In 1975, the petitioner, William Douglas Davidson, was found guilty of conspiracy to violate federal narcotics laws in a jury trial in the federal district court for the Northern District of Indiana. This court affirmed his conviction.
United States v. Harris,
The petitioner, discontent with the restrictions placed on his access to the court records and the periods of time granted to review them, filed two notices of appeal from the district court’s order. This court in an unpublished order dismissed the appeals for want of appellate jurisdiction. United States v. William Douglas Davidson, Nos. 78-1090, 78-1091 (7th Cir. April 20, 1978). Although our order does not provide a reason for the conclusion that jurisdiction to review the district court’s order was lacking, it is apparent that we accepted the reasoning of the U. S. Attorney that the district court’s order was not a “final decision” within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
In the meantime, the warden of the Marion prison permitted the petitioner to review the court documents for certain periods of time each day under the supervision of prison employees. A log kept by one of those employees indicates that the petitioner consulted the record for a total of forty-nine hours between January 5, 1978, and February 7, 1978. Toward the end of this period, the petitioner initiated suit in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Illinois, seeking to restrain the prison warden from returning the records to the Northern District of Indiana. Judge Foreman of the Eastern District dismissed the petitioner’s suit and the petitioner sought to review his action by way of a petition for a writ of mandamus in this court. This court, in another unpublished order, found no abuse of discretion and refused to issue the writ. United States ex rel. William Douglas Davidson v. George Wilkinson, Warden et al., Misc.No. 78-8077 (7th Cir. May 24, 1978).
An understanding of the contentions of the parties as to the appealability question and the merits starts with our decision in
Rush v. United States,
We vacated the district court’s order and remanded for further proceedings with directions. Our opinion indicates that jurisdiction was invoked under 28 U.S.C. § 2253.
1.
Appealability.
The
Rush
opinion did not examine the court’s jurisdiction to review the action of the district court other than to cite 28 U.S.C. § 2253, and it cannot be regarded as determinative of the question in this case. In
Rush
the district court treated the petitioners’ motion as one for relief pursuant to § 2255. Thus jurisdiction did lie in this court under § 2253 providing for review of “the final order” in a habeas corpus proceeding.
Rush,
however, went beyond merely reversing the district court’s judgment. It recognized the rights of indigent prisoners to access to court documents prior to filing § 2255 motions. That is precisely the right that the petitioner relies on in this case. Because § 2255 has not as yet been invoked, § 2253 provides no basis for this court’s jurisdic
Had the petitioner filed a § 2255 motion and then been refused permission to inspect the court’s documents, the trial court’s order would be in the nature of a discovery order entered in the course of an action. Such orders are not in the usual case independently appealable and the petitioner would probably have to wait until final judgment and urge the district court’s action as a basis for reversal. In the present case, however, no § 2255 action has been filed: The sole right asserted by the petitioner is the right to inspect public documents prior to initiating a § 2255 action in the district court. As such this case falls within an exception to the general rule barring immediate review of discovery orders. “Discovery judgments may also be subject to final judgment appeal if production of information is found to be the sole object of the district court proceeding.” 15 C. Wright, A. Miller, & E. Cooper, Federal Practice and Procedure § 3914 at 578 (1976). Orders granting or denying petitions to perpetuate testimony pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 27 and requests for letters rogatory,
see id.
at 28(b)(3), for example, are generally regarded as immediately appealable. Here, although the petitioner’s ultimate goal is to attack his judgment of conviction, the only right he presently asserts is the right to review further the documents underlying that conviction. We hold that the district court’s order denying him that right is a “final decision” within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
Cf. Jones v. Superintendent,
2. The Merits. We do not regard this appeal as requiring that we pass on the correctness of the “preliminary procedure” established by the district court. 3 Although the U. S. Attorney maintains that the petitioner has failed to establish that the records which he seeks are unobtainable from his trial and appellate counsel, the district court did permit the petitioner to review the records once. Therefore, the district court implicitly decided that the petitioner satisfied whatever preliminary showing is necessary to invoke his right to see the documents. 4 Instead, we regard this appeal as raising the question of whether the restrictions placed by Judge Sharp on the petitioner’s access to the records is in conformity with our opinion in Rush.
The propriety
of the
trial court’s order placing the court records in the custody of the prison warden and providing that .the petitioner would have access to them only under the supervision of an official of the prison cannot be doubted. In
Rush
we stated that when granting a prisoner access to court documents, the district court should
When the party withdrawing the record is incarcerated, the clerk, on the order of the court, will send the record to the warden of the institution with the request that the record be made available to the party under supervised conditions and be returned to this court before a specified date.
As the district court noted, “the court must be concerned with the security of the records in its possession. A court must be concerned that some defendants might utilize the opportunities afforded by the procedures enunciated in
Rush
to alter or destroy valuable portions of the record.”
The questions which cannot be answered so categorically are (1) whether the particular time allotted by the district court for the petitioner’s review of the records — 30 days — -was unreasonably short and (2) whether the district court erred in refusing to grant the petitioner’s motion for an extension of that time. We believe both of these questions are reviewable only for abuse of discretion. Moreover, when, as here, the trial judge who makes the initial determination also presided over the proceedings the records of which are sought, his judgment on the length of time necessary to review the records is entitled to considerable weight on review.
The purpose of our decision in
Rush
was to afford indigent prisoners some means of obtaining the facts necessary to draft post-conviction motions for relief from their convictions or sentences. A section 2255 motion need only “set forth in summary form the facts” supporting the movant’s grounds for relief. Rules Governing Section 2255 Proceedings, Rule 2(b). Once a § 2255 motion is filed, 28 U.S.C. § 753(f) provides the funds for a transcript if “the suit or appeal is not frivolous and the transcript is needed to decide the issue presented by the suit.” In light of the rather limited purpose of affording prisoners access to court documents, the 30 day period granted here was not unreasonably short. The petitioner alleges that the court records are voluminous — some 16,000 pages by his estimate. Some of these records, however, should prove of only marginal utility to the petitioner because they concern H-74-Cr-56, a trial from which he was severed early in the proceedings. See
United States v. Harris,
Similarly, we cannot say that the district court abused its discretion in refusing to grant the petitioner an extension of time to see the records. The petitioner’s motion merely requests more time. It does not explain why 30 days was insufficient. Nor does it suggest any particular ground for relief which the petitioner hopes to pursue and for which additional review of the rec
Accordingly, the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Notes
. The complete text of the order is as follows:
It is now the ORDER of this Court that the Clerk of this Court shall deliver by certified mail the record and transcript of this case as it pertains to this defendant to the Warden of the Federal Penitentiary in Marion, Illinois. Furthermore, the Warden is now Ordered to maintain custody and control of the record and transcript for a period of thirty (30) days following which the Warden is required to
return the record and transcript by certified mail to the Clerk of this Court. The Warden shall allow the defendant Davidson access to the record and transcript only under the direct supervision of an official of the prison and at such times, places and circumstances as the Warden shall deem necessary to insure that the record and transcript shall remain intact without alteration, destruction or other change.
. The Eighth Circuit has declined to follow.
Rush. See United States v. Losing,
that a prisoner has no absolute right to a transcript to assist him in the preparation of a collateral attack on his conviction, and that constitutional requirements are met by providing such materials only after judicial certification that they are required to decide the issues presented by a non-frivolous pending case.
. The district court imposed the following requirements before affording the petitioner access to the court’s records:
1. The defendant must exhaust his private sources of access to transcripts and records of the proceedings through and from his trial and appellate counsel.
2. The defendant must set forth his efforts to exhaust his personal sources, and the results thereof, as part of any subsequent application to this court.
3. The defendant must make some showing as to the purpose for which the transcripts are sought from the court.
. In any event, the district court’s “preliminary procedure” does seem to conform with the factual premises underlying our opinion in Rush. The Rush opinion’s equal protection rationale depends on the implication of a fundamental right, i. e., the right to meaningful access to the courts. Thus, it would seem necessary in order to invoke the right that a prisoner indicate that the records are necessary to file some sort of action in the courts. In Rush, the prisoners indicated their intention to seek post-conviction relief. Second, Rush’s holding was premised on the unavailability of obtaining access to the information contained in the court records by other means. The petitioners there did not have a copy of the court records. Nor did their attorneys who represented them in their direct appeals. Finally, the petitioners in Rush did not have the financial resources to retain counsel and thus to obtain vicarious access to the court documents.
. The district court’s order delegating to the prison warden the power to determine the time and place that the petitioner would be permitted to review the transcript also seems permissible.
