Stephen Mark HAUSE, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Ralph VAUGHT, Director; Joey Johnson, Captain, on behalf of
Horry County and in their individual and/or
official capacities at Horry County
Detention Center, Defendants-Appellees.
No. 92-6328.
United States Court of Appeals,
Fourth Circuit.
Argued Feb. 5, 1993.
Decided May 7, 1993.
Louis C. Ricciardi, Student Counsel, Appellate Litigation Clinical Program, Georgetown University Law Center, Washington, DC, argued (Steven H. Goldblatt, Director, John J. Hoeffner, Supervising Atty., Nancy Y. Tong, Student Counsel, Appellate Litigation Clinical Program, Georgetown University Law Center, on brief), for plaintiff-appellant.
Clifford Leon Welsh, McCutcheon, McCutcheon & Baxter, P.A., Conway, SC, argued (John B. McCutcheon, Jr., McCutcheon, McCutcheon & Baxter, P.A., on brief), for defendants-appellees.
Before WILKINSON, LUTTIG, and WILLIAMS, Circuit Judges.
OPINION
WILLIAMS, Circuit Judge:
Stephen M. Hause brought this action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1988) challenging his conditions of confinement while a pretrial detainee at the Horry County Detention Center, Conway, South Carolina. The district court, adopting the recommendation of a magistrate judge, granted summary judgment for the Defendants, all of whom are officials at the Detention Center. Finding no error, we affirm.
* Hause was detained at the Detention Center for three separate periods: from December 3 to December 19, 1989; from January 5 to March 1, 1990; and from March 9 to April 25, 1990. He raises five claims with regard to his confinement. First, he contends that the Detention Center's restrictions on the receipt of outside publications violated the First Amendment. Second, he contends that the legal assistance offered by the Detention Center was insufficient to provide him with meaningful access to the courts. Third, he urges that the Detention Center's requirement that detainees, when necessary, assist in cleaning the common areas of their cell-block violates his Fourteenth Amendment right to be free from punishment prior to conviction. Fourth, Hause contends that the Detention Center's policy of placing all incoming inmates (including himself) in administrative segregation upon entry into the Center violates inmates' Fourteenth Amendment due process rights. Fifth, Hause urges that the Detention Center disciplined him for violating Center rules without giving him constitutionally adequate notice of the Center's rules.
Hause initially sought both damages and injunctive relief. The district court determined that the claim for injunctive relief was moot, a determination that Hause does not challenge on appeal. Hause does challenge the district court's grant of summary judgment to the Defendants on his claims for damages. We review the district court's grant of summary judgment de novo. Higgins v. E.I. DuPont de Nemours & Co.,
II
Hause challenges the Detention Center's policy of not permitting detainees to receive books and periodicals in the mail. He urges that the policy infringes upon his First Amendment right to receive information and ideas, as outlined in Kleindienst v. Mandel,
In Bell v. Wolfish,
The Court subsequently held in Turner v. Safley,
In Turner, the Supreme Court applied what amounts to a two-part test. First, "there must be a valid, rational connection between the prison regulation and the legitimate governmental interest put forward to justify it." Turner,
[T]he absence of ready alternatives is evidence of the reasonableness of a prison regulation. By the same token, the existence of obvious, easy alternatives may be evidence that the regulation is not reasonable, but is an "exaggerated response" to prison concerns. This is not a "least restrictive alternative" test: prison officials do not have to set up and then shoot down every conceivable alternative method of accommodating the claimant's constitutional complaint. But if an inmate claimant can point to an alternative that fully accommodates the prisoner's rights at de minimis cost to valid penological interests, a court may consider that as evidence that the regulation does not satisfy the reasonable relationship standard.
Id.
Plaintiffs bear the burden of showing that the challenged regulation is unconstitutional. Covino v. Patrissi,
Hause's challenge focuses on whether the Detention Center's ban on outside publications was reasonably related to the objective of preventing smuggling and fires. His principal argument is that an "obvious, easy alternative" to Detention Center policy existed that would have accommodated both the Detention Center's security concerns and his own desire for access to information: a "publishers-only" rule. Hause initially makes a facial attack on Detention Center policy based on cases such as Bell that have upheld a publishers-only rule as constitutional. Bell,
Hause also argues that a publishers-only rule offers an "obvious, easy" alternative under the facts of this case. In so doing, he fails to consider a central principle implicit in the Turner analysis. Bell, Turner, and Thornburgh all emphasize the deference owed to prison administrators in their management of penal facilities. Bell,
We hold that a publishers-only rule would not constitute an alternative to the Detention Center's ban on publications because such a rule would not have meaningfully enhanced Hause's access to information and ideas. As a practical matter, most publications sent from publishers and book clubs will arrive after a detainee has been transferred to another facility or released from confinement. Hause has submitted no evidence showing that a person detained sixty days or less (like Hause) who ordered publications directly from the publisher would likely receive them prior to his release or transfer. Further, Hause's three periods of confinement were quite brief; hence, any denial of outside information was minimal. See Bell,
Even if a publishers-only rule offered an alternative that would prevent smuggling, it would not address the Detention Center's legitimate concern that publications could be used to start fires. Of course, correspondence can also be used to start fires, but in our view the efforts of prison administrators to accommodate First Amendment rights by allowing inmates to receive correspondence should not be weighed against them in considering other measures adopted in the interest of security.
Hause also argues that the Detention Center did not offer enough alternative means of exercising his right of access to information and ideas. See Thornburgh,
On the facts before us, which involve a short-term detainee seeking damages for limitations placed on the exercise of his constitutional rights during previous periods of short-term confinement, we conclude that the Detention Center's ban on outside publications was reasonably related to penological interests, and hence constitutional.
III
Hause's second claim is that the Detention Center denied him access to the courts. Under Bounds v. Smith,
Hause's claim is without merit because he has not shown any actual injury. See Strickler v. Waters,
In our case, Magee was a temporary occupant of the jail, only awaiting transfer. He advises us of no specific problem he wished to research and of no actual injury or specific harm which has resulted to him by his limited access to the jail library or its limited contents.
In such a situation, we do not believe that he has been denied any constitutional right within the meaning of Bounds v. Smith....
Id.
The only evidence Hause offers of injury is a conclusory statement that he was unable to plead his claims properly or properly prepare his (unsuccessful) motion for appointment of counsel. We have examined Hause's motion and pleadings, together with the record as a whole, and are satisfied that the alleged lack of legal assistance did not affect the outcome either of his motion or of his various claims.
Hause contends that injury should be presumed because, unlike in Magee, no legal assistance at all was offered here. See Strickler,
Courts have recognized that whether and to what degree prisoners must be offered legal assistance may vary based upon the length of detention. See id. at 1385-1386. Determining when and to what degree legal assistance must be offered has, however, proved troublesome. See Morrow v. Harwell,
Because Hause has not shown "actual injury or specific harm," the district court properly granted summary judgment on this claim.
IV
Hause's third claim is that the Defendants forced him to work even though he was a pretrial detainee. Hause's evidence on this claim consisted of the following passage from his affidavit:
On at least 2 different occasions I was intentionally threatened with punishment, without Due Process, in the form of 48 hours lock-down in my cell if I refused to work as a Pre-Trial Detainee[.] [T]his violated my 13th Amendment Rights.... The work I was forced to do by defendants did not entail cleaning up my cell, which I did willingly, but involved cleaning up the whole 'module' several times a day....
(J.A. 60, pp 11 & 13.) Beyond the fact that the work involved cleaning, Hause did not specify what work he was required to do.
Hause asserts that his forced participation in a cleaning detail violated his right under the Due Process Clause not to be punished prior to a conviction for some crime. As we held in Martin v. Gentile,
[T]he pretrial detainee, who has yet to be adjudicated guilty of any crime, may not be subjected to any form of "punishment." But not every inconvenience encountered during pre-trial detention amounts to "punishment" in the constitutional sense. To establish that a particular condition or restriction of his confinement is constitutionally impermissible "punishment," the pretrial detainee must show either that it was (1) imposed with an expressed intent to punish or (2) not reasonably related to a legitimate non-punitive governmental objective, in which case an intent to punish may be inferred.
(Citations omitted.)
The only evidence that in any way supports finding an intent to punish is the work assignment itself. Hause, however, provides no details regarding the work he had to do as part of cleaning the "module" where he was housed. Indeed, we cannot tell from the record before us whether Hause's duties amounted to anything more than dusting. One cannot reasonably infer from Hause's characterization of his cleaning duties that the Defendants intended to punish him.
In an analogous case, Bijeol v. Nelson,
V
In Hause's fourth claim, he challenges the Detention Center's policy of placing all incoming detainees in administrative segregation for five days before releasing them to the general prison population. The Defendants explain that the time spent in segregation allows the detainees to acclimate to their new environment and allows Detention Center officials to evaluate the detainees before they enter the general population.
The Supreme Court has sanctioned the use of administrative segregation, but has cautioned that it "may not be used as a pretext for indefinite confinement of an inmate." Hewitt v. Helms,
VI
Hause's final claim is that the Detention Center violated his procedural due process rights by failing to provide him with a copy of the Center's rules and regulations during his confinement. The Defendants acknowledge that inmates were not individually provided with copies of the rules because they were being revised during Hause's confinement, but claim that interim rules were posted throughout Hause's confinement. Hause admitted that "memorandums" were posted on a bulletin board in the Detention Center, but contends that the rules were only followed when it suited the Defendants.
In Gaston v. Taylor,
On appeal, Hause claims he was sanctioned twice for failing to follow rules of which he had no notice. First, he claims that he was "deadlocked" in his cell one hour earlier than other inmates because he overslept and failed to get up when called by a guard. This punishment is not sufficiently severe to implicate the due process concerns of adequate notice. Second, Hause claims that he was forced to help clean his cell module under threat of punishment. While Hause claims that he was threatened with punishment, he does not claim that the cleaning assignment itself was imposed as a result of his failing to follow some rule or regulation. Hause's claim is thus without merit.
VII
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
Although some evidence before the district court also indicated that magazines were available to detainees, this fact is disputed. For purposes of this appeal, we assume magazines were unavailable
The Third Circuit modified its position in a later case, Shabazz v. O'Lone,
