Harold T. Tarter brought this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 asserting broad challenges to the administration of the criminal justice system in Galveston County, Texas. The district court dismissed Tarter’s claims even before his pleadings could be served on defendants. Although we disagree in part with the district court’s reasons, we must affirm the dismissal.
I.
Harold T. Tarter filed this suit pro se in 1979. 1 Construed liberally, as pro se pleadings must be, his complaint asserts a class action on behalf of all those persons who have been, are presently, or who in the future will be, prosecuted in the state criminal courts of Galveston County, Texas. The defendants are two judges, the district attorney and one of his assistants, and the clerk of court and his deputy. The complaint charges that the defendants have violated and will continue to violate the constitutional rights of indigent criminal defendants in Galveston County in the following ways: (1) by providing ineffective court-appointed counsel; (2) by denying speedy trial; (3) by imposing excessive bail; (4) by creating and tolerating unfair grand jury proceedings; (5) by coercing guilty pleas; and (6) by refusing to docket and hear pro se motions. The complaint seeks declaratory and injunctive relief, damages, and attorneys’ fees.
Before Tarter’s complaint could be served on the defendants, the district court entered an order dismissing all his claims. 2 Two unrelated reasons were offered for the dismissal. The court held first that the judges, prosecutors, and court clerks, were absolutely immune from suit because all the actions complained of were within their jurisdiction or authority. Second, relying on precedent established by the Supreme Court and by this Court, the district court held that since the complaint directly raised issues concerning the validity of the plaintiffs’ confinement, the complaint was essentially a habeas corpus petition. The plaintiffs therefore had to exhaust all available state remedies before bringing suit in federal court.
*1012 II.
The failure to exhaust state remedies provides a proper basis for dismissing some, but not all, of Tarter’s claims.
Preiser v. Rodriguez,
1973,
The district court’s conclusion that absolute immunity protected the defendants against Tarter’s claims is only partially correct. The Supreme Court has indeed held that judges and prosecutors enjoy absolute immunity from claims for monetary relief arising out of actions performed within their official authority.
See Stump v. Sparkman,
1978,
As to claims for declaratory and injunctive relief, however, the Supreme Court has never provided judges and prosecutors with absolute immunity. See
Supreme Court of Virginia v. Consumers Union,
1980,
Court clerks enjoy an even narrower ambit of immunity than judges and prosecutors. They have absolute immunity from actions for damages arising from acts they are specifically required to do under court order or at a judge’s direction, and only qualified immunity from all other actions for damages.
Williams v. Wood,
5 Cir. 1980,
III.
As demonstrated above, the district court’s reasoning supplies a basis for dismissing most of Tarter’s claims. The actions that survive the district court’s grounds for dismissal are the actions for equitable and monetary relief against the clerks based on the refusal to docket pro se motions, and the actions for equitable relief against the judges based on the imposition of excessive bail and on the refusal to hear pro se motions. These actions are nevertheless dismissable for reasons other than those cited by the district court.
Considerations of comity, as described in
O’Shea
v.
Littleton,
1974,
Because O’Shea involved a challenge to the imposition of excessive bail, it is conclusive as to Tarter’s claim for equitable relief based on that ground. 5 The O’Shea rubric does not apply, however, to the refusal to docket and hear pro se motions. The enforcement of an injunction requiring clerks to file all pro se motions would not require the same sort of interruption of state criminal processes that an injunction against excessive bail would entail. Because the amount of bail prescribed for each criminal defendant depends on the peculiar facts and circumstances of his case, the setting of bail requires ad hoc decisions committed to the discretion of judges. An injunction against excessive bail, no matter how carefully limited, would require a federal court to reevaluate de novo each challenged bail decision. By contrast, an injunction requiring that all pro se motions be docketed and considered by the court (although not necessarily argued) would not require such case-by-case evaluations of discretionary decisions. It would add a simple, nondiscretionary procedural safeguard to the criminal justice system in Galveston *1014 County. We have required the addition of similar procedural safeguards before. The changes in Florida’s procedures governing the pretrial detention of criminal defendants that resulted from the extensive litigation in Pugh v. Rainwater 6 constitutes at least as much of a federal interference in state processes as an injunction requiring the docketing of pro se motions would constitute.
Nevertheless, Tarter’s action based on that ground must be dismissed because his complaint fails to state a claim upon which either equitable or monetary relief can be granted. If Tarter and the other members of the purported class had not been represented by court-appointed counsel, the refusal to docket their pro se motions would be a matter of constitutional significance, representing an interference with their right of access to the courts. But that is not the situation here. Nor does the complaint assert specific instances where the clerks’ refusal to docket a particular pro se motion has caused hardship to some particular criminal defendant. Rather, the gravamen of the complaint is that the refusal to docket and hear the pro se motions of criminal defendants who are already represented by counsel of itself deprives them of their constitutional right of access to the courts. We do not agree. As long as a criminal defendant is represented by counsel, he will be able to present matters for decision to the court through motions filed by his attorney. Therefore, in the absence of extraordinary circumstances, not alleged here, due process does not require that a criminal defendant be permitted to file every pro se motion he wishes to submit in addition to his attorney’s motions.
We hasten to add, however, that extraordinary circumstances may exist in a particular case so that the refusal to docket a pro se motion could deprive a defendant of an opportunity to present an issue to the court. In such a case, an action would lie. Considerations of fairness and prudence therefore suggest that appropriate procedures be established to ensure that pro se motions submitted in such circumstances are presented to the court. But since the present complaint does not allege any particular instances where criminal defendants have been deprived of access to the courts by the failure of a clerk to file a particular pro se motion, it does not state a claim upon which relief can be granted.
For the foregoing reasons, the order of the district court dismissing Tarter’s complaint is AFFIRMED. We make the suggestion, however, that when a habeas corpus petition alleges that failure of a clerk to file a particular pro se motion thereby deprived petitioner of access to the courts, the district court should conduct a hearing and determine whether the pro se motion should have been docketed and heard.
Notes
. Tarter’s original complaint, submitted on a form provided by the Clerk of Court for the Southern District of Texas, was also signed by five other co-plaintiffs. Tarter’s amended complaint, filed on the same day as the original complaint, was signed by one other co-plaintiff. Only Tarter, however, has perfected an appeal from the dismissal.
. The district court apparently ordered dismissal after reviewing Tarter’s complaint to determine whether to grant his request to proceed in forma pauperis.
. This Court has taken a dim view of dismissing a plaintiffs claims on the ground of either absolute or qualified immunity without conducting a hearing.
Slavin v. Curry,
5 Cir. 1978,
. Three federal courts of appeals have held that judges are not immune from claims for equitable relief, and three others have indicated agreement with that view.
See Supreme Court of Virginia v. Consumers Union,
1980,
. Except for the refusal to docket and hear pro se motions, the rationale of
O’Shea
applies equally to Tarter’s other alleged grounds for equitable relief. Granting and enforcing the equitable relief sought by Tarter to remedy those alleged improprieties would require the same anticipatory interference condemned in
O’Shea. Cf. Wallace v. Kern,
2 Cir. 1974,
. S.D. Fla. 1973,
