Iowa inmate Henry Parrish and his wife Yvonne brought this damage action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against three prison officials for seizing funds that came into Parrish’s inmate account to satisfy his obligations under the Iowa Victim Restitution Act, Iowa Code ch. 910. The district court
1
initially grantеd summary judgment to one defendant, Richard Larkin, but granted Henry Parrish partial summary judgment against the other two, Crispus Nix and Donald Mal-linger, concluding they had violated Parrish’s due process rights and were not entitled to qualified immunity. Nix and Mallinger appealed the qualified immunity ruling, and we remanded for further consideration in light of two intervening decisions of the Supreme Court of Iowa,
Walters v. Grossheim,
Iowa requires nearly all convicted offenders to pay restitution to crime victims and the State.
See
Iowa Code § 910.2 (1990).
2
The sentencing court determines the amount of restitution, the persons to whom it must be paid, and any public service that must be performed as restitution.
See
§ 910.3. An offender committed to prison “shall make restitution while placed at that facility.” § 910.5(1). The Department of Corrections must establish a restitution pаyment plan, taking into account the offender’s income, family circumstances, and other individualized factors.
See
§§ 910.4, 910.5(1). Prison officials may deduct up to fifty percent of an inmate’s prison earnings and allowances for restitution payments.
See
Iowa Admin. Code § 201-20.11(7) (1991). Restitution may also be deducted “from a credit to an inmate’s account from an outside source by written authorization from the inmate, approval from the warden/superintendent, or by court order.” Iowa Admin. Code § 201-20.11(10). An inmate may at any time petition the sentencing court “on any matter related to the plan of restitution or restitution plan of payment.” § 910.7;
see State v. Van Hoff,
*614 Prior to April 1991, the Iowa State Penitentiary, where Henry Parrish was incarcerated, published to inmates a Policy & Prоcedure Statement adopting the above-referenced restitution payment standards. On April 12, 1991, the Linn County District Court issued three restitution orders establishing Parrish’s total restitution obligation at $1106.97. Later that month, Parrish received $650 from his mother. Parrish deposited the money in his inmate account and requested that $456 be paid to his wife. On April 23, Warden Nix approved Parrish’s restitution payment plan, which provided that “[p]ayments will consist of 20 percent of my institutional allowance.” Also on April 23, Warden Nix approved a staff recommendation that the $650 from Parrish’s mother be applied to his restitution obligation. On April 25, the prison issued a $456 check to Yvonne Parrish. The next day, Mallinger, the prison Business Manager, learned that Warden Nix had previously approved applying the entire $650 against Parrish’s restitution debt. Mallinger directed a subordinate to contact the payor bank and stop payment on the $456 cheek. Yvonne had already cashed the check, but she returned the money when the bank threatened criminal prosecution. Parrish later received two more checks from his mother totaling $70.
The Parrishes then commenced this action, alleging that defendants “confiscated Plaintiff Henry’s monies ... in violation of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment,” and seeking $570,000 in compensatory and punitive damages. Their damage claims center on a nervous breakdown, loss of employment, and involuntary mental health commitment that Yvonne Parrish allegеdly suffered as a result of this episode. Defendants have held the $720 from Parrish’s mother in a special account pending the outcome of this litigation.
Defendants concede, as they must, that Parrish has a property interest in the money his mother sent him that is protected by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
See Mahers v. Halford,
A. In arguing that Warden Nix lacked substantive authority to take his money, Parrish relies on our decision in
Sell v. Parrott,
Relying on
Sell,
the district court initially granted partial summary judgment in Parrish’s favor on the ground that neither the Iowa Victim Restitution Act nor § 201-20.11(10) of the Iowa Administrative Code permitted this taking of an inmate’s money from an outside source. In
Walters
and
Van Hoff,
the Iowa Supreme Court subsequently decided that the statutes do authorize such action. Thus, we remanded because these decisions confirm there was no due process constraint on Warden Nix’s
substantive
authority under § 201-20.11(10) of the Administrative Code to approve paying money Parrish received from an outside source to satisfy his court-ordered restitution debt. Legislation authorizing the pаying of an in
*615
mate’s restitution debt out of his prison account “is reasonably related to a legitimate governmental purpose” and therefore satisfies the modern, highly deferential substantive due process standard.
Honeywell, Inc. v. Minnesota Life & Health Ins. Guar. Ass’n,
Seeking to revive this issue, Pаrrish argues on appeal that the sentencing court ordered him to pay restitution in accordance with his restitution payment plan, that the plan only authorized deductions of twenty percent of his prison allowance, and that his property interest includes enforcing this limitation in the plan. In other words, Parrish contends that Warden Nix’s authority under § 201-20.11(10) could only be exercised constitutionally through a payment plan. However, this is nothing more than an assertion that defendants acted contrary to state law, and “something more than a violation of state law must be claimed to establish a substantive due process violation.”
Weimer v. Amen,
B. That brings us to the more complex question whether Nix and Mallinger are entitled to qualified immunity on Parrish’s claim that he was denied procedural due process. A procedural due рrocess claim focuses not on the merits of a deprivation, but on whether the State circumscribed the deprivation with constitutionally adequate procedures. This inquiry examines “the procedural safeguards built into the statutory or administrative procedüre of effecting the deprivation, and any remedies for erroneous deprivations provided by statute or tort law.”
Zinermon,
In this ease, the State clearly provided an adequate postdeprivation remedy because Parrish could have petitioned the sentencing court to review these deductions under Iowa Code § 910.7. Indeed, such a petition may be filed predeprivation. Parrish argues that more process was due — that defendants were constitutionally required to provide predeprivation notice and some form of hearing before taking $720 from his account to satisfy his restitution debt. Limiting the inquiry in this fashion puts the
Mathews v. Eldridge
factors in rather nice balance. On the one hand, the private interеst at stake is not particularly strong because, though Parrish was deprived of the immediate use' of the money, he received the benefit of having it applied to satisfy a restitution debt that would otherwise survive incarceration.
See Beeks v. Hundley,
On the other side of the
Mathews v. El-dridge
scale, giving inmates a limited, informal predeprivation opportunity to contest particular deductions can be made administratively feasible and is consistent with the statutory directive that restitution must reflect individualized factors bearing on an inmate’s ability to pay.
See
Iowa Code §§ 910.4, 910.5(1). These factors led the Iowa Supreme Court to conclude that prede-privation notice and a brief opportunity to object are required.
See Walters,
Parrish argues that this case is factually different than
Mahers v. Halford
and urges us to conclude that he had a clearly established right to predeprivаtion notice and hearing when Nix and Mallinger implemented their decision to apply the funds to Parrish’s restitution debt. We reject this contention. The issue here is qualified immunity, a doctrine designed to protect from damage liability “all but the plainly incоmpetent or those who knowingly violate the law.”
Malley v. Briggs,
The contours of the right must be sufficiently clear that a reasonable official would understand that what he is doing violates that right. This is not to say that an official action is protected by qualified immunity unless the very action in question has previously been held unlawful, but it is to say that in the light of pre-existing law the unlawfulness must be apparent.
Anderson v. Creighton,
After the court dismissed Henry Parrish’s claims, defendants moved to dismiss Yvonne Parrish’s claims. She defaulted on that motion, despite the fact that the district court granted her request for an extension of time to respond. The district court granted summary judgment dismissing her claims for this reason. That was not an abuse of the court’s considerable discretion.
The judgments of the district court are affirmed.
Notes
. THE HONORABLE HAROLD D. VIETOR, United States District Judge for the Southern District of Iowa.
. The Victim Restitution Act has been significantly amended since the April 1991 events in question.
See generally Mahers v. Halford,
