The plaintiff, injured in an automobile accident, filed a diversity suit in a federal district court in Illinois against the driver of the other car and the driver’s insurer, charging negligence. After the accident but before the suit (which remains pending in the district court) was filed, the plaintiff had been convicted in a Wisconsin state court of burglary and sentenced to prison, where he remains, making it difficult for him to litigate his federal suit, especially because he has no lawyer. So he asked the clerk of the district court to issue a writ of habeas corpus
ad testificandum,
ordering the warden of the Wisconsin state prison in which he is incarcerated to deliver him to the district court in Illinois for the trial of his diversity suit. Section 2241(c)(5) of the Judicial Code authorizes the district court to issue a writ of habeas corpus commanding that the prisoner be delivered to the court “to testify or for trial.” The section codifies the common law authority of federal courts to issue writs of habeas corpus
ad testificandum
and
ad prosequendum, United States v. Larkin,
The district judge denied the writ on the ground that he lacked power to issue it. He reasoned that the authority to issue a writ of habeas corpus
ad testificandum
is limited to cases in which a prisoner is seeking relief against being confined or against the conditions in which he is being confined — that is, is either seeking federal habeas corpus as a postconviction remedy or complaining under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 that the conditions of his confinement violate his federal rights. Section 2241(c)(5) is part of the general federal habeas corpus statute, which is intended to provide a remedy against illegal confinement, and it is tempting to suppose as the district judge did that subsection (c)(5) applies only to a suit complaining about the prisoner’s confinement, for example because a prisoner cannot litigate his habeas corpus claim without obtaining the testimony of some other prisoner. Many cases in which writs of habeas corpus
ad testificandum
are sought under the authority of section 2241(c)(5) are indeed prisoner suits. See, e.g.,
Pennsylvania Bureau of Correction v. U.S. Marshals Service,
The district judge further ruled that if he was authorized to command the plaintiffs presence, nevertheless he would not do so but would instead allow the plaintiff to appear in the district court electronically.
Thornton v. Snyder,
The plaintiff appeals from the denial of the writ. His appeal also challenges the district judge’s refusal to attempt to obtain a lawyer for him under 28 U.S.C. § 1915(e)(1), but that ruling is nonfinal, since the case continues in the district court, and therefore nonappealable.
Ran-dle v. Victor Welding Supply Co.,
Our court, as well as the other courts to address the issue, has said that orders granting the writ are immediately appealable under the “collateral order” doctrine. E.g.,
Lynk v. LaPorte Superior Court No. 2,
But we emphasize that these are cases in which the appeal was from the
grant
of the writ (except
Lynk,
but our statement in that case that “in the federal system, the grant
or denial
of writs of habeas corpus
ad testificandum
is appeal-able,”
But 28 U.S.C.- § 2253(a) makes the final order in a federal habeas corpus proceeding appealable. The order denying the writ in this diversity case, though interlocutory from the standpoint of the case, is the final order in the plaintiffs habeas corpus proceeding and thus may seem ap-pealable because made so by the statute, regardless of the inapplicability of the collateral-order doctrine. Yet no case that has allowed an appeal from the grant of a writ of habeas corpus ad testificandum has referred to the statute.
As a matter of semantics, section 2253(a) could be read to apply to every subsection of section 2241, including (c)(5), though it is odd to think of the denial (or for that matter the grant) of such a writ as a “final order” in a habeas corpus proceeding, since the petitioner is not seeking his freedom by asking for such a writ and the real proceeding is another case altogether (in this case, the plaintiffs diversity suit) which the order does not end. But the decisive objection to deeming the grant or denial of the writ a final order within the scope of section 2253(a) is that any order appealable under that statute is also subject to section 2253(c)(1)(A) if the petitioner is detained as a consequence of a state judgment, as our plaintiff is. So he would need a certificate of appealability to be allowed to proceed with this appeal. He does not have such a certificate and could not get one because (given the video conference option) he has not made “a substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right.” 28 U.S.C. § 2253(c)(2).
Carbo v. United States, supra,
is relevant here. It holds that the geographical limitation of writs of habeas corpus in section 2241(a) does not apply to writs issued under (c)(5), even though there is nothing in section 2241(a), just as there is nothing
There is a further distinction between this case and the ones that have allowed an immediate appeal from the grant of a writ of habeas corpus ad testificandum. Those were all third-party cases. A writ of habe-as corpus issued to a warden is like a subpoena issued to a stranger to the case. The stranger is not a party and will not be allowed to appeal from the final decision, which does not aggrieve him. So he is allowed to appeal immediately if he can demonstrate irreparable harm, even though he is not faced with the prospect that a judgment will be entered against him in the case that the party wants to drag him into. When a court declines to issue or enforce a subpoena, the aggrieved litigant can get appellate review at the end of the case; from his perspective the order is no more final than any other step in discovery. And so it is here. Our plaintiff wanted the judge to do something that would make it easier for him to litigate. Appellate review of other interlocutory steps that a judge might take, such as recruitment of counsel, waiving certain fees, or ordering the defendants to answer interrogatories, but refuses to take, must await the end of the case in the district court. The denial of a writ of habeas corpus ad testificandum is one of those steps. The appeal from the denial must be dismissed for want of appellate jurisdiction.
The State of Wisconsin has filed an amicus curiae brief arguing another jurisdictional ground for why this case must terminate: that the writ of habeas corpus
ad testificandum
to compel the delivery to the district court of a state prisoner violates the Eleventh Amendment. But the state is not a party to or even remotely interested in the plaintiffs suit, and is not charged with a violation of federal law. The writ sought in this case would if granted be like an order commanding a state official who is not a party to a case between private persons to produce documents in the state’s possession during the discovery phase of the case; such orders, because they do not compromise state sovereignty to a significant degree, cf.
Tennessee Student Assistance Corp. v. Hood,
Nevertheless, for the reasons stated earlier the appeal must be, and it hereby is,
Dismissed.
