Langton v. Hogan ( 1995 )


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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 95-1582

    WILLIAM LANGTON AND DAVID LEBLANC,

    Plaintiffs - Appellees,

    v.

    WILLIAM HOGAN, JR., ET AL.,

    Defendants - Appellants.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. Rya W. Zobel, U.S. District Judge] ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Boudin, Circuit Judge, _____________

    Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________

    and Keeton,* District Judge. ______________

    _____________________

    Robert J. Munnelly, Jr., Assistant Attorney General, with _________________________
    whom Scott Harshbarger, Attorney General of Massachusetts, Karen _________________ _____
    Laufer, Assistant Attorney General, and Philip W. Silva IV were ______ ___________________
    on brief for appellants.
    Dennis J. Bannon for appellees. ________________



    ____________________

    November 21, 1995
    ____________________

    ____________________

    * Of the District of Massachusetts, sitting by designation.












    KEETON, District Judge. This is an appeal by KEETON, District Judge. ________________

    Defendants-Appellants from a 1995 Judgment of the district court

    modifying, on motion of Defendants-Appellants, but not to the

    full extent they requested, a Permanent Injunction ordered in

    1984. We treat the 1995 Judgment as in essence a ruling on a

    motion for modification of a consent decree that did no more than

    decide the issues before the court, as the matter was presented

    by Defendants-Appellants. Discerning no error of law, no clearly

    erroneous finding of fact, and no abuse of discretion, we affirm.



    I. Background Facts and Procedural History I. Background Facts and Procedural History

    In 1979, the Plaintiffs-Appellees, two inmates of a

    Massachusetts correctional institution, filed a civil action

    under 42 U.S.C. 1983, claiming, among other things, that

    predecessors of Defendants-Appellants in positions of authority

    in the institution and the state correctional system had violated

    and were continuing to violate constitutionally protected rights

    of the inmates by intercepting and monitoring their telephone

    calls, including calls to their counsel as well as other private

    calls, and that such interception and monitoring violated the

    federal and state wiretapping statutes, 18 U.S.C. 2510 et seq. __ ____

    and Mass. Gen. L. ch. 272, 99 et seq. __ ____

    For convenience, we will refer to Plaintiffs-Appellees

    as plaintiffs or by name, and Defendants-Appellants as defendants

    or the Department of Correction.

    In 1984, after negotiations of the parties, and


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    consultations of counsel and the judge to whom the case had been

    randomly assigned, the parties entered into a Settlement

    Stipulation, dated October 17, 1984, providing for a Permanent

    Injunction in the form of an attached exhibit, and a Judgment of

    Dismissal in the form of another attached exhibit. The district

    court (Zobel, D. J.) approved the settlement and made the two

    orders. One was the Judgment of Dismissal, reciting that, in

    view of the Settlement Stipulation,

    all of the claims by both plaintiffs in this
    action are dismissed with prejudice and
    without costs or attorney's fees to any
    party.

    App. 000029.

    The other was a Permanent Injunction in view of the Settlement

    Stipulation:

    1. All officers, agents, servants,
    employees and attorneys of the Department of
    Correction are enjoined permanently, under
    both 18 U.S.C. 2510 et seq. and M.G.L. c. ________
    272, 99 et seq., from intercepting, ________
    endeavoring to intercept or procuring any
    other person to intercept, any wire
    communication by or to William Langton or
    David LeBlanc, inmates within the custody of
    the Department, without a specific court
    order or legislative authorization to do so,
    except as specifically permitted by these
    statutes, taken together, as they have been
    amended or may be amended and as they have
    been construed in reported decisions that are
    binding in this Court or in the state courts
    of Massachusetts.

    2. This Permanent Injunction, entered
    pursuant to the Settlement Stipulation dated
    October 15, 1984, shall operate prospectively
    only. It shall not of its own force affect
    the rights of inmates of the Department other
    than William Langton and David LeBlanc.


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    App. 000030-31.

    The Department of Correction apparently complied with

    the Permanent Injunction without incident for almost a decade,

    until April 1994, when it promulgated new regulations governing

    telephone access and use by inmates, 103 C.M.R. 482.00 et seq. __ ____

    (hereinafter "the Regulations"). These Regulations, ostensibly

    applicable to all inmates in all Department institutions and

    facilities, instituted a system of routine monitoring of inmate

    telephone calls by the Department of Correction and required

    inmates to sign a form consenting to having their calls

    monitored, or be deprived of their telephone access. The

    Regulations also limited the number of telephone calls that could

    be made by inmates to ten monitored calls to non-lawyers, and

    five non-monitored calls to lawyers. All telephone calls,

    whether lawyer or non-lawyer, were required to be pre-approved.

    The Department of Correction sought to apply the new

    Regulations to plaintiffs. Plaintiffs refused to sign the

    consent forms and were denied telephone access. In June 1994,

    plaintiffs filed a Petition for Contempt alleging that the

    Department of Correction had prohibited plaintiffs from placing

    telephone calls unless they agreed to permit the recording of all

    their telephone calls. Defendants moved to dismiss the petition

    for contempt, and plaintiffs filed an opposition to the motion to

    dismiss.

    While the motion to dismiss was still pending,

    defendants filed, in January 1995, a Motion to Modify the


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    Permanent Injunction

    to allow for the restrictions, monitoring and
    recording of plaintiffs' telephone use in
    accordance with the Department of
    Correction's new telephone regulations, 103
    CMR 482.00 et seq. _______

    App. 000077.

    On February 21, 1995, Judge Zobel signed a Memorandum

    of Decision, the last paragraph of which is as follows:

    Defendants' motion to modify the permanent
    injunction is allowed to the extent that the
    Department of Correction may limit
    plaintiffs' access in accordance with the
    Regulations, 403 CMR 482.00 et seq. It is _______
    denied to the extent that defendants shall
    not monitor plaintiffs' calls and 482.10
    shall not apply to plaintiffs. Counsel shall
    submit a form of judgment reflecting the
    modification allowed.

    App. 000103.

    Counsel having failed to agree upon a form of judgment

    reflecting the modification allowed, Judge Zobel, on May 3, 1995,

    signed a Judgment as follows:

    After hearing on the defendants' Motion to
    Modify the Permanent injunction, and in
    accordance with the Court's Memorandum of
    Decision dated February 21, 1995, it is
    hereby ordered and adjudged:

    1. The defendants shall not monitor or
    record the telephone calls of the plaintiffs,
    William Langton and David LeBlanc.

    2. The provisions of 403 CMR 482.10,
    shall not apply to the plaintiffs (except for
    call detailing, which shall apply to the
    plaintiffs) pending further order of the
    court upon application of the defendants.

    3. Acceptance by each plaintiff of a PIN
    and use of inmate telephones shall not be
    deemed as consent to the conditions and

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    restrictions placed upon inmate telephone
    calls, including call monitoring or
    recording.

    4. The defendants shall notify by letter
    each non-attorney whose name appears on the
    plaintiffs' lists of preauthorized telephone
    numbers that the message regarding recording
    and monitoring should be disregarded and that
    calls made by the plaintiffs are not subject
    to monitoring and recording.

    5. The plaintiffs may request changes in
    their preauthorized telephone numbers at any
    time. Such changes shall be made
    expeditiously by the defendants provided they
    are in compliance with the restrictions on
    the total number of personal and attorney
    numbers plaintiffs are allowed to call
    pursuant to 403 CMR 482 et seq. If, at any _______
    time, defendants believe plaintiffs are
    abusing this arrangement, they may petition
    the court for further relief.

    6. Defendants' Motion to Modify the
    Permanent Injunction is allowed to the extent
    that the Department of Correction may limit
    plaintiffs' access in accordance with the
    Regulations, 403 CMR 482.00 et seq., as _______
    amended, so long as such amendments do not
    change the substance of this order.

    7. Modification of the Permanent
    Injunction entered by this court on
    October 15, 1984 is required for the
    Department of Correction to apply new inmate
    telephone access regulations to the
    plaintiffs.

    App. 000104-106.



    II. The 1984 Permanent Injunction and Judgment of Dismissal II. The 1984 Permanent Injunction and Judgment of Dismissal

    The 1984 Permanent Injunction was not in the classic

    mold of consent decrees, as two orders were made rather than a

    single integrated consent decree. The terms of these two orders,

    however, were as surely part of the terms of the settlement as

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    were the recitations in the document entitled Settlement

    Stipulation. In this case, we take account of the terms of all

    three documents in construing each, and we conclude that they do

    not support the interpretation urged upon the district court, and

    here, as the primary contention of defendants.

    This is an appeal from the district court's ruling on a

    motion for modification, yet defendants have not presented

    arguments as to why the 1995 Judgment should be modified, in

    light of changes in law or fact, to allow the Regulations to be

    applied to the plaintiffs. Defendants instead contend that the

    Regulations should be applied to the plaintiffs because the

    Regulations do not violate, and never have violated, the 1984

    Permanent Injunction. Defendants argue that the federal and

    state wiretapping statutes, as they interpret those statutes, do

    not prohibit the Regulations, and therefore the Permanent

    Injunction does not prohibit the Regulations.

    Rather than argue for modification, defendants, in

    essence, argue that the Permanent Injunction did no more than

    prohibit them from violating law, that there was never any

    adjudication that they had violated any constitutionally

    protected right of plaintiffs, that they yielded nothing with

    regard to any reasonably disputable issue of law or mixed-legal-

    factual issue but merely stipulated that they would not commit

    certain types of violations of law in the future, and therefore

    that when the district court in 1995 purportedly granted in part

    but not fully their motion for modification of the Permanent


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    Injunction, the court was in effect enlarging the injunction in

    plaintiffs' favor rather than granting limited modifications in

    defendants' favor in order appropriately to tailor relief to

    defendants' showing, on the record before the district court at

    the time it made its 1995 ruling, of changes in law or fact that

    warranted modification of the Permanent Injunction.

    We conclude that the position of Defendants-Appellants

    is flawed in several ways, as explained below.

    If the Permanent Injunction did not in any way enlarge

    the rights of plaintiffs beyond what they were under defendants'

    proposed interpretation of the law, then defendants gave up

    nothing in settling the dispute. This is an unlikely

    interpretation and we do not accept it. If it were correct, no

    purpose would be served by the declaration in paragraph 2 that

    the Permanent Injunction "shall not of its own force affect the

    rights of inmates of the Department other than William Langton

    and David LeBlanc." Defendants' contention, in effect, asks us

    to hold that both paragraph 1 and paragraph 2 were illusory --

    stating nothing beyond what was already forbidden by law before

    the Permanent Injunction was entered. This is not a reasonable

    interpretation.

    The usually understood meaning of a Settlement

    Stipulation is that each party is agreeing to give up something -

    - to yield on one or more reasonably plausible contentions of

    law, or fact, or mixed-law-fact issues. "[T]he agreement reached

    normally embodies a compromise; in exchange for the saving of


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    cost and elimination of risk, the parties each give up something

    they might have won had they proceeded with the litigation."

    United States v. Armour, 402 U.S. 673, at 681 (1971). When _____________ ______

    making an agreement for a consent decree, the parties to a case

    are agreeing not to press any of their disputes to decision in

    court. The parties forego "their right to litigate issues

    involved in the case and thus save themselves the time, expense,

    and inevitable risk of litigation." Armour, 402 U.S. at 681. We ______

    so interpret the Settlement Stipulation of the parties to this

    case. The parties' disputes thus settled may include disputes

    about applicable law, disputes about facts, and disputes about

    mixed-legal-factual issues, including disputes about the

    materiality under rules of law (as finally determined in court

    proceedings at trial or on appeal) of particular disputes of

    fact.

    In the present case, it was clear, before the

    Settlement Stipulation, that disputes of fact had been raised by

    the pleadings. It might reasonably be argued in support of the

    position now advanced by defendants, however, that rather than

    settling the merits of these disputes the Settlement Stipulation

    rendered them moot. Without so deciding, we assume in

    defendants' favor that this is so as to any strictly factual

    disputes.

    As to the reasonably disputable issues of law or mixed-

    legal-factual disputes, a settlement and consent decree in

    accordance with the settlement preclude the parties from


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    reasserting their contrasting legal arguments on such issues

    without having first shown cause for vacating or modifying the

    consent decree. Whatever the law governing this case might have

    been just before the parties entered into the Settlement

    Stipulation, the Permanent Injunction was a lawfully entered

    order of court. The law as between the parties to the case is

    what it was agreed to be in the Permanent Injunction. The

    Supreme Court has stated:

    [T]he scope of a consent decree must be
    discerned within its four corners, and not by
    reference to what might satisfy the purposes
    of one of the parties to it .... [T]he
    instrument must be construed as it is
    written, and not as it might have been
    written had the plaintiff [or defendants]
    established his [or their] factual claims and
    legal theories in litigation.

    Armour, 402 U.S., at 681-82. Accord, Firefighters Local Union ______ ______ ________________________

    No. 1784 v. Stotts, 467 U.S. 561, 574 (1984). The parties are ________ ______

    not free to argue their contrasting legal theories of the meaning

    of the statutes that underlie the Injunction, because they gave

    up the right to have that dispute resolved by the court. ____

    We take account of the fact that Armour was decided ______

    long before Rufo v. Inmates of Suffolk County Jail, 502 U.S. 367 ____ ______________________________

    (1992), and that Armour's holdings must be read today, especially ______

    as applied to an institutional consent decree like that before us

    now, with sensitivity to any modification of precedent that the

    decision in Rufo has effected. As we note in Part IV below, ____

    however, this point bears principally upon whether modification

    of the Permanent Injunction should be made, not upon what the


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    Permanent Injunction meant when entered, or meant in 1994 or

    1995, absent modification.

    We take account also of unsettled questions regarding

    whether Armour was modified by United States v. ITT Continental ______ _____________ _______________

    Baking Co., 420 U.S. 223 (1975). We conclude, however, that even __________

    if ITT is read as liberalizing to some degree the standard for ___

    going outside the text of a consent decree to assist in

    determining its meaning, defendants have not offered any

    persuasive reason for going outside the text of the Permanent

    Injunction in this case. Even if we were to assume that

    ambiguity of the meaning of the text of the Permanent Injunction

    warrants our consideration of extraneous sources of

    clarification, defendants' position is not aided. Looking

    outside the text of the Permanent Injunction to then existing

    law, rather than clarifying defendants' position, muddles it

    further, because the existing law was uncertain and yet to be

    determined (as explained in Part III below). We see no reason to

    permit defendants to argue that genuine disputes regarding what

    the state and federal statutes prohibited defendants from doing,

    or permitted them to do, should be resolved now in defendants'

    favor and thereby control the meaning of the Permanent

    Injunction. Instead we hold that the Permanent Injunction (along

    with the associated documents) settled those underlying legal

    disputes.

    The way in which a consent judgment or consent decree

    resolves, between the parties, a dispute over a legal issue is


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    not a ruling on the merits of the legal issue that either (1) _____________

    becomes precedent applicable to any other proceedings under the

    law of stare decisis or (2) applies to others under the law of _____________

    claim preclusion or issue preclusion. See Martin v. Wilks, 490 ___ ______ _____

    U.S. 755 (1989)(parties to litigation cannot enter into a consent

    judgment that will preclude a person not made a party from

    bringing a later suit alleging violation of his or her legal

    rights). The resolution of the legal dispute by consent judgment

    is nonetheless binding on the parties to the case in which the

    consent judgment is entered. The parties to this case are bound

    by the rules of law declared in the Permanent Injunction,

    although no other parties are so bound.

    We state the point more generally. When a dispute of

    law exists between parties to a case and they agree to a

    settlement of that dispute and entry of a judgment with prejudice

    based on that settlement, then the terms of that judgment in

    relation to that legal issue are subject to res judicata

    principles. A judgment that is entered with prejudice under the

    terms of a settlement, whether by stipulated dismissal, a consent

    judgment, or a confession of judgment, is not subject to

    collateral attack by a party or a person in privity, and it bars

    a second suit on the same claim or cause of action. See 1B ___ __

    Moore's Federal Practice .409[5] (2d ed. 1995). Such a judgment ________________________

    has the force of res judicata until further order of that or a

    higher court modifying that consent judgment. This proposition

    is supported in a large body of precedent. See, e.g., In re ___ ____ ______


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    Medomak v. Canning, 922 F.2d 895 (1st Cir. 1990) (generally a _______ _______

    court-approved settlement receives the same res judicata effect

    as a litigated judgment); accord, In Re Laing, 31 F.3d 1050 (10th ______ ___________

    Cir. 1994); Keith v. Aldridge, 900 F.2d 736 (4th Cir. 1990), _____ ________

    cert. denied, 498 U.S. 900 (1990); Epic Metal Corp. v. H.H. _____________ _________________ ____

    Robertson Co., 870 F.2d 1574 (Fed. Cir. 1989), cert. denied, 493 ______________ ____________

    U.S. 855 (1989); Kurzweg v. Marple, 841 F.2d 635 (5th Cir. 1988); _______ ______

    Amalgamated Sugar Co. v. NL Industries, 825 F.2d 634 (2d Cir. _____________________ ______________

    1987), cert. denied, 484 U.S. 992 (1987). ____________




































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    III. Settling Disputable Issues of Law III. Settling Disputable Issues of Law

    Defendants have not called attention to any "specific

    court order or legislative authorization" occurring after the

    entry of the Permanent Injunction. Defendants' position is not

    salvaged by the language in the Permanent Injunction stating that

    defendants are enjoined under the state and federal acts from

    intercepting telephone calls,

    except as specifically permitted by these
    statutes, taken together, as they have been
    amended or may be amended and as they have
    been construed in reported decisions that are
    binding in this Court or in the state courts
    of Massachusetts.

    The statutes do not "specifically permit" the Regulations, and

    the meaning of the statutory provisions for permitted

    interception and monitoring, as "amended" or "construed" in

    "binding" decisions, is at least reasonably susceptible to a

    construction contrary to defendants' proposed interpretation.

    Defendants contend that the Regulations do not violate

    the state or federal wiretapping statutes for three reasons.

    Even now, reasonable arguments can be advanced against, as well

    as for, each of defendants' contentions about the applicable law.

    First, defendants argue that the Massachusetts Wiretap

    Act, Mass. Gen. L. ch. 272, 99 et seq., prohibits only secret __ ____

    "interception", and monitoring under the Regulations is not

    secret and therefore not prohibited. The 1984 Permanent

    Injunction, however, prohibited conduct that would amount to

    "interception" under federal law, even if that conduct would not

    amount to "interception" under state law. The federal wiretap

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    act, 18 U.S.C. 2510, et seq., does not make secrecy decisive. __ ____

    That act, as of 1984, defined the term "intercept" as simply "the

    aural acquisition of the contents of any wire, or oral

    communication through the use of any electronic, mechanical, or

    other device." 18 U.S.C. 2510(4). Monitoring and recording of

    plaintiffs' telephone calls under the Regulations thus

    constitutes "interception" under the 1984 Permanent Injunction,

    despite its being performed openly and without secrecy.

    Second, defendants attempt to argue that the new

    Regulations do not violate the 1984 Permanent Injunction because

    the definition of "interception" within the federal wiretapping

    act, at 18 U.S.C. 2510(5), expressly excludes recording or

    monitoring performed "by an investigative or law enforcement

    officer in the ordinary course of his duties." Defendants

    interpret the statute to mean that monitoring by corrections

    officials under the Regulations falls within the excluded

    category. The defendants have not shown beyond genuine dispute,

    however, that in monitoring conversations corrections officials

    would be acting as "investigative or law enforcement officer[s] _____________ ___________

    in the ordinary course of [their] duties." Defendants cite ________

    several cases from other courts that may be read as so holding.

    United States v. Sabubu, 891 F.2d 1308, 1328 (7th Cir. 1989); _____________ ______

    United States v. St. Paul, 614 F.2d 115, 117 (6th Cir. 1980); ______________ _________

    State v. Fornino, 539 A.2d 301, 308 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. _____ _______

    1988). We are, however, aware of no reported decisions to this

    effect that are binding in this court or in the state courts of


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    Massachusetts. In Campiti v. Walonis, 611 F.2d 387, 392 (1st _______ _______

    Cir. 1979), the First Circuit expressly reserved decision as to

    whether monitoring in accordance with an established prison

    policy of which the prisoners were informed could qualify as part

    of the ordinary course of business of a law enforcement officer.

    The issue in this circuit was in 1984, and still is, reasonably

    debatable.

    Finally, defendants argue the new Regulations do not

    violate the 1984 Permanent Injunction because the federal act

    under 18 U.S.C. 2511(2)(c) permits monitoring or recording by

    "a person acting under color of law" where "one of the parties to

    the communication has given prior consent to such interception."

    Defendants contend that the Regulations meet the one-party

    consent exception of the federal act because inmates impliedly

    consent to be monitored when they use the telephone after being

    made aware that monitoring of calls is a condition for being

    allowed to use the telephone. Defendants have cited cases from

    other jurisdictions holding that execution of forms by inmates

    that acknowledge their understanding that their calls will be

    monitored constitutes consent under the federal act, even if

    inmates are denied telephone access if they do not sign the

    forms; and that calls placed by inmates despite express notice

    from stickers on the telephones and the message from the

    automated operator that accompanies every call constitutes

    consent. See United States v. Horr, 963 F.2d 1124, 1126 (8th ___ ______________ ____

    Cir. 1992); United States v. Amen, 831 F.2d 373, 378-79 (2d Cir. _____________ ____


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    1987); United States v. Willoughby, 860 F.2d 15, 20-21 (2d Cir. _____________ __________

    1988); United States v. Paul, 614 F.2d 115, 117 (6th Cir. 1980); _____________ ____

    United States v. Valencia, 711 F. Supp. 608, 611 (S.D.Fla. 1989); _____________ ________

    United States v. Green, 842 F. Supp. 68, 71-71 (W.D.N.Y. 1994). _____________ _____

    Defendants also argue that because the Regulations require

    positive call acceptance from the recipient after hearing a

    recorded message, recipients are deemed to have impliedly

    consented. Defendants, however, cite no cases to this effect.

    Once again, we are aware of no reported decisions that

    are binding in this court or in the state courts of

    Massachusetts, holding that this type of prison telephone

    monitoring system meets the one-party consent exception to the

    federal wiretapping act due to implied consent. It may

    reasonably be argued that "implied consent" in this sense is not

    a free and voluntary consent; it is instead no more than a choice

    between unattractive options -- a limited choice imposed on

    plaintiffs by defendants. The issue then becomes whether the law

    allows the defendants to impose this limitation of choice on the

    defendants and call their response an implied consent. At the

    least, grounds exist for genuine dispute about whether defendants

    are authorized by law to impose such a limited choice on

    plaintiffs and whether "implied consent" under these

    circumstances is "consent" as that term is used in the federal

    act, and legally effective consent under the Department's

    regulations. See Griggs-Ryan v. Smith, 904 F.2d 112 (1st Cir. ___ ___________ _____

    1990) (holding that "implied consent" is consent in fact,


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    inferred from associated circumstances indicating that a party

    knowingly agreed to surveillance).

    The issue of what constitutes "implied consent" in the

    prison context has not yet been directly addressed by this court,

    and we do not decide it here. It is sufficient to point out that

    plaintiffs in this case have not consented, impliedly or

    otherwise, to the monitoring scheme; plaintiffs instead brought a

    contempt action under the Permanent Injunction, an opposition to

    defendants' motion to dismiss the contempt action, and an

    opposition to defendants' motion for modification of the

    Permanent Injunction. We do not read Griggs-Ryan as supporting ___________

    the view that an inmate has impliedly consented to the very

    scheme the inmate has challenged as a violation of the 1984

    Permanent Injunction.

    Defendants entered into a Settlement Stipulation under

    which each party gave up the right to have the dispute as to the

    meaning of the federal and state wiretapping statutes resolved by

    a court. The meaning of what was permitted under the state and

    federal wiretapping statutes was ambiguous and reasonably

    debatable. Defendants have no right to have that dispute now

    decided in their favor and then to use that resolution to

    interpret the terms of the Permanent Injunction.

    Of course, this does not mean defendants are forever

    barred from moving that the court orders be vacated or modified.

    Special rules are applicable to institutional consent decrees,

    but they concern grounds for vacating or modifying a consent


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    decree, rather than undermining the force of this body of

    precedent in relation to the effect of the consent decree until

    vacated or modified. We perceive no error in Judge Zobel's

    invoking for guidance, in her consideration of the defendants'

    motion for modification of the 1984 Permanent Injunction in this

    case, the body of precedent applicable to motions for

    modification of a consent decree. This body of precedent

    includes the case on which she relied especially, Rufo v. Inmates ____ _______

    of Suffolk County Jail, 502 U.S. 367 (1992) (holding that a party ______________________

    seeking modification of a consent decree may meet its initial

    burden by showing a significant change either in factual

    conditions or in law). Under the guidance of Rufo, however, a ____

    court considering such a motion would be concerned with tailoring

    modifications according to intervening changes in law (as well as

    fact). It would not be deciding the original dispute about what

    would have been a court's answer to the dispute had the parties

    not entered into their Settlement Stipulation.



    IV. The Nature of the 1995 Judgment IV. The Nature of the 1995 Judgment

    When these legal principles are applied here, can it

    reasonably be said that the 1995 Judgment modified the consent

    decree in plaintiffs' favor, as defendants contend, rather than _____________________

    only in defendants' favor though less substantially so than they

    requested? We conclude that, as properly construed in the way

    explained below, the 1995 Judgment modified the Permanent

    Injunction only in defendants' favor. It was appropriately


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    tailored to the only changes in law or in fact disclosed on the

    record before the district court as developed after ample

    opportunity for defendants to present both legal and evidentiary

    support for their motion for modification.

    The only changed circumstances shown on the record

    before the district court at the time of its 1995 Judgment were

    changes of fact with respect to technology of initiating,

    detailing, effecting, monitoring, and recording electronic

    transmissions, including telephone calls. The only changes of

    law shown were those effected when the Department of Correction

    adopted new regulations, published in 403 CMR 482.10 et seq. __ ____

    Rather than attempting to show that the district court's

    modifications, recited in the 1995 Judgment, were not reasonably

    tailored to those changes, defendants seek to show that the 1984

    Permanent Injunction was not in any respect a settlement of a

    disputed issue of law but instead preserved their unlimited right

    to assert their view of the law and have that dispute decided now

    in their favor.

    Defendants ask us on this appeal to resolve that

    original dispute about the law in their favor, and argue that the

    district court should have done so instead of conceiving its duty

    as one of considering whether intervening changes of law (as well

    as fact) had occurred, and, if so, how to tailor modifications of

    the consent decree accordingly. We reject this contention.

    The key modification of the 1984 Permanent Injunction

    that the 1995 judgment makes is explained:


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    Modification of the Permanent Injunction
    entered by this court on October 15, 1984 is
    required for the Department of Correction to
    apply new inmate telephone access regulations
    to the plaintiffs.

    The 1995 judgment adds, for clarity, a statement of some of the

    terms that remain in effect. These terms are not enlargements of

    the terms of the Permanent Injunction in plaintiffs' favor; they

    simply clarify limits on the scope of the modifications in

    defendants' favor.

    The 1995 judgment says nothing, either directly or

    impliedly, about how any future motion for modification with

    appropriate showing of cause and request for appropriately

    tailored relief should be heard and decided under the principles

    of Rufo, 502 U.S. 367. Nor do we. Instead, we leave such ____

    matters for decision in the future only if and when they are

    appropriately presented first in district court.



    V. Conclusion V. Conclusion

    For the foregoing reasons Defendants-Appellants'

    arguments fail. The 1995 judgment of the district court is

    AFFIRMED. ________














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    "Dissent Follows" "Dissent Follows"
















































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    BOUDIN, Circuit Judge, dissenting. This case turns BOUDIN, Circuit Judge, dissenting _____________ __________

    centrally on the interpretation of a provision of a 1984 consent

    decree settling a case that Langton and LeBlanc brought against

    Massachusetts corrections officials. The majority's opinion

    contains many unexceptionable statements of law, but on the

    pivotal issue--the reading of a sentence of the 1984 decree--the

    majority's reading simply does not square with either the

    decree's language or its purpose. Indeed, because this case

    involves the regulation of a state agency by federal judges under

    an elderly consent decree, it raises issues of policy and

    judicial attitude that go beyond a mere quarrel about decree

    language.

    1. In 1979, Langton and LeBlanc filed a 1983 action

    against the state prison authorities complaining of mistreatment.

    The complaint alleged that using corrections officers to

    distribute medication violated state health laws and the

    Constitution; that the number of telephone calls permitted to the

    plaintiffs was too few and the time limit too short; and finally

    that the prison had been monitoring telephone calls--one call by

    Langton to an attorney was specified--and that such monitoring

    violated 18 U.S.C. 2510 and Mass. Gen. Laws ch. 272, 99, the

    federal and state wire-tapping statutes.

    In an April 1983 decision, the district court

    considered the medication and limited-calls issues at some

    length, and it concluded that no protected rights had been

    violated and ordered summary judgment for the defendants. In a


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    brief discussion of the monitoring issue, the district court said

    that "[n]on-consensual monitoring of inmate calls may violate 18

    U.S.C. 2510," citing a then-recent decision of this court.

    Although the defendants denied any such monitoring, Langton's

    affidavit described one incident in which he thought that a

    telephone call to his lawyer had been monitored; the court said

    that the affidavits, "if just barely," created a factual issue

    precluding summary judgment.

    In October 1984 the parties entered a settlement

    agreement that dealt with several different grievances. The

    proposed remedies included new regulations permitting inmates'

    access to telephones for at least 15 minutes per day, furnishing

    Langton a three-drawer metal file cabinet and a stereo system in

    his cell, and arrangements concerning Langton's use of an

    electric typewriter in the prison library. Finally, the parties

    agreed to the entry of a permanent injunction whose main

    paragraph read as follows:

    All officers, agents, servants,
    employees and attorneys of the Department
    of Correction are enjoined permanently,
    under both 18 U.S.C. 2510 et seq. and __ ____
    M.G.L. c. 272, 99 et seq., from __ ____
    intercepting, endeavoring to intercept,
    or procuring any other person to
    intercept, any wire communication by or
    to William Langton or David LeBlanc,
    inmates within the custody of the
    Department, without a specific court
    order or legislative authorization to do
    so, except as specifically permitted by
    these statutes, taken together, as they
    have been amended or may be amended and
    as they have been construed or may be
    construed in reported decisions that are
    binding in this Court or in the state

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    courts of Massachusetts.

    There has been no showing that this provision aimed to

    resolve any dispute between the parties as to what was or was not

    unlawful. Indeed, the settlement agreement said, in the

    paragraph proposing the injunction just quoted, that corrections

    officers "specifically deny that any of them, or anyone acting in

    concert with any of them, ever intercepted or monitored any of

    Langton's or David LeBlanc's wire communications by any means,

    lawful or unlawful . . . ." In short, the parties disagreed

    about whether monitoring had occurred, and the matter was settled

    by a forward-looking decree that enjoined obedience to two cited

    statutes.

    In recent years, prisons have encountered a growing

    number of problems created by inmate telephone calls.1 These

    problems include the use of telephones to obtain narcotics in

    prisons, to promote illegal drug trading outside of prison as

    well as other criminal operations, commit fraud in the purchase

    of merchandise and goods for prisoners, and to carry out

    obstructions of justice and escape plots. Ultimately

    Massachusetts followed a number of other prison systems including

    the federal prison system in adopting a standardized regime to

    control and track inmate use of the telephone system.

    The new Massachusetts regime allows each inmate to list

    ____________________

    1 This intervening history is recounted in defense affidavits
    filed in the district court incident to the latest round of
    litigation and the description was largely accepted by the
    district court.

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    up to ten family members and friends and up to five private

    attorneys or law firms, in addition to three automatically

    authorized legal service organizations. Each inmate can place a

    call only by using his or her personal identification number, and

    the technology restricts the call to one of the 18 telephone

    numbers authorized for that inmate. To obtain such a PIN number,

    the inmate completes a form that requires the inmate's consent to

    various conditions, including call monitoring, call recording and

    the retention of various "details" incident to the call (e.g., ____

    the time of the call, the number called). But calls to

    attorneys, law firms and the legal service organizations are not ___

    subject to monitoring or recording.

    Langton and LeBlanc refused to complete the consent

    forms, were denied telephone access, and in June 1994 began the

    contempt proceeding that prompted the present appeal. When the

    defendants moved to dismiss the petition on the ground that they

    had not violated the consent decree, the district judge indicated

    that a motion to modify the decree should be filed. Without

    agreeing that it was necessary, the defendants filed the

    suggested motion. Their affidavits provide reasons why they

    think it impractical or dangerous to except Langton and LeBlanc

    from the regime that is now applied to all other prisoners.

    In February 1995, the district judge entered an

    unpublished decision which treated the issue before the court as

    a motion for modification of the consent decree. Fed. R. Civ. P.

    60(b)(5), (6). The court granted the government's motion in part


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    and denied it in part, ruling that the new regime did respond to

    new technology and real threats of abuse, that Langton and

    LeBlanc could be limited as to the number of telephone calls they

    could make, but that there was no pattern of abuse by either of

    them to justify the monitoring of their calls. The core of the

    court's injunctive judgment is that prison officials cannot

    monitor or record calls made by these two plaintiffs.

    2. The broad question on appeal is whether the

    monitoring and recordation regime violates the consent decree.

    The district court evidently assumed that it did--thus its

    suggestion that the government file a motion for modification--

    but it never addressed this issue in detail. Yet if the regime

    does not violate the consent decree, the contempt proceeding case

    should have been dismissed and the Rule 60(b) motion mooted.

    Langton and LeBlanc have never moved to modify the decree to

    enlarge their rights; and prison officials, in moving to modify

    the decree in their favor (in accordance with the district

    court's suggestion), certainly were not abandoning their bedrock

    position that the new regime was lawful under the decree and did

    not require any decree modification.

    In my view, a realistic reading of the 1984 decree

    provision is that it effectively enjoined state prison officials

    from violating the cited provisions of federal or state law and ___

    nothing more. True the provision was clumsily worded: it _____________

    juxtaposed a ban on interception, itself a term differently

    defined under the two cited statutes, with an awkward but broadly


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    worded qualification, namely, that interceptions are allowed "as

    specifically permitted by the statutes, taken together, as they

    may have been amended or may be amended and as they have been

    construed or may be construed in reported decisions that are

    binding in this Court or the state courts of Massachusetts."

    The injunction could and probably should have used a

    much simpler formulation, such as a ban on "unlawful"

    interceptions, but everyone knows that lawyers often overwrite

    legal documents. There is no indication anywhere that the phrase

    "specifically permitted" means anything more than "permitted,"

    the term "specifically" being the kind of legal flourish that

    usually causes more trouble than it solves. In any event, the

    provision itself describes the defendants as "enjoined . . .

    under both 18 U.S.C. 2510 et seq. and M.G.L. c. 272, 99 et __ ____ __

    seq." and nothing in the provision suggests that the injunction ____

    was intended to be broader than the statutes themselves.

    This view is confirmed by the "circumstances

    surrounding the formation of the consent order" which are

    properly considered in its interpretation. United States v. ITT _____________ ___

    Continental Baking Co., 420 U.S. 223, 238 (1975). The casus _______________________ _____

    belli, it must be remembered, was a claim, denied by prison _____

    officials, that they had monitored an inmate's call to his

    lawyer, something that no one would expect a court or legislature

    to authorize. The prison officials, who never contended that

    such a monitoring of calls to lawyers would be lawful, simply

    denied that they did any monitoring. The parties then settled


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    the case by having the defendants enjoined to obey federal and

    state law on interception, as it might be construed by courts or

    amended by legislatures from time to time.

    The panel majority expresses disbelief that plaintiffs

    in a lawsuit would ever settle merely for a promise by defendants

    to obey the law. But in fact such provisions are common in

    decrees (SEC consent decrees are a classic example) and, in any

    event, a promise simply to obey the law made perfectly good sense

    in this case. The settlement provided Langton and LeBlanc a

    small number of specific benefits already described. As to

    telephone monitoring, the prison did not defend listening in on a

    telephone call between an inmate and his lawyer, but denied that

    monitoring had occurred or was routinely practiced. Langton and

    LeBlanc then settled for a general provision that made the prison

    officials subject to contempt proceedings if they did violate the

    law in the future.

    If the decree is read in this fashion, then the

    contempt motion boils down to the question whether the prison's

    new regime is lawful under the relevant statutes. Nothing in the

    decree's terms prohibits monitoring or recording as such. The

    decree uses the term "interception" which is a statutory concept

    freighted with exceptions, and the decree's ban is itself subject

    to the broad "except as" clause already described. Nor does the

    panel majority hold that the present regime is unlawful under the ____

    federal and state statutes but only that reasonable arguments can

    be made on both sides.


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    The issue of the regime's lawfulness under the statutes

    may be debatable, but it is doubtful that it is a close call.

    Massachusetts has adopted a widely used model, used by the

    federal prison system as well, see generally 28 C.F.R. 540.100 ___ _________

    et seq., and practically all the case law cited in the briefs __ ____

    tends to support it.2 Given the general wording of the federal

    and state statutes, and the strong policy considerations for

    giving prison officials "appropriate deference and flexibility,"

    Sandin v. Conner, 115 S. Ct. 2293, 2299 (1995), it is very ______ ______

    unlikely that a regime like that of Massachusetts would be struck

    down, even if there are possible occasional applications that

    might raise hard questions.

    In any event, once it is understood that the decree

    only precludes unlawful interception, the district court has ________

    provided no basis for entering a judgment against the prison

    officials since that court did not find that the regime violated

    federal or state law. It is true that this general question is

    one of law that we might in theory resolve ourselves; but no such

    theory has been adequately briefed by the plaintiffs, and no

    decision of a district court on this issue has ever been

    rendered. The proper solution in this case is to vacate the
    ____________________

    2 E.g., United States v. Horr, 963 F.2d 1124, 1126 (8th Cir. ____ _____________ ____
    1992); United States v. Sababu, 891 F.2d 1308, 1326-30 (7th Cir. _____________ ______
    1989); United States v. Willoughby, 860 F.2d 15, 19-21 (2d Cir. _____________ __________
    1988); Martin v. Tyson, 845 F.2d 1451, 1458 (7th Cir. 1988); ______ _____
    United States v. Amen, 831 F.2d 373, 378-80 (2d Cir. 1987); ______________ ____
    United States v. Paul, 614 F.2d 115, 117 (6th Cir. 1980); United _____________ ____ ______
    States v. Green, 842 F. Supp. 68, 71-72 (W.D.N.Y. 1994); United ______ _____ ______
    States v. Valencia, 211 F. Supp. 608, 611 (S.D. Fla. 1989); Lee ______ ________ ___
    v. Carlson, 645 F. Supp. 1430, 1438-39 (S.D.N.Y. 1986). _______

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    district court's 1995 judgment and remand to give the plaintiffs

    the opportunity to show that the present regime is unlawful, and

    therefore in violation of the decree. _________

    The panel majority's contrary construction of the

    decree does not rest on an attempt to grapple seriously with its

    language and background. Rather, the majority relies primarily

    on several rather general propositions: that parties sometimes

    do resolve by consent decree legal issues that are reasonably

    debatable, that such resolutions have an operative effect through

    the consent decree, and that parties are bound by the decree even

    if the legal issues should have been decided the other way.

    These notions might have some bearing if the prison officials had

    agreed, with no exceptions, that "monitoring and recordation" are

    prohibited. But the defendants did not make such a bargain, so

    the general propositions relied on by the majority have nothing

    to do with this case.

    To sum up, the panel majority could decide on the

    merits whether the new Massachusetts regime does violate the

    federal or state statutes, and it would be equally permissible,

    and in my view more appropriate, to vacate the 1995 judgment, to

    remand and to allow the district court to consider this set of

    issues in the first instance. But what is not tenable is an

    interpretation of the 1984 consent decree, without serious

    support in either its phrasing or its context, that enjoins

    Massachusetts officials from doing what (so far as we know from

    the precedents) they lawfully can do under existing federal and


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    state law.

    Courts have been widely criticized in recent years for

    excessively interfering with state institutions such as prisons

    and, of course, these charges are often made by those who are

    unaware of the abusive conditions that the federal decrees are

    invoked to remedy. But it does behoove federal judges--who do

    not have political responsibility for managing these

    institutions--to consider with care and modesty how they

    interpret their authority, especially in construing elderly

    decrees as applied to entirely new sets of conditions.


































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