The appellant, Robert Sowell, is a prisoner at the Massachusetts Correctional Institution in Cedar Junction. Sowell’s
pro se
complaint, which he supported with a number of affidavits and other documents, alleged that his constitutional right of access to the courts was infringed when prison officials restricted his access to certain “legal property.”
1
Sowell alleged two such deprivations. In the first instance, prison officials searched his cell and confiscated some “legal property” located there, removing it to the prison property room where it has been stored pursuant to a Department of Correction regulation that limits the amount of property a prisoner may keep in his cell.
The second alleged deprivation occurred when prison authorities refused to allow Sowell to gain access to “legal property” that had been stored in the property room under the name of another inmate (who had been helping Sowell, an illiterate, with his litigation). Because he was denied access to this property, Sowell was forced to seek and obtain, from this court, several extensions of the time in which to file a brief in an otherwise unrelated appeal. Although the complaint was confusing (and even contradictory) on this point, the supporting affidavits showed that Sowell eventually did gain access to these documents on at least one occasion, when he discovered that “certain documents pertaining to issues mentioned in this complaint” were missing. An affidavit identified the missing documents as consisting of “notes” and “certain briefs,” but their contents and significance were not described anywhere in the record in any greater detail.
The district court granted summary judgment to the defendants. It acknowledged that prisoners have a constitutional right of access to the courts,
Bounds v. Smith,
This court has not yet determined whether or when a plaintiff who alleges a denial of his right to access to the courts must plead and prove the existence of an “actual injury.”
See Messere v. Fair,
In some cases, the courts have found, the “prejudice inheres in the facts.”
Chandler v. Baird,
On the other hand, in cases involving “ancillary features,” such as library schedules, the provision of notary services and the availability of supplies (such as papers, pens and pencils), the deprivation “may affect merely comfort or convenience without depriving a prisoner of access to the courts. A court cannot make the assumption that any alleged administrative deficiency or less than optimal clerical arrangement actually impedes a prisoner’s ability to file meaningful legal papers.”
Peterkin v. Jeffes,
While the concerns implicated by Sowell’s complaint lie at neither extreme on the “deprivation spectrum,” we think they fall comfortably within the range in which the court can and should require the prisoner to show an actual injury as a prerequisite to recovery. It may be true that a prisoner’s “legal property” (to the extent that it consists of his research notes, court documents and the like) is “core material[ ], central to his right of access to the courts,”
Roman v. Jeffes,
*35 An absolute denial of access to all legal materials, like an absolute denial of access to a law library or other basic form of legal assistance, might be deemed inherently prejudicial, but this case does not involve such an unqualified deprivation. On the other hand, it would be unrealistic to expect prison authorities to give all prisoners unfettered access to all of their legal materials at all times. It is a fact of life that prisoners live in prison cells. Their warders therefore may have good reason, based on considerations of safety and security, to limit the amount of legal documents and similar materials that prisoners may keep with them; if they implement those regulations fairly, the prisoners subject to the regulations will still be able to participate meaningfully in the legal process. Thus, where a prisoner, like Sowell, does not allege an absolute deprivation of access to all of his legal materials, but rather complains about some sort of conditional restriction of access to some of them, we think it fair to require him to show an “actual injury” as a prerequisite to recovery.
The question, then (since this appeal asks us to review a grant of summary judgment), is whether Sowell has established a genuine issue as to the existence of an actual injury; that is, “whether a fair-minded jury could return a verdict in his favor” on the evidence presented.
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
Second, Sowell alleged that several documents were missing from the boxes kept in the prison property room. Missing documents do, in a sense, constitute an “absolute” deprivation—the prisoner can never gain access to documents which cannot be found. The deprivation here, however, while arguably absolute, was clearly not complete. That is to say, the prison officials did not lose all of Sowell’s “legal property,” but only certain portions of it. The loss of a few documents is not inherently prejudicial. Absent some further showing that the loss of those particular documents deprived Sowell of the ability to participate meaningfully in the legal process, a court cannot say that a constitutional deprivation has occurred.
Finally, Sowell made the unadorned allegation that his appeal to the Massachusetts Appeals Court, in a case called Sowell v. Gilligan, was dismissed shortly before the complaint in this case was filed. The Appeals Court decision, which Sowell attached to his complaint as an exhibit, stated as grounds for the dismissal Sowell’s failure to file a timely notice of appeal. The notice of appeal was due on March 27, 1989. So-well alleged elsewhere in his complaint that prison officials removed “legal property” from his cell in early February 1989.
One could, conceivably, infer from the juxtaposition of the two dates that the removal of the property caused Sowell’s failure to meet the filing deadline. But Sowell was not entitled to rely on such speculative indulgences in resisting a motion for summary judgment. As to issues on which he bore the burden of proof, he was required to “reliably demonstrate that specific facts sufficient to create an actual dispute exist.”
Garside v. Oseo Drug, Inc.,
The judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. The complaint does not describe the "legal property” other than to suggest that it consisted at least in part of documents. The district court called the property at issue "legal papers.” The supporting documents suggest, and for purposes of this appeal we will assume, that by "legal property” Sowell was referring to research materials, briefs, memoranda, court filings and other papers he used in the pursuit of the many lawsuits in which he was and is involved.
