Robert SMITH-BEY, Appellant,
v.
George PETSOCK, Superintendent, Thomas Seiverling, Complaint
Officer, Robert Coward, Mail Department Official, Anthony
Pace, Business Manager, Sergeant Markovich, Erskind Deramus,
Deputy Commissioner, and Ronald J. Marks, Commissioner.
No. 83-5825.
United States Court of Appeals,
Third Circuit.
Submitted Under Third Circuit Rule 12(6)
May 14, 1984.
Decided Aug. 23, 1984.
Robert Smith-Bey, pro se.
LeRoy S. Zimmerman, Atty. Gen., Allen C. Warshaw, Andrew S. Gordon, Sr. Deputy Attys. Gen., Sheila M. Ford, Deputy Atty. Gen., Harrisburg, Pa., for appellees.
Before GIBBONS, GARTH and MARIS, Circuit Judges.
OPINION OF THE COURT
MARIS, Circuit Judge.
Robert Smith-Bey, a prisoner in the State Correctional Institution at Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, appeals from the district court's order of November 8, 1983 denying him court-appointed counsel.
Proceeding pro se, Smith-Bey filed a civil rights complaint in the district court against various officers and employees of the Pittsburgh prison and the Commissioner and Deputy Commissioner of the Pennsylvania Bureau of Corrections. The complaint charges that the defendants, on November 19, 1982, maliciously and in reckless disregard of Smith-Bey's rights failed to follow his instructions and send an envelope containing legal papers addressed to this court by certified mail, return receipt requested. On the same date, Smith-Bey charges, an amount attributable to the cost of such certified mail, $3.95, was deducted from his inmate account. He seeks a declaratory judgment that the defendants acts violated his constitutional right of access to the courts, compensatory and punitive damages and enjoinment of any retaliatory activity by defendants.
The district court granted Smith-Bey in forma pauperis status but denied his request for court-appointed counsel which he sought under 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1915(d). Magistrate Mitchell, to whom the case had been referred, denied counsel, without prejudice to subsequent reconsideration, stating that counsel would not, in his view, materially further the litigation and stating also the policy of the court of limiting plaintiffs' request for attorneys to cases presenting a colorable claim in which the plaintiff appears to lack the capacity to represent himself adequately. Judge Diamond affirmed Magistrate Mitchell's order denying counsel for the reasons given by the magistrate. This appeal followed.
Initially, appellees urge us to reconsider the question of our authority to entertain immediate appeals from orders denying indigents counsel, which question we decided affirmatively in Ray v. Robinson,
Our jurisdiction is confined, under 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1291, to appeals from final decisions of the district courts which bring before us the propriety of those and all intermediate orders entered by the district court during the course of the proceeding terminating with the entry of the final decision. This restriction on our jurisdiction has as its purpose the avoidance of delaying, costly and sometimes unnecessary piecemeal appeals. See Flanagan v. United States, supra, --- U.S. ----,
In Cohen and subsequent cases, the Supreme Court has emphasized the rarity of appealable interlocutory orders. Flanagan v. United States, supra, --- U.S. at ----,
In Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Risjord,
Our cases, however, require much more before a ruling may be considered "effectively unreviewable" absent immediate appeal.
To be appealable as a final collateral order, the challenged order must constitute "a complete, formal and, in the trial court, final rejection," Abney v. United States, supra,
On the contrary, should the Court of Appeals conclude after the trial has ended that permitting continuing representation was prejudicial error, it would retain its usual authority to vacate the judgment appealed from and order a new trial.
In Ray v. Robinson,
The effect of the disqualification [of counsel] on the defense, and hence whether the asserted right [to counsel] has been violated, cannot be fairly assessed until the substance of the prosecution's and defendant's cases is known. In this respect the right claimed by petitioners is analogous to the speedy trial right. In United States v. MacDonald, supra,
This is true, a fortiori, in this civil case in which the plaintiff under section 1915(d) does not have the right to appointed counsel but may only succeed on appeal if he can show that the absence of appointed counsel has so prejudiced him that its denial amounts to an abuse of discretion on the part of the trial judge.
This brings us to the third Cohen requirement, that the order, to be reviewable on interlocutory appeal, must be effectively unreviewable on appeal from the subsequent final judgment. We held in Ray, that an order denying counsel was effectively unreviewable because a decision on a party's need for counsel must be made before trial if it is to be of any practical value to him.
In Flanagan v. United States the government moved in the district court to have disqualified, for potential conflicts of interest, counsel who proposed to represent all four defendants in a criminal trial. The district court granted the government's motion over the defendants' objections and the defendants took an immediate appeal to this court. We held that we had jurisdiction over the appeal but the Supreme Court subsequently reversed us, holding that an order disqualifying counsel is not one of that small class of interlocutory orders which are immediately appealable.
Even before examining the exposition of the Supreme Court's decision in its opinion in Flanagan in order to assess its impact upon the present appeal, it is quite clear to us that an order disqualifying a party's choice of counsel is not easily distinguishable from an order denying counsel. The outcome of the proceedings in the district court may be significantly affected in much the same manner by both pretrial decisions regarding counsel. In any event, we view the Flanagan decision on the appealability of orders disqualifying counsel as more relevant to the disposition of the question of the appealability of orders denying counsel than was, for example, Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Risjord, supra, which dealt with the appealability of orders refusing to disqualify counsel.
Moreover, while it is true, as we said in Ray v. Robinson with regard to denial of counsel, that a party's need for counsel must be decided prior to trial if it is to be of practical use to him, this same point can be made regarding disqualification of counsel. However, in Flanagan v. United States, the Court clearly indicated that the remedy of a new trial is available upon posttrial review of an erroneous order disqualifying counsel. The Court said (p. ----,
Moreover, an appellate court's reversal of a disqualification order would not result in dismissal of the prosecution. The prosecution would continue, though only after long delay.
This could obviously only be by way of a new trial. We think it is clear that the remedy of a new trial is equally available, after trial and upon appeal from the final judgment, to redress erroneous denial of counsel. See Appleby v. Meachum,
Similarly, post-conviction review [of a disqualification order] is concededly effective to the extent that petitioners' asserted right is like the Sixth Amendment rights violated when a trial court denies appointment of counsel altogether ...
--- U.S. ----,
Accordingly, we hold that the order here sought to be reviewed may be reviewed only on appeal from the final judgment to be entered in the case. Since that order does not meet conditions laid down in the Cohen case, it is not reviewable by interlocutory appeal. We accordingly lack jurisdiction of the appeal presently before us.
The appeal will be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction.
GIBBONS, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
In my view the issue of appealability is controlled by our decision in Ray v. Robinson,
The majority errs by concluding that Flanagan v. United States, --- U.S. ----,
This panel is not free to disregard the binding Third Circuit precedent in Ray v. Robinson. Since the order is appealable, I would dispose of the appeal on the merits. On this record I would hold that the trial court did not abuse its discretion in denying the motion to appoint counsel. Thus I dissent from the judgment dismissing the appeal.
