Late in December 1992 Fred Nance was transferred from the Graham Correctional Center in Illinois to the prison at Joliet, so that he could be closer to the court where he was to appear to ask for leave to withdraw his guilty plea. Nance arrived at the transfer point with a box containing documents and other personal possessions. J.D. Vier-egge, the prison’s property clerk, told Nance that he could not take the box with him on the bus but that it would have to be sent separately. Nance caused a ruckus; ultimately Warden Riegel appeared and assured Nance that any legal papers in the box would follow promptly. Unfortunately, some contents of the box were sent to the prison at Stateville, and the legal papers were never seen again. The ruckus led to the imposition of a mild sanction: Nance lost commissary privileges for two weeks. That deprivation did not affect any liberty or property interest, see
Sandin v. Conner,
The ground the district court gave for its decision is incompatible with Fed. R.Civ.P. 8, which establishes a system of notice pleading. Plaintiffs need not plead facts or legal theories; it is enough to set out a claim for relief, which Nance did. See, e.g.,
Cook v. Winfrey,
Nonetheless, the' district judge was right to dismiss the complaint. Suppose Vieregge spitefully misdirected Nance’s papers. Illinois maintains a system of courts that can provide compensation for torts, and the opportunity to recover damages for a rogue guard’s wrongful conduct supplies all of the process that is due — whether the deprivation was negligent, see
Parratt v. Taylor,
To establish a deprivation of access to the courts, a prisoner must show that unjustified acts or conditions “hindered his'efforts to pursue a legal claim.”
Lewis v. Casey,
Heck
added, however, that claims that do not call into question the validity of a conviction or comparable decision remain viable under § 1983.
Nance has two options, which are not mutually exclusive: to seek damages in state court for the value of the photocopies as ordinary personal property, and to initiate a collateral attack or request for pardon concerning the judgment that rests on his guilty plea. The dismissal of his § 1983 complaint is without prejudice to the pursuit of those options, and on that understanding the judgment is
AFFIRMED.
