLU” or “Chester” as appropriate) against Wicomico County, Maryland and four employees
I. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
A. Background
Between March and September, 1990, Monica Chester made periodic visits to the Wi-comico County Detention Center in order to document inmate complaints for the ACLU. Prior to her first visit, Chester was informed that paralegals were not permitted “contact” visits with inmates.
In September, 1990, based at least in part on the results of Chester’s investigations, the ACLU filed an employment discrimination suit (hereinafter “the Baker lawsuit”) on behalf of a former employee of WCDC, alleging that the employee was fired in retaliation for his complaints about the treatment of African-American prisoners. Filing of the suit created some tension among prison employees and heightened administrators’ concerns about staff and inmate contact with outsiders. When Chester next visited WCDC on November 29,1990, she was not permitted to visit with inmates.
On December 12, 1990, representatives of the ACLU met with prison officials to discuss Chester’s status. WCDC claimed that Chester represented a threat to institutional security, suggesting that she had pursued prison employees for interviews and had acted unprofessionally during her visits. Appellees deny these allegations of impropriety. The parties failed to settle their dispute at the meeting, but the attorneys present were permitted to visit with inmates on that date.
WCDC subsequently provided Appellees with a list of conditions which Chester would have to meet before making any future paraprofessional visits to the facility. The new restrictions disqualified Chester from contact visits with inmates and forbade her to interview WCDC employees on site. She was barred from paraprofessional visits, contact or non-contact, with inmate Gairy Williams, with whom she had a personal friendship. In addition, Chester was to give a personal history statement, agree to a criminal history check and agree in writing to abide by the rules of the Detention Center. She was to continue providing, on each visit, a letter from an ACLU attorney identifying the inmates she was to meet, the means by which those inmates had requested to meet with her, and the attorney’s acceptance of responsibility for her. At ño time did WCDC restrict Chester’s access to inmates in a personal capacity; Appellees make no claim that she was forbidden the non-contact visits available to other non-lawyers.
The ACLU objebted to the restrictions placed on Chester and, in April, 1991, filed suit. The complaint included three claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 that the restrictions on Chester deprived the ACLU, the ACLUF, and Chester of First and Fourteenth Amendment rights. Appellees also included state law claims for tortious interference with contract and defamation. These last two claims arose from allegations that WCDC administrators had pressured inmates to reveal the substance of conversations with ACLU representatives and had disparaged the ACLU .in an effort to persuade inmates to disclaim ACLU representation.
Appellants filed a motion to dismiss or for summary judgment, asserting (1) that they were immune from suit in their individual capacities on the basis of qualified immunity; (2) that the ACLU had failed to demonstrate the existence of factors triggering municipal liability under 42 U.S.C. § 1983; (3) that Appellees had failed to state claims for violation of the rights asserted; and (4) that they were entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law.
B. District Court Opinion
The district court ordered discovery on the issue of immunity and treated the motion as one for summary judgment. On the basis of
The district court next weighed each count of the complaint for statement of a claim and the existence of genuine factual disputes precluding summary judgment. The court found a triable issue precluding summary judgment on Count I (retaliation) and Count III (equal protection) and dismissed Count II (due process) for failure to state a claim. The court denied the individual Appellants’ claim of qualified immunity on the basis that determining whether Appellants had violated Appellees’ clearly established rights turned on their disputed motive for altering their policy toward Chester.
With regard to the state law claims, the court denied WCDC’s claim of governmental immunity under state law and found that the ACLU had stated claims for tortious interference with contract and defamation.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Jurisdiction
A district court’s denial of qualified immunity on a motion for summary judgment is an immediately appealable final order under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. Mitchell v. Forsyth,
B. Qualified Immunity
The doctrine of qualified immunity shields public officials, including state prison officials, from civil liability as long as their conduct does not “violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.” Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 800, 818,
In order to weed out insubstantial § 1983 claims without resort to a trial or extensive pre-trial proceedings, a trial court confronted with an assertion of qualified immunity should first determine whether the plaintiff has properly asserted a constitutional violation. Siegert v. Gilley, — U.S. -, -,
The district courts should first focus on whether the plaintiff has established a constitutional violation before determining whether material issues of fact are present. No material issues can be in dispute where the plaintiffs evidence fails to establish a constitutional violation.
Bennett v. Parker,
A preliminary evaluation of the plaintiffs allegations may resolve the immunity question at an early point in the litigation. See Anderson,
1. Count I: Retaliation
Retaliation by a public official for the exercise of a constitutional right is actionable under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, even if the act, when taken for different reasons, would have been proper. Mt. Healthy City School Dist. Bd. of Education v. Doyle,
In Count I, Appellees allege that WCDC violated their First Amendment right to petition the government through legal advocacy by heightening restrictions on Chester in retaliation for the ACLU’s filing of the Baker lawsuit. Appellees urge that Chester’s visits are essential to their efforts to provide legal assistance because understaffing prevents ACLU attorneys from conducting screening visits in the Wicomico County area. The restrictions on Chester, therefore, allegedly interfere with the constitutional rights of the institutional plaintiffs.
The district court denied summary judgment on grounds that this claim turned on WCDC’s disputed motive for changing the restrictions on Chester; while the ACLU claimed it was done in retaliation for the Baker lawsuit, WCDC pointed to concern for institutional security. However, the issue of motivation is not material to the question of immunity because, at the threshold, Appel-lees have failed to demonstrate adverse impact sufficient to support a claim of retaliation for their pursuit of litigation.
“The filing of a lawsuit carries significant constitutional protections, implicating the First Amendment right to petition the government for redress of grievances, and the right of access to courts.” Hoeber on Behalf of NLRB v. Local 30,
As of March, 1990, WCDC did not permit paralegals to conduct contact visits with inmates and the warden was vested with broad discretion to accommodate or restrict paralegal access under the applicable Maryland regulations. State of Maryland Division of Correction Regulation, Department of Public Safety and Correctional Services, DCR 195-1: Authorized Visitors (September 15,1988). There is no evidence in the record of WCDC’s treatment of other paralegals at
The December 1990 change in conditions placed Chester and the ACLU in the same position they were in before March, 1990: subject to the reasonable requirements imposed by the warden upon visits to inmates. We do not find this withdrawal of an accommodation sufficiently adverse to support a constitutional claim.
In South Carolina Educ. Ass’n v. Campbell,
[T]he First Amendment does not impose an affirmative obligation on the state to assist the program of the association by providing payroll deduction services. Loss of payroll deductions, it is true, may tend to impair the effectiveness of the [plaintiff] in representing its members, but we hold that such impairment ... is not one that the First Amendment proscribes.... The state’s failure to authorize payroll deductions for the [plaintiff] does not deny [plaintiffs] members the right to associate, to speak, to publish, to recruit members, or otherwise express and disseminate their views. Thus, we find no cognizable constitutional claim pursuant to the First Amendment.
Appellees have failed to establish the adverse impact necessary to a retaliation claim and thus have failed to assert a constitutional violation.
2. Count II: Due Process
In Count II, Appellees allege that WCDC’s acquiescence to attorney and paralegal visits to the prison created a protected liberty interest in that access of which they were deprived when WCDC altered its policy toward Chester. The district court dis
Absent a protected liberty interest, Appel-lees cannot state a claim under the Due Process Clause and Appellants are entitled to qualified immunity with regard to Count II of the complaint. Because the district court dismissed the claim under Appellants’ motion for summary judgment, we affirm its ruling on that issue.
3. Count III: Equal Protection
In Count III, Appellees claim that the restrictions on Chester denied her, and through her the ACLU, equal protection of the laws under the Fourteenth Amendment. The district court found that WCDC’s disputed motive precluded summary judgment, in this case because it affected whether WCDC could demonstrate a compelling state interest served by the alleged impairment of fundamental First Amendment rights.
The Equal Protection Clause mandates that similarly situated persons be treated similarly by the government. The WCDC warden made a special accommodation for Chester in March, 1990 and withdrawal of that accommodation necessarily affected her alone. Far from supporting a claim under the Equal Protection Clause, removal of the special accommodation merely returned Chester to the status occupied by other prospective paralegal visitors. In Phillips v. Bureau of Prisons, the D.C. Circuit cautioned that a prison authority might not, consistent with the Constitution “conspicuously foreclose to particular individuals opportunities it has previously and independently created generally for others.”
C. Other Issues
1. Municipal Liability
As we find that Appellees have failed to state any claim under § 1983, the issue of municipal liability is moot.
2. State Law Claims
The district court should decline, now, to exercise pendent jurisdiction over the state law claims for tortious interference with contract and defamation. Given our decision with regard to the federal claims, we believe the state law issues are more properly handled in a state tribunal.
3. District Court Order of Discovery
With regard to Appellants’ claim that the district court erred in ordering discovery on the issue of immunity, we find that this decision was well within the discretion of the district court.
For foregoing reasons, we reverse in part and affirm in part the decision of the district . court and remand the case with instruction to dismiss Counts I and III under the doctrine of qualified immunity and under Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c) and to dismiss Counts IV and V for lack of jurisdiction.
AFFIRMED IN PART AND REVERSED AND REMANDED IN PART.
. The individual Defendants/Appellants are John W. Welch, Jr., Warden of the Wicomico County Detention Center; Colonel Richard Darling; Major William Young; and Sergeant Michael Hunter.
. A contact visit is one with no physical barrier between inmate and visitor. WCDC permits contact visits between inmates and "professional visitors”, a category which includes attorneys, members of the clergy and law enforcement per-sonnet "Paraprofessional visitors”, including paralegals, private detectives and civil process servers, are limited to noncontact visits in secure visiting rooms while inmates’ personal visitors are similarly restricted. The WCDC director and assistant warden may make exceptions to these guidelines at their discretion. Wicomico County Department of Corrections Regulation 190-1 (effective February 1, 1992).
. The Vemet lawsuit centered on the claim that WCDC’s treatment of Chester adversely impacted inmates’ right to counsel. We note in passing that this claim strikes us as a substantially more persuasive posture for the case than the claim that the restrictions interfered with the right of the ACLU to conduct civil rights litigation.
. Given that the Detention Center had only been in operation for approximately two years as of March, 1990, and that its location was apparently remote, it is possible that Chester was the first paralegal to seek access to WCDC.
. We do not suggest that a plaintiff alleging retaliation must show that the action taken in response to her exercise of constitutional rights independently deprives her of a constitutional right. Such a rule would make a cause of action for retaliation wholly redundant of the protections provided by the Constitution itself. We merely find that these § 1983 plaintiffs suffered no more than a de minimis inconvenience and that, on the facts of this case, such inconvenience does not constitute cognizable retaliation under the First Amendment.
