Charles R. WREN, Jr., Appellant, v. Norman A. CARLSON et al., Appellees.
No. 73-1846.
United States Court of Appeals, District of Columbia Circuit.
Sept. 12, 1974.
506 F.2d 131
No appearance for appellees.
Before BAZELON, Chief Judge, and ROBINSON and WILKEY, Circuit Judges.
PER CURIAM:
Appellant, an inmate of the United States Penitentiary at Atlanta, Georgia,1 filed pro se in the District Court for the District of Columbia a petition seeking a writ of habeas corpus on the ground that he was constitutionally entitled to,
When notified of the docketing of the appeal and asked whether he wished an appointment of counsel, appellant filed a motion for permission “to withdraw [his] complaint and litigation, with leave to refile same at [a] later date.” As reasons for the motion, appellant alleges that his health is impaired and that, in retaliation for the litigation, he has been severely harassed by penitentiary personnel.3 The case is now before us on the motion for leave to relinquish the appeal.
We have no call to consider the constitutional argument which appellant‘s habeas corpus petition ushered in. The District Court dismissed the petition, not for failure to state a claim upon
The latter question would ordinarily present a simple task, particularly in view of the poor condition of appellant‘s health, but it has been given a new cast by his allegations of retaliatory mistreatment by prison personnel. “Every prisoner,” the Fifth Circuit aptly declares, “has a constitutional right of access to the courts to present any complaints he might have concerning his confinement. He cannot be disciplined in any manner for making a reasonable attempt to exercise that right.”6 If indeed the motion to withdraw was a product of persecution germinated by appellant‘s assertion of his claim judicially, the motion is not made voluntarily. And it goes without saying that the courts will not tolerate such a perversion of the judicial process, or aid the unlawful thwarting of the litigation.
In this state of affairs, we find ourselves confronted with something of a dilemma. Certainly we could not, in the face of the grave charge which appellant makes, act on his motion without further investigation.7 But just as surely, this court, as an appellate tribunal, is not equipped to undertake the kind of factual exploration which the situation demands. We could, of course, remand the inquiry to the District Court, but only if, contrary to its already-expressed view, that court was empowered to adjudicate the case when it first came there. And even if it was, the factual predicate, if any, for appellant‘s complaint of abuse resides in the penitentiary in Atlanta, and only dubiously would a court in the District of Columbia attempt to thrash out the factual issues which expectably would arise.
The interplay of these considerations leads us unavoidably, in the search for the answer, to reexamine the District Court‘s jurisdictional position. Doing so, we have little difficulty in concluding that the District Court possessed jurisdiction to entertain appellant‘s action. We need not ponder whether there was jurisdiction in habeas corpus per se8 for, at the least, appellant‘s pro se petition was treatable alternatively as an application for relief via some other suitable remedy—mandamus, injunction or declaratory judgment.9 With both defendants in the District of Columbia, and charged with unconstitutionally barring conjugal visitation between federal inmates and their spouses, there was both jurisdiction and venue for mandamus10 and, upon satisfaction of the jurisdictional-amount require-
But even though the District Court has power to act in this case, the further question is whether its action in connection with the allegations of harassment would otherwise be appropriate. The answer, we believe, is plainly in the negative. Ostensibly the witnesses are in the penitentiary in Atlanta, and certainly their convenience would be served by the transfer of the litigation to the Northern District of Georgia, wherein the penitentiary is located.14 Other factors bearing on “the interest of justice”15 point in the same direction.16 And we are unable to perceive “any compelling reason [which] requires the matter [of harassment] to be litigated here.”17
We are mindful that the District Court is authorized to transfer this case only to a district “where it might have been brought,”18 a requirement necessitating proper venue19 and, as well, amenability of the defendants to process emanating from the transferee court.20 But venue in the Northern District of Georgia would have been proper whether the assumed objective of appellant‘s lawsuit is a writ of habeas corpus21 or mandamus,22 or an injunction or a declaratory judgment.23 And it is equally clear that the District Court for that district possessed the means of acquiring personal jurisdiction over the federal officers at whose hands appellant seeks relief.24
Accordingly, we reverse the District Court‘s jurisdictional determination and remand the case with the instruction that it be transferred to the Northern District of Georgia. Since neither the
So ordered.
WILKEY, Circuit Judge:
I concur in the result my two colleagues reach. Certainly this case belongs in the Northern District of Georgia, the District of appellant‘s incarceration1 if, indeed this case belongs in any court at all.
Logically and historically, imprisonment has usually resulted in a deprivation of conjugal rights. No other result could be expected from incarceration and forced separation from the rest of society. No prison is designed to be just like home. Deprivation of conjugal rights, like many deprivations flowing from imprisonment, is thus neither cruel nor unusual punishment within the meaning of the Eighth Amendment.
In the few instances where conjugal visitations have been granted, this has always been done by act of the legislative or executive, as an act of grace or experiment in rehabilitation, not because of any constitutional mandate to grant such a privilege. No decision of any court has been cited requiring conjugal visitations as a matter of constitutional right, and I am aware of none. There are decisions to the contrary.2
I would remand this “case” to the District Court to dismiss as frivolous.3
