Lead Opinion
When the Bureau of Prisons “locked down” the federal prison at Marion, Illinois, in 1983, it restricted the volume of personal materials inmates could keep in their cells. It offered to store the excess or send it to someone of the inmate’s choice. W. Foster Sellers initially declined to designate a recipient, so guards put at least five boxes of his goods in storage. Later he designated Judge Fairchild of this court as their recipient, which the guards took as a joke and refused to implement. More than a year after the lockdown, with Sellers still not cooperating, the guards sent his things to his wife. According to Sellers, somewhere in this process the guards stole or lost an oil painting of his wife, 41 law books, an almanac, an ice bucket, a combination lock, a pair of sunglasses, and a leg supporter. He sued not only three guards but also the warden on the theory that the loss violаted the Constitution. See Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents,
Chief Judge Foreman allowed Sellers to proceed in forma pauperis and directed the Marshals Service to serve process “as directed by plaintiff”. Sellers did not know the addresses of the guards or former Warden Miller, all of whom left Marion before he filed suit. Hе told the Marshals Service where he believed each had gone. The Marshal mailed a copy of the complaint and summons to the former warden, who declined to sign the acknowledgement. Under Fed.R.Civ.P. 4(c)(2)(C)(ii) this means that the plaintiff must use an alternative method (such as hand delivery) at the defеndant’s expense. The Marshal did not follow up in serving Miller. Apparently the Marshals Service did not obtain the addresses of the other three defendants and none was served. Magistrate Meyers, then presiding by virtue of consents under 28 U.S.C. § 636(c), dismissed the case with respect to all four defendants for failure to perfect service within 120 days, as Fed.R. Civ.P. 4(j) requires in the absence of “good cause”. Magistrate Meyers wrote that Judge Foreman’s order to serve “as directed by plaintiff” meant that Sellers had to furnish the Marshal with the defendants’ addresses. Magistrate Meyers did not mention the fact that Sellers had furnished еnough information to enable the Marshal to mail the complaint and summons to former Warden Miller.
On his own initiative, Magistrate Meyers substituted the United States as a defendant and converted the case from a Bivens action to one under the Federal Tort Claims Act. The United States, which received notiсe as soon as the suit was filed, has not argued that the substitution is untimely.
Sellers insists that the painting is worth $200 rather than $100. Valuation оf works of art is difficult business, and we are not persuaded that the trier of fact committed clear error. Nothing in the record suggests that the painting had any market value; although Sellers attached the value of $200 to it, perhaps for sentimental reasons, the magistrate was not required to accept it. Taliferro v. Augle,
With respect to the law books, however, Sellers has a point. Although Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a) requires the сourt to “find the facts specially”, the magistrate did not mention Sellers’ argument that the guards lost his books. Perhaps he overlooked the subject in the welter of confusing documents filed in this case. No matter the reason, however, we must remand for findings. Sellers’ objections to the rulings admitting evidence of the inventories of his property are without substance, as is his contention that the defendants are liable on account of their refusal to send his possessions to Judge Fairchild. Federal judges are not prisoners’ warehousemen. The only question on remand under the Tort Claims Act is whether the governmеnt tortiously lost Sellers’ books, and the magistrate is free to make whatever ruling the record requires on this subject. One may question whether substantial investment of judicial time in a ease of this sort is appropriate. The Federal Courts Study Committee, picking up a suggestion in Free v. United States,
This leaves the contention that the suit should be revived with respect tо the four original defendants. It is at least conceivable that these defendants may be held liable on account of the ice bucket, sunglasses, lock, and leg supporter, if Sellers can demonstrate that they got rid of his property with the state of mind required by Daniels v. Williams,
The Marshal needs from the prisoner information sufficient to identify the guard (“John Doe No. 23” won’t do); once that information has been provided, the Marshal should be able to obtain a current business address and complete service. If the Department of Justice declines to furnish the address to its own employee the Marshal, that hard-nosed attitude satisfactorily explains a prisoner’s inability to serve papers within 120 days. How is the prisoner to obtain information thе Bureau of Prisons will not entrust to a Marshal? We join the Ninth Circuit in holding that when the district court instructs the Marshal to serve papers on behalf of a prisoner, the prisoner need furnish no more than the information necessary to identify the defendant. Puett v. Blandford,
Magistrate Meyers believed that by telling the Marshal to serve papers “as directed by plaintiff”, Chief Judge Forеman required Sellers to supply the defendants’ addresses to the Marshal. This is not a natural interpretation of the language, which was addressed to the Marshal rather than Sellers. As Rochon holds,
In November, 1983, Lt. John Wilson was on temporary assignment at USP, Marion from USP, ATLANTA. It is believed that he is now back at USP, Atlanta. USP, Marion Personnel Office should have Wilson’s forwarding address.
Someone from the Mаrshals Service wrote this in the portion of the summons reserved for the Marshal’s remarks:
USP ATLANTA — Per TRACY RoberTs, PErSONNeL SecreTARy, CHeCK EMPLOYee WORK LiST. NO SUCh NAMed PerSON WAS Listed.
Nothing written on the summons suggests that the Marshals Service checked the personnel office at Marion to see where Wilson had gone; nothing suggests that anyone picked up the phone to ask the Bureau of Prisons in Washington where he had
Bivens actions against federal employees require personal service of process. Del Raine,
The United States Attorney maintains that the judgment with respect to the individual defendants may be affirmed on the alternative ground that because the Tort Claims Act furnishes an adequate remedy, the Due Process Clause of the fifth amendment does not authorize a direct action against the jailers. This reasoning parallels Parratt v. Taylor,
Although an appellee may urge, without taking a cross-appeal, any argument raised below that supports the judgment, see Massachusetts Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. Ludwig,
The judgment is affirmed to the extent it awards Sellers $105 for the painting and almanac. The judgment is reversed and remanded to the extent the magistrate denied on the merits any recovery for the 41 books. The judgment is vacated to the extent it dismissed the four individuals as defendants. Further proceedings on remand shall conform to this opinion.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I join the judgment of the court and its fine opinion except with respect to the following matter that, in my view, is unnecessary to our disposition of this case. I respectfully decline to express a view on the appropriateness of the congressional determination that prisoners' small claims be subject to the Federal Tort Claims Act. Supra p. 4. Cf. Tidewater Oil Co. v. United States,
