Thomas Smith, an Illinois state prison inmate, claims he and other inmates in protee-tive custody were denied meaningful access to the courts. We hold that the prison did not deny Smith meaningful access, but we also hold that the class action status of the litigation is void.
I. Background
From 1980 to 1992, Smith was a prisoner at Menard Correctional Center (MCC), a maximum security state prison in Menard, Illinois. Prison officials placed Smith in the protective custody unit (PCU), where prisoners were segregated from the general population for their own protection. The prison established the PCU pursuant to a federal court consent decree (unrelated to this litigation), into which it entered in 1981.
MCC maintained a fully stocked law library for prisoners to use. The law library was available to general population inmates five days a week for six hours a day. Up to twenty-five inmates at a time could browse freely. However, because inmates in the PCU could not safely mix with general population inmates, MCC constructed five wire mesh cells inside a room attached to the library. PCU inmates using the library were locked in those cells, and legal materials were delivered to them through a slot in the wire mesh.
PCU inmates could therefore not browse in the library; instead, non-inmate law librarians, as well as trained inmate law clerks, provided research and document preparation assistance to them. This assistance included bringing them books they wanted, both case reporters and finding aids such as law digests. PCU inmates could have as many books as they wanted in their library cells at one time. The library also maintained a “missing case file,” updated twice a week, containing photocopies of cases inmates had torn out of case reporters.
A PCU inmate who wanted to use the library could either notify prison staff, notify inmate law clerks, or place a note in a special box by the PCU cellhouse door. PCU inmates had access to the library five days a week for approximately three hours a day,
Smith is an accomplished “jailhouse lawyer,” although professional counsel has represented him for almost all of this litigation. From the time he entered the prison system until 1991, Smith had filed 97 lawsuits, and he routinely assisted other inmates in research and case preparation.
On June 5, 1985, Smith filed a suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against various defendants connected -with the prison, alleging that they had infringed his right of access to the courts. The case crawled along; Smith added more defendants and more factual allegations, and asked that the case be certified as a class action, with himself as class representative. On September 11, 1989, a magistrate judge certified the ease as a class action and granted a preliminary injunction. The preliminary injunction required that PCU inmates get ten hours per week of unlimited access to the library.
On March 30, 1994, a magistrate judge granted summary judgment for all the private defendants, and, on September 26, 1994, he dismissed the case against the state defendants — MCC and the Illinois Department of Corrections. Smith appeals only the summary judgment in favor of the individual defendants.
II. Analysis
We review a district court’s grant of summary judgment de novo. Hedberg v. Indiana Bell,
A. Appellate Jurisdiction
United States magistrate judges have overseen this case from its very early stages. For a magistrate judge to have the power to enter a final judgment, each party to litigation must explicitly consent. 28 U.S.C. § 636(c); Mark I, Inc. v. Gruber,
The original parties to this litigation jumped through the required hoops. On May 5, 1988, all defendants named at the time executed a written consent. On May 17, 1988, Smith executed a consent. However, Smith added eight more defendants in his Third Amended Complaint, filed April 6, 1990. Those defendants did not consent at the time, though they were represented by the same attorneys from the State of Illinois. Nonetheless, the case proceeded.
If the seven additional defendants had not submitted a belated consent, that would be the end of it. See Jaliwala,
King controls the case before us as well. “The statute does not require a specific form or time of consent....” King,
The problem with accepting late consents, as Smith points out, is that it allows parties to play strategy games. If a litigant knows that he or someone aligned on his side has not consented, he can keep silent, and grant his consent if the magistrate judge decides in his favor, but withhold his consent and get another crack at the piñata if the magistrate judge decides against him. See Caprera v. Jacobs,
B. Class Notification
The magistrate judge first certified this case as a class action on September 11, 1989, under Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(b)(2). Rule 23(b)(2) class actions generally ask only for declaratory or injunctive relief. Fontana v. Elrod,
Class actions under Rule 23(b)(3) allow class members to recover damages. However, members of a Rule 23(b)(3) class must receive reasonable notice and an opportunity to opt out; that is an absolute requirement for a court to exercise jurisdiction over those class members. Eisen v. Carlisle & Jacquelin, 417 U.S. 156, 173,
On July 15, 1991, the magistrate judge amended his earlier certification in a two-line order at Smith’s request, adding “certification under Rule 23(b)(3)” as well as the new claim for money damages. The intended effect was unclear, but, in the context, the judge’s language implied that he was substituting certification under Rule 23(b)(3) for certification under Rule 23(b)(2). He was apparently not creating a type of hybrid class action or creating sub-classes, see Kyriazi,
Smith thereupon made various motions to notify the class, and the defendants resisted each motion. The magistrate judge found no fault with the notification demands, but the class notification proceeded at a glacial pace. As a result, summary judgment was granted before notification was made, and therefore the court dismissed Smith’s requests for notification as moot. They were moot, of course, but the class certification was void because no notice was ever given to the absent members of Smith’s class. Therefore, insofar as the magistrate judge’s order purports to rule against the entire class, it is in error. See Gert,
C. Access to Courts
Smith claims that the system of library use MCC set up for PCU inmates violated his constitutional right of “meaningful” access to the courts. See Bounds v. Smith,
At least in civil cases such as § 1983 suits, the right to access is meant to allow a prisoner to bring claims through the preliminary stages in the courts, not to allow full-fledged self-representation. “[OJur main concern here is protecting the ability of an inmate to prepare a petition or complaint.” Bounds,
Deciding whether a penal system provides adequate access means evaluating a legal access program as a whole, rather than requiring it to contain any particular service. Bounds, 430 U.S. at 832,
To show a violation of the right of access to the courts, Smith must meet both parts of a two-part test. Jenkins v. Lane,
In Shango,
As in Shango, Smith and the other PCU inmates at MCC had meaningful access to law research materials. Trained non-inmate librarians and inmate law clerks assisted the PCU inmates at MCC. The inmates could obtain any material they needed or wanted from the library, including digests, treatises, and a full range of case reporters. The hours Smith says PCU inmates could use the library were constitutionally adequate. In fact, Smith does not really argue much that the hours were insufficient; he concentrates on the physical limitations and inconveniences the system of separate cells imposed. However, in Campbell, 787 F.2d at
Naturally, sitting locked in a cell is less pleasant than getting the free run of the library (though not as unpleasant as being attacked by general population inmates while in the library), and the segregation may have slowed legal preparation. Smith agrees it did not stop legal preparation, and we have held that even highly restrictive regulations can be completely compatible with meaningful access. Hossman,
Smith emphasizes that PCU inmates locked in cells who wished to use the toilet were escorted out and not allowed to return to the library that day. MCC instituted this policy to minimize PCU inmate contact with the general population when a PCU inmate used the library toilet and was attacked by other inmates. To allow PCU inmates to urinate, the librarians placed cans in the cells (after some inmates had relieved themselves directly on the floor of the cells). Smith calls this practice cruel. While unpleasant, and perhaps not the best solution, this is not an Eighth Amendment case, and prisoners still had just as much opportunity for meaningful access. See Campbell,
Smith failed to meet his burden of coming forward with adequate evidence to support the existence of a genuine issue of material fact.
We Modify the district court’s order to the extent it purports to apply to members of the class other than Smith. We AffiRM the order as modified.
Notes
. Around the time of the injunction, MCC eliminated the in-libraiy cells and began providing night hours for PCU inmates to browse in the library. The preliminary injunction was dissolved upon the entry of summary judgment for defendants in this case, and the record does not indicate the current structure for library use by PCU inmates. Smith does argue, somewhat desultorily, that the new system also infringed his rights and was not in keeping with the preliminary injunction. He did not bring an action under the injunction, however. Our opinion today concentrates on the more restrictive pre-1989 library system, but our holding that Smith was not denied adequate access applies to the system at all times relevant to the litigation.
. The magistrate judge might have certified the part of the suit asking for equitable relief under Rule 23(b)(2) and certified the part of the suit asking for monetary relief under Rule 23(b)(3). Class members would still have been entitled to notice as to the monetary relief portions of the suit. We think that if a complexity such as a hybrid class action is to be created, it must be dear on the record that the district court intends that effect.
. It is not entirely clear whether the right to access is based upon due process or equal protection guarantees. See Murray v. Giarratano,
. Shango was not an appeal from a summary judgment, but from a verdict against the inmates. Because of the different standards of review, Shango does not dictate the result we reach today, but it is persuasive.
. Smith stated that some of the inmate law clerks were corrupt and incompetent, but he also stated that therefore he insisted that the librarians, not the law clerks, provide almost all of his services. Smith stated that he once could not immediately get notary services, but he admitted that he failed to pursue known avenues for getting notary service; instead, he "just stopped.” He also says he had "difficulty” getting typing paper, but admits he was able to get paper when needed. Smith concludes that even though he could get what he needed, the fact that it was not as easy as it might have been denied him meaningful access. These arguments create no genuine issue of material fact; they are just the sort of conclusory allegations summary judgment is designed to defeat, as is his argument that he had an "overall inability to conduct legal research.”
. Smith points us to DeMallory v. Cullen,
.Smith cites in places to material not before the district court, such as part of a 1991 deposition. He may not, of course, rely on such evidence in his appeal to this court. Henn v. Nat'l Geographic Soc'y,
. As the district court also held, Smith additionally fails the second part of the meaningful access test, that he must have suffered some real detriment. Kincaid v. Vail,
. Our primary holding upholds the summary judgment on a different ground than that relied upon by the district court. Mendelovitz v. Vosicky,
