Isiah Carl Green is a paraplegic prisoner serving a life sentence in the Huntsville Unit of the Texas Department of Corrections. Because of his condition, he is permanently assigned to the hospital ward and suffers various restrictions not placed on the general prison population. In this action, brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, he asserts that he is subject to cruel and unusual punishment and denial of equal protection because of his handicap. Specifically, he asserts that he should not be permanently assigned to the hospital ward because he is not sick; that he should not be subject to the dress, food, television, visitation, and other restrictions that are placed on those assigned to the hospital ward; that he is denied access to religious services, and that he is denied access to the law library.
The magistrate reviewed a computer printout of Green’s inmate trust account and determined that Green could pay $12 of the $30 charge for filing and serving his complaint. Green complied, but simultaneously filed a motion for reconsideration or for leave to take an interlocutory appeal, both of which were denied by the district judge. Had Green not complied, his complaint would have been subject to dismissal.
After responsive pleadings were filed, the district court dismissed the complaint as “malicious” pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1915(d). The court determined that the majority of Green’s allegations were raised in an action already pending before that court, No. H-78-1926. Green was advised that he should have moved to amend his pleadings in the already-pending action. Green’s motion to appeal in forma pauperis was denied by the district court but granted by this Court. On appeal, Green argues that (1) the district court erred in dismissing his complaint as “malicious”; and (2) the district court abused its discretion in requiring him to make a partial payment of the filing and service fees.
I. Dismissal of Green’s Complaint
On October 5, 1978, Green filed his first complaint, No. H-78-1926, against W.J. Es
Green was subsequently moved from “segregation row” and returned to his permanent housing in the prison hospital. Green then filed his second complaint, No. H-79-1378, which is the basis of the present action. This complaint, which was filed on June 29,1979, challenges the constitutionality of applying various restrictive hospital rules and regulations to Green simply because he is handicapped and permanently housed in the hospital. 1 Acting sua sponte, the district court dismissed Green’s complaint in the present action as “malicious” pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1915(d).
Section 1915(d) authorizes a district court to dismiss an action prosecuted in forma pauperis if the court is “satisfied that the action is frivolous or malicious . . .. ” The district court offered three reasons for dismissing Green’s complaint as “malicious”: (1) the presence of Green’s prior pending complaint made the instant complaint “entirely redundant”; (2) the pleadings of the instant suit were a “conglomeration of fragments from the prior suit”; and (3) Green’s instant suit was “patently malicious” because it was repetitious litigation of identical causes of action. Comparison of the two complaints, however, reveals that they state distinct, although related, claims: Whereas the first complaint arguably alleges that defendants responded to Green’s filing of grievances with the prison administration by housing him in administrative segregation without affording Green an opportunity to contest his “protection” status, and also complains of the dangerous and unsanitary conditions that paraplegics housed in administrative segregation are exposed to, the second complaint attacks Green’s permanent assignment to the hospital ward, and asserts that otherwise healthy paraplegics should not be assigned to the hospital ward, and thereby subject to its restrictions on clothing, television, commissary visitation, and other privileges.
It appears possible, if not probable, that Green properly could have amended his first complaint to include the allegations of the second complaint. It does not appear, however, that Green’s election to forego this option, and instead to file a second complaint, can be deemed “malicious” within the meaning of the statute. Moreover, this Court has been unable to find any decision in which, on the basis of a single prior pending complaint, the filing of a subsequent complaint was held to be “malicious.” Hi
ll v. Estelle,
II. Imposition of the “Partial Payment’’ Requirement
Green also complains of the district court’s order requiring him to make a $12 partial payment of the fees for filing and serving his complaint. In
Braden v. Estelle,
In the present case, the magistrate examined a computer printout of Green’s inmate trust account, which revealed balances of $10 on May 25,1979; $30 on June 13, 1979; and $30 on July 11, 1979, the last day reflected on the printout. In addition, the magistrate noted that Green had received deposits to his account totaling $40 over the preceding two months. It appears, however, that the total deposits into Green’s account over the preceding year did not exceed $80. On the basis of the foregoing facts, the magistrate determined that Green was able to pay $7 of the regular $15 filing fee, and $5 of the regular $15 fee for service on the five defendants.
As noted above, Green possessed $30 on July 11th, the last day reflected on the computer printout. The record reflects that Green possessed no other assets. Consequently, by instructing Green to make a partial payment of $12, the court required Green to expend forty percent of his total
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Specifically, Green challenges the constitutionality of hospital rules and regulations which:
1. Prohibit any outside exercise;
2. Require all patients to wear pajamas issued three times a week;
3. Require paraplegics to eat the bland diet prepared for the sick;
4. Restrict commissary privileges to two times a week, while the general inmate population has access seven days a week;
5. Prohibit the purchase of foods from the commissary;
6. Restrict the use of television;
7. Prohibit the purchasing of “fast foods” from the outside;
8. Prohibit participation in all rehabilitation programs, including education, art classes, and movies.
In addition, Green complains of alleged fire hazards faced by paraplegics housed in the prison hospital, and requests adequate shower facilities.
. It appears that Green’s complaint in No. H-78-1926 had been previously consolidated by a different judge of that court with No. H-78-2005, also filed by Green, and involving similar issues of law and fact.
.
Petitioner’s Present Assets Clerk’s Fee Marshal’s Fee
Minimum Maximum Amount Amount Minimum Maximum Payment Payment Minimum Maximum Payment Payment
0.00 $20.00 $0.00 $ 3.00 $0.00 $0.00
$20.01 $45.00 $3.00 $ 9.00 $1.00 $2.00 each
$45.01 $65.00 $9.00 $15.00 $2.00 $3.00 each
$65.01
$15.00 $3.00 each
