Lead Opinion
Tracy Anthony Miller is an inmate in the Georgia prison system. He is a frequent litigant, as plaintiff, in the federal courts in Georgia. Since 1992, proceeding pro se and in forma pauperis, he has filed at least thirty cases in district court and has taken nearly as many appeals to this court. The defendants in these cases are, for the most part, officials of the Georgia Department of Correction. In the case now before us, he has sued in the Southern District of Georgia the Commissioner of the Department of Correction and various Department officials (collectively “Commissioner”) under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, seeking relief for their continuous infringement of his rights under Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act (“ADA”), 42 U.S.C. § 12131 et seq., and section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, 29 U.S.C. § 794.
On receiving Miller’s complaint, the district court, acting sua sponte, took note of the law suits Miller previously has brought against Department of Correction officials, examined the complaint’s factual allegations and concluded that they were frivolous, and dismissed the complaint without prejudice under 28 U.S.C. § 1915(g).
I
At the time he filed his complaint in this case, Miller was incarcerated in the Augusta State Medical Prison (“ASMP”). His complaint alleges in substance that the officials at ASMP failed to make adequate accommodations for his physical limitations. He is a paraplegic confined to a wheelchair, and as a result of his immobility, he was and continues to be subjected to physical harm. The officials also failed to make accommodations for his ailments. They essentially ignored his kidney condition, which requires catheter treatment and medication, and his chronic high blood pressure, which requires medication. As an example of the officials’ disregard of his physical condition, the complaint alleges that the officials confined him for twenty-four hours a day in a cell too small for his wheelchair to move and denied him acces
Miller lacked the means to pay the $250 fee for filing his complaint, so he sought leave to proceed in forma pauperis (“IFP”) pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1915. Section 1915(g), as amended by the Prison Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (“PLRA”), precludes a prisoner from “bringing] a civil action ... under this section if the prisoner has, on 3 or more prior occasions,” brought an action that was dismissed either as frivolous or because the complaint failed to state a claim for relief, “unless the prisoner is under imminent danger of serious physical injury.” 28 U.S.C. § 1915(g). It is undisputed that Miller has had enough cases dismissed to fall under this so-called three-strikes provision. See Miller v. Brown, CV 604-100,
The district court did not overlook Miller’s argument that it should entertain his law suit because it fell within the imminent danger exception. After reviewing the eases Miller had previously filed challenging conditions of his confinement in Georgia’s prison system, however, the court concluded that Miller was “attempting to use claims of ‘imminent danger’ as a means to force a shotgun blast of other frivolous and duplicative claims into court.” The court observed that allegations of the complaint were nearly identical to the allegations Miller had brought against other Georgia prison officials. Two of those cases, Miller v. King,
The provision of the district court’s dismissal order that enjoined Miller’s filing activity was drawn from a practice invoked from time to time by the Southern District of Georgia to curb filing abuses in prisoner cases. With three narrow exceptions, a prisoner is prohibited from filing any new papers with the court under § 1915(g) until he has paid all accrued filing fees. The exceptions are that a prisoner may file (1) papers in a criminal proceedings brought against him by the state, (2) a timely motion for reconsideration of the filing bar as applied, and (3) a pleading or paper demonstrating that he has been denied access to state court and has no recourse except to repair to the district court. Noticeably absent from this list of exceptions is a complaint alleging that the prisoner is under imminent danger of serious physical injury.
II
Our first task in this appeal is to consider the appropriateness of the filing injunction and then to consider the dismissal of Miller’s complaint as frivolous.
The propriety of an injunction against IFP filings by a litigant depends on weighing the interest of the court to protect its own jurisdiction to hear meritorious matters against the interest of the IFP litigant presenting his claim for adjudication. Access to the courts is unquestionably a right of considerable constitutional significance, see Bounds v. Smith,
The right of access to the courts “is neither absolute nor unconditional.” Cofield v. Ala. Pub. Serv. Comm’n,
Yet to the indigent, a filing fee is a blunt instrument that cannot discriminate between valid and bogus claims. A blanket injunction that prohibits all IFP filings by a given person would be overinclusive; it would screen out legitimate claims of the indigent, even if these claims concerned fundamental interests. For this reason, Congress has been careful to tailor limitations on IFP filings to minimize the exclusion of valid claims that involve fundamental interests. In the context of prisoner litigation, Congress was deliberate in leaving an exception for claims of imminent threat of serious physical injury when it enacted the three-strikes provision that screens out all other IFP suits as part of the PLRA. See 28 U.S.C. § 1915(g). Likewise, when exercising their inherent powers, courts have made sure that indigent
Designing an acceptable procedural device to screen out frivolous IFP filings requires some degree of nuance, and for that reason “[cjonsiderable discretion necessarily is reposed in the district court.” Procup,
In Cofield v. Alabama Public Service Commission,
Other courts of appeals have, in the years since Procup was decided, likewise proceeded right up to the line of prospectively banning all IFP filings by a litigant, but have yet to cross it. For example, in Cok v. Family Court of Rhode Island,
The injunction against Miller is similarly overbroad. Miller has indeed filed several suits alleging similar core facts, i.e., that officials at three different prisons have failed to provide him with adequate treatment for his medical conditions, and these suits raise a host of additional incoherent allegations of official wrongdoings, real or imagined. Assuming that Miller’s claims in this case are frivolous or repetitive, a narrower injunction could target Miller’s filings arising from the facts or transaction already raised and litigated in other cases, such as in Miller v. Pryor and Miller v. King.
We took the same approach in United States v. Flint,
The injunction in this case likewise goes beyond what is sufficient to protect the district court’s jurisdiction from Miller’s repetitive filings related to the conditions of his confinement, and fails to uphold Miller’s right of access to the courts. The three limited exceptions in the injunction, taken together, do not provide Miller with meaningful access. The first exception permits Miller to file only responsive papers in criminal cases brought against him. The second exception applies only to a “timely filed reconsideration motion,” and obviously Miller may have a valid claim that arises after the ten-day period for moving the court to alter or amend a judgment has elapsed, see Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e). The third exception, that Miller can file his complaint if he can demonstrate that he lacks access to the state courts, misses the point that the relevant right in question is access to the federal courts.
The cases the Commissioner relies upon do not support the district court’s broad injunction. First, Sloan v. Lesza,
Second, the Supreme Court’s decisions banning vexatious litigants from seeking leave to file IFP petitions for extraordinary writs are also inapposite because they “kept at least one door open by allowing ... [litigants] to file their writs of certiora-ri, by far the most important doorway to Supreme Court review.” Cofield,
The Commissioner finally urges us to affirm and validate the practice of issuing these “ § 1915(g)-plus” sanctions because this provision of the PLRA has proven insufficient for managing inmate litigation. As a general matter, courts should be hesitant to supplement the rules and remedies that Congress provides by statute. The Supreme Court reiterated this view recently in the context of the PLRA when it held unanimously that because the statute does not require inmate plaintiffs to plead that they have exhausted the administrative remedies, courts cannot impose this additional pleading requirement. Jones v. Bock,
We turn now to whether the court erred in dismissing Miller’s complaint. The appropriate standard of review to apply is not without some ambiguity. Formally, the district court’s order dismissed the complaint without prejudice because it denied Miller IFP status. This implies that the dismissal was pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1915(g), which we review de novo. See, e.g., Brown v. Johnson,
A claim is frivolous if and only if it “lacks an arguable basis either in law or in fact.” Neitzke v. Williams,
The Commissioner’s arguments supporting dismissal all condense to the point that the allegations of Miller’s complaint are repetitive of the allegations presented in Miller v. King and Miller v. Pryor. This repetition, the Commissioner submits, demonstrates that Miller’s complaint clearly “lacks an arguable basis in law or in fact” and thus should be dismissed for frivolity under various sections of the PLRA; alternatively, the complaint evidences Miller’s abusive litigation tactics and should be dismissed as an exercise of the court’s inherent power to protect its own jurisdiction. Putting aside the question whether mere repetition renders a claim frivolous, we are not convinced that the record in this case shows Miller’s claims to be repetitive. As the district court indicated, Miller’s allegations about the prison’s conditions in this case are strikingly similar to his allegations about prison conditions in King and Pryor, and this similarity may be due to the actual existence of similar conditions in the ASMP. However, Miller also checked the box marked “yes” in the standard prisoner § 1983 form complaint section asking whether the prisoner has begun “other law suits ... dealing with the same facts in
Miller’s factual allegations, or at least those making up the ADA claim, are also not so fantastical as to be clearly baseless. The allegations were enough to survive screening in King. There is no new reason to view them more skeptically in this case once we consider that the same conditions that existed in the other prisons that hosted Miller could also prevail in the ASMP.
Finally, we disagree with the Commissioner’s argument that Miller’s present lawsuit represents abusive litigation warranting dismissal as a sanction. Of course, “the court can consider [the prisoner’s history of meritless litigation] in deciding to dismiss a questionable claim.” Clark,
IV
For the foregoing reasons, the provision of the district court’s order dismissing Miller’s complaint is REVERSED; the provision enjoining Miller’s future filings is VACATED; and the case is REMANDED for further proceedings.
REVERSED, in part; VACATED, in part; and REMANDED.
Notes
. The district court adopted in full the recommendation of the magistrate judge to whom Miller’s complaint had been referred.
. The unpaid fees amount to $1,329.
. In addition to these allegations concerning conditions of his confinement and inadequate medical care at ASMP, the complaint alleges that prison officials at unnamed facilities knowingly placed him in close proximity to other inmates on his "enemy list,” and failed to intervene when he was repeatedly attacked by other inmates. He has been subjected to all of this — at the hands of the Commissioner of the Georgia Department of Correction, the warden, correction officers, medical staff, prosecutors, and judges — because he possesses evidence of official corruption in Georgia’s prison system.
. As mentioned in Miller v. King,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring:
The district court’s injunction flowed from a mistaken finding of frivolity. I would vacate the injunction on that ground alone; therefore, I join in part III of the majority opinion.
