Russell T. Palmer, Jr., an inmate of the Bland Correctional Center in Virginia, brought this § 1983 action against Ted S. Hudson, an officer of that facility, alleging, among other things, that Officer Hudson destroyed his property, in a nonroutine shakedown search.
1
The district court granted defendant’s motion for summary
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judgment, reasoning that under
Parratt v.
Taylor,
A.
In
Parratt
the Supreme Court held that the negligent loss of a prisoner’s property by a prison official was not a due process violation when the state provided an adequate postdeprivation remedy.
Parratt’s
scope cannot easily be limited to negligent deprivations of property. For, if the underlying principle is, as Justice Rehnquist stated in a plurality opinion, that when no practical way to provide a predeprivation hearing exists, a postdeprivation hearing will satisfy the dictates of procedural due process, then it as well applies to an intentional deprivation for which meaningful pri- or review was impractical.
Accord Engblom v. Carey,
Nor do we read any of the separate opinions in
Parratt
to give any persuasive basis on which to conclude that its holding does not encompass an intentional tort. It is true that four justices stated that they would limit
Parratt’s
scope to negligent acts, but no persuasive rationale was provided for doing so. Justice Blackmun, with whom Justice White concurred, agreed with the plurality that the impracticality of predeprivation review and the existence of a postdeprivation remedy was relevant to determining if an action violated due process. However, he suggested that the existence of a state tort remedy should not suffice to cure the unconstitutional nature of a state official’s intentional act, since an intentional act would rarely be amenable to prior
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review and since a state tribunal would be unlikely to provide due process when reviewing the deliberate conduct of the state’s employees.
Justice Marshall intimated that he would limit
Parratt’s
scope to negligent deprivations, but he, too, suggested no rationale for the distinction that he was prepared to recognize.
We therefore conclude that plaintiff has no meritorious cause of action under § 1983 for the allegedly intentional destruction of his property.
B.
We conclude, however, that the district court’s entering summary judgment for defendant with regard to an unreasonable search of his property was premature. In his verified complaint plaintiff alleged that “officer Hudson shook down my locker and destroyed ... my property ... as a means of harassment .... The shakedown was no routine shakedown. It was planned and carried out only as harassment.” In moving for summary judgment, defendant filed his affidavit asserting that he and Officer Lephew conducted “a routine search of [plaintiff’s] locker” and that “it was merely a routine search for contraband.” Plaintiff responded with a counteraffidavit reasserting that he “knows and believes that the shakedown of Sept. 16, 1981 was not a routine shakedown, but only a form of harassment by [defendant].”
Thus the record reflects a sharp factual conflict as to whether the search was routine or whether it was conducted solely for purposes of harassment. Summary judgment was therefore precluded, Rule 56 F.R. Civ.P., unless it can be concluded that Palmer had no privacy interest in the locker. While we have never considered this issue, numerous other courts have held that prisoners have a limited privacy interest and should be free from unreasonable searches and unjustifiable confiscations.
3
United States v. Hinckley,
In defining privacy rights in prison we .are guided by the general principle that prisoners should be stripped of only those constitutional rights which would impair prison security or administration.
Cf. Wolff v. McDonnell,
But individual shakedown searches, such as that here, may legitimately be grounded upon either a prison policy of conducting random searches of single cells or blocks of cells to deter or discover the possession of contraband, or upon the existence of some reasonable basis for a belief that the prisoner possesses contraband. We recognize that allowing the prison authorities to adopt a program of random individual searches may provide an increased opportunity for prison officials to abuse that power and utilize searches as a means of harassment; however, the device is of such obvious utility in achieving the goal of prison security that we do not think that the risk outweighs the benefit.
5
Prisoners will be accorded some protection from abusive searches by requiring prison authorities, if the validity of the search is questioned, to prove that adequate grounds existed to justify the search.
Cf. United States v. Lilly,
If the defendant is unable to establish that the search was permissibly motivated and conducted in a reasonable manner, then the plaintiff is entitled to at least nominal damages. In an appropriate case where his injury is greater, he may be entitled to both actual and punitive damages.
See United States
v.
Calandra,
Because we conclude that Palmer had a limited privacy right which may have been violated, we reverse the district court’s judgment as to this claim and remand for an evidentiary determination.
AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Palmer’s other claims are without merit and may be disposed of summarily. The district judge properly reasoned that defendant’s actions do not constitute cruel and unusual punishment and that the procedures accorded to Palmer in the disciplinary proceedings suffice under the standard of
Wolff v. McDonnell,
.
See also Gilday v. Boone,
A common argument for so limiting
Parratt
is that extending its scope to intentional acts drastically undercuts the use of § 1983 as a check on wrongdoing by state officials, its congressionally intended purpose.
Howse v. DeBerry Correction Inst., supra; Tarkowski v. Hoogasion, supra; Parker v. Rockefeller, supra.
However, § 1983 is not a remedy for every wrong committed by state officials, it is only a remedy for those wrongs which are of a constitutional dimension or which violate a federal statute.
Parratt,
of course, did not restrict the availability of § 1983 as a remedy for constitutional wrongs. Instead, it held the constitutional requirement of procedural due process to be satisfied if the state provides a post facto remedy for an injury inflicted by an official which was not done pursuant to an established policy and was not amenable to prior control.
Parratt
does not impinge upon the right to a § 1983 remedy for an officially inflicted injury done pursuant to an established procedure, which remains a violation of the requirement of procedural due process,
Logan v. Zimmerman Brush Co.,
. In
Lanza v. New York,
. Denying prisoner privacy rights merely because of the absence of an expectation of privacy is circular reasoning. Prisoners will come to expect that level of privacy which is accorded to them. Giannelli & Gilligan “Prison Searches and Seizures: ‘Locking’ The Fourth Amendment Out of Correctional Facilities”, 62 Va.L. Rev. 1045, 1058-63 (1976).
. Some justification for an absolute prohibition of individual shakedown searches can be found in Delaware v. Prouse, supra, where the Supreme Court invalidated a state program of conducting random spot checks of automobiles, in part because of the inherent danger of arbitrary conduct by the police, despite the admitted utility of such a practice.
