Leroy Jenkins claims that his prison’s library policy prevented adequate access to the courts. The district court dismissed Jenkins’ 42 U.S.C. § 1983 suit on summary judgment, after finding no evidence that the policy caused injury. For the same reason, we affirm.
I.
Jenkins is an inmate housed in the protective custody unit at the Pontiac Correctional Center (Pontiac). In an effort to separate protective custody inmates from inmates in its general population, Pontiac banned those in protective custody from its law library. 1 The inmates instead obtained legal help and materials by corresponding with library personnel and by consulting with inmate law clerks. This system operated with mixed results. Although Jenkins admitted that he received cases and research help from some clerks, he claimed that others extorted payment for their services. The library personnel also provided Jenkins with materials and usually aided him with requested research. The library, however, was slow and occasionally required exact citations to cases.
Jenkins complained about the library system to various prison officials, but they did nothing. He also filed a grievance with the Administrative Review Board, which ordered the prison to investigate the system. Finally, Jenkins sued the defendants under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, claiming that he was denied access to the courts. Jenkins also filed a motion to appoint counsel, which the court denied, finding that, although Jenkins’ claim was colorable, it raised rather simple issues, which a person with Jenkins’ intellectual abilities could understand and investigate.
After answering Jenkins’ complaint, the defendants filed a motion for summary judgment, which they supported with a transcript from Jenkins’ deposition. Jenkins responded to the summary judgment motion by filing a pro se “Plaintiff's Affidavit in Opposition to Defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment.” The court interpreted this response as a motion to compel answers to Jenkins’ discovery requests and consequently ordered the defendants to inform the court whether they had answered discovery. After the defendants proved that they had complied with all pending requests, the court granted summary judgment. The court’s order held that even if the system at Pontiac violated the Constitu *268 tion, Jenkins could not prevail because he failed to show damages.
Jenkins appealed the court’s decision and moved for the appointment of counsel on appeal. We granted the motion for counsel, appointing the attorneys who represented Jenkins at briefing and oral argument. We now consider the merits of Jenkins’ appeal.
II.
This court reviews
de novo
the district court’s grant of summary judgment.
Hayes v. Otis Elevator Co.,
An inmate’s access to the courts is the most fundamental of his rights; “all other rights of an inmate are illusory without it, being entirely dependent for their existence on the whim or caprice of the prison warden.”
Adams v. Carlson,
This court has never formally defined the terms “direct, substantial and continuous” or “minor and incidental”; we have always proceeded on a case-by-case basis. In the De Mallory case, for instance, we found substantial and continuous limitations. The inmates in De Mallory were banned from the prison’s law library and obtained books only upon written request. Id. at 449. The inmates could consult with attorneys from the Legal Assistance for Incarcerated Persons (LAIP) program and the Public Defender’s Office, but neither group handled many conditions of confinement cases. See id. at 448. The inmate paralegals were also of little assistance. Prisoners could not personally meet with the paralegals; they could only correspond through the mail. Id. We found these limits substantial because they prevented inmates from performing preliminary legal research and formulating legal theories. Id. at 447.
In a more recent case, we found only minor and indirect limits.
See Shango,
*269 Although Jenkins’ case shares characteristics with both Shango and De Mallory, Jenkins argues that it is closer to De Mallory. He suggests that we may distinguish the two lines of cases by considering only the type of resource withheld from the prisoner. Under Jenkins’ system, a denial of “ancillary materials” such as pens and photocopying would amount to a minor and incidental limitation, while a denial of libraries or counsel would constitute a substantial deprivation.
We reject Jenkins’ suggestion for several reasons. First, De Mallory’s discussion of “direct, [substantial,] and continuous limitations on legal materials or counsel,” requires us to consider the duration and degree, as well as the type, of limitation. Jenkins however focuses only on the resource denied without defining the terms “substantial and continuous.” He addresses these concepts only by claiming that any regulation preventing personal access to a library substantially limits legal materials. This suggestion conflicts with our decision in Shango, where we found a minor limitation even though prisoners could not directly enter the library or withdraw books from the shelves. Jenkins’ test also conflicts with our two-part analysis in legal access cases. The two-part test requires a defendant to show both prejudice and a constitutional violation. A constitutional violation occurs any time a prisoner is denied direct access to counsel or libraries. Because Jenkins suggests a nearly identical test for waiving prejudice, his standard would collapse our two prongs into one.
To avoid these problems, we define a “substantial and continuous” limitation as any restriction on counsel or legal materials that completely prevents the prisoner, or a person acting in the prisoner’s behalf, from performing preliminary legal research.
See De Mallory,
Under our new standard, the restrictions at Pontiac were minor and incidental. Although Pontiac banned Jenkins from its library, it permitted clerks to personally meet with Jenkins and to research on his behalf. Some of these clerks, as well as the librarians, researched general areas of the law and provided Jenkins with relevant cases. 2 Because this assistance allowed Jenkins to learn the pleading requirements of his case, 3 he must plead prejudice.
Jenkins cannot prove that the prison prejudiced him by causing a delay or interruption in litigation.
See Shango,
As a final matter, Jenkins challenges the district court’s refusal to appoint counsel. A district court may deny counsel after considering: (1) the strength of the plaintiff's claim, (2) the plaintiffs ability to investigate, (3) the complexity of the evidence, (4) the plaintiffs capabilities, and (5) the difficulty of the legal issues.
Maclin v. Freake,
We find no unfairness in Jenkins’ case. The district court decided that, although Jenkins raised a colorable claim, he was not entitled to counsel because of his intellectual abilities and the simplicity of the issues he raised. This decision is supported by the district court record. The pleadings show that Jenkins is an intelligent, college-educated man with the ability to understand and analyze caselaw. Such a plaintiff is capable of bringing a § 1983 action for the denial of access to the courts. Section 1983 cases are procedurally simple, and the caselaw dealing with access to the courts is manageable and relatively straightforward.
Jenkins disagrees, arguing primarily that his problems with the law library prevented him from researching his case. This claim is contradicted by Jenkins’ own affidavit. In the affidavit, Jenkins admits that the library researched the legal access issue and provided Jenkins with caselaw.
III.
We affirm the district court in all respects.
Notes
. Since Jenkins filed this suit, Pontiac has opened its library to protective custody inmates, allowing them better access to legal texts.
. Although Jenkins admitted this in his deposition, at oral argument, the appellants claimed that Pontiac employed an "exact citation system” as in
Corgain v. Miller,
. Jenkins attempts to dismiss the librarians and clerks by arguing that they lacked legal training, but such training is irrelevant at this stage of our analysis. Legal training is relevant to determining whether a prison has violated the constitution under part one of the two-part test, but not to deciding whether the prejudice requirement can be waived under part two. By determining that we will not waive part two of the test, we simply apply the general rule under § 1983, which prevents recovery without a showing of actual prejudice.
