KENNETH A. MARSHALL, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. STANLEY KNIGHT, et al., Defendants-Appellees.
No. 04-1062
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
ARGUED OCTOBER 24, 2005—DECIDED APRIL 26, 2006
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Northern District of Indiana, South Bend Division. No. 03 C 460—Robert L. Miller, Jr., Chief Judge.
SYKES, Circuit Judge. Kenneth Marshall, an inmate at Indiana’s Miami Correctional Facility, alleged in a pro se complaint that the prison’s superintendent, along with other unnamed prison employees, unconstitutionally deprived him of access to the courts by impeding his access to the prison law library. Before any of the defendants were served with the complaint, Marshall filed what he captioned a “Petition To Amend Complaint And To Include The Submission Of Exhibits And Affidavits.” The district court summarily denied Marshall’s petition to amend and later dismissed his complaint for failure to state a claim pursuant to
I. Background
Marshall submitted his handwritten, pro se complaint to the district court on June 25, 2003. He brought his action pursuant to
Access To the Law Library has been diminished and as of lately non-existent. As a result of [the superintendent’s] actions my ability to prepare, transmit, research, and my access to courts is not adequte [sic], also as of lately non-existent. As a Direct-result I proceeded pro-se within Court proceedings on (05/29/03), and because of my inability to prepare I was Denied credit Time that I was entitled to. Also I’ve currently a Post-Conviction claim within Marion County, Indpls, IN., that due to me being Denied my Constitutional Rights under the First Amendment, Sixth Amendment, Fourteenth Amendment I will be Denied my Right to proceed Pro-Se and my Right to be prepared for redress, so I will probably lose.
On September 3, 2003, Marshall filed his petition to amend with the district court. As of that date, the superintendent had not been served and had not filed any responsive pleading.
Marshall’s petition asked the court to appoint him “legal aid”—which we understand as a request for appointed counsel—and specifically asked for leave to make four changes to his initial complaint: (1) to name as defendants prison employees Robert Moore, “Mrs.” Reynolds, Chris Johnson, and “Lieutenant” McCoy; (2) to increase his claim for damages from $500 to $10,000; (3) to demand a jury trial; and (4) to attach several exhibits and affidavits. His petition also contained new factual allegations that suggested a claim for retaliation. Marshall alleged that
The district court denied Marshall’s petition to amend on November 24, 2003. The court’s one-sentence order read: “The court now DENIES the plaintiff’s motion to amend his complaint to include exhibits and affidavits (docket #7).” On December 18 the district court dismissed Marshall’s initial complaint pursuant to the prisoner litigation screening procedures set forth in
the constitution’s guarantee of access to the courts requires state actors to assure that prisoners have access to courts to present claims concerning the legality or conditions of their confinement, but . . . state actors have no duty to assure that prisoners can litigate those claims effectively once they have been raised in court. The right to access, goes no further than access.
Because Marshall had not alleged “that he was prevented from filing a complaint or appeal because of his inability to gain access [to] legal assistance,” the district court concluded he had not stated a valid claim.
II. Analysis
We review the district court’s decision to dismiss a claim under
A. Dismissal Under § 1915A
Our notice-pleading system requires complaints to contain a “short and plain statement of the claim” sufficient to notify defendants of the allegations against them and enable them to file an answer.
The requirement that prisoners making access-to-courts claims allege specific prejudice should not be understood as an onerous fact-pleading burden; it is simply a requirement that a prisoner’s complaint spell out, in minimal detail, the connection between the alleged denial of access to legal materials and an inability to pursue a legitimate challenge to a conviction, sentence, or prison conditions. Requiring the complaint to include the basic allegations of the prejudice suffered serves the traditional purpose of notice pleading: it gives defendants fair notice of the claims against them and a reasonable opportunity to form an answer.
Marshall’s initial complaint alleged that the prison superintendent and other unnamed prison employees enforced policies that “diminished” his access to the prison law library to the point of being “non-existent.” He then alleged that his lack of library access adversely affected his attempt to challenge the length of his incarceration: “As a Direct-result I proceeded pro-se within Court proceedings on (05/29/03), and because of my inability to prepare I was Denied credit Time that I was entitled to.” At the dismissal stage the district court was obligated to accept
Applying these lenient pleading standards to Marshall’s pro se complaint, we conclude his allegations sufficiently stated a claim for denial of access to the courts. He alleged that the defendants reduced his law library access to a “non-existent” level, and that his inability to research and prepare for a May 29, 2003 court hearing caused him to lose custodial credit time that would have shortened his incarceration. The law requires no more from a prisoner at this stage of the proceeding. Lehn v. Holmes, 364 F.3d 862, 868 (7th Cir. 2004) (“In order to avoid dismissal . . . [plaintiff] therefore had to allege that he had a non-frivolous legal claim that was frustrated or impeded by [defendant’s] failure to assist him in the preparation and filing of meaningful legal papers and that he was harmed by [defendant’s] action (or lack thereof).”); see also Ortloff, 335 F.3d at 656 (to state an “access-to-courts claim and avoid dismissal . . . a prisoner must make specific allegations as to the prejudice suffered because of the defendants’ alleged conduct”).
The district court reached the opposite conclusion based on its reading of the Supreme Court’s decision in Lewis. In the district court’s view, Lewis “only requires that an inmate be given access to the courts to file a complaint or appeal, but state actors have no duty to assure that prisoners can litigate those claims effectively once they have been raised in court. The right to access, goes no further than access.” We do not agree that Lewis confines access-to-courts claims to situations where a prisoner has been unable to file a complaint or an appeal. Indeed, Lewis explained that a prisoner could prove a denial of access to the courts by showing that a complaint he
The district court was correct, however, that Marshall’s complaint was insufficient insofar as he based his claim on speculation that he would suffer some unspecified future harm during his postconviction proceedings in Marion County. In his briefs to this court, Marshall cited no authority permitting an access-to-courts plaintiff to plead prejudice by pointing to some injury he might later incur. There is good reason for this, since the absence of an actual or imminent injury—as opposed to a merely speculative future one—would deprive federal courts of jurisdiction under
B. Petition to Amend
“A party may amend the party’s pleading once as a matter of course at any time before a responsive pleading is served.”
Marshall’s petition to amend did not comply with the district court’s local rule requiring plaintiffs to attach a copy of the proposed amended complaint to a motion to amend. N.D. IND. L.R. 15.1. But even that local rule states that “failure to comply with this rule is not grounds for denial of the motion.” Id. See also Donald v. Cook County Sheriff’s Dep’t, 95 F.3d 548, 555 (7th Cir. 1996) (“[D]istrict courts have a special responsibility to construe pro se complaints liberally and to allow ample opportunity for amending the complaint when it appears that by doing so the pro se litigant would be able to state a meritorious claim. . . . [I]t is incumbent on [the court] to take appropriate measures to permit the adjudication of pro se claims on the merits, rather than to order their dismissal on technical grounds.”) (footnote omitted).
A true Copy:
Teste:
Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
