The plaintiff in this state prisoner’s civil rights suit claims that prison officials violated his constitutional right to access to the courts. His pro se complaint alleges that they “den[ied] him adequate scribe materials, a desk, a chair and personal legal property to defend pending litigation in state and federal courts, which caused plaintiffs eases to now be lost and/or dismissed”; they “violate[d] access to the courts’ standards by refusing to release lawbooks, briefs, transcripts, ease law materials, [and] carbon paper.” The district judge dismissed the suit on the ground that the plaintiff had failed to plead a claim of denial of access to the courts with the requisite particularity — failed to “provide more than general allegations that defendants hindered his ability to pursue these or any other non-frivolous legal actions.”
In so ruling the judge relied primarily on
Ortloff v. United States,
Ortloff
in turn relied solely on
Martin v. Davies,
The list in Rule 9(b) of claims that must be pleaded with particularity does
*732
not include claims of denial of access to the courts, and so in
Nance v. Vieregge,
Marshall v. Knight,
In other words, it is not enough for a plaintiff to allege that the prison did not supply him with writing materials. That wouldn’t give the prison a clue as to what injury the plaintiff was alleging, and the prison would therefore have no idea how to go about preparing its defense. To survive a motion to dismiss, the complaint would have to go on and allege that as a result of the prison’s action the plaintiff had lost a case or suffered some other legal setback.
Applying the standard set forth in the opinion to Marshall’s complaint, we held the complaint adequate, though it was only slightly more detailed than the complaint in this case. Marshall “alleged that the defendants reduced his law library access to a ‘non-existent’ level, and that his inability to research and prepare for a May 29, 2003 court hearing caused him to lose custodial credit time that would have shortened his incarceration. The law requires no more from a prisoner at this stage of the proceeding.”
Marshall v. Knight, supra,
The district judge went through the exhibits and found that none showed that the withholding of materials of which the plaintiff complained had affected the outcome of the suits. But one would not expect the filings to show this. Cf.
Alston v. Parker, supra,
The judgment is reversed and the case remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
