OPINION OF THE COURT
*331 In this appeal we must determine at what point the denial of in forma pauperis status amounts to a denial of access to the courts and whether a district court can bar an inmate from filing future in forma pau-peris suits based on 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claims. Because we conclude that the district court erred by issuing an order barring Abdul-Akbar from filing any in for-ma pauperis § 1983 suits without considering the effects on a legitimate claim and we further conclude that his claim is not legally “frivolous,” we will vacate and remand to the district court for further proceedings.
I.
Debro Siddig Abdul-Akbar, a.k.a. Debro Michael Davis, (“Abdul-Akbar”) filed suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 alleging a violation of his sixth amendment right of access to the courts by prison officials who forced him to surrender legal papers he claims were necessary to litigate his cases. Abdul-Akbar is an inmate at the Delaware Correctional Center, Maximum Security Unit, located at Smyrna, Delaware. He originally filed the complaint in the District Court for the Eastern District of New York, but it was transferred to the District Court of Delaware.
Abdul-Akbar claims that, in retaliation for filing lawsuits, several unnamed prison corrections officers came to his cell on February 15, 1989, and ordered him to clean some of the accumulated legal material from his cell by placing what he needed in a box and disposing of the remainder. He requested that he be allowed to mail the excess material to the district court and his request was granted. He mailed his papers to the clerks for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania and the District Court of Delaware. By early March, all of Abdul-Akbar’s materials were returned by the clerks with an explanation that the court could not act as a repository for his material. In addition, Abdul-Akbar complains that he is denied access to the law library, that his requests for photocopying take too long, and that he is denied access to jailhouse lawyers or other experienced assistance. Abdul-Akbar also claims that the policy of the district court of referring § 1983 prisoner civil rights suits to United States Magistrates results in his being held to a higher standard in his pleadings than an attorney could meet. 1
The district court referred Abdul-Akbar’s complaint to a U.S. Magistrate who recommended that the complaint be dismissed and that, in the future, Abdul-Akbar be denied in forma pauperis status for all cases filed pursuant to § 1983. The magistrate noted that Abdul-Akbar had filed forty § 1983 claims and three under 28 U.S.C. § 2254 in seven years and concluded that Abdul-Akbar had abused his privilege of proceeding in forma pauperis. The district court adopted the magistrate’s recommendation, dismissed the suit and issued an order directing the Clerk of the U.S. District Court for the District of Delaware to reject any future § 1983 claims from Abdul-Akbar unless he paid the filing fee and was otherwise in compliance with court rules. The order provided that Abdul-Akbar was permitted to file in forma pauperis all matters other than § 1983 so long as he did not abuse the privilege.
Abdul-Akbar appeals, claiming the order impermissibly denies him access to the courts. He also requests review of the magistrate’s recommendation and district court’s dismissal of his suit pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1915(d). We granted him
in forma pauperis
status to file the appeal and appointed counsel. We review the issuance of an order barring further filing of litigation for an abuse of discretion.
Matter of Packer Ave. Assoc.,
II.
Because of the importance of the right involved here,
i.e.,
an indigent prisoner’s right to proceed
in forma pauperis,
we address that issue first. “It is now established beyond doubt that prisoners have a constitutional right of access to the courts.”
Bounds v. Smith,
Yet, we also recognize that the cost in time and personnel to process
pro se
and
in forma pauperis
pleadings requires some portion of the court’s limited resources and ties up these limited resources to the detriment of other litigants.
See e.g., In re Green,
The Supreme Court addressed the nature of § 1983 claims in
Parratt v. Taylor,
in any § 1983 action the initial inquiry must focus on whether the two essential elements to a § 1983 action are present: (1) whether the conduct complained of was committed by a person acting under color of state law; and (2) whether this conduct deprived a person of rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution or laws of the United States.
In this instance, however, Abdul-Akbar does raise an important issue since he challenges the limitation placed on his access to federal courts. The magistrate’s recommendation and the district court’s order revoking his in forma pauperis status create a presumption that all of Abdul-Akbar’s future claims will be frivolous or du-plicative. That has not necessarily been true of all of his past claims: one case was settled, albeit for a nominal amount, and another suit was reinstated after a decision by our court.
We recently recognized in
Matter of Packer Ave. Assoc.,
*333
In
Packer Ave. Assoc.,
we turned to a decision of our sister court of appeals in
In re Green,
Petitioner may not file any civil action without leave of court. In seeking leave of court, petitioner must certify that the claims he wishes to present are new claims never before raised and disposed of on the merits by any federal court. Upon a failure to certify or upon a false certification, petitioner may be found in contempt of court and punished accordingly.
Green,
We recognize that the district court has the tool set forth in § 1915(d) of dismissing a legally frivolous complaint immediately after it has been filed, and prior to service of process. In
Wilson v. Rackmill,
We once again endorse the approach taken in In re Green as striking an appropriate balance between an indigent citizen’s interest in access to the district court and the court’s interest in being free from abusive tactics. However, given the fact that the district court’s injunction here was aimed not only at repetitious civil rights suits but also at civil rights suits frivolous for other reasons, we go one step further and sanction an injunction that will bar Abdul-Akbar from filing new suits that he knows to be frivolous. More specifically, when a district court concludes that a litigant has abused the judicial process by filing a multitude of frivolous § 1983 cases in a relatively brief period of time and will continue to file such cases unless restrained, we hold that the court may enter an injunction directing that the litigant not file any section 1983 claims without leave of court and that in seeking leave of court, the litigant certify (1) that the claims he wishes to present are new claims never before raised and disposed of on the merits by any federal courts, (2) that he believes the facts alleged in his complaint to be true, and (3) that he knows of no reason to believe his claims are foreclosed by controlling law. Such an injunction should state that upon a failure to certify or upon a false certification, the litigant may be found in contempt of court and punished accordingly.
We acknowledge some risk that an indigent litigant who becomes subject to such an injunction may forego filing a claim he believes is neither repetitious nor frivolous because he fears the court will disagree and find him in contempt. Nevertheless, we believe the risk of such an unintended chill to be minimal. First, only indigent *334 litigants like Abdul-Akbar, whose history of repetitious and frivolous filings indicates a clear intent to abuse the courts and the informa pauperis process, can be subjected to such an injunction. This population, fortunately, is a very small one; more important, it is one whose members have had substantial experience with the kinds of claims that the courts regard as frivolous. Second, the approved injunction is carefully tailored so that it requires only that a litigant refrain from filing a repetitious claim or a claim that the indigent litigant knows to be frivolous. The chill is thus effectively limited to those indigent litigants who have a subjective intent to abuse the process; one who makes an honest mistake about the facts or the current state of the law may not be sanctioned. 2
We do not think it too great a burden for an indigent litigant who has already demonstrated an intent to abuse the courts that he abandon that practice or pay with contempt sanctions. The requirements outlined above will demonstrate to Abdul-Akbar that “we are saying point-blank that if he continues to show his contempt for the orderly judicial process, that process will accord him further time in prison as summarily as the law allows.”
Green,
III.
We now address Abdul-Akbar’s allegation that the district court erred by dismissing his complaint pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1915(d). In
Wilson v. Rackmill,
To be dismissed as frivolous, the complaint must lack an arguable factual or legal basis. If the complaint arguably states a claim, then it should go forward so that the defendants can answer and plaintiff can receive notice of the possibility of Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal and the need to amend his complaint in order to properly state a legal claim.
Wilson,
Abdul-Akbar’s complaint alleges that several corrections officers came to his cell, ordered him to pack much of his legal material and dispose of it. Additionally, he claims that the method of photocopying court decisions is too prolonged a process to be helpful to his litigation and that he has been denied access to a law library, jailhouse lawyers or other competent legal assistance. Underlying all of these claims is a single theme — denial of access to the courts. In light of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Bounds v. Smith,
In
Neitzke v. Williams,
— U.S. -,
Since, under Rule 12(b)(6), a plaintiff is placed on notice of a pending motion to dismiss and is given the opportunity to amend the complaint to state a claim before the motion to dismiss is ruled upon, an opportunity not granted to a litigant under § 1915(d), the question of whether Abdul-Akbar’s claims would survive a Rule 12(b)(6) challenge is a matter which will have to be determined by the district court on remand. We recognize that prison officials may have legitimate penological interests which may conflict with prisoners’ enjoyment of their constitutional rights,
see generally Thornburgh v. Abbott,
— U.S. -,
IV.
We conclude that the district court erred by dismissing Abdul-Akbar’s claims pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1915(d) since the complaint alleged a violation of the fundamental right of access to the courts which, under these circumstances, is not a frivolous claim. Consequently, we will vacate the district court’s dismissal of the suit. In addition, we will vacate the district court’s injunction. Although this is a case in which an injunction directed to repetitious or otherwise frivolous claims might be appropriate, (1) the district court did not expressly find that an injunction was necessary in order to avoid future abuse of the court’s process, (2) to the extent the district court may have addressed that issue sub silentio, its direction may have been influenced by its erroneous view that the complaint in this case was frivolous, and (3) the terms of the injunction impermissibly deprived Abdul-Akbar of all access to the federal courts in the event his federally secured rights are violated. If the district court wishes to revisit the injunction issues, it may do so on remand. Therefore, we will vacate the order and remand to the district court for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Notes
. On appeal, it appears that Abdul-Akbar has dropped his challenge to the procedure of referring prisoner’s rights cases to magistrates. In light of the fact that such duties have been authorized for the magistrates under the Magistrate’s Act, 28 U.S.C. § 636, and the Local Rules of Court, this claim was clearly without merit. In addition, he has dropped his claim that the magistrate held him to a higher standard.
. We recognize that, in some contexts, the courts use an objective/reasonableness standard to assess whether a party's abuse of process merits sanction. It is clear, for instance, that courts use the objective standard in Rule 11 case, even in those involving pro se litigants. Fed.R.Civ.P. 11 advisory committee note,
reprinted in
