OPINION
In 1996, a district court in the Eastern District of Washington declared unconstitutional a policy of the Washington State Penitentiary prohibiting inmates from receiving books and magazines that they did not pay for themselves from their prison accounts. That decision was subsequently upheld on appeal.
Crofton v. Roe,
I. BACKGROUND
Ross Sorrels was a prisoner at the Airway Heights Corrections Center (“AHCC”) in the state of Washington. In June 1997, Doubleday, the publisher of The Partner by John Grisham, sent Sorrels a complimentary copy of the book. On account of AHCC’s “no gift publication” policy, 1 by which inmates may receive publications only if they pay for them out of their inmate accounts, the prison officials notified Sorrels they had received the book but refused to let him have it. Sorrels appealed this refusal through the prison’s internal grievance system, but , to no avail, and the book was mailed to his family in July 1997.
In.March 1998, Sorrels sent a letter to various prison officials, including defendants Walter, Lehman, Blodgett, and Evans, informing them that the District Court for the Eastern District of Washington, where AHCC is located, had issued two unpublished decisions in 1996 holding unconstitutional the “no gift publication” policy at the Washington State Penitentiary at Walla Walla. Those cases were
Crofton v. Ocanaz,
No. CY-95-3142-LRS (E.D.Wash. Dec. 17, 1996),
aff'd. sub nom Crofton v. Roe,
On May 15, 1998, Sorrels filed a pro se complaint under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The complaint alleged (1) a violation of the First Amendment in rejecting the free publication, (2) a deprivation of due process by providing inadequate grievance procedures, and (3) a conspiracy to violate Sorrels’s constitutional rights. Sorrels sued Ronald McKee and David Buss, who work in the AHCC mail room; Cly Evans, Archie Grant, Loreli Cruthers, and Kay Walter, who work at AHCC in administrative roles; and James Blodgett and Joseph Lehman, who work in prison administration at the state level.
The defendants filed a motion to dismiss in September 1998, which the court treated in part as a motion for summary judgment. The magistrate judge issued a first Report and Recommendation, later adopted by the district court, (1) denying defendants’ motion to dismiss Sorrels’s First Amendment claim, on the grounds that the “no gift publication” policy was unconstitutional under
Turner v. Safley,
On May 5, 1999, this court issued a decision in
Crofton v. Roe,
Sorrels filed a supplemental complaint to add an allegation that AHCC had rejected a gift copy of the Georgetown Law Journal sent to Sorrels by an attorney on or about April 1,1998. Because the prison had rejected the journal without first notifying Sorrels, he alleged a procedural due process violation in addition to another violation of the First Amendment.
The Washington Department of Corrections, which operates both Airway Heights Corrections Center and Washington State Penitentiary, whose regulations were at issue in Crofton v. Roe, amended the “no gift publication” policy, effective January 5, 2000, to allow receipt of gift publications. 2 Defendants filed a motion for summary judgment immediately after the new policy went into effect. The magistrate issued a second Report and Recommendation, recommending (1) dismissal of the due process redress-of-grievances claim; (2) granting summary judgment on qualified immunity grounds for defendants on the First Amendment claim; (3) granting summary judgment for defendants on the conspiracy claim; (4) granting summary judgment for defendants on the procedural *969 due process claim as an isolated incident, constituting only negligence; and (5) dismissing as moot Sorrels’s request for in-junctive and declaratory relief in light of his transfer to another prison and the prison’s subsequent change in policy. This second Report and Recommendation was adopted by the district court, and judgment entered for defendants, on July 24, 2000. Sorrels appeals only the grant of qualified immunity on his First Amendment claim and the dismissal of his due process claim for failure to notify.
II. JURISDICTION AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
This court has jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291. A lower court’s decision regarding qualified immunity is reviewed de novo.
Elder v. Holloway,
III. ANALYSIS
On appeal, Sorrels advances two arguments. First, he argues that the defendants are not entitled to qualified immúnity on the First Amendment claim. He asserts that the district court erred in concluding that the illegality of AHCC’s “no gift publication” policy was not clearly established. Second, Sorrels argues that the district court erred in dismissing his procedural due process claim as mere negligence not actionable under § 1983. We address each of these arguments in turn.
A. Qualified Immunity on First Amendment Claim
42 U.S.C. § 1983 allows individuals to recover for deprivations of constitutional rights that occur under color of state law.
Parratt v. Taylor,
In ruling on a qualified immunity defense, a court must consider two questions. First, “[t]aken in the light most favorable to the party asserting the injury, do the facts alleged show the officer’s conduct violated a constitutional right?”
Saucier v. Katz,
The district court held that the “no gift publication” policy was unconstitutional under the first prong of qualified immunity. Defendants concede, in light of Crof- *970 ton v. Roe, that Sorrels has alleged a violation of his constitutional rights. That is, the prison’s (former) policy of rejecting gift publications for which inmates had not paid was not rationally related to a legitimate penological interest as required by Turner. The policy therefore violated Sorrels’s First Amendment rights to receive publications free from censorship.
The court below found for the defendants, however, on the second prong of qualified immunity. The right at issue in this case is the First Amendment right to receive publications that the inmate himself did not pay for from his own prison account. To determine if the defendants are entitled to qualified immunity under the second prong, then, we must ask: Was the law so “clearly established” at the time AHCC rejected
The Partner
(June 1997) and the
Georgetown Law Journal
(April 1998) that AHCC officials should have known that the “no gift publication” policy was unconstitutional under Turner? Surveying the legal landscape as it existed in 1997 and 1998, were “[tjhe contours of the right ... sufficiently clear that a reasonable official would understand that what he [was] doing violate[d] that right”?
Anderson v. Creighton,
If so, then prison officials knew or should have known of the illegality of their actions, and qualified immunity is no defense to liability. The relevant inquiry under this second prong is wholly objective; an official’s subjective belief as to the lawfulness of his conduct is irrelevant.
Anderson,
The existence of binding precedent holding unconstitutional a prison policy requiring inmates to pay for publications received would easily dispose of prong two. The law would be clearly established and defendants’ qualified immunity defense would fail. However, neither the district court, nor the parties, nor our own research has unearthed Ninth Circuit or Supreme Court caselaw on point predating our 1999 decision in
Crofton v. Roe.
We next look to the decisions of our sister Circuits, district courts, and state courts.
Capoeman v. Reed,
Still this does not end our inquiry. In deciding the second prong of qualified immunity, “[i]t is not necessary that the alleged acts have been previously held unconstitutional, as long as the unlawfulness [of defendants’ actions] was apparent in light of preexisting law.”
Malik v. Brown,
*971
To defeat the defendants’ claim of qualified immunity, then, Sorrels had to show that the policy was such a far cry from what any reasonable prison official could have believed was legal that the defendants knew or should have known they were breaking the law. However, it is entirely reasonable that the defendants could have thought that the policy would pass muster under
Turner.
One of the rationales put forth (and rejected) in
Crof-ton v. Roe
was preventing “strong-arming,” by which an inmate would threaten retaliation if the friends or family of another inmate did not send requested gift items.
Sorrels also urges us to consider two unpublished district court decisions in determining whether the law was clearly established:
Ocanaz,
No. CY-95-3142-LRS (E.D.Wash. Dec. 17, 1996) (holding the policy at another Washington prison unconstitutional); and
Spalding,
No. CS-94-208-CI (E.D.Wash. May 14, 1996) (same). We have held that unpublished decisions of district courts may inform our qualified immunity analysis.
See Prison Legal News v. Cook,
The district court rulings in
Ocanaz
and
Spalding
do not change our conclusion that the law was not clearly established. At most, they show that the law was in the process of becoming established. This is not surprising, as it will be a rare instance in which, absent any published opinions on point or overwhelming obviousness of illegality, we can conclude that the law was clearly established on the basis of unpublished decisions only. Indeed, common to cases in which qualified immunity is unavailable is that “the issue ... has been litigated extensively and courts have consistently recognized” the right at issue.
Malik,
We emphasize one additional point: This is not a case in which defendants chose not to appeal unfavorable trial court rulings to avoid a decision in the court of appeals clearly establishing the law. To the contrary, it was the prison officials in Crofton v. Roe who appealed the district court ruling striking down the “no gift publication” policy, thus teeing up the issue for a definitive ruling in the Ninth Circuit. It is entirely possible that the law could become clearly established when a party repeatedly litigates an issue, repeatedly loses, but avoids an adverse appellate decision by opting not to appeal. Such was not the case here, however.
In sum, we conclude that defendants are entitled to summary judgment as to Sorrels’s First Amendment claim. There is no published caselaw on point, and the policy was not so far-fetched that its illegality was necessarily obvious to a reasonable prison official. Consideration of *972 unpublished decisions presented by the parties does not alter our conclusion. We therefore affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment as to Sorrels’s First Amendment claim on grounds of qualified immunity.
B. Dismissal of Procedural Due Process Claim
Sorrels’s second argument is that the district court erred in granting summary judgment for defendants on his procedural due process claim that the
Georgetown Law Journal
was rejected without notice. It is undisputed that “withholding] delivery of [inmate mail] must be accompanied by minimum procedural safeguards.”
Procunier v. Martinez,
An initial question is whether the prison ever in fact received the
Journal.
Because this case was resolved below on a summary judgment motion, all facts must be taken in the light most favorable to Sorrels as the non-moving party.
Lopez v. Smith,
If a meaningful post-deprivation remedy exists for an alleged deprivation of property, then that post-deprivation remedy is sufficient to satisfy the requirements of due process.
Parrott,
Sorrels argues that because refusing delivery of the journal was pursuant to official policy, a post-deprivation remedy is inadequate and he has alleged a deprivation of due process. This argument conflates Sorrels’s First Amendment and procedural due process claims, and it confuses the relevant actions of prison officials— rejecting Sorrels’s mail, as opposed to failing to notify Sorrels of the rejection— underlying each claim.
It was not the prison’s rejection of the publication that makes out a procedural due process claim; it is the lack of notice of that rejection under Procunier. Only if the failure to provide notice was pursuant to prison policy does this constitute a due process violation actionable under § 1983. There is no evidence that this failure was anything other than a random mistake. Defendants maintain that the lack of notice was “a rare and inadvertent action,” and Sorrels admits that he does not “allege or present any evidence that there is a widespread refusal or a custom or practice not to issue mail rejections.”
*973 Thus, while the policy by which the Journal was rejected cannot be characterized as simple negligence — an unauthorized event for which there is a meaningful post-deprivation remedy — Sorrels concedes that the failure to notify of the rejection was unauthorized and contrary to prison policy. It constitutes at most negligence and does not state a due process violation under § 1983. We therefore affirm the district court’s dismissal of Sorrels’s procedural due process claim.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The relevant policy provisions are Washington Department of Corrections Policy 450.100, Procedure (E)(2), which reads, “Publications containing material which ... is deemed to be a threat to legitimate peno-logical objectives as stated in this policy ... may be rejected”; AHCC Field Instruction 450.100, Procedures (B)(2)(s) & (t), which provide that "mail contain[íng] a publication ... not mailed directly by the publisher/retailer” or "mail containing items not ordered, and approved in advance, through Institution-designated channels," "will be refused”; and AHCC Field Instruction 440.000, Procedure (B)(5), which provides that "[a]ll inmate vendor purchases must come from the inmateis account, and ... must cover the full amount of the purchase.”
. As amended, Washington Department of Corrections Policy Directive 450.100, Directive (VII)(B), reads: "Offenders may receive gift subscriptions and/or publications from any party other than from another offender or the friends or family of another unrelated offender.” (emphasis in original).
