Texas Department of Criminal Justice inmates Van Lee Brewer and Claude Harris brought this § 1983 civil rights action against the mail-room supervisor and a mail-room clerk at TDCJ’s Price Daniel Unit, alleging constitutional violations arising from the handling of their mail. Concluding that the inmates had failed to state a cognizable constitutional claim for denial of access to the courts, the district court granted the Appel-lees’ motion for summary judgment and dismissed the action. Brewer and Harris appeal. We affirm in part and reverse in part the judgment of the district court.
I. BACKGROUND
Proceeding pro se and in forma pauperis, Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ) inmates Van Lee Brewer and Claude Harris (Appellants) filed this § 1983 civil rights action against Brenda Wilkinson and several other unnamed employees of the mailroom at the TDCJ Price Daniel Unit (Appellees) seeking money damages for alleged violations of the Appellants’ constitutional rights. Specifically, Appellants allege *818 that Appellees violated their constitutional rights by opening incoming legal mail from various courts, attorneys, and government officials and inspecting it for contraband outside of their presence. Brewer complains that thirteen such items of incoming legal mail were opened and inspected outside of his presence between January 1990 and March 1991; Harris complains of one such instance, which allegedly occurred on November 15, 1990. 1 Appellants contend that Appellees’ conduct infringed upon their First Amendment rights and their right of access to the courts, which is protected by the First and Fourteenth Amendments.
According to Appellants, the Appellees’ acts with regard to their incoming legal mail “denied [Appellants’] [right] to be free from arbitrary and unjustified governmental interference [and] denied [Appellants’] rights to have ‘confidential communications’ with the Courts and Attorneys.” Appellants do not, however, specifically allege that Appellees censored their incoming legal mail.
Appellants also allege constitutional violations arising from the handling of their nonlegal mail. Brewer complains that, on “numerous” occasions, incoming and outgoing correspondence with his wife was not delivered. Harris complains that ten specific items of incoming general correspondence were intentionally “withheld” for over seventy-two hours before delivery. According to Appellants, these actions violated their rights under the First and Fourteenth Amendments. Appellants further allege that Appel-lees’ handling of their mail, legal and nonlegal, violated TDCJ correspondence rules. 2
Wilkinson filed an answer in which she denied Appellants’ allegations and raised the defense of qualified immunity. Wilkinson also moved to dismiss the action on the grounds that Appellants’ claims against her in her official capacity were barred by the Eleventh Amendment, that Appellants had failed to plead facts sufficient to overcome her plea of qualified immunity, and that Appellants had failed to state a cognizable claim for violation of any constitutionally protected right. The district court then referred the matter to a magistrate, who permitted Appellants to supplement their complaint in response to Wilkinson’s plea of qualified immunity.
After considering Wilkinson’s motion in light of the supplemental pleading, the magistrate issued proposed findings, conclusions, and recommendations, in which he concluded that Appellants’ allegations regarding the opening of incoming legal mail stated a claim for “a violation of a clearly established law.” The magistrate therefore found that Appellants had pleaded facts that, if proven, would be sufficient to overcome Wilkinson’s claim of qualified immunity. Accordingly, the magistrate recommended that Appellants be allowed to proceed with their action. Wilkinson objected, and, after a de novo review of the record, the district court adopted the magistrate’s report and scheduled the case for trial. 3
*819 Wilkinson subsequently moved for summary judgment. Wilkinson argued that she was entitled to judgment as a matter of law on Appellants’ aecess-to-the-courts claim because Appellants had alleged no actual prejudice or harm resulting from Appellees’ conduct. Wilkinson also reasserted her Eleventh Amendment and qualified immunity defenses. Appellants responded to Wilkinson’s motion and, with the permission of the court, amended their complaint, adding C. Callo-way, a mail-room clerk, as a named defendant, adding allegations that Appellees’ conduct had caused Appellants “mental and emotional distress,” and dropping all claims against Appellees in their official capacities. The Amended Complaint also added an allegation by Brewer that Calloway had opened two items of outgoing — as opposed to incoming — legal correspondence and, at least with respect to one of those mailings, removed a “writ of mandamus,” thereby not “allow[ing] the Court to receive said materials.” 4 According to Brewer, Calloway’s conduct infringed upon his right of access to the courts and his First Amendment right of free speech. Calloway filed a timely answer, in which she raised the defense of qualified immunity, and joined in the pending motion for summary judgment.
On August 10, 1991, the district court granted Appellees’ motion for summary judgment as to all of Appellants’ claims. In granting the motion, the court first concluded that Appellees were not entitled to summary judgment on the issue of qualified immunity. The court reasoned that prisoners have a constitutionally protected right of access to the courts, and that this court, in
Guajardo v. Estelle,
Notwithstanding its conclusion that Appellants had alleged a violation of a clearly established constitutional right, the district court then concluded that summary judgment was proper because Appellants had failed to make out a cognizable constitutional claim. Following
Henthorn v. Swinson,
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
Proceeding on appeal pro se, Appellants argue that the district court erred in granting summary judgment. Specifically, Appellants challenge the district court’s conclusion that they failed to make out a cognizable claim for denial of their right of access to the courts. Appellants also argue that the district court improperly dismissed their other First and Fourteenth Amendment claims.
We review the district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo,
applying the same standard as a district court.
Hanks v. Transcontinental Gas Pipe Line Corp.,
III. QUALIFIED IMMUNITY
Although the district court concluded that Appellees were not entitled to summary judgment on the issue of qualified immunity, we review that conclusion here because the determination of such immunity is a threshold question which must be resolved inasmuch as it determines a defendant’s immunity from suit rather than merely immunity from damages.
See Siegert v. Gilley,
— U.S. -, -,
To determine whether a defendant official is entitled to qualified immunity, a court must first ascertain whether the plaintiff has sufficiently asserted the violation of a constitutional right.
Siegert,
— U.S. at -,
IV. PRISONERS’ LEGAL MAIL CLAIMS
Before we can address whether the Appellants have asserted any cognizable constitutional claims, however, we must examine in detail the rights which Appellants allege have been violated. We must also specifically examine the extent to which a prison regulation or practice may constitutionally impinge upon those rights.
A. Rights Involved in Legal Mail Claims
A prison official’s interference with a prisoner’s legal mail may violate the prisoner’s constitutional right of access to the courts. Additionally, such interference may violate the prisoner’s First Amendment right to free speech — i.e., the right to be free from unjustified governmental interference with communication. We examine each of these rights in turn.
1. Right of Access to the Courts
It is clearly established that prisoners have a constitutionally protected right of access to the courts.
See Bounds v. Smith,
2. Right to Free Speech
The precise contours of a prisoner’s right to free speech are also obscure. The Supreme Court has made it clear, however, that prisoners retain only those First Amendment rights of speech which are “not inconsistent with [their] status as ... prisoner[s] or with the legitimate penological objectives of the corrections system.”
Hudson v. Palmer,
B. The Extent to Which a Prison Regulation or Practice May Impinge Upon Prisoners’ Rights With Respect to Legal Mail
As the above discussion indicates, prisoners’ constitutional rights with respect to legal mail are not absolute. That is, under some circumstances, a prison practice or regulation may, consistently with the constitution, interfere with inmates’ legal mail. The following discussion traces Supreme Court and Fifth Circuit cases dealing with prisoner mail, in an effort to determine the extent to which prison officials may interfere with a prisoner’s legal mail without offending his constitutional rights.
Of course, a prisoner’s claim that interference with his legal mail violated his right of access to the courts is distinct from his claim that such conduct violated his right to free speech. However, because the jurisprudence governing each of these claims has become inextricably intertwined, our discussion includes cases involving access to the courts challenges, as well as cases involving only free speech challenges, to prison practices or regulations that interfere with the ability of prisoners to send or receive mail.
1. Procunier v. Martinez
We begin with the Supreme Court’s decision in
Martinez,
in which the Court invalidated a prison regulation that permitted the censoring of non-legal prisoner mail. In so doing, the Court made it clear that it was basing its inquiry on a somewhat different analytical framework than other federal courts had in previously considering the proper standard of review for constitutional challenges to censorship of prisoner mail.
Martinez,
2. Wolff v. McDonnell
Shortly after deciding
Martinez,
the Court in
Wolff
addressed the narrow issue of whether prison authorities could open letters to an inmate from attorneys in the inmate’s presence or whether such mail had to be delivered unopened “if normal detection techniques fail to indicate contraband.”
Wolff,
In initially reviewing the prisoners’ free speech claim, the Court noted that the “rights of correspondents with prisoners may protect against the censoring of inmate mail, when not necessary to protect legitimate governmental interests.”
Id.
(citing
Martinez,
3. Taylor v. Sterrett
In the wake of the Supreme Court’s decisions in
Martinez
and
Wolff,
this court decided
Sterrett,
which served as the basis for our decision in
Guajardo v. Estelle,
In
Sterrett,
county officials challenged the constitutional basis for restrictions imposed by the district court upon the opening of prisoner mail in the Dallas County Jail.
See Sterrett,
In particular, Sterrett holds that a prisoner’s right of access to the courts requires that incoming legal mail be opened only in the prisoner’s presence. Id. at 475. In so holding, the court observed:
The basic prisoner interest is in uninhibited communication with attorneys, courts, prosecuting attorneys, and probation or parole officers. Both pre-trial detainees and convicted prisoners have a vital need to communicate effectively with these correspondents. This is to insure ultimately that the judicial proceedings brought against or initiated by prisoners are conducted fairly.
Id.
Using
Martinez
as its foundation, the
Ster-rett
court based its holding on its analysis of the restrictions imposed by the district court on the opening of incoming legal mail. The
Sterrett
court thus asserted that “[bjefore procedures that impede a prisoner’s access to the courts may be constitutionally validated, it must be shown that the state’s substantial interests cannot be protected by less restrictive means.”
Sterrett,
•4. Turner v. Safley and Thornburgh v. Abbott
Sterrett’s requirement of the “least restrictive means” and a “substantial or important governmental interest” in the context of prison regulation of legal mail appears to have been modified. In
Thornburgh v. Abbott,
Furthermore, the
Thornburgh
Court made it clear that
Martinez
was not to be read as requiring a “least restrictive means” test to determine the constitutional validity of prison officials’ decisions'.
Thornburgh,
a careful reading of Martinez suggests that our rejection of the regulation at issue resulted not from a least restrictive means requirement, but from our recognition that the regulated activity centrally at issue in that ease — outgoing personal correspondence from prisoners — did not, by its very nature, pose a serious threat to prison order and security.
Id. 10 Although the Court appeared to draw a distinction between incoming and outgoing mail and to preserve the .viability of Martinez with respect to outgoing mail, its “reading” of Martinez in Thornburgh suggests that Turners “legitimate penological interest” test would also be applied to outgoing mail.
5. Prisoners’ Mail Claims After Turner and Thornburgh
The Court’s decision in
Thornburgh
appears to us to have invalidated the reading of
Martinez
which the
Sterrett
court had given it. In adopting
Turner’s,
“legitimate penological interest” standard of review for constitutional challenges to prison regulations or practices,
11
Thornburgh
must be read as modifying
Sterrett
and its progeny, including
Guajardo,
in regard to prison regulations or practices which deal with prisoner mail. That is, in determining the constitutional validity of prison practices that impinge upon a prisoner’s rights with respect to mail, the appropriate inquiry is whether the practice is reasonably related to a legitimate penological interest.
See Jackson v. Cain,
The only distinction that can be made regarding these cases is that Martinez and Thornburgh involved purely First Amendment free speech concerns while Sterrett focused on an access-to-the-courts claim, a claim grounded in both the First and Four *825 teenth Amendments. We view that distinction, however, as not controlling in light of (1) Turners instruction that when a prison practice impinges on inmates’ constitutional rights, whatever those rights might be, such a practice is valid if it is “reasonably related to legitimate penological interests” and (2) the First Amendment implications inherent in both a free speech claim and an aceess-to-the-courts claim. With the foregoing framework in mind, we now analyze Appellants’ legal mail claims.
V. APPELLANTS’ INCOMING LEGAL MAIL CLAIMS
Appellants allege that Appellees opened Appellants’ incoming legal mail and inspected it for contraband outside of their presence, in violation of TDCJ rules and thus their rights of access to the courts and free speech. They do not assert, however, that their ability to prepare or transmit a necessary legal document has been affected by this opening and inspection. Nor do they allege that their mail has been censored. Furthermore, they concede that such mail was opened and inspected for the “legitimate penological objective” of prison security, i.e., to detect contraband.
In light of our discussion in Part IV,
supra,
we thus acknowledge that what we once recognized in
Sterrett
as being “compelled” by prisoners’ constitutional rights— i.e., that a prisoner’s incoming legal mail be opened and inspected only in the prisoner’s presence,
see Sterrett,
VI. APPELLANT BREWER’S OUTGOING LEGAL MAIL CLAIMS
Appellant Brewer’s claim regarding outgoing legal mail poses a different question. Brewer alleges that Appellee Calloway and unnamed others opened and removed material from an outgoing item of legal mail, thereby preventing a “writ of mandamus” from ever arriving in the district court and thus violating his rights of free speech and access to the courts.
We must first emphasize that the Supreme Court in
Thornburgh
made it clear that a distinction still exists between incoming prison mail and outgoing prison mail.
See Thornburgh,
We believe that Appellant Brewer has set forth a cognizable First Amendment claim with respect to his outgoing legal mail. By alleging that Appellee Calloway and others arbitrarily opened an item of his outgoing
*826
legal mail and removed the “writ of mandamus” therein, thus preventing this document from ever arriving in the district court, Brewer has sufficiently alleged that his outgoing legal mail was “censored,” apparently without a legitimate penological-interest. No one has suggested — and Appellant Brewer has not conceded' — that some legitimate pe-nological interest justified the alleged removal of legal material. We additionally stress that for decades this court has acknowledged a prisoner’s right to be free from completely arbitrary censorship of his outgoing mail,
see Sterrett,
We also believe that Appellant Brewer has stated a cognizable constitutional claim for a denial of his right of access to the courts. By claiming that the actions of Calloway and others prevented his “writ of mandamus” from arriving at the district court, Brewer has' sufficiently alleged the element of legal prejudice, as required by this court in
Hent-hom,
that is necessary to set forth a cognizable access-to-the-eourts claim. Moreover, that a prisoner’s right of access to the courts includes his ability to prepare and transmit a necessary legal document to a court has been clearly established for decades.
See, e.g., Wolff,
We therefore reverse the district court’s grant of summary judgment regarding Appellant Brewer’s outgoing legal mail claims. As explained, Brewer has asserted the violation of clearly established constitutional rights of which a reasonable prison official should have known. We remand for further proceedings. ■
VII. CONCLUSION
We conclude that the district court properly granted summary judgment with respect to Appellants’ claims against, the Appellees arising from the opening and inspection of their incoming legal correspondence outside of their presence. We further conclude, however, that the district court erred in granting summary judgment with respect to Appellant Brewer’s claims concerning his outgoing legal mail. We also believe that, on remand, the district court should address the merits of the Appellants’ remaining claims 14 that were ignored in the district court’s order granting summary judgment for the Appel-lees. We therefore AFFIRM in part and REVERSE in part the judgment of the district court and REMAND the action for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The Appellants’ pleadings specify the precise items of legal mail and the approximate dates on which the alleged unauthorized opening occurred.
. The TDCJ correspondence rules provide that ”[a]s a general proposition, all incoming and outgoing correspondence, except as otherwise provided here, is subject to delivery, inspection, and rejection in accordance with the following rulesf.]” Under the Rules, mail addressed to and received from courts and public officials constitutes “Special Correspondence.” See Rule 3.9.2. The Rules provide: "All outgoing Special Correspondence shall be sent sealed and uninspected whether or not addressed to a specific named official. Incoming Special Correspondence from a specific named official will be delivered to the inmate sealed and uninspected. Incoming Special Correspondence not from a specific named official may be opened and inspected for contraband only. The inspection shall be in the inmate’s presence.” Rule 3.9.2.1. With respect to "General Correspondence,” the Rules provide, inter alia, that mail may be rejected only if it falls into one of several enumerated categories of offending material, Rule 3.9.1.6, that incoming mail will be delivered within forty-eight hours, except on weekends or holidays when seventy-two hours is allowed, and outgoing mail will be delivered to a U.S. Postal Officer within the same time periods, Rule 3.9.1.7, and that all mail, whether incoming or outgoing, "shall be handled with all reasonable dispatch," Rule 3.9.1.9.
.Neither the magistrate nor the district court mentioned the inmates' claims regarding nonlegal mail.
. Actually, as we read Brewer’s complaint, the two items of outgoing mail are an original and a copy of the same legal document. Both were allegedly mailed on November 19, 1991. The copy allegedly mailed to the clerk of the district court was an item of Brewer’s outgoing mail that was allegedly never received by the court because of Appellee Calloway’s interference.
. This court has likewise recognized the relationship between the First Amendment and the constitutional right of "access to the courts."
See, e.g., Taylor v. Sterrett,
.
See Morrow v. Harwell,
. The prison regulation originally being challenged in
Wolff
provided that prison officials would inspect and read all incoming and outgoing mail.
See Wolff,
. The prisoners had also asserted that their rights under the Sixth Amendment would be violated, an assertion the Court did not further address in light of the Court’s determination that the Sixth Amendment only protected "the attorney-client relationship from intrusion in the criminal setting, while the claim here would insulate all mail from inspection, whether related to civil or criminal matters.”
Wolff,
. We note that the
Thornburgh
Court, in determining that
Turner's
"reasonableness” standard applied to the issue before it, explained that it was improper to focus on the "identity of the individuals whose rights allegedly have been infringed.”
Thornburgh,
. The Court in
Turner
had also explained that, in determining whether the existence of ready alternatives evidenced the unreasonableness of a prison regulation or practice, a court was not to employ a “least restrictive means” test.
See Turner,
. Interestingly, the
Sterrett
court found unpersuasive the county officials' argument that “opening correspondence in an inmate's presence creates an onerous administrative burden.”
Sterrett,
However, the Supreme Court in
Turner
specifically listed "the impact accommodation of the asserted constitutional right [would] have ... on the allocation of prison resources generally" as a factor in determining the reasonableness of a prison regulation or practice and hence its constitutional validity.
Turner, 482
U.S. at 90,
. We must also point out that at issue in
Sterrett
and its progeny was the constitutionality of prison regulations or practices which were engendered as prophylactic measures in the wake of
Martinez's
emphasis on the First Amendment rights of
correspondents
with prisoners — an emphasis which the Supreme Court abandoned in cases after
Martinez. See Thornburgh,
. As it happens, in a
pre-Martinez
case this court determined that the opening and inspecting of incoming attorney-inmate mail without censorship does not deny
any
federally-protected right that a prisoner has.
See Frye v. Henderson,
. Those claims are that (1) legal mail was wrongly withheld from the Appellants for over seventy-two hours, the maximum period which mail could be withheld under prison regulations; (2) incoming non-legal mail was never received by the Appellants; (3) outgoing non-legal mail was never received by the addressees; and (4) numerical limits were placed on the Appellants’ outgoing mail.
