Dеnnis Anderson, an inmate of an Illinois state prison, brought suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against prison officials who, he claimed, had inflicted cruel and unusual punishment on him, had violated other federal constitutional rights of his as well, and had also violated his common law right of privacy and committed other common law torts upon him. The defendants moved to dismiss the suit on the ground that they had a qualified immunity from suit. The judge denied the mоtion, and the defendants appealed to this court, as was their right.
Mitchell v. Forsyth,
If all thе defendants wanted to do was to dismiss their appeal, they would not have to argue that it is moot. It is their appeal. They can dismiss it if they want, subject to appropriate conditions not hеre sought. Fed.R.App.P. 42(b). They want more. They want us to order the entire lawsuit dismissed on the ground that it has been rendered moot by the plaintiffs death.
The “personal representative” to which Rule 43(a) refers will ordinarily be the execu
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tor or administrator of the deceased plaintiffs estate.
Ferak v. Elgin, Joliet & Eastern Ry.,
Anderson’s lawyers did not learn of their client’s death until the defendants filed the suggestion of death with us. According to their uneontradicted affidavit, they have made diligent efforts to locate a relativе of Anderson, but without success. Repeatedly, both in writing and over the telephone, they have asked the Illinois Department of Corrections to furnish them with whatever information it might have that would assist thеm in finding such a person, but the Department has refused to assist. The Department had in fact written the person who according to its records was Anderson’s next of kin, informing that individual of Anderson’s death but not advising him (or her — we do not know the sex, let alone the name, of the person the Department wrote) that Anderson had a lawsuit pending when he died. The Department refuses to show the letter to Andеrson’s lawyers or tell them the name or address of the person to whom it was sent. All this is admitted by the defendants, who are represented by the Attorney General of Illinois.
The conduct of the state attorney general appears to constitute, in fact if not in form, an effort to obstruct the administration of justice. The state officials whom he represents are defendants in a federal suit that hаs sufficient merit to have survived a motion to dismiss on grounds of qualified immunity. The deceased plaintiff apparently does have a next of kin who might wish to go forward with the suit if he or she knew about it; but the defendants’ refusal to disclose that person’s identity, as well as its refusal to inform the person of the existence of the lawsuit, is perceived by the plaintiffs lawyers as an impediment to their effort to рrocure a special administrator to prosecute the suit in the deceased plaintiffs place. The plaintiffs lawyers cannot use the discovery procedures of the district court to obtain the information, because the case is no longer in the district court; it is in our court, and Anderson died after the notice of appeal was filed. The information concerning the next of kin came to the defendants in their official capacity as prison administrators; abetted by the highest law enforcement officer of the State of Illinois, they are conсealing this information in order to promote their private interest in avoiding being brought to justice for violating a prisoner’s federal rights. There is no contention that the information is privileged.
All this, although indicative of thoroughly dishonorable behavior on the part of the state’s highest legal officer and his assistants, would be moot if the defendants were correct that none of the plaintiffs claims survives his death, so that the suit would have to be dismissed even if a representative were appointed to prosecute it in succession to Anderson. Section 1983 does not mention survival, but 42 U.S.C. § 1988 dirеcts us in such absences to look to state law unless it is inconsistent with federal policy. We held in
Bennett v. Tucker, supra,
that Illinois’s rule for personal injury suits — the rule that such suits survive the plaintiffs death unless they are suits for defamatiоn, 755 ILCS 5/27-6— was appropriate for suits under section 1983, which the Supreme Court had analogized to personal injury actions for purposes of choosing the statute of limitations.
Wilson v. Garcia,
One of Anderson’s common law claims, it is true, is that his right of privacy was infringed. The alleged infringement consists in the defendants’ having revealed that Anderson was infected with the AIDS virus (and it was AIDS that killed him while the appeal was pending). An infringement of the common law right of privacy, save in its “publicity” branch not here involved, may indeed not survive the рlaintiffs death.
Maritote v. Desilu Productions, Inc.,
Because at least some of the case survives — -provided someone is appointed to replace the original plaintiff — we have to decide what to do about the defendants’ obduracy in refusing to disclose the, name of Anderson’s next of kin. There is, of course, a simple if blunt solution well within our power to decree. We could order the Attorney General of Illinois to reveal the name and address of Anderson’s next of kin to Anderson’s counsel. The authority to issue such an order is given by section 1651(a) of the Judicial Code, which authorizes federal courts to issue all writs that are necessary and proper in aid of their jurisdiction. Although the “all writs act,” аs section 1651(a) is known, cannot properly be used to circumvent the limitations on discovery, or as a substitute for the rules of discovery, the courts of appeals do not have other discovery powers upon which the use of the act might trench; nor would the compelled disclosure of the information that the defendants are concealing violate any principlеs of discovery, such, as the rules of privilege. The defendants through their counsel the Attorney General of Illinois seek to defeat the jurisdiction of the federal courts over Anderson’s lawsuit by withholding nonprivileged information which Anderson’s lawyers believe they need in order to determine whether the suit can continue. We cannot direct the plaintiffs lawyers to utilize the discovery or subpoena powers of the district court to obtain the information, because, to repeat an earlier point, jurisdiction is in this court, not the district court, and the civil rales do not apply to thе courts of appeals. An order by us to the defendants to divulge the information sought would be designed to protect the jurisdiction of the district court and, potentially, of this court over this federal lawsuit.
United States v. New York Tel. Co.,
But it is too soon to decree such relief. The next of kin is not essential to the maintenance of this suit. On the contrary, when a claim survives the death of the plaintiff, the claim belongs to the estate, not to the plaintiffs next of kin.
Wilmere v. Stibolt, supra,
Construing the defendants’ suggestion of death as a motion to order the district court to dismiss the suit, the motion is
DENIED.
