We have consolidated for decision a prisoner’s appeals from orders by a district judge dismissing two civil rights suits, both of which complain about the treatment the prisoner received when he was confined in a county jail to await trial. In each case the prisoner filed a complaint accompanied by a request to be permitted to proceed
in forma pauperis,
and the judge, without waiting for an answer to be filed, dismissed the suit as frivolous. 28 U.S.C. § 1915(d);
Williams v. Faulkner,
The district judge’s ground for dismissal in both cases was that the allegations of the complaint were conclusory, stale, and lacking in a factual basis. As he put it in one of the orders, “The plaintiff’s allegations fail to make a rational argument in either fact or law to support a claim for relief. Furthermore, his allegations are merely conclusory and seem to be stale in nature.” (Citation omitted.) This is not a very happy formula. The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure establish a system of notice pleading rather than of fact pleading, Fed.R.Civ.P. 8;
Elliott v. Thomas,
As for “staleness,” that is a more disabling criticism of a bread than of a complaint, unless by this term the district judge meant barred by the statute of limitations. Indeed a number of this prisoner’s claims
are
plainly barred by the relevant statute of limitations, and others plainly fail to state a claim. In the latter category is the allegation that one of the officers turned on a hot water pipe that dripped; there is no contention either that the officer intended to injure the prisoner, or that the prisoner was injured. Also frivolous is the claim that the prisoner was not allowed to have hardcover law books or a hardcover bible in his cell. For he doesn’t argue that he lacked reasonable alternatives — a softcover bible for his cell, and access to law books in the jail’s law library. Compare
Jackson v. Elrod,
But several of the claims in the two complaints cannot be dismissed as failing to state a claim or as showing on their face that they have no merit because they allege wrongs that are patently outside the period of limitations. The prisoner claims that one of the defendants turned down a number of requests to return documents that he needed for a suit he had filed, even though the defendant knew that the documents had been confiscated by one of the guards; and that because the documents were not returned, the suit was dismissed. Subsequent proceedings may show that this claim is unfounded; but it is not insufficient, let alone frivolous, on its face.
Bounds v. Smith,
Most prisoner civil rights cases are frivolous, but district judges, busy as they are, must not assume that all are and dismiss them by rote. They may not throw out the haystack, needle and all.
Reversed.
