Lead Opinion
John B. Vester, an inmate in the Virginia penal system, appeals from an order of the district court granting summary judgment on behalf of officials of the Virginia Department of Corrections (the “Department”) in an action brought pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Vester’s complaint alleged that the Department’s Guideline 851, which
I.
Vester was committed to the Virginia Department of Corrections in July of 1984 and was initially sent to the Powhatan Receiving and Classification Center (“Receiving Center”). While at the Receiving Center, he became acquainted with another inmate, Gary Boggs, with whom he shared an interest in certain legal issues. In October, 1984, Vester was transferred to the Powhatan Correctional Center. Shortly thereafter, without seeking official permission, he wrote to Boggs. Upon delivery of the letter to the Receiving Center, institutional personnel returned it as unauthorized correspondence.
Vester then filed a grievance under the Department’s Inmate Grievance Procedure. At the Level I informal response stage, he was informed that correspondence between inmates at different institutions was subject to the restrictions contained in Guideline 851 (“DGL 851”). DGL 851 provides, in part, that “[cjorrespondence shall not be permitted with inmates serving sentences in other institutions under the authority of the Department of Corrections unless the Wardens/Superintendents of the involved institutions determine that such correspondence is in the best interest of both inmates and the institution.” Vester subsequently appealed his grievance to the Level I formal committee, which concluded that the issue should be reviewed by the Attorney General’s office.
Vester chose not to return his copy of the grievance to the Attorney General, thereby terminating the administrative procedure short of exhaustion. Instead, he and another inmate, Jonathan Tuller, brought an action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against W.P. Rogers, Warden of the Powhatan Correctional Center and Allyn R. Sielaff, Director of the Virginia Department of Corrections. The complaint alleged that DGL 851 was an overly broad intrusion into rights protected by the first and fourteenth amendments. Plaintiffs sought to have the regulation declared unconstitutional and to enjoin its enforcement. Vester and Tuller also requested both compensatory and punitive damages. Subsequently, Tuller voluntarily withdrew from the action.
The Department moved for summary judgment and the district court granted the motion. In doing so, the court first determined that DGL 851 was a reasonably drawn regulation intended to protect a legitimate state interest in prison security. Accordingly, the regulation was held to be a constitutional limitation on prisoner speech in conformity with the standard established by the United States Supreme Court in Procunier v. Martinez,
II.
On appeal, Vester’s primary contention is that the district court misapplied the test of
We find that Vester’s argument falls prey to the same error as did the Eighth Circuit in Safley. By focusing excessively upon the Procunier test, Vester, like the Eighth Circuit, fails to recognize the impact of a continuing effort by the Supreme Court in cases such as Pell v. Procunier,
We must note initially that the Supreme Court has not dealt with the precise factual circumstance posed in this case. Nor have the first amendment implications of regulations limiting prisoner-to-prisoner correspondence been addressed by this Court. Procunier dealt with a California Department of Corrections rule restricting correspondence between inmates and non-prisoners. Indeed, the Court therein expressly based its ruling not on “prisoner rights” but on the fact that the challenged regulation caused a “consequential restriction on the first and fourteenth amendment rights of those who are not prisoners.”
To the extent, therefore, that the Procu-nier test is relevant to regulations affecting only prisoners, the process of applying the standard is subject to the well-established policy of judicial deference to the reasonable decisions of prison administrators. The Court in Procunier noted that the task of maintaining an orderly prison was “Herculean” and required a specialized expertise which courts were ill-equipped to supply.
This distinction between deference and strict scrutiny was further illustrated in Pell v. Procunier. The Court upheld a California regulation that absolutely prohibited “press and other media interviews with specific inmates.”
The Court in Jones noted that state correctional officials had testified with regard to the potential dangers connected with an unregulated prisoner labor union. The Court then held that
Without a showing that these beliefs were unreasonable, it was error for the District Court to conclude that appellants needed to show more. In particular, the burden was not on appellants to show affirmatively that the Union would be “detrimental to proper penological objectives” or would constitute a “present danger to security and order.” ... Rather, “[s]uch considerations are peculiarly within the province and professional expertise of corrections officials, and, in the absence of substantial evidence in the record to indicate that the officials have exaggerated their response to these considerations, courts should ordinarily defer to their expert judgment in such matters.” Pell v. Procunier,417 U.S., at 827 ,94 S.Ct., at 2805 . The necessary and correct result of our deference to the informed discretion of prison administrators permits them, and not the courts, to make the difficult judgments concerning institutional operations in situations such as this.
The Pell-Jones rationale was reaffirmed in Bell v. Wolfish, where the Court sustained a variety of regulations and internal practices utilized in a federally-operated custodial facility in New York. Again the Court found no evidence of an “exaggerated response” by prison officials. With regard to those rules that directly affected inmate first amendment rights the Court found them acceptable as long as they were reasonable and operated “in a neutral fashion without regard to the content of the expression.”
III.
Although “a prisoner does not shed his first amendment rights at the prison portals,” Brown v. Peyton,
We conclude that a two-part synthesis has emerged from the Procunier, Pell, Jones and Bell decisions. If a penal regulation either intrudes upon the first amendment rights of non-prisoners or constitutes a total denial of an inmate’s right to free speech, including any possible alternative means of exercising that right, then the state must satisfy the Procunier strict scrutiny requirement. The burden of demonstrating both the substantial state interest and the absence of a less restrictive alternative rests upon the proponent of the rule. If, however, the rule operates only
Applying this rationale to the facts of the present case we find no substantive constitutional defect in DGL 851. The rule imposes certain limitations on one manner in which an inmate may exercise his first amendment rights. It does not, however, operate as an absolute denial of free speech. Nor does it affect the rights of nonprisoners. It must, therefore, be construed as a “time, place and manner” regulation of the type sustained in Pell.
As a limitation on speech rather than a total denial of that first amendment right, the rule must be upheld if it is rationally related to the legitimate penological objectives of the penal institution. We conclude that DGL 851 is such a reasonable response to valid concerns relating to institutional security. The Department has articulated its need to impose a limit on the flow of information between inmates as a means of reducing institutional tensions and impeding the exchange of communication relating to unlawful activity. We have no reason to believe that this position is not an accurate depiction of the requirements of penal administration.
On appeal, Vester does not dispute that the institutional concerns which gave rise to DGL 851 are genuine. Rather, he argues that less restrictive means of protecting those concerns, such as letter-by-letter censorship or a rule limiting only those prisoners specifically identified as security threats, would equally serve the institution’s goal. As we have stated, however, the availability of alternatives is not relevant if a penal regulation only limits rather than denies a constitutional right. Vester’s burden was to overcome the presumption of constitutionality to which a reasonable penal regulation is entitled by demonstrating an exaggerated response on behalf of the promulgators of the rule. We find that Vester has not met this burden. We hold, therefore, that DGL 851 is a constitutionally valid effort by Virginia penal officials to insure the orderly operation of that state’s prisons.
IV.
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the district court properly granted summary judgment in favor of the defendants below. The district court’s order is, therefore, affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The Court stated the Procunier test as follows:
First, the regulation or practice in question must further an important or substantial governmental interest unrelated to the suppression of expression. Prison officials may not censor inmate correspondence simply to eliminate unflattering or unwelcome opinions or factually inaccurate statements. Rather, they must show that a regulation authorizing mail
censorship furthers one or more of the substantial governmental interests of security, order, and rehabilitation. Second, the limitation of First Amendment freedoms must be no greater than is necessary or essential to the protection of the particular governmental interest involved.
. In reaching the merits of Vester’s appeal, we reject as meritless the Department’s contention that his failure to seek permission to correspond renders his claim hypothetical and conjectural. The Department’s reliance on our opinion in Doe v. Duling,
. The Court held that a journalist’s first and fourteenth amendment rights were not abridged by a penal regulation limiting media access to sources of information to the same level available to the general public.
. Although we articulate this position for the first time today, we note that it is consistent with our earlier decisions on prison regulation. Cf. Pittman v. Hutto,
To the extent that there is any contrary language in the unpublished decision of Parker v. McKenzie,
. Appellant seeks to distinguish Pell from the present case in the same manner as did the Eighth Circuit in Safley. He contends that unlike Pell's "time, place and manner” regulation, DGL 851 is an absolute limitation on free speech. We find appellant’s argument unpersuasive.
DGL 851 addresses correspondence, not communication. Even if the regulation totally prohibited correspondence between inmates of different institutions, which it clearly does not, communication would be possible through non-prisoner intermediaries such as family, friends, clergy, etc. The Court in Pell found this mechanism an adequate alternative form of communication. We fail to see, therefore, why DGL 851 is any less a "time, place or manner” regulation than was the rule at issue in Pell.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I dissent because the majority, under the guise of enunciating a test which synthesizes previous Supreme Court precedent relating to prisoners’ first amendment rights, has, in effect, placed an insuperable burden on prisoners and taken from them the rights which they retain even in the restrictive constitutional setting of a prison. In its desire to afford prison administrators discretion in the difficult business of running a penal institution, a principle to which, when it is stated abstractly, I strongly adhere, the majority has given those officials carte blanche to restrict prisoners’ communications with one another. It is important to bear in mind that decision making for judges is choosing between, or, if possible, reconciling competing principles, and it does not do perfunctorily to nod at one principle but thereafter wholly to avoid its application.
After paying lip service to the principle that “ ‘a prisoner does not shed his first amendment rights at the prison portals,’ ” the majority proceeds quickly to the “two-part synthesis” which it states “has emerged from the Procunier;
The majority errs in its neat division of previous prisoners’ rights cases into two categories. The cases which it cites in support of its formulation, Procunier, Pell, Jones, and Bell, do not lend themselves to a gloss of the first amendment rights of prisoners which, as the majority candidly states, “will in most instances defeat a claim of overbreadth.” As stated by the majority, a prisoner must be deprived of all means of communicating, be subjected to a “total denial” of his right to free speech, before he is entitled to the strict scrutiny requirement. The alternative is the highly deferential, essentially nugatory inquiry as to whether an inmate “has shown by substantial evidence that the state has exaggerated its response to an institutional problem.” At 1183. An inmate’s first amendment rights would be placed deep in the deep freeze by such an approach, which forces him to sacrifice legitimate and protected speech, as well as that which may be properly restricted. An inmate may never be able to shoulder the burden of showing complete restriction of his rights, since prison officials may still be able to argue the availability of alternative channels or come up with reasons why their response was not exaggerated.
More importantly, I believe that the majority ■ has read the cases in the area of prisoner’s rights in a way which makes anything but the most transparently sophistical and unsubstantiated enunciation by officials of a justification for a regulation affecting speech pass constitutional muster. The majority goes beyond previous cases by requiring a showing that first amendment rights have been totally obliterated. The majority warns against “focusing excessively” upon the test of Procunier v. Martinez, supra, but, in its complete deference to the justifications proffered by prison officials, it bypasses not only Procu-nier, but Pell, Jones, and Bell. A brief overview of Supreme Court precedent in the area indicates that the majority has erred in the formulation of its “synthesis.”
In Procunier v. Martinez, where the Court found unconstitutional a California regulation which subjected certain classes of correspondence between prisoners and non-prisoners to censorship, the Court stated that it was “unnecessary” to examine the question of whether the first amendment rights of prisoners, per se, were implicated in the prisoner regulation because
The interest of prisoners and their correspondents in uncensored communications by letter, grounded as it is in the First Amendment, is plainly a “liberty” interest within the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment even though qualified of necessity by the circumstances of imprisonment.
Id. at 418,
The additional cases in the continuum of prisoners’ rights cases considered by the Court subsequent to Procunier v. Martinez do not take from prisoners their first amendment right of free communication by mail enunciated in Martinez. Indeed, in Pell v. Procunier,
The next case which the majority believes supports its formulation of its “synthesis,” Jones v. North Carolina Prisoners’ Union,
As indicated by the Court, there is also, in terms of the strain on prison facilities, an obvious distinction between an exchange of personalized letters between two discrete individuals and indiscriminate bulk mailings to hordes of others. In Jones, the Court noted that “[m]ail rights are not themselves implicated; the only question respecting the mail is that of bulk mailings.” Id. at 130,
The final case relied on by the majority, Bell v. Wolfish, reiterated previous principles addressed by the Court in the context of a prison rule requiring books and maga
None of the principles reiterated in Bell v. Wolfish can be taken to the length suggested by the majority opinion. In the present case, there has been no showing that there are available alternative means of communication for the prisoner to communicate with a fellow prisoner on matters relating to post-conviction relief. Unlike Jones, which involved associational rights, inevitably restricted in a penal setting, a case where mail rights were only tangentially concerned, the present case directly involves such rights. Unlike Bell, where alternative means of receiving outside communications (directly from publishers or book clubs) were explicitly sanctioned by the regulation in question, there was no showing here that such communications could be made among prisoners in different institutions. Even by the majority’s standard — the “total denial of an inmate’s right to free speech” — the regulation may offend first amendment principles, since there was no showing that the regulation did not foreclose all means of communication. But even if that is not the case, I believe that, under previous Court precedent, the majority’s view of the first amendment rights of prisoners puts an impermissible burden on the exercise of such rights.
.
.
.
.
. In Johnson v. Avery,
. In the present case the record is not clear whether Vester could, in fact, communicate with a prisoner in another institution by any means other than the mails. The guideline in question flatly states that "[cjorrespondence [i.e., communication] shall not be permitted with inmates serving sentences in other institutions under the authority of the Department of Corrections unless the wardens/superintendents of the involved institutions determine that such correspondence is in the best interest of both the inmate and the institution.”
. It should be noted that the Court, contrary to the majority’s formulation of its test, does not state that all avenues of communication by prisoners be foreclosed, but rather that there be "other avenues" available to prisoners.
