Lead Opinion
Arizona transferred inmate Alfonso Sisne-ros to the Iowa State Penitentiary (“ISP”) under the Interstate Corrections Compact
I. Background.
Sisneros was transferred from Arizona to Iowa in January 1991 pursuant to a Compact agreement between the two States. See Iowa Code Ann. § 913.2, Art. III. In the first six months after his transfer, Sisneros filed numerous “kites” challenging (i) adverse rulings by the no-eontact visitation committee, (ii) ISP’s English-only rule, and (iii) a decision by ISP’s Native American Consultant that Sisneros, who is of Hispanic and Native American descent, must furnish a Bureau of Indian Affairs enrollment number in order to participate in ISP sweat lodge ceremonies.
In September 1991, Sisneros filed this action, claiming that the English-only rule violates his First Amendment and equal protection rights. In November 1991, he sought an order holding prison officials in contempt of the district court’s consent decree in another ease because the Native American Consultant would not grant him access to sweat lodge ceremonies until Sisneros disclosed his BIA enrollment number. In December, the Iowa Department of Corrections asked the State of Arizona to “find an alternate placement” for Sisneros, explaining he “has not been a very cooperative guest.” He was transferred back to Arizona on February 5, 1992, and filed a supplemental complaint alleging that this transfer was in retaliation for his “litigation activities.”
Following discovery, both sides moved for summary judgment. The district court granted summary judgment for Sisneros on his retaliation claim, concluding: “defendants failed to articulate, let alone establish, a non-retaliatory reason for transferring Sisneros back to Arizona in February 1992.”
II. The Retaliatory Transfer Claim.
Prison officials may not punish an inmate because he exercises his constitutional right of access to the courts. Goff v. Burton,
In a retaliatory transfer case, “the burden is on the prisoner to prove that but for an unconstitutional, retaliatory motive the transfer would have not occurred.” Goff,
The Fourth Circuit has noted, in the context of prison discipline, that inmate claims of unlawful retaliation must be treated with skepticism because “[e]very act of discipline ... is by definition ‘retaliatory’ in the sense that it responds directly to prisoner misconduct.” Cochran v. Morris,
This case again illustrates the distinction. In his lawsuits, Sisneros demanded the right to correspond in the Spanish and Apache languages, and to participate in ISP Native American ceremonies. Apparently, his former prison in Arizona had accommodated these desires. But at ISP, a Statewide rule required English-only correspondence. Regarding Native American ceremonies, ISP’s Native American Consultant insisted that Sisneros furnish a BIA enrollment number. Sisneros demanded that ISP officials overrule the Consultant. But the consent decree leaves such issues to the Consultant’s .discretion, so ISP officials could not satisfy Sisneros’s objections to the Consultant’s interpretation of the decree. In these circumstances, the nature of Sisneros’s claims — not simply the fact that he sued to enforce them — made it penologically appropriate to transfer him back to Arizona. Cf. Gomez v. Grossheim,
Defendants further argue that they are entitled to summary judgment because Sisneros has failed to prove unconstitutional retaliation. Although summary judgment is not often appropriate when motive is at issue, the undisputed facts in this record arguably establish that Sisneros cannot satisfy Goff’s rigorous but for test because his transfer back to Arizona was motivated by rational
But we need not decide whether defendants are entitled to summary judgment on the merits of this claim. At this point in the litigation, Sisneros seeks only damages. Defendants are entitled to qualified immunity from any damage claim if they “demonstrate ‘the objective legal reasonableness of the[ir] action assessed in light of the legal rules that were clearly established at the time it was taken.’ ” Latimore v. Widseth,
The decision of the district court is affirmed in part and reversed in part, and the case is remanded with instructions to enter final judgment in favor of defendants. We commend the members of the University of Iowa College of Law Clinical Law Programs for their excellent representation of Mr. Sisneros.
Notes
. On appeal, defendants argue that the italicized portion of this statement means that the district court placed the burden of proof as to retaliatory motive on defendants, contrary to our decision in Goff v. Burton,
. Sisneros also cross appealed the dismissal of his challenge to the English-only rule. However, after Arizona transferred Sisneros to a third State, at his request the district court dissolved its injunction requiring defendants "to use all available efforts to secure Sisneros’ return to Iowa.” Sisneros then advised this court that his English-only claim is moot, and therefore we do not consider it.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting in part.
I respectfully dissent from that part of the court’s opinion which reverses the grant of summary judgment to Mr. Sisneros on his retaliatory transfer claim. In my view, the district court was correct when it held, after reviewing all of the summary judgment record, that there was “not a shred of evidence that Hedgepeth and Nix had any other reason than retaliation for transferring Sisneros from Iowa back to Arizona.” (Appellants’ Addend, at 35.)
The right of inmates to have access to the courts “means that inmates must have a ‘reasonably adequate opportunity to present claimed violations of fundamental constitutional rights to the courts.’” Sterling v. Wood,
Q. What do you mean by obnoxious?
A, Just kind of like you would expect reasonable behavior, reasonable compliance with being here at ISP because as we have said a time or two, you are a guest, if you don’t like the way the rules are you could have asked to go back and if you don’t like what we are doing here whether it be the rules with respect to writing or anything else, it is just too*754 bad, go back to Arizona, so go back there.
Q. But what you mean by obnoxious is he was complaining about things here?
A. Yes, complaining, obnoxious, I guess that they fall in the same category.
* # * *
Q. Is putting in grievances about potential violations of rights being ungracious?
A. I didn’t say it was.
Q. But is it?
A. Filing a grievance is not being ungracious, it is just being totally obnoxious, complaining and all of that sort of stuff and not being willing to accept our rules, that is too bad, but all of that aside, we still can send him home for any reason or no reason.
(Dep. of Paul Hedgepeth, Sept. 29, 1992, at 55; 62-63.)
The district court also correctly applied the “but for” test set out in Goff v. Burton,
With respect to the defendants’ claim to qualified immunity, the court’s reliance on the total discretion given to the receiving state by the Compact to send back a prisoner any time it wants to do so fails to recognize that that discretion cannot be exercised in retaliation for the prisoner’s exercise of his constitutional rights to bring his complaints to a court. Sisneros had the same rights when confined in Iowa as any other Iowa prisoner. See Iowa Code § 247.2(IV) (1991) (currently § 913.2(IV)) (“All inmates who may be confined pursuant to the provisions of the compact ... shall be treated equally with such similar inmates of the receiving state ...”). The law in this circuit was clearly established in 1979 in a ease from Iowa that an Iowa prisoner states a valid cause of action when he alleges he was transferred in retaliation for the exercise of his constitutional right of access to the courts. Garland v. Polley,
In my view, a reasonable prison administrator in Iowa, charged with knowing the law governing his conduct, would have known in 1992 that any transfer of a prisoner solely because he had exercised his First Amendment constitutional right of access to the courts was a prohibited retaliatory transfer subjecting the administrator to liability under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
