Plаintiff William Bell-Bey appeals the district court’s grant of summary judgment for defendant Beverly Williams in this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action. 1 For the reasons that follow, we affirm the decision of the district court.
I.Facts
Bell-Bey resides at a maximum security state prison operated by the Michigan Department of Corrections (“MDOC”). Williams is the record officer supervisor of the prison, Ionia Maximum Correctional Facility. Pursuant to a policy directive, PD-BCF-63.03, and Michigan Administrative Rule 791.6603, MDOC рrovides indigent prisoners ten first-class stamps per month. Shadowing the language of Rule 791.6603(2), the policy directive states: “Additional postage will be provided to indigent prisoners, or loaned to non-indigent prisoners, for legal mail to courts or attorneys if necessary for pending litigation.” The directive also requires:
All outgoing mail of segregation prisoners is subject to inspection, except mail from a prisoner to:
1. His/her designated attorneys
2. Any state or federal court
3. Any federal, state or local public offi•cial
# H* H* # ❖
Mail from аny prisoner to any of the above listed persons or agencies will be considered confidential. The prisoner will be allowed to seal such mail and it will not be opened or otherwise inspected.
Williams issued a memorandum (“the Memo”) on November 18, 1993, which clarified the exact procedure for inmates to obtain postage:
Prisoner Mail Policy, PD-BCF-63.03, states “additional postage will be provided to indigent prisoners, or loaned to non-indigent prisoners if necessary for pending litigation.” Pending litigation means litigation already accepted by the courts. Out-going legal mail meeting this criteria will have postage applied by the mail center when letter(s) are accompanied by approved, signed RDAs (Resident Disbursement Authorization). Mail not meeting criteria in policy will not have postage applied and will be returned to the prisonеr.
Prisoners who have postage stamps may mail whatever they want. Indigent prisoners who have exhausted their indigence allowance and need additional postage to mail legal mail will have to prove the mail is for pending litigation. Proof will consist of showing the documents to the reviewing staff member who will be looking for court docket numbers, plaintiff versus, requests from either the court or attorney general for specifiс documents, etc. If requested information is not provided or prisoner refuses to show mail to staff reviewing mail, the letter(s) will not be processed. This also applies to non-indigent prisoners who have no funds available in their account. No postage loans will be made for letters not meeting policy guidelines.
*835 New lawsuits or requests for forms from courts will not be mailed at department expense. If an indigent prisoner wants to filе a new lawsuit, he will have to wait until he has indigent postage available. A non-indigent prisoner will have to have sufficient funds on account to have his mail processed for new lawsuits.
According to an affidavit from the prison’s warden, Raymond G. Toombs, prison employees inspect the mail in the prisoner’s presence and look only for proof such as docket numbers or case titles. MDOC’s policy does not authorize prison employees to “read” the prisoner’s legal mail. After inspection, the prisoner is allowed to seal his legal mail in the presence of the prison employee. If the inspection indicated that the mail was not for pending litigation or if the prisoner refused to show the mail to the reviewing prison employee, the mail would not be sent out.
On November 29, 1993, Bell-Bey attempted to obtain additional postage for a letter. Bell-Bey, however, refused to allow the resident unit manager to inspect the legal mail, and his mail was returned undelivered. On December 13, 1993, Bell-Bey completed two forms to obtain a postage loan for letters addressed to two state courts. He identified the case numbers on the forms but refused to present any other proof that the mail regarded pending litigation. Accordingly, the letters were returned to him. Bell-Bey filеd grievances which were subsequently denied by prison staff.
II. Procedural History
In 1993, Bell-Bey filed a pro se claim under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that Williams violated his First Amendment rights of access to the courts and free speech and his Fourteenth Amendment substantive due process rights. 2 Bell-Bey alleged that the Memo authorized prison staff to deny him a postage loan unless they were allowed to “read” his outgoing legal mail. He requested compensatory and punitive damages against Williams and an injunction enjoining the prison from enforcing the requirements of the Memo which, he alleged, contradicted MDOC policy directives and rules. In 1994, Williams filed a motion to dismiss or, in the alternative, for summary judgment, asserting the defense of qualified immunity.
Finding the prison’s inspection of outgoing legal mail (as directed in the Memo) constitutional, the district court rejected Bell-Bey’s § 1983 claims. It specifically cited several facts validating the prison’s policy: 1) prison officials are required to look for evidence that the mail regards pending litigation, but are not to read the mail; 2) the officials are to go to the prisoner’s cell to conduct the inspection, and the prisoner must be given additional time to comply with the regulation if necessary; 3) the inspection is performed in the prisoner’s presence; and 4) the entire inspection process is only triggered if the рrisoner exceeds the monthly allotment of free stamps. Thus, the district court granted Williams’ motion for summary judgment and dismissed all of Bell-Bey’s claims. The thrust of Bell-Bey’s argument on appeal is that the procedure outlined in the Memo violates his constitutional rights because it directs prison staff to open and read his legal mail. 3
III. Discussion
The district court’s grant of summary judgment is reviewed
de novo. Moore v. Holbrook,
*836 A. Qualified Immunity
Although Bell-Bey raises five points of contention on appeal, only two issues merit discussion.
4
With respect to the first issue, the doctrine of qualified immunity bars Bell-Bey’s § 1983 action against Williams. Government officials who perform discretionary functions are generally protected from liability for civil damages as long as their conduct doеs not violate “clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.”
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
Bell-Bey first argues that Williams is not entitled to qualified immunity because she failed to comply with the prison’s own policy directive, PD-BCF-63.03, which states that legal mail shall not be inspected. However, PD-BCF-63.03 could be interpreted to mean that outgoing legal mail will not be inspected
after
it is sealed. Regardless, “[t]he Supreme Court has made it clear that the failure to comply with state or federal regulations does not necеssarily deprive government officials of qualified immunity.”
Lavado v. Keohane,
Bell-Bey next argues that case law clearly established a prisoner’s right not to have his legal mail opened and read. The case law he cites, however, involves the opening of incoming legal mail
outside
of the prisoner’s presence.
5
The Supreme Court has approved a prison policy authorizing the
opening
of legal mail in the prisoner’s presence, but no mention is made of the officials actuаlly
reading
the content of the mail.
Id.
at 608 (citing
Wolff v. McDonnell,
In
Parrish v. Johnson,
In a recent unpublished case,
Bout v. Abramajtys,
Despite the holding in Bout, Bell-Bey did not have a clearly established right because of the factual differences between the present case and Bout. In the present scenario, a prisoner may send as many sealed legal letters as he wants if he can afford the postage. Indigent prisoners are allotted ten free stamps per month, and non-indigent prisoners may purchase stamps from the prison store. Therefore, MDOC’s present policy directive is only triggered if the prisoner wants subsidized postage. Additionally, MDOC’s inspection procedure calls for safeguards which limit the prison official’s inspeсtion of a prisoner’s legal mail: 1) the official’s inspection is limited to scanning legal mail for docket numbers, ease title, requests for documents, et cetera; 2) the inspection is conducted in the prisoner’s presence in his cell; and 3) the prisoner may seal his mail after the inspection is completed. These safeguards address the Bout court’s concern that prison officials would have unbridled discretion to “review” а prisoner’s mail. Id. at *2.
Although the prison officials contend that they are merely “inspecting” the legal mail in order to find proof that it pertains to pending litigation, Bell-Bey claims that they are “reading” prisoners’ legal mail. In
Lavado,
this court noted, “we have held that opening/reading inmates’ mail in ‘arbitrary’ or ‘capricious’ fashion does violate inmates’ First Amendment rights.”
B. First Amendment
The final issue is whether MDOC’s inspection procedure as embodied in
*838
the rules, poliсy directives, and Memo, is unconstitutional. Bell-Bey alleges that his First Amendment rights of free speech, access to the courts, and petition have been violated by the prison’s inspection procedure. The
Lavado
court has recognized a First Amendment right associated with legal mail.
Lavado,
States [must] shoulder affirmative obligations to assure all prisoners meaningful access to the courts. It is indisputable that indigent inmates must be provided at Statе expense with paper and pen to draft legal documents with notarial services to authenticate them, and with stamps to mail them.
* sN * H: *
This is not to say that economic factors may not be considered, for example, in choosing the methods used to provide meaningful access. But the cost of protecting a constitutional right cannot justify its total denial.
Bounds v. Smith,
The first prong of the
Martinez
standard requires MDOC to “show that a regulation authorizing mail censorship furthers one or more of the substantial governmental interests of security, order, and rehabilitation.”
Martinez,
Contrary to plaintiffs assertion, we think that the regulation furthers an important government interest unrelated to expression; namely, the management of limited prison resources. Although not technically within the confines of the substantial interests articulated in Martinez, it is fundamental that fiscal considerations form the core of any orderly system.
Bout,
The second Martinez prong requires only that the prison regulation be “generally necessary” to a government interest. Id. at *2. Therefore, MDOC’s inspection procedure does not have to be the least restrictive means of assuring that Bell-Bey’s outgoing legal mail is, in fact, pertaining to pending litigation. The individual facts which accompany MDOC’s inspection procedure militate in favor of finding the policy constitutional.
*839 1) Providing free postage for pending litigation
MDOC has fulfilled its affirmative duty to provide indigent prisoners access to the courts. By allotting ten stamps per month, a prisoner may send ten sealed letters without being subject to inspection. If a postage loan is needed for a current suit, a prisoner may either submit proof that thе mail pertains to pending litigation, or he may wait until the next month’s allotment of postage. This policy follows the suggestion given by the Bout court: “[T]he regulation could impose some reasonable upper limit on how much [postage] may be provided in a given month.” Id. at *2.
2) Opening mail in the prisoner’s presence
The Supreme Court held that “by acceding to a rule whereby the inmate is present when mail from attorneys is inspected (without being read), has done all, and perhaps еven more, than the constitution requires.”
Wolff v. McDonnell,
3) Limited inspection
In
Lavado,
this court specifically noted that we have not joined other circuits in holding that a prisoner’s legal mail may not be read.
Lavado,
First of all, the regulation gives virtually unbridled discretion to prison officials to ‘review’ prisoners’ mail, but does not specify the nature or limits of that review. Without procedural safeguards, there can be no assurance that a prison official will not read a prisoner’s mail----
After
Bout,
MDOC implemented procedural safeguards to ensure that а prison employee only looks for identifiable information. MDOC’s safeguards in this case sufficiently collar the prison official’s review of the mail. Furthermore, there is authority upholding the constitutionality of a cursory inspection of prisoner mail to ascertain whether it is, in fact, legal correspondence. In
Kendrick v. Bland,
Where the state must provide the postage for indigent inmates in order to ensure their access to the courts, however, that absolute right [to seal and send all outgoing mail without inspection] may give way in order to allow the designated legal office supervisor to determine from the outside of the envelope, and if necessary a cursory glance at its contents, that it is a court or legal document destined to a court of competent jurisdiction, employed or appointed legal counsel, or [the Office for Publiс Advocacy].
Id.
at 1554;
see also Lemon v. Dugger,
4)Alternative avenues of access
Given that the inspection procedure is triggered only after a prisoner exhausts his allotted postage, MDOC’s policy does not
*840
overburden a prisoner’s right of access to the courts.
See Martinez,
IY. Conclusion
“[S]imply because prison inmates retain certain constitutional rights does not mean that these rights are not subject to restrictions and limitations.”
Bell v. Wolfish,
Notes
. Plaintiff Samuel Dunham-Bey was dismissed from this case pursuant to this court’s April 7, 1995 order, because he failed to file an appellate brief in accordance with local rules.
. Originally, another prison employee, Lynn Harsevoort, was named as a defendant. However, because she was not served summons, the district court subsequently dismissed her from the case for lack of prosecution.
. He also alleges that the Memo allows prison staff to censor his outgoing legal mail, but there is no proof in the record of such conduct.
. Three of Bell-Bey's contentions are meritless. First, the district court properly dismissed another defendant, Lynn Harsevoort, from the case for want of prosecution.
Link v. Wabash R.R. Co.,
370 U.S.
626, 630-31,
.
See, e.g., Pairish v. Johnson,
. The Second and Tenth Circuits have also relied on the First Amendment to find constitutional violations, but in situations where outgoing legal mail was opened
outside
of the prisoner's presence.
See Bieregu v. Reno,
. The Supreme Court specifically overruled the standard advanced in
Martinez
with regard to incoming mail.
Thornburgh v. Abbott,
. Bell-Bey also asserts that his legal mail was not delivered in retaliation for lawsuits he had filed against MDOC employees in the past. "[I]f the mail was actually read, and this action was motivated by retaliation as plaintiff alleges, such behavior by prison officials might constitute the type of arbitrary action proscribed by
Parrish,
