Lead Opinion
Affirmed by published opinion. Judge WILKINSON wrote the majority opinion, in which Judges RUSSELL, WIDENER, HALL, WILKINS, NIEMEYER, HAMILTON, LUTTIG, AND WILLIAMS joined. Judge MICHAEL wrote a dissenting opinion, in which Chief Judge ERVIN and Judges MURNAGHAN and MOTZ joined.
OPINION
We granted en bane review in this case to consider whether the district court properly dismissed appellant Dennis Wayne Cochran’s in forma pauperis complaint. Because we find that the court dismissed Cochran’s complaint pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1915(d), its judgment is entitled to great deference. Nasim v. Warden, Maryland House of Correction,
I.
This ease is one of a series that Dennis Wayne Cochran has generated from his prison cell. The lawsuits, filed in both the Western and Eastern districts of Virginia, all stem from a single incident that occurred when Cochran was incarcerated at the Buckingham Correctional Center (BCC). A fellow prisoner stabbed Cochran in a stairwell in December of 1990. After the assault, BCC officials placed Cochran in protective custody.
The record does not fully disclose what transpired after Cochran was placed in protective custody. What is clear is that Cochran objected to BCC’s treatment of him. According to Cochran, he and BCC officials had a succession of disputes about several subjects, including Cochran’s investigation of security in the stairwells at BCC, his continued placement in protective custody, his on-again, off-again request for a kosher diet, and his transfer to the Powhatan Correctional Center (PCC) in late April, 1992.
As a result of the assault and ensuing disputes, Cochran filed a number of lawsuits against his jailers. In March of 1992 Cochran brought two suits in the Western District alleging a denial of equal protection and deliberate indifference by BCC officials based on their failure to post security guards in the stairwells. Cochran sought to file these cases in forma pauperis; the court assessed a partial filing fee of $40 for each case pursuant to Evans v. Croom,
The record also discloses portions of the procedural history of at least two other lawsuits Cochran filed in 1992. Unlike the previous cases, Cochran brought these suits in the Eastern District. One alleged a denial of adequate medical care, and the other asserted improper confinement in segregation. The record does not reveal the final disposi
One other suit Cochran filed in 1992 is especially pertinent to this appeal. In June, 1992, Cochran submitted a § 1983 action in the Eastern District (Cochran I), which contained allegations resembling those in the case now before the court. The Cochran I complaint charged that prison officials violated Cochran’s constitutional right to the free exercise of religion when they denied him a kosher diet. This refusal to provide kosher meals was connected, in a roundabout way, to the assault and Cochran’s subsequent placement in protective custody. Allegedly forced to choose between his kosher diet at BCC and transfer to another prison where he would be separated from his attacker, Cochran asserted that he initially chose a transfer. After consulting a rabbi, however, Cochran alleged that he changed his mind while still at BCC and sought to revoke his waiver of a kosher diet. BCC officials denied his request; Cochran was transferred to PCC where he was unable to obtain a kosher diet. This chain of events formed the basis for Cochran’s free exercise claim.
In July, 1993, the district court granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment in Cochran I. Cochran v. Murray, No. 92-1021 (E.D.Va. July 7, 1993). Notably, the district court observed that Cochran’s change of heart about his need for a kosher diet occurred only after, not before, he transferred to PCC. In this context, the court decided that it was permissible to deny Cochran’s request to transfer back to BCC from PCC in order to receive a kosher diet; the court also determined that Virginia’s accommodation of kosher diets at one institution satisfied the constitution.
On November 17, 1993, this court affirmed the district court’s decision in Cochran I.
In September, 1993, just two months after the Eastern District dismissed Cochran I and while he was appealing its decision, Cochran brought the § 1983 action presently before this court. (Cochran II). This time, however, he brought suit in the Western District. The factual recitation contained in the Cochran II complaint largely repeated the facts alleged in Cochran I regarding denial of a kosher diet, and it also contained new allegations of official misconduct. On appeal, Cochran asserts four claims: denial of the free exercise of religion; denial of access to the courts; retaliatory prison transfer; and due process violations.
Defendants moved to transfer Cochran II to the Eastern District of Virginia, which Cochran opposed. In support of their motion, defendants called the court’s attention to the Cochran I court’s resolution of the free exercise claim and a pending and apparently related action in the Eastern District. Noting that “[ijnasmuch as plaintiff has raised many of the same claims in previous actions filed in the Eastern District,” the court granted the motion.
After transfer to the Eastern District, Judge Hilton dismissed Cochran’s complaint sua sponte and before responsive pleadings had been filed. Judge Hilton had also presided over, and dismissed, at least two other actions Cochran filed; this court affirmed those dismissals. Cochran v. Williams,
Many of plaintiffs claims have been previously ruled on in this Court’s Order of July 7, 1993 [Cochran I ]. The plaintiff now makes further complaints regarding the defendants, none of which state a claim for which relief can be granted, and this case is DISMISSED.
Cochran then filed a motion under Rule 60(b), in which he cited RFRA’s passage as a basis to vacate the judgment of dismissal. The district court denied his motion.
Cochran appealed and a panel of this court heard argument. While the case was under submission, a majority of the court voted to hear it en banc.
II.
We must first ascertain the basis for the district court’s dismissal of Cochran’s complaint. Cochran notes that the district court used the words “none of which state a claim for which relief can be granted” in dismissing his sundry claims. He contends that the district court’s dismissal must necessarily have been pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). Cochran then argues that the dismissal was improper under Rule 12(b)(6) because it was sua sponte. See, e.g. Ricketts v. Midwest Nat’l Bank,
We think Cochran’s view of the district court’s dismissal ruling unduly formalistic. The district court’s action must be viewed against the nature of Cochran’s complaint. Cochran filed his complaint under 28 U.S.C. § 1915(a), which allows district courts to waive costs and fees in actions filed by in forma pauperis litigants. Section 1915(d), in turn, permits district courts to dismiss suits filed pursuant to § 1915(a) if “the allegation of poverty is untrue, or if satisfied that the action is frivolous or malicious.” 28 U.S.C. § 1915(d). Both the authority to accept and to dismiss such complaints thus arise from a single statute. The most logical basis for the dismissal of a § 1915(a) complaint, then, is the authority granted by § 1915(d).
It is clear for several reasons that the district court intended to exercise its authority under § 1915(d). First, the sua sponte nature of the court’s dismissal was consistent with a ruling under § 1915(d) rather than Rule 12(b)(6), since sua sponte dismissals are freely permitted under the former provision. Denton v. Hernandez,
Finally, the dismissal in this case can be affirmed under § 1915(d) under the well-recognized authority of courts of appeals to uphold judgments of district courts on alternate grounds. We have freely exercised this authority in actions brought by prison inmates. In Brown v. Briscoe the nominal ground for dismissal by the trial court was for failure to state a claim.
III.
The standards for review of § 1915(d) dismissals are well established. As noted, the statute allows dismissal if the district court is “satisfied that the action is frivolous or malicious.” 28 U.S.C. § 1915(d). This standard encompasses complaints that are either legally or factually baseless. Neitzke,
We find no reason in this case to depart from our general obligation of deference to the district court. Denton,
Cochran, moreover, did more than file numerous lawsuits. He attempted to escape the final decision of one federal court by filing in another and he resisted attempts to transfer the latter suit, Cochran II, to the Eastern District, where Cochran I was decided. Cochran also withdrew two lawsuits in 1992 only after he was ordered to pay a partial filing fee and respond to summary judgment motions. A district court could consider these withdrawals as evidence that Cochran lacked commitment to his claims, an implication that is strengthened by his failure to pay filing fees ordered by trial courts. Cochran v. Morris, No. 94-6971,
IV.
Turning to the particular claims, we find that the district court soundly exercised its discretion.
Cochran’s free exercise claim, arising from prison officials’ failure to provide him with a kosher diet, was properly dismissed. The district court observed that this same claim was decided adversely to Cochran in Cochran I. Its earlier opinion reflected as much, noting that “Plaintiff brings this action against Edward Murray, Director of the Virginia Department of Corrections (“VDOC”), E. Morris, Deputy Director of VDOC, and David Williams, former Warden at PCC, alleging that his First Amendment rights were violated because he was not provided with a kosher diet at PCC.” The district court then proceeded to resolve this very claim: Section 1915(d) is aimed at the dismissal of “frivolous, malicious, or repetitive lawsuits.” Neitzke,
B.
The district court also properly dismissed Cochran’s claim that prison officials infringed his right of access to the courts. In making such a claim, a prisoner cannot rely on conclusory allegations. White,
Cochran failed to meet these standards. For the most part, the complaint was conclu-sory, alleging simply that prison officials “conspired to circumvent plaintiffs access to the courts.” He did, however, contend that in response to his investigation of stairwell security, prison officials both transferred prisoners who had provided him with damaging affidavits and “confiscated and destroyed” his legal documents during his prison transfer. Significantly, Cochran failed to make comparable allegations in earlier court filings that he submitted after his transfer; in one document he merely stated that his legal papers were “disarranged and missing” and in another he neglected to mention the alleged conspiracy altogether.
Cochran’s complaint was primarily deficient, however, because he failed to assert any actual injury resulting from prison officials’ conduct. Strickler,
C.
The district court also did not abuse its discretion by dismissing Cochran’s claims of retaliation. In the prison context, we treat such claims with skepticism because “[e]very act of discipline by prison officials is by definition ‘retaliatory’ in the sense that it responds directly to prisoner misconduct.” Adams,
Cochran’s complaint charged that every single action by prison officials represented either a conspiracy or a retaliation,
On appeal, counsel transforms these loose accusations into allegations of two specific acts of retaliatory prison transfer (intrastate transfer and pending interstate transfer) to punish Cochran for filing grievances and lawsuits. Of course, the district judge did not have the benefit of this post-hoc reconstruction of Cochran’s complaint. In addition, with respect to the intrastate transfer, Cochran’s complaint acknowledged that he consented to the transfer from BCC. While the complaint alleged that Cochran changed his mind before his transfer, this assertion directly conflicted with the statement in the Cochran I opinion that Cochran’s turnabout occurred only after he was transferred. The district court was entitled to consider its earlier conclusion in related litigation to hold that Cochran’s allegation was factually frivolous.
The second claim of retaliatory interstate transfer cannot fairly be wrested from the complaint Cochran submitted. The complaint alleged that “defendants transferred plaintiff in retaliation for filing law suits” but, given that much of the complaint discussed the intrastate transfer, this allegation was not sufficiently linked to a decision to transfer Cochran out-of-state. A district judge is not required to piece together causes of action from fragmentary factual recitations. To the extent that claims could be constructed from the complaint, Cochran’s grievances with the interstate transfer appeared to relate not to retaliation but to vague due process violations.
D.
The district court also did not abuse its discretion in dismissing the plaintiffs procedural due process claim, which is based on alleged breaches of basic due process requirements at a hearing on Cochran’s interstate transfer. On appeal, counsel have vigorously disputed which precise set of regulations govern Cochran’s transfer and whether they convey a liberty interest. See Department of Corrections, Division of Adult Institutions Operating Procedure (“DOP”) 820 (Interstate Corrections Compact). The state asserts that Cochran’s transfer is a general compact transfer and that the applicable regulations use discretionary language. DOP 820 Part I, § III(D). Cochran contends, on the other hand, that the transfer is an administrative compact transfer; the pertinent regulations, he argues, contain mandatory language. Id. at Part I, § III(E), (F). This whole debate, however, misses the point. Cochran’s complaint did not even suggest that the relevant prison regulations conferred a liberty interest, which is a necessary element of a procedural due process claim. Meachum v. Fano,
y.
Our dissenting colleagues pass up a fine opportunity to support a district court in its dismissal of a frivolous prisoner complaint. Although the dissent purports to interpret the intention of the district court with respect to Federal Rule 12(b)(6) and § 1915(d), it ignores the court’s foremost intention to end litigation by an inmate who has been
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Appellee also refers to an action Cochran filed in 1991 in the Western District requesting placement in protective custody. This action is not included in the record before this court but appellee asserts that it was dismissed as moot in November, 1991. This court affirmed that dismissal. See Cochran v. Smith,
. Notwithstanding the dissent’s view, we do not read Boag v. MacDougall,
. We do not reach the applicability of RFRA to this claim, or the question of RFRA’s constitutionality. Cochran did not allege a violation of RFRA in his complaint. He raised his RFRA claim only in a motion for relief from judgment. The district court denied this Rule 60(b) motion and Cochran did not appeal that ruling. Therefore, RFRA's constitutionality is not properly before this court. 11 Charles A. Wright, Arthur R. Miller & Mary K. Kane, Federal Practice and Procedure § 2871 at 422-24 (1995).
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
Bound and determined to label another prisoner complaint as “frivolous,” the majority passes up a good chance for this circuit to adopt a sensible rule that would require notice and an opportunity to respond prior to a sua sponte dismissal on the merits. To avoid a remand, the majority first transforms the district judge’s dismissal on the merits into a dismissal under § 1915(d). Then, alternatively, the majority applies § 1915(d) in the first instance, ignoring the Supreme Court’s instruction in Boag v. MacDougall,
I.
The majority’s effort to transform the December 2, 1993, dismissal order into one of the § 1915(d) variety has a fundamental flaw: it does not take the district judge at his word. When the words of the dismissal order are measured against the words of Fed. R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6) and § 1915(d), it becomes clear that the district judge dismissed Cochran’s complaint on two grounds: res judicata and failure to state a claim. Section 1915(d) is not in the picture.
The dismissal order provides:
This case comes before the Court after having been transferred from the Western District of Virginia, Roanoke Division. Many of plaintiffs claims have been previously ruled on in this Court’s Order of July 7, 1993. The plaintiff now makes further complaints regarding the defendants, none of which states a claim for which relief can be granted, and this ease is DISMISSED.
The order’s plain language indicates that Cochran’s free exercise claim, which had been “previously ruled on” in the July 7, 1993, order, was dismissed on res judicata grounds. Cochran’s “further complaints” were dismissed because “none ... states a claim for which relief can be granted.” This language tracks Rule 12(b)(6) (“failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted”) almost verbatim. Not only did the district judge track the language of Rule 12(b)(6), but he also avoided either a citation to § 1915(d) or the use of its rememberable language (court may dismiss ”if satisfied that the action is frivolous or malicious”).
The experienced district judge here has been steeped in in forma pauperis prisoner litigation. I expect, therefore, that he was aware of the guidelines for § 1915(d) dismissals. The Supreme Court has instructed district courts to provide a brief explanation when dismissing under § 1915(d) “to facilitate intelligent appellate review.” Boag,
The district judge’s failure to use the “frivolous” designation or even to cite § 1915(d) was deliberate, I believe, for one reason: he intended to dismiss on the merits, thereby blocking Cochran from filing a paid complaint later. “[A] § 1915(d) dismissal is not a dismissal on the merits, but rather an exercise of the court’s discretion under the in forma pauperis statute.” Denton,
The district judge’s words — -dismissing Cochran’s second free exercise claim as “previously ruled on” and dismissing his “further complaints” because “none ... states a claim” — should be allowed to carry their usual consequence of a judgment on the merits. With his choice of language the judge surely did not intend to permit Cochran to refile a paid complaint asserting his free exercise claim a third time and his other claims a second time. Yet that would be quite possible under a § 1915(d) dismissal, the designation chosen by the majority.
It is best to give the judge’s order its most natural reading even if, as we see next, that would require a remand.
II.
Accepting the obvious, that the sua sponte dismissal was based on res judicata and failure to state a claim, does force a fundamental question. Is it proper to grant a sua sponte dismissal on the merits without notice and an opportunity to respond? I would hold that such a dismissal cannot be permitted.
There are compelling reasons of fairness and efficiency for disallowing sua sponte dismissals on the merits entered without notice and an opportunity to respond. The Eighth Circuit has explained:
When unaccompanied by notice to the plaintiffs and an opportunity to respond, sua sponte dismissals deprive plaintiffs of the chance to develop legal arguments or clarify factual allegations, undercut the adversarial process, and render the appellate record less complete for review.
Murphy v. Lancaster,
This case powerfully illustrates the need for a prohibition against dismissals on the merits entered without notice and an opportunity to respond. Eleven days after his complaint was dismissed, Cochran filed a Rule 60(b) motion to vacate the judgment, asserting that (the newly-enacted) RFRA applied to his facts. The district court denied the Rule 60(b) motion, but because Cochran did not appeal that ruling, the majority does not reach his RFRA argument or the question of RFRA’s constitutionality. Unfortunately, court-appointed counsel for Cochran, counsel for the Commonwealth, counsel for the United States (as intervenor) and counsel for an amicus cwriae spent considerable public and private resources briefing and arguing the RFRA issue, first to a panel and then to the cn banc court. These resources and valuable court time were wasted on what counsel honestly believed was an issue in the case. This waste might have been avoided if the district judge had notified Cochran of his intention to dismiss and offered Cochran an opportunity to respond. Then Cochran could have advised the district court of his reliance on RFRA, and the judge could have ruled on his claims, taking RFRA into account. Under that scenario, the RFRA claim would be before us and we could dispose of it once for all. Surely no one doubts that Cochran’s RFRA claim must be dealt with eventually, and it would have been more efficient and far less costly to have decided it now.
Under the circumstances, I would vacate the judgment and remand this case with the instruction that the district judge reconsider his proposal to dismiss after Cochran has had the opportunity to respond.
III.
The majority must sense that it will be hard to sell the order as anything other than a dismissal on the merits. I say this because the majority feels compelled to hold that the dismissal may in any event be upheld on alternate grounds, that is, this court may in the first instance determine that Cochran’s claims are frivolous under § 1916(d). The Supreme Court does not allow § 1915(d) to be used in that way, however.
Whether a complaint is “frivolous” for purposes of § 1915(d) “must be addressed in the first instance by the District Court.” Boag,
I am bothered by the lack of precision this opinion could encourage in the district courts. Nowhere does the majority suggest that when a district court invokes § 1915(d) it should cite the statute and provide a brief explanation as to why the complaint is frivolous or malicious. Here, it took an en banc majority untold hours and several pages of writing to find that the district judge dismissed under § 1915(d). Such inefficient exercises can be avoided only if district courts cite the statute and explain in a few sentences why the complaint fails under the statutory standard.
Rather than wrench this case into § 1915(d), I would conclude that the district judge meant what he said and dismissed on the merits. That, of course, would require that the judgment be vacated and the case remanded to give Cochran the opportunity to be heard. Again, I respectfully dissent.
Chief Judge ERVIN, Judge MURNA-GHAN and Judge MOTZ have asked me to say that they join in this dissent.
. There is some case law discussing the narrow circumstances in which a court may raise sua sponte the issue of res judicata. See, e.g., Holloway Constr. Co. v. U.S. Dept. of Labor,
. A few circuits will affirm such (without notice) dismissals when it is “patently obvious” that the plaintiff could not possibly succeed. See Murphy,
. The majority cannot avoid the Boag rule by citing Brown v. Briscoe,
