Appellant Roosevelt Brandon filed a pro se сomplaint seeking declaratory, injunctive, and monetary relief against the District of Columbia Board of Parole (the Board) and its individual members for alleged violations of 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Brandon claimed that the District of Columbia parole process is subject to the due process clause of the Fifth Amendment and that the Board’s delay in considering his case, its failure to supply adequate, reasons for its parole decisions respecting him, and its failure to reparole him in the same time period in which other similarly situated prisoners were reparoled violated his constitutional rights. The district court granted Brandon leave to proceed in forma pau *58 peris but then dismissed the complaint sua sponte before it was served on the defendants. We reverse that sua sponte dismissal and remand for fuller consideration of the merits of his claim. As we have repeatedly emphasized, sua sponte dismissal of a pro se complaint is warranted only when a prisoner’s claim is “frivolous” or “malicious,” 28 U.S.C. § 1915(d), and this is clearly not such a case.
Brandon is not a sympathetic plaintiff. In 1966 he was convicted of murder and sentenced to a term of ten to thirty years. He was paroled in April 1975. Shortly after that, on November 11, 1975, he was arrested and charged with the offense of rape while armed. He pleaded guilty to that charge and received a consecutive sentence of ten to thirty years. Prior to the imposition of this sentence, the Board revoked Brandon’s original parole. Because Brandon’s second sentence was to be consecutive with his first, he could not begin serving his second term until he had served out his time on the first sentence or was reparoled on the first conviction. Brandon came before the Board for reparole five times between November 15, 1976 and February 21, 1980 before he was finally reparoled.
Brandon alleged that the average parole violator in his circumstances would have been reparoled in twenty-four months rather than the nearly four year wait to which he was subjected. Specifically, Brandon asserted that the failure to reparole him before 1980 “departed from Board rules and regulations and/or customary reparoling policy....” Record Excerpts at 7. As part of his prayer for relief, Brandon asked for an order that the Board amend his certificate of parole to reflect reparole after twenty-four months. He also sought punitive and сompensatory damages against the Board members.
The district court dismissed the action sua sponte with the following terse statement:
Dismissed. States no cause of action. Parole Board is completely justified in getting all the information it can get on a prisoner who has been convicted of murder and rape while armed.
As this statement reveals and as the Board admits, “the District Court appeared to be less concerned with appellant’s [constitutional claims] than with the nature of his crimes.” Appellee Brief at 5. The fact that Brandon is not a sympathetic plaintiff, however, does not justify suspending the Constitution with respect to him. Because Brandon’s complaint cannot be labelled frivolous or malicious, the Board should be required to answer Brandon’s complaint, and the district court should, after whatever faсt finding proves necessary, address the merits of the substantial constitutional questions presented by this case.
Discussion
Brandon’s complaint was brought into federal court under the auspices of 28 U.S.C. § 1915, which authorizes federal courts to entertain actions
in forma pauperis
in an effort to assure that “no citizen shall be denied an opportunity to commence, prosecute, or defend an actiоn, civil or criminal, ‘in any court of the United States’ solely because his poverty makes it impossible for him to pay or secure the costs.”
Adkins v. E.I. DuPont de Nemours & Co.,
In this case, there is nothing in the complaint itself or in the district court’s summary dismissal of it to suggest that the complaint was malicious. Accordingly, the district court’s sua sponte dismissal can be sustained only if Brandon’s complaint can be styled frivolous.
This circuit has not yet defined with precision the test for frivolity under Section 1915(d). We did -recognize in
Crisafi v. Holland,
It is also true that “[a]
pro se
complaint, like any other, must present a claim upon which relief can be granted by the court.”
Id.
That statement, however, cannot be taken to mean that a frivolous complaint is one which could not survive a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss. On the contrary, the test for frivolity cannot be the same as the test for whether a complaint would survive a 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss. When a Rule 12(b)(6) motion is filed, the plaintiff is put on notice that the legal sufficiency of the complaint is being challenged and.is often given some insight into the theory upon which that challenge is made. The plaintiff then has an opportunity to develоp his claim further by filing an opposition to the Rule 12(b)(6) motion. Alternatively, the plaintiff may seek to show that decision on the motion would be premature before the facts were further drawn out through discovery. Neither of these opportunities, nor the sharply honed adversarial exchange involved in a Rule 12(b)(6) motion and opposition, are present when dismissal is
sua sponte. Sua sponte
dismissal is therefоre a much more truncated process .than is dismissal under Rule 12(b)(6). In giving effect to the intent with which Congress created the narrow exception in section 1915(d) for
sua sponte
dismissals, this difference must be taken into account. Accordingly, we hold that a complaint need not indisputably state a cause of action to survive
sua sponte
dismissal; instead, if the complaint has at least
an arguable
basis in law and fact — if the complaint is
viable
— it cannot be deemed frivolous.
See Watson v. Ault,
Judged by these standards, Brandon’s complaint was improperly shortcircuited. Onе of Brandon’s allegations was that he had been denied “due process of law because- the Defendants ... have violated normal parole custom and adjective rules and regulations.” Record Excerpts at 4 The complaint developes this allegation further when it states that “the Board’s stated reasons for this denial were defective and the decisions dеparted from Board rules and regulations and/or customary reparol
*60
ing policy, that is, Plaintiff had served the average violator time required by the Board.”
Id.
at 7. As his appointed counsel points out on appeal, construed under the liberal rules applicable to
pro se
pleadings,
see Haines v. Kerner,
A prisoner need not always allege the presence of a suspect classification or the infringement of a fundamental right in order to state a claim under the equal protection component of the Fifth Amendment. Even in the absence of a fundamental right or a suspect classification, equal protection requires that a classification between similarly situated individuals bear some rational relationship to a legitimate state purpose.
Schweiker v. Wilson,
The situation thus described is much the same as that in
Durso v. Rowe,
In light of our disposition of the equal protection claim, we also choose to remand Brandоn’s procedural due process claims without deciding whether those claims state a cause of action. We note, however, that those claims raise substantial issues of first impression in this circuit. Whether due process guarantees apply to parole or reparole decisions depends as a threshold matter on whether the District of Columbia parolе system creates a liberty interest in parole.
See Greenholtz v. Inmates of the Nebraska Penal and Correctional Complex,
Brandon’s statutory claim asks this circuit to enter into the fray concerning parole that has followed in the wake of the Supreme Court’s holding in
Greenholtz, supra.
There the Court found that Nebraska had created a substantive liberty interest in parole by ordering that parole “shall” be granted “unless” the parole board made one of four enumerated determinations. Since
Greenholtz,
lower courts have struggled to determine whether a parole statute must be drafted in this shall/unless formulation to create а liberty interest in parole, or whether instead a statute that makes parole decisions less than wholly discretionary suffices to create such an interest.
Compare Booth v. Hammock,
We also hold that further factfinding is required to determine whether the Board’s regulations or its administrative practices create a liberty interest in parole. Resolution of these claims may depend upon the way in which the Board applies its regulations and upon the degree of formality with which the Board’s administrative practices are embossed. While we need not decide today whether informal and merely customary administrative practices can ever give rise to a liberty interest in parole, it suffices for today’s decision that such practices clearly can have such effect at least when they are sufficiently formalized. That is the import of our recent decision in
Lucas v. Hodges,
Our decision today reinstates the entirety of Brandon’s complaint. As a result, this case illustrates the waste of resources entailed in erronеous
sua sponte
dismissals. Because the issues on appeal potentially raised important constitutional questions, we appointed counsel to represent Brandon before this court. That counsel thoroughly briefed the relevant issues and ably argued Brandon’s ease. With our decision that appellate review of this ease cannot take place until further proсeedings below have been completed, the issues narrowed, and a fuller record compiled, it seems clear that, after remand, Brandon’s theories will once more be briefed and argued to this court. Such duplicative use of appointed counsel and of this court’s scarce resources is hardly sensible and could have been avoided by more considеred treatment at the district court level of Brandon’s complaint. For this reason, we have repeatedly sought to impress upon district judges that
“sua sponte
dismissal would almost always seem less preferable than requiring at least some responsive answer from the government entity or official named as defendant.”
Redwood v. Council of the District of Columbia,
On remand, we also urge the district court to use its power under § 1915(d) to appoint counsel so that the important issues raised by Brandon’s complaint will be fully aired. To minimize further duplicative effort, it may be most efficient to appoint the same counsel whom this court appointed to litigate Brandon’s appeal; the same issues which have been briefed and argued on appeal will form the basis for further proceedings in the district court. The case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
