Walter M. GUYER, Appellant, v. Jeffrey A. BEARD, Appellee.
No. 89-3658
United States Court of Appeals, Third Circuit
July 20, 1990
Rehearing and Rehearing In Banc Denied Aug. 22, 1990.
907 F.2d 1424
OPINION OF THE COURT
BECKER, Circuit Judge.
Appellant Walter Guyer, who was incarcerated at the State Correctional Institution (SCI) at Cresson, Pennsylvania, refused to sign a form power of attorney consenting to the receipt of his mail by prison officials because he claimed that it interfered with his right of access to the
I. PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In addition to seeking release from prison, Guyer‘s habeas petition requested “preliminary relief” in order to enable him to have access to the courts.1 Guyer named Jeffrey A. Beard, the warden of SCI at Cresson, as the defendant. As part of his requested “preliminary relief,” Guyer sought an order compelling the prison officials at SCI Cresson to deliver his mail to him.2 He alleged that Pennsylvania Department of Corrections officials had stopped his incoming mail in March 1988. Guyer also sought: (1) the return of his legal materials, which had been left at SCI Dallas when he was transferred to SCI Cresson; (2) legal postage at state expense; and (3) direct access to an adequate law library or professional legal services. The district court ordered the warden to respond to Guyer‘s allegations concerning his mail. Additionally, the court directed Guyer to file both a civil rights complaint and a proper habeas petition on standard forms provided by the district court clerk‘s office. The district court apparently construed Guyer‘s request for preliminary relief as presenting civil rights claims.3
In his answer, the warden stated that he was not delivering Guyer‘s mail to him because Guyer had failed to execute a power of attorney form, which provides in pertinent part:
I do make, constitute, and appoint the Superintendent/Director of this institution, or his/her authorized representative . . . my true and lawful attorney for me and in my name to sign my name as endorsement on all checks, money orders, or bank drafts for deposit to my credit in the Inmate‘s Escrow Account and to receive and document receipt of mail on my behalf.
The warden explained that United States Postal Service regulations require inmates to sign a power of attorney form in order to authorize the prison to receive the inmates’ mail.4 The district court thereupon ordered Guyer to sign a power of attorney form limited to authorizing the prison‘s receipt of the court‘s orders and notices
Guyer filed a civil rights complaint and amended habeas petition pursuant to the district court‘s order.5 In his amended habeas petition, Guyer objected to signing the limited power of attorney form and noted that the court had not given him a deadline for signing such a form. By order entered September 1, 1989, the district court dismissed Guyer‘s civil rights complaint, which had pleaded Guyer‘s contention that the power of attorney requirement was unconstitutional. In the September 1 order, the district court directed Guyer to sign a limited power of attorney form by September 8, 1989.6 Guyer, however, declined to sign the form.7 Finding that Guyer‘s refusal to execute the form made communication among the parties and the court impracticable, and that it was unreasonable for a prison to make accommodations to deliver mail to an inmate in person, the district court dismissed Guyer‘s habeas petition by order entered September 15, 1989. This appeal followed.
When an appeal is taken from an order dismissing a habeas petition where the detention complained of arises out of process issued by a state court, we must ordinarily first issue a certificate of probable cause before the appeal can proceed. See
We now render our decision upon both the merits of the appeal and the request for a certificate of probable cause. Although it does not affect our analysis, we note preliminarily that this is a somewhat anomalous habeas appeal inasmuch as the merits issues seem much more like civil rights issues than habeas issues. However, since the habeas petition was dismissed because Guyer refused to sign a limited power of attorney form, which he asserted deprived him of access to the courts (typical fodder for a civil rights case), that is the end result. In view of this situation, our decision does not address the merits of Guyer‘s habeas claims or determine whether those claims have been exhausted. Instead, our decision addresses
II. THE PRETRIAL ORDER
The district court ordered Guyer to sign a power of attorney form limited to authorizing the warden‘s receipt of the court‘s orders and notices pending the adjudication of the power of attorney form itself. The district court noted that failure to comply with its order would result in dismissal of the habeas petition. In dismissing Guyer‘s habeas action for failure to obey this order, the district court specifically found that it would be unreasonable to require the warden to deliver Guyer‘s mail personally. Because this decision by the district court is a legal conclusion involving the interpretation and application of legal precepts, our review is plenary. McCandless v. Beyer, 835 F.2d 58, 60 (3d Cir. 1987).
The order directing Guyer to sign a limited power of attorney form was a reasonable order entered by the district court to further the efficient management of its caseload. However, Guyer objected to the district court‘s order, claiming that it denied his right of access to the courts while giving the warden a right he could not constitutionally exercise. We disagree. By requiring Guyer to execute a limited power of attorney form, the district court furthered communication between the parties and the court while also furthering the warden‘s legitimate interest in prison security. See Turner v. Safley, 482 U.S. 78, 89, 107 S. Ct. 2254, 2261-62, 96 L. Ed. 2d 64 (1987) (prison regulations are constitutional if reasonably related to legitimate penological interest).
The limited power of attorney form that Guyer refused to execute would have authorized prison officials to receive and document the receipt of his mail related to his case. See supra p. 1426. This would directly further communication between the parties and the court. The limited power of attorney form also would have enabled the warden to comply with United States Postal Service, Domestic Mail Manual § 115.97, which requires prison officials to obtain the inmates’ consent to the prison‘s receipt of their mail so that prison officials can open, inspect, and censor incoming mail.9 Without such consent, the prison would have to deliver the mail unopened, or else return it to the post office marked “Refused.”
By objecting to the warden‘s decision to have his mail returned to the post office, rather than delivered unopened, Guyer was claiming, in effect, a constitutional right to have his mail delivered unopened. While it is clear that Guyer‘s right of access to the courts would be burdened if he failed to receive mail related to his pending lawsuit and as a result did not learn of deadlines and rules relevant thereto, it is also clear that requiring the warden to deliver Guyer‘s mail unopened could adversely affect prison security because contraband could be delivered to Guyer undetected. Preventing the introduction of contraband into the prison is unquestionably a legitimate penological interest. See Wolff v. McDonnell, 418 U.S. 539, 577, 94 S. Ct. 2963, 2985, 41 L. Ed. 2d 935 (1974) (Constitution allows prisons to open attorney mail addressed to inmate in presence of inmate in order to inspect for contraband). Under Pennsylvania regulations, the warden can have incoming inmate mail from the courts and attorneys opened in the presence of the inmate-addressees to inspect for contraband.
As a result, the district court‘s order enabled it to communicate with Guyer without undermining the warden‘s interest in prison security. Such an accommodation of both Guyer‘s need to receive mail related to his case and the prison‘s legitimate interest in inspecting incoming mail for contraband does not deny Guyer his right of access to the courts. Cf. Turner, supra. Accordingly, we hold that the district court‘s order requiring Guyer to execute a limited power of attorney form did not infringe upon Guyer‘s right of access to the courts and that it was a reasonable pretrial order.
III. DISMISSAL AS SANCTION
By dismissing Guyer‘s habeas petition because of his failure to sign the limited power of attorney form, the district court exercised its inherent power under
In this case, the district court directed Guyer to sign a limited power of attorney form pending the final adjudication of the validity of the regulation requiring the execution of a power of attorney form. Guyer refused to sign that form. Because Guyer‘s conduct in disobeying the court‘s orders was contumacious, we are satisfied that the district court did not abuse its discretion in dismissing the habeas petition.11
Under Carter, a district court must use dismissal as a sanction of last resort. See 804 F.2d at 807. The court should consider
For the foregoing reasons, a certificate of probable cause to appeal will be granted, and the district court‘s order dismissing Guyer‘s habeas corpus petition will be affirmed.
SEITZ, Circuit Judge, dissenting.
My difference with the majority centers around the following language in its opinion.
“In this case, the district court directed Guyer to sign a limited power of attorney form pending the final adjudication of the validity of the regulation requiring the execution of a power of attorney form. Guyer refused to sign that form. Because Guyer‘s conduct in disobeying the court‘s orders was contumacious, we are satisfied that the district court did not abuse its discretion in dismissing the habeas petition.”
I do not believe the district court had the right to direct the plaintiff to sign the limited power of attorney. All the court could do, in my view, was to grant plaintiff access to his mail upon the condition that he execute the power of attorney form. If plaintiff chose not to do so, he would suffer the consequences, including the possibility that his action would be dismissed for failure to comply with other court orders or requirements. I do not consider his conduct contumacious in the circumstances.
I agree that a certificate of probable cause should be granted. However, I would vacate the order of the district court and direct that an order be entered along the lines I have described. Thereafter, the district court could address the habeas corpus and civil rights’ claims as circumstances dictated.
