The plaintiff, Clyde Wagner, a prisoner in the Illinois State Penitentiary at Joliet, Illinois, filed this acton in the District Court against the defendant, Joseph E. Ragen, Warden, alleging that Ragen, as warden, had deprived the plaintiff of certain property without due process and had also deprived the plaintiff of certain rights in violation of the Civil Rights Act, 42 U.S.C.A. § 1981 et seq.
The alleged actions of the defendant to which the plaintiff objected were the warden’s refusal to permit the plaintiff’ “to draw inventions and send them to the Federal Government”; the refusal to permit the plaintiff “to register" inven-' tions in the U. S. Patent Office” or “to consign his inventions to different Manufacturers” who wished- to manufacture and sell them; and, finally, the claiming and' seizing by the defendant for the' *295 state of personal property of the plaintiff consisting of oil paintings which the plaintiff had painted while he was in prison. The plaintiff was in prison under a sentence of 100 years for shooting a police officer.
The complaint asked that the court declare the rights of the plaintiff; that the defendant be enjoined from further denial of plaintiff’s rights; and that the plaintiff be awarded damages for the past denial of such rights. The plaintiff claims that the District Court had jurisdiction of this action because Warden Ragen had deprived him of rights guaranteed to him by the Federal Constitution and by the Civil Rights Act.
The federal courts have held that they do not have the power to control or regulate the ordinary internal management and discipline of prisons operated by the states. Siegel v. Ragen, 7 Cir.,
' In a companion case, Morris v. Igoe, 7 Cir.,
This same principle has also been followed where the prisoner was incarcerated in a federal penitentiary. In Stroud v. Swope, Warden, 9 Cir.,
There was another valid reason for dismissing this complaint. A few months before this complaint was filed this plaintiff had filed another complaint, No. 53-C-1827, in the same court against the same defendant alleging violation by the defendant in the same manner of the same rights of the plaintiff as are alleged in the instant complaint. That complaint was dismissed for failing to state a cause of action. No appeal was taken from that judgment of dismissal. It follows that the judgment of dismissal on the former complaint was an adjudication against the plaintiff on that action and, therefore, is conclusive against the plaintiff on the complaint in the instant case which presents the same questions and issues. Courts are not required to repeatedly determine the same questions and the same issues between the same parties.
The judgment is
Affirmed.
