Lead Opinion
Dale Holt, a Missouri inmate, appeals from the district court’s
The Conduct Violation Report, attached to Holt’s complaint, indicates that corrections officers found Holt holding several pieces of broken tablets marked “Valium.” The Report charged Holt with violation of “Rule #24 — Contraband; making, transferring, or having possession of any unauthorized article or substance.” The Report, given to Holt as his notice of violation, stated the pills had been submitted for analysis and that after analysis, the pills, along with all pertinent documentation, would be available to the adjustment board that served as the disciplinary hearing committee.
The Adjustment Board’s “Findings and Evidence Relied On,” also attached to the complaint, states:
5-18-89 in presence of counsel substitute John Czajka, who requested the result of the lab test. Mr. Czajka was advised that the lab results were still pending.... Board finds that the contraband pills were clearly marked Valium, which is a controlled substance and would lead a reasonable person to believe they were Valium. The pills could pose a threat to the security of the institution, as' they could be consumed or trafficked throughout the institution. The board recommends that the CV be elevated to Rule #3 dangerous contraband.
The Findings also state that Holt was found guilty “by virtue of the report that [subject] was in possession of what is considered dangerous contraband (Valium pills).” Rule 24 is a minor violation, and Rule 3 is a major violation. The sanctions for a major violation are substantially more severe and include extension of the conditional release date, transfer, and referral for criminal prosecution, which are not available for violation of Rule 24. Holt stated in his complaint that he was recommended for all of these sanctions.
Holt brought his section 1983 action against Paul Caspari, superintendent of the prison, and J.P. Smith, chairman of the Adjustment Board, in their official and individual capacities. Holt claimed a deprivation of due process because at the hearing Smith refused to advise him of the “documentary evidence, or the substance thereof, which the adjustment board would use as evidence against him.” Holt also claimed he asked for the result of the laboratory analysis of the pills, but Smith informed him the results had not yet been furnished to the prison. He claimed the refusal to provide him with the substance of the reports to be used against him deprived him of a fair and impartial hearing and the opportunity to controvert the allegations against him, and that the board did not have any laboratory results to confirm the pills were in fact Valium. He also claimed the upgrading of the violation from Rule 24 to Rule 3 effectively denied him his right to notice of the charge in order to prepare his defense.
The magistrate judge
On appeal, Holt renews his claims that the refusal to provide him with documentary evidence the board would use, the refusal to disclose the substance of any existing documentary evidence, the lack of a laboratory report, and the failure to give him adequate notice of the charge by upgrading the violation during the deliberation violated his due process rights.
Under section 1915(d), a complaint may be dismissed as frivolous if it lacks an arguable basis either in law or fact. Neitzke v. Williams,
Holt attached to his pro se pleading copies of the various disciplinary reports and notations made by the Adjustment Board concerning the reports. The minutes of the Adjustment Board action are excerpted above in this opinion. It is evident from the face of Holt’s complaint and the attachments that the board found that the contraband pills were clearly marked Valium, which is contraband and a threat to the security of the institution because of the danger of consumption and trafficking. The Adjustment Board found Holt guilty by virtue of the report that he possessed dangerous contraband, and the report recited that Valium was not issued to residents in the institution under any circumstances. While Holt complains that he was not furnished the laboratory report, the board’s minutes showed that the board did not have any such report, either. The board did not need any such report because, as it stated, “[t]he contraband pills were clearly marked Valium, which ... would lead a reasonable person to believe they were Valium.” The failure to produce a laboratory report is thus irrelevant, since there was no such report in existence, such report had no bearing on the correctional authorities’ decision, and the mere appearance of the pills revealed them to be contraband. Cf. Locher v. Plageman,
Before issuing our opinion in this case, we called for a written response from
Holt’s other argument is that he was denied due process by the committee’s action in elevating the charge from possession of contraband under Rule 24 to dangerous contraband under Rule 3. This court has held in Jensen v. Satran,
That the Adjustment Board considered the contraband to be sufficiently dangerous to warrant an increased penalty may have been to Holt’s detriment, but did not change the factual charge that had been made against him, namely possession of Valium. Any defense he would assert would not differ because of the increase in the penalty. The facts are set forth plainly and clearly, and a constitutional violation has not been charged.
We affirm the judgment of the district court.
Notes
. The Honorable George F. Gunn, Jr., United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri.
. The Honorable David D. Noce, United States Magistrate Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I agree that the pro se complaint must be liberally construed and dismissal is warranted only if the face of the complaint shows an insuperable bar to relief. In my view, Holt’s complaint should not have been dismissed under this standard. Thus, I respectfully dissent.
Prisoners charged with a disciplinary violation have a right of reasonable access to information necessary to put on a defense. Meis v. Gunter,
A threshold issue is whether Holt has sufficiently alleged the existence of documentary evidence. Nowhere in his complaint does he specifically state that documentary evidence was actually available. A district court is not required to “pretend that certain facts exist in order to foresee a theory of recovery not actually raised or reasonably [implied] by the pleader.” Williams v. Willits,
In my view, a legal basis exists for Holt’s claim that he was denied due process by the rule change. Wolff found procedures which included informing a prisoner orally of the charges, followed by further investigation “which may reshape the nature of the charges” at the time of the hearing, inadequate to provide the prisoner
This court has held that Wolff does not require the notice to specify whether the infraction was “serious or minor.” Jensen v. Satran,
Holt’s claim against Caspari may be interpreted as based on a theory of responde-at superior, which will not support a section 1983 action. See City of Canton, Ohio v. Harris,
I emphasize the posture in which Holt’s claims come before us: Holt’s in forma pauperis complaint was dismissed as frivolous prior to service of process. Under section 1915(d), such dismissals are proper only if the claims involve indisputably mer-itless legal theories or clearly baseless factual contentions. Neitzke,
I do not believe that Holt’s guilty plea to criminal charges arising out of the same incident can negate his right to procedural due process in connection with the prison disciplinary proceeding. The guilty plea means only that Holt cannot demonstrate actual injury flowing from any due process denial that occurred. In another prisoner’s 1983 complaint before the Supreme Court in a similar posture, the Court stated:
[EJven if the subsequent hearing accorded petitioner minimized or eliminated any compensable harm resulting from the initial denial of procedural safeguards, his constitutional claim is nonetheless action-able_ “Because the right to procedural due process is ‘absolute’ in the sense that it does not depend upon the merits of a claimant’s substantive assertions, and because of the importance to organized society that procedural due process be observed ... the denial of procedural due process should be actionable for nominal damages without proof of actual injury.”
Hughes v. Rowe,
I would reverse the district court’s order dismissing Holt’s complaint and remand this case to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this dissent.
