Stow v. Warden, NHSP ( 1994 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion









    March 31, 1994 [NOT FOR PUBLICATION]

    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ___________________


    No. 93-1869




    WESTON J. STOW,

    Plaintiff Appellant,

    v.

    WARDEN, NH STATE PRISON, ET AL.,

    Defendant, Appellees.


    __________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

    [Hon. Joseph A. DiClerico, U.S. District Judge]



    ___________________

    Before

    Breyer, Chief Judge,
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    Torruella and Selya, Circuit Judges.
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    ___________________

    Weston J. Stow on brief pro se.
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    Jeffrey R. Howard, Attorney General, and Christopher P.
    __________________ _______________
    Reid, Attorney, Civil Bureau, on brief for appellees.
    ____



    __________________

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    Per Curiam. Weston Stow appeals the district
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    court's decision dismissing his action under 42 U.S.C. 1983

    against New Hampshire corrections officials. We affirm.1

    Stow is presently in prison in Massachusetts.

    Previously, he had been confined in a New Hampshire state

    prison. While in prison in New Hampshire, Stow sued

    corrections officials in state court, alleging that a new

    prison policy permitting the removal and destruction of all

    newsclippings in incoming letters violated the state

    constitution. Under the policy, prison officials had removed

    and destroyed a newsclipping sent to Stow in a family letter,

    and Stow sought damages and an injunction against enforcement

    of the policy. After a hearing, the state superior court

    determined that the no-newsclipping policy was invalid, but

    denied Stow money damages.

    Soon after bringing his state suit, Stow filed a

    section 1983 suit in the federal district court in New

    Hampshire, seeking declaratory and injunctive relief and

    damages.2 Stow alleged that the New Hampshire state

    prison's publishers only rule "as it appl[ies] to the receipt


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    1. Because the facts and legal arguments are adequately
    presented in the briefs and record, and because our
    decisional process would not be aided by oral argument, we
    deny the defendants' request for oral argument. See 1st Cir.
    ___
    Loc. R. 34.1(a).

    2. Stow's federal complaint named the same defendants as
    were named in the state suit, as well as an additional
    defendant.

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    of both hardcover and softcover as well as looseleaf papers

    from sources other than a publisher" was unconstitutional and

    that defendants had illegally seized his personal property.

    On three occasions, Stow said that he had not been allowed to

    keep specific printed material contained in incoming letters

    or dropped off for him by visiting family members. One such

    occasion involved the same incident and policy on which

    Stow's state suit was based. In an amended complaint, Stow

    further alleged that the rule prevented him from receiving

    newspapers and periodicals from his Massachusetts hometown

    which he could not afford to subscribe to and which the

    prison library did not have.

    In granting judgment on the pleadings, the court

    determined first that Stow could not litigate his section

    1983 claim based on the no-newsclipping policy in federal

    court. Under state law, Stow would have been barred from

    litigating that claim since he could have presented it to the

    court in the state action he brought, but had not. Because

    state law would not have permitted Stow to litigate his

    section 1983 claim in state court, the court concluded that

    Stow was also barred from litigating that claim in federal

    court, citing Migra v. Warren City School District Board of
    _____ _____________________________________

    Education, 465 U.S. 75 (1984). In Migra, the Supreme Court
    _________ _____

    held that a federal court must give the same preclusive

    effect to a state court judgment as the law of that state



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    would give to that judgment, and it affirmed a district court

    decision dismissing a section 1983 action brought after the

    plaintiff had successfully sued in state court under state

    law on the same claim, because the plaintiff could have, but

    did not, present the section 1983 issue to the state court in

    the state action. Id. at 81, 83-85. Under Migra, the
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    district court's ruling was clearly correct. On appeal, Stow

    contends that the court gave the state court decision

    preclusive effect with respect to his other claims as well,

    but the court's decision belies that contention.

    The district court also correctly decided that

    Stow's claims for declaratory and injunctive relief regarding

    the publishers only rule were moot. Plaintiff's own filings

    establish that he is no longer confined in New Hampshire, but

    is presently housed in Massachusetts. Accordingly, the

    district court permissibly relied on the fact of Stow's

    transfer out of New Hampshire in granting judgment on the

    pleadings. On appeal, Stow says that Massachusetts

    corrections officials review his case annually to determine

    whether he may be paroled, and that he will be returned to a

    New Hampshire prison to begin serving his sentence there once

    he is paroled. He claims that his requests for declaratory

    and injunctive relief are not moot because he may be back in

    a New Hampshire prison soon. We have no basis for evaluating

    the validity of that claim on the present record. In any



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    event, his eventual parole in Massachusetts is a contingency,

    which itself is subject to other contingencies (e.g., what

    the standards for parole are in Massachusetts and how close

    Stow comes to meeting them). Therefore, his claims for

    declaratory and injunctive relief are moot. Cf. Super Tire
    ___ __________

    Engineering Co. v. McCorkle, 416 U.S. 115, 123 (1974)
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    (declaratory relief was warranted where the allegedly

    injurious governmental action did not rest on "distant

    contingencies"); see Johnson v. Moore, 948 F.2d 517, 520 (9th
    ___ _______ _____

    Cir. 1991) (per curiam) (prisoner's claims for injunctive

    relief from publishers only rule were mooted by his transfer

    to a different facility). Although Stow also argues that his

    case comes within the capable of repetition yet evading

    review exception to the mootness doctrine, we have no basis

    for evaluating that claim. The record does not show (nor has

    Stow said) how long his sentence in New Hampshire will be

    once he returns. Cf. Super Tire, supra, 416 U.S. at 126
    ___ __________ _____

    (capable of repetition yet evading review exception applies

    where the potentially recurring situation is of

    "comparatively short duration").

    Finally, the district court found that New

    Hampshire's publishers only rule was valid as a matter of

    law. We affirm its decision on the basis of the qualified

    immunity defense asserted by defendants on appeal, which, in

    this case, may be resolved as a question of law. See Febus-
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    Rodriguez v. Betancourt-Lebron, 14 F.3d 87, 90 (1st Cir.
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    1994) (qualified immunity is a question of law where there

    are no disputed fact issues). Although defendants did not

    argue their qualified immunity below, we may affirm a

    judgment on "any independently sufficient ground." Horta v.
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    Sullivan, 4 F.3d 2, 9 (1st Cir. 1993).
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    Here, Stow's only remaining claim is one for

    damages allegedly suffered by defendants' application of the

    state prison's publishers only rule. But he may only sue

    defendants for damages if their conduct violated "clearly

    established . . . constitutional rights of which a reasonable

    person would have known." Febus-Rodriguez, supra, 14 F.3d at
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    91. The question for us, therefore, is not whether

    defendants' conduct was "clearly constitutional, but whether

    it [was] clearly unconstitutional." Knox v. McGinnis, 998
    ____ ________

    F.2d 1405, 1409 (7th Cir. 1993).

    The publishers only rule challenged by Stow

    permitted prisoners to receive published materials only from

    publishers. Stow argued on appeal that the rule was

    unconstitutional because it did not permit prisoners to

    obtain materials from visitors or to seek case-by-case

    exceptions to the rule's outright prohibition of printed

    materials from nonpublisher sources. Moreover, in his

    complaint, he had alleged a complete deprivation of certain

    materials which he could not afford to buy from publishers



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    and which were not available in the prison library. Although

    this court has sustained a publishers only rule which covered

    both hardbound and softbound materials as a matter of law in

    part on the ground that the rule permitted exceptions for

    certain printed materials brought by visitors, see Kines v.
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    Day, 754 F.2d 28 (1st Cir. 1985), there is nothing in Kines
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    which suggested that a rule without such an exception would

    be per se unlawful. Moreover, in Ward v. Washtenaw County
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    Sheriff's Department, 881 F.2d 325 (6th Cir. 1989), the Sixth
    ____________________

    Circuit sustained a publishers only rule which applied to

    both hardcover and softcover publications and which

    specifically forbade inmates from receiving publications from

    visitors. There is authority that suggests a publishers only

    rule would not be unconstitutional merely because it prevents

    an inmate from receiving the particular materials he seeks,

    as long as inmates have access to a "broad range of

    publications." See Bell v. Wolfish, 441 U.S. 520, 552 (1979)
    ___ ____ _______

    ("where 'other avenues' remain available for the receipt of

    materials by inmates, the loss of 'cost advantages does not

    fundamentally implicate free speech values'") (emphasis in
    ____ ______

    original; citation omitted); Hurd v. Williams, 755 F.2d 306,
    ____ ________

    308 (3d Cir. 1985) (rejecting an argument that the prison's

    publishers only rule fell "inequitably" on the poor where the

    plaintiff had not disputed that he had access to a library);

    compare Thornburgh v. Abbott, 490 U.S. 401, 418 (1989)
    _______ __________ ______



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    (sustaining regulations impinging on First Amendment rights

    where the regulations permitted "a broad range of

    publications to be sent, received, and read" and thus

    afforded inmates sufficient alternative means of exercising

    those rights). Thus, we cannot say that, when defendants

    applied their publishers only rule to Stow, the rule was

    "clearly unconstitutional" because it did not provide for the

    exceptions suggested by Stow or because Stow was unable to

    afford to buy particular materials not otherwise available in

    the prison library. Accordingly, defendants are protected by

    qualified immunity, and Stow's claim for compensatory damages

    was properly dismissed. See Johnson, supra, 948 F.2d at 520
    ___ _______ _____

    (inmate's claim for damages was held preempted by defendants'

    qualified immunity where circuit law had not yet clearly

    established that a publishers only rule covering both

    hardcover and softcover materials was unconstitutional).

    Affirmed.
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