Tyree, Jr. v. Fair ( 1993 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion




    March 9, 1993 [NOT FOR PUBLICATION]


    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT


    ____________________


    No. 92-1742
    No. 92-1743
    No. 92-1744
    No. 92-1745
    No. 92-1746

    WILLIAM M. TYREE, JR.,

    Plaintiff, Appellant,

    v.

    MICHAEL V. FAIR, ET AL.,

    Defendants, Appellees.


    ____________________

    APPEALS FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. Robert E. Keeton, U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Breyer, Chief Judge,
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    Torruella and Cyr, Circuit Judges.
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    William M. Tyree, Jr. on brief pro se.
    _____________________
    Nancy Ankers White, Special Assistant Attorney General, and
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    Richard C. McFarland, Supervising Counsel, Department of Correction,
    ____________________
    on Memorandum of Law in Support of Motion for Summary Disposition, for
    appellees.


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    Per Curiam. Appellant, William M. Tyree, Jr.,
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    currently is imprisoned in the Cedar Junction Massachusetts

    Correctional Institute; he is serving a life sentence for

    first-degree murder. On December 27, 1988, appellant was

    transferred from Cedar Junction to the Old Colony

    Correctional Center where he spent twenty-seven days in the

    administrative segregation unit. On February 8, 1989,

    appellant filed five separate complaints in the Massachusetts

    district court concerning his prison status and his transfer

    to and residence at Old Colony. The district court dismissed

    all five actions for lack of prosecution. A brief

    description of each action follows.

    I.
    _

    1. Appellant alleges that when he was transferred

    to Old Colony, prison officials refused to allow him to use

    his television set with speakers; instead, he was required,

    under regulations apparently promulgated in 1983, to use

    earplugs or headphones. He claims that this rule was an ex
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    post facto violation of the United States Constitution
    ____ _____

    because appellant had been allowed the use of a television

    set with speakers since the beginning of his incarceration in

    1979. He also maintained that his civil rights were

    infringed on the ground that the regulation did not contain

    an exception that allowed hearing-impaired prisoners to use

    television sets with speakers. In this action, the



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    defendants were served with process. They filed their answer

    in May 1989.

    2. Because appellant had enemies at Old Colony and

    because Old Colony lacked a protection unit, appellant avers

    that he was forced into administrative segregation for the

    twenty-seven days he spent at Old Colony. During this time,

    appellant claims that he was denied proper medical care.

    Specifically, prison officials allegedly refused to allow

    appellant to bring with him two knee braces he needed for

    support. He further alleged that he did not receive

    sufficient daily exercise and did not have access to a

    "universal" weight machine. In addition to these complaints,

    appellant states that the prison officials refused to ensure

    that all of his mail was being sent out, that the transfer

    made it difficult for him to receive visitors and that, after

    "punching out" two glass windows, appellant was placed in the

    "nut room" and threatened with the possibility of being

    chained to the bed. None of the defendants named in this

    action were served with process.

    3. Appellant states that while in the segregation

    unit he did not have access, as did the prisoners in the

    general population, to a footlocker in which to store his

    personal belongings. He also claims that defendants used a

    two-way window and an electronic eavesdropping sound gun to

    monitor all of appellant's visits with outsiders. As in the



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    previously described action, appellant failed to serve

    defendants with his complaint.

    4. In the fourth complaint, appellant alleges that

    in 1985 he was transferred to a higher security prison as the

    result of allegations he had made concerning employee

    discrimination in the Massachusetts prison system. Due to

    his involvement in this matter, appellant asserts that he

    became known as a legal and political troublemaker. He

    charges that he made defendants aware of the fact that due to

    the above allegations, he had enemies at Old Colony. He

    again asserts that he needed to be placed in administrative

    segregation at Old Colony -- the only place where he felt

    safe. All of the defendants were served with process in this

    action and they filed answers in May 1989.

    5. Appellant claims that under a prison

    regulation, an inmate who refuses to transfer to a lower

    security prison loses work privileges, is not permitted to

    attend vocational, educational and other institutional

    programs, and is not allowed to attend church. Appellant

    asserts that he lost the above privileges due to his refusal

    to transfer to a medium security prison. In this action,

    appellant served the defendants and in 1990 sent requests for

    admissions to them.







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    II.
    __

    On March 11, 1992, the district court issued

    notices in all five actions pursuant to Local Rule 41.1.

    This rule provides:

    (a)(1) Whenever in any civil action
    the clerk shall ascertain that no
    proceeding has been docketed therein for
    a period of ONE (1) year, he shall then
    mail notice to all persons who have
    entered an appearance in such a case
    that, subject to the provisions of
    subsection (a)(3), the case will be
    dismissed without further notice thirty
    (30) days after the sending of the
    notice.

    In response to this notice, appellant requested an eight-

    month extension of time. He based this request on his

    assertions that since the filing of the five actions in 1989

    the Department of Corrections (DOC) had confiscated

    appellant's legal papers and had failed to return them to

    appellant, had opened appellant's legal mail, had denied him

    access to the law library during "lock downs" and had made it

    difficult for him to obtain typewriting materials.

    The district court denied appellant's motion and

    dismissed the five actions. The court accepted as true

    appellant's allegation that his legal files had been

    confiscated. It nonetheless found that this did not

    "satisfactorily explain" appellant's inaction and his failure

    to communicate with the district court.





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    III.
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    A district court's sua sponte power to dismiss an
    ___ ______

    action for want of prosecution is "'an inherent power,'

    governed not by rule or statute but by the control

    necessarily vested in the courts to manage their own affairs

    so as to achieve the orderly and expeditious disposition of

    cases." Link v. Wabash R.R. Co., 370 U.S. 626, 630-631
    ____ ________________

    (1962) (footnote omitted). "[T]his power is necessary to

    prevent undue delays in the disposition of pending cases,

    docket congestion, and the possibility of harassment of a

    defendant." Zavala Santiago v. Gonzalez Rivera, 553 F.2d
    ________________ _______________

    710, 712 (1st Cir. 1977). However, such dismissals are

    "drastic sanctions, which should be employed only when the

    district court, in the careful exercise of its discretion,

    determines that none of the lesser sanctions available to it

    would truly be appropriate." Id. (footnote omitted).
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    We review sua sponte dismissals based on lack of
    ___ ______

    prosecution for abuse of discretion. Enlace Mercantil
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    Internacional, Inc. v. Senior Indust., Inc., 848 F.2d 315,
    ___________________ _____________________

    317 (1st Cir. 1988). In conducting this review, we must

    examine all relevant circumstances. Asociacion de Empleados
    _______________________

    del Instituto de Cultura Puertorriquena v. Rodriguez Morales,
    _______________________________________ _________________

    538 F.2d 915, 916 n.2 (1st Cir. 1976). Among the pertinent

    factors we consider are the history of the litigation, the

    length and type of delay, the nature of the underlying



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    claims, the possible prejudice to defendants and the presence

    of an adequate excuse for a plaintiff's inaction. See
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    Carribbean Transp. Sys., Inc. v. Autoridad de las Navieras,
    ______________________________ __________________________

    901 F.2d 196, 197 (1st Cir. 1990).

    Turning to the case at hand, we first note that in

    two of the actions, appellant never made service of process

    on the defendants named in the complaints. This in itself

    suffices for a finding of lack of prosecution. See id. In
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    two out of the three actions in which service of process was

    accomplished, appellant took no steps to further the progress

    of the actions after the answers were filed in 1989. In the

    one action where the proceedings did advance beyond the

    filing of the defendants' answers, appellant sent requests

    for admissions to the DOC in July 1990. Thus, by the time

    the Local Rule 41.1 notice was sent in March 1992, appellant

    had done nothing in four of the cases for almost three years

    and in the fifth case for well over one year.

    A clear record of delay "measured in years," as in

    the case at hand, will support a dismissal for want of

    prosecution. See Cosme Nieves v. Deshler, 826 F.2d 1, 2 (1st
    ___ ____________ _______

    Cir. 1987). Appellant asserts on appeal that he did

    "everything possible" to alert the DOC and the district court

    to the problem of the missing legal files and interference by

    prison officials with his personal papers and mail.

    Specifically, he states that he filed a protective order in



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    the district court in 1990. To support his position,

    appellant refers to the first addendum to his brief. While a

    review of the material included in addendum #1 indicates that

    appellant pursued his complaints within the prison system,

    there is no evidence that appellant contacted the district

    court in any way to alert it to his difficulties. The only

    reference to a protective order is in papers concerning

    another action filed by appellant in the district court.

    We find appellant's excuse inadequate to explain

    such long delays in the prosecution of these actions. In

    light of appellant's knowledge in 1989 that he would have

    difficulty in pursuing his complaints due to defendants'

    alleged obstructive conduct, he was in a position to appeal

    to the district court for relief. See Medeiros v. United
    ___ ________ ______

    States, 621 F.2d 468, 470 (1st Cir. 1980) (where plaintiff
    ______

    knew about unavailability of expert witness for approximately

    five months prior to trial date and was, as a result, unable

    to proceed on day of trial, dismissal warranted); Zavala
    ______

    Santiago, 553 F.2d at 713 (initial burden to go forward is on
    ________

    plaintiff and failure to alert district court to problems is

    one factor supporting dismissal for failure to prosecute).

    This is not a case where, although a significant amount of

    time had passed between the filing of the complaint and the

    dismissal for want of prosecution, the parties diligently

    acted to advance the case. See Richman v. General Motors
    ___ _______ _______________



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    Corp., 437 F.2d 196, 199 (1st Cir. 1971) (where parties
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    actively pursued action, outright dismissal too harsh a

    sanction). Rather, appellant essentially did nothing.

    In light of his ability, as the district noted and

    appellant himself acknowledges, to pursue his other federal

    actions, his inertia in these cases becomes less supportable.

    Although appellant's conduct cannot be called contumacious,

    it is plain that he has unreasonably delayed in advancing his

    causes of action and in applying to the district court for

    relief. Indeed, his request for an eight-month extension of

    time in response to the notice of dismissal only highlights

    the likelihood that appellant will continue to act in a

    dilatory manner. In such a situation, dismissal is not too

    harsh a sanction. See Medeiros, 621 F.2d at 470-71 (delay by
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    plaintiff in availing himself of discovery, although not

    "contumacious," is a sufficient ground for dismissal). We

    also note that the merits of appellant's underlying claims

    are questionable and that the long pendency of this action

    has likely resulted on prejudice to defendants. Thus, we

    cannot say that the district court abused its discretion in

    dismissing the complaints under Fed. R. Civ. P. 41(b) and

    Local Rule 41.1.

    The judgments of the district court are affirmed.
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