The complaint in this Illinois state prisoner’s civil rights suit, filed pro se under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, charges prison officials with having confiscated the plaintiffs legal papers (including a brief in the Supreme Court of Illinois) thereby causing him to lose a number of lawsuits, denied him daily
The district judge thought the complaint deficient on the following grounds: the Supreme Court of Illinois later overruled the cases on which the plaintiff relied in the brief that he was prevented from filing; the complaint did not allege that the plaintiff suffers from a serious medical problem that would be aggravated by denial of exercise, departure from the prescribed diet, or subjection to ambient cigarette smoke; and the complaint did not contain “a chronology of events from which retaliation may plausibly be inferred.” In short, the plaintiff had pleaded himself out of court so far as the charge concerning confiscation of his legal papers was concerned, and for the rest the complaint contained insufficient detail to be plausible.
It is of course true that if a complaint pleads facts that show that the plaintiff does not have a claim, the complaint should be dismissed without further ado. E.g.,
Ciarpaglini v. Saini,
The plaintiff, however, contended that he had lost several lawsuits because of the defendants’ confiscating his legal papers, not just one. In light of the judge’s approach to the plaintiffs other claims, it is apparent that by failing to identify those suits the plaintiff provided insufficient detail to make his suit plausible, just as he failed to identify his medical problems and allege that the defendants’ failure to respond to them was the result of deliberate indifference on their part to his medical needs and just as he failed to set forth a chronology that would provide some basis for thinking that the change in his prison conditions was in fact in retaliation for his filing grievances.
In other words, the judge wanted the plaintiff to plead enough facts to show that it would be worthwhile to put the defendants to the bother of answering the complaint. That is an understandable approach in light of the burden that prisoners’ civil rights litigation places on the district courts, the frivolousness of most of that litigation, and the endeavor of Congress in the Prison Litigation Reform Act to curb the abuse of legal process by prisoners with time on their hands. But it is an approach that the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure and the decisions of the Supreme Court and the federal courts of appeals forbid. The federal rules replaced fact pleading with notice pleading. All that the rules require, with a few exceptions inapplicable to this case, such as pleading fraud, Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b), is that a
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
