Carter v. McGrady ( 2002 )


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  •                                                                                                                            Opinions of the United
    2002 Decisions                                                                                                             States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    5-28-2002
    Carter v. McGrady
    Precedential or Non-Precedential: Precedential
    Docket No. 01-1738
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    Recommended Citation
    "Carter v. McGrady" (2002). 2002 Decisions. Paper 303.
    http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_2002/303
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    PRECEDENTIAL
    Filed May 29, 2002
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    No. 01-1738
    RICHARD CARTER, SCI-MAHANOY PARA-LEGAL
    ASSISTANT/ ON BEHALF OF HIMSELF AND PRISON
    POPULATION
    v.
    JAMES MCGRADY, CAPTAIN, AND; MARY CANINO,
    HEARING EXAMINER, IN THEIR INDIVIDUAL AND
    OFFICIAL CAPACITY
    (Eastern District of PA Civil #94-cv-7163)
    RICHARD CARTER, on behalf of himself and all those
    similarly situated
    v.
    MARTIN L. DRAGOVICH, SUPERINTENDENT; EDWARD J.
    KLEM, Superintendent of Centralized Services;
    COMMONWEALTH OF PENNSYLVANIA; PENNSYLVANIA
    DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS; SCI AT MAHANOY;
    JAMES MCGRADY, CAPTAIN (Eastern District of PA Civil
    #96-cv-6496)
    Richard Carter, Appellant
    On Appeal From the United States District Court
    For the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
    District Judge: Honorable J. Curtis Joyner
    Argued: February 4, 2002
    Before: BECKER, Chief Judge, McKEE and BARRY,
    Circuit Judges.
    (Filed: May 29, 2002)
    JOSEPH A. SULLIVAN, ESQUIRE
    EDWARD W. FERRUGGIA, ESQUIRE
    KIMBERLY M. KAPLAN, ESQUIRE
    (ARGUED)
    LISA M. SCIDURLO, ESQUIRE
    ADAM C. BONIN, ESQUIRE
    Schnader, Harrison, Segal & Lewis,
    LLP
    1600 Market Street, Suite 3600
    Philadelphia, PA 19103
    Counsel for Appellant
    D. MICHAEL FISHER, ESQUIRE
    Attorney General
    BETH ANNE SMITH, ESQUIRE
    (ARGUED)
    Senior Deputy Attorney General
    JOHN G. KNORR, III, ESQUIRE
    Chief Deputy Attorney General
    Chief, Appellate Section
    Office of Attorney General
    21 S. 12th Street, 3rd Floor
    Philadelphia, PA 19107-3606
    Counsel for Appellees James
    McGrady, Martin L. Dragovich
    Edward J. Klem and Mary Canino
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    BECKER, Chief Judge.
    This is a prisoner’s civil rights case, 42 U.S.C.S 1983,
    brought by Richard Carter, an inmate in the custody of the
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    Pennsylvania Department of Corrections ("DOC"). Carter, an
    experienced and assiduous jailhouse lawyer, claims that he
    was unlawfully subjected to cell searches and disciplinary
    proceedings in retaliation for his jailhouse lawyering, which
    he contends was disfavored at the State Correctional
    Institute at Mahanoy ("SCI-Mahanoy") where he was
    incarcerated at all times relevant to this lawsuit. This
    appeal is from the order of the District Court granting
    summary judgment for the defendants, James McGrady,
    Martin Dragovich, and Edward Klem, all officials at SCI-
    Mahanoy, based on the conclusion that Carter did not have
    a constitutionally protected right to act as a jailhouse
    lawyer and, thus, the defendants were entitled to qualified
    immunity.
    When this case was before the District Court, the
    Supreme Court had yet to decide Shaw v. Murphy , 
    532 U.S. 223
     (2001), which held that prisoners do not have a
    freestanding constitutional right to assist other inmates in
    filing legal claims. Shaw had asserted such a right, and the
    Supreme Court has therefore foreclosed one facet of
    Carter’s claim. This development has required Carter, who
    describes himself in the case caption as "SCI-Mahanoy
    Para-Legal Assistant/On Behalf of himself and prison
    population," to shift gears and to stress two other
    arguments. First, Carter claims that he was retaliated
    against for exercising his First Amendment rights. Second,
    invoking Turner v. Safley, 
    482 U.S. 78
     (1987), he claims
    that there are no reasons related to penological interests
    that would otherwise justify the conduct of the prison
    officials.
    Carter’s claim of retaliation for exercising a constitutional
    right is governed by Rauser v. Horn, 
    241 F.3d 330
     (3d Cir.
    2001). Under Rauser, prison officials may prevail when the
    plaintiff has made out a prima facie case of retaliation if
    they prove that "they would have made the same decision
    absent the protected conduct for reasons reasonably related
    to legitimate penological interests." 
    Id. at 334
    . The record
    reveals that Carter was clearly guilty of egregious violations
    of prison policy -- stealing a typewriter and unauthorized
    use of the mails (and other violations as well). We conclude,
    assuming arguendo that Carter has correctly described the
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    attitude at SCI-Mahanoy about jailhouse lawyering and that
    he has made out a prima facie case of retaliation, that there
    is no genuine issue of material fact that the prison officials
    would have disciplined Carter for these violations
    notwithstanding his jailhouse lawyering. Accordingly, we
    will affirm, albeit on different grounds than those relied on
    by the District Court. See Narin v. Lower Merion Sch. Dist.,
    
    206 F.3d 323
    , 333 n.8 (3d Cir. 2000). We therefore need
    not reach the interesting issues raised by Carter’s theory
    that he has a protected First Amendment right to provide
    legal advice, and that any action taken against him for
    exercising such a right must be evaluated under Turner.
    I. Facts and Procedural History
    On February 25, 1994, Carter executed and transmitted
    an "outside purchase approval form" for an electric
    typewriter from a "family member or friend." In due course,
    a Smith-Corona typewriter arrived at SCI-Mahanoy from
    Suburban Office Equipment, a vendor located in Ardmore,
    Pennsylvania. On March 24, 1994, Carter signed an inmate
    personal property receipt and accepted delivery of the
    typewriter. A mailroom inspector, Liz Ryan, later informed
    James McGrady, SCI-Mahanoy’s Security Captain, that the
    vendor had sent a demand letter stating that: (1) no
    payment had been made for the typewriter; and (2) Carter
    had obtained the typewriter through the unauthorized use
    of a credit card.
    McGrady investigated the matter by contacting Wallace
    McLean, who worked for the vendor. McLean informed
    McGrady that the typewriter had been ordered over the
    phone using a credit card and that the customer identified
    the name on the card as Richard Carter. The actual owner
    of the card, who lived in California, subsequently verified
    that Carter was not authorized to use that card. McLean
    faxed certain documents to McGrady, including the sales
    receipt that indicated that the typewriter was sold to Carter
    and paid for with a Visa card; the "Retrieval Request
    Fulfillment Transmittal" containing a copy of a credit card
    sales slip reflecting that the sale of the typewriter was made
    by a credit card bearing the name "Richard Carter"; and an
    inquiry from McLean representing that a typewriter was
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    shipped from the vendor to Richard Carter and signed for
    by an SCI-Mahanoy mailroom employee.
    On October 19, 1994, thirteen days after the vendor had
    contacted SCI-Mahanoy about the typewriter, McGrady
    twice ordered Carter’s cell to be searched. In the course of
    the first search, a corrections officer, M.E. Steinhauer,
    seized the typewriter. Immediately after the search, Carter
    was taken to the security office. McGrady testified that
    Carter told him that an inmate at SCI-Graterford, where
    Carter was formerly an inmate, had purchased the
    typewriter for him in return for legal services rendered, but
    that he had no idea how that inmate purchased the
    typewriter. Carter denies telling McGrady this, but does
    admit that he gave McGrady an unsigned affidavit that he
    prepared, purportedly on behalf of the other inmate,
    making a statement to this effect.
    Carter submits that McGrady then threatened him with
    discipline should he assist other inmates with legal
    matters, stating that, "You don’t work in the law library
    here . . . SCI-Mahanoy does not allow inmates to help other
    inmates with their legal matters." When Carter told
    McGrady about how he had been helping other inmates for
    many years, Carter alleges that McGrady responded by
    saying "I don’t care where you were before. We don’t allow
    prisoners to help other inmates." Carter also represents
    that McGrady said, "if I even hear about you helping other
    inmates, I will write you up and put you in RHU[Restrictive
    Housing Unit]."
    McGrady subsequently ordered a second search for
    documentation of the purchase of the typewriter or any
    other evidence of the unauthorized use of the credit card. In
    the course of this search, Steinhauer confiscated Carter’s
    personal papers, including all of Carter’s legal materials. In
    the papers seized from Carter’s cell, Steinhauer found an
    envelope from the vendor containing two receipts for the
    typewriter that were identical to the sales receipt and credit
    card sales slip that the vendor had faxed to McGrady.
    Carter testified that, on October 23, 1994, he filed a written
    request to have his documents returned. The request was
    denied.
    5
    On October 27, 1994, McGrady called Carter to his office
    to witness the return of legal documents belonging to ten
    different inmates. Carter testified that, in his presence,
    each of the inmates that he was assisting was ordered not
    to allow Carter to review their legal materials and told that
    anyone who did would be sent to the RHU. This was despite
    protests that they had no other means of legal assistance.
    During this meeting, McGrady asked Carter what he was
    doing with these papers. Carter responded that he was not
    assigned to the law library as a legal aide but that he was
    being paid for helping people. McGrady then told Carter
    that he could not conduct a business while in prison.
    Carter responded that he was a court-appointed paralegal
    and was being paid by the Federal Courts to assist other
    inmates. Carter produced two documents as evidence of his
    status as a court-appointed paralegal, but McGrady could
    not determine from the documents whether Carter was
    telling the truth.
    McGrady thereafter wrote a misconduct report charging
    Carter with receiving stolen property. At the disciplinary
    hearing on the charge, Carter was found guilty and
    sentenced to sixty days disciplinary custody in the RHU.
    After serving this sanction, he was returned to the general
    population at SCI-Mahanoy. Carter was also charged by the
    Schuylkill County District Attorney’s Office with
    unauthorized use of a credit card, theft by deception,
    receiving stolen property, and conspiracy. He was convicted
    of the charge of receiving stolen property and given a
    sentence of two and one-half to five years consecutive to the
    sentence he is currently serving.
    Carter testified that over the course of the next two years
    he was routinely harassed and searched when entering and
    leaving the prison library, far more frequently than other
    inmates. He alleges that these were efforts to search his
    files to determine which inmates he was assisting with legal
    matters. On June 5, 1996, his cell was again searched and
    his legal and personal papers were seized.
    In August 1997, an inmate informed Vincent Mooney, the
    Security Lieutenant at SCI-Mahanoy, that another inmate -
    Dana Carter (who happened to be the plaintiff’s cell-mate)
    - was holding the inmate’s legal papers until he paid Dana
    6
    Carter money for his legal work. As a result, Mooney
    ordered a search of Dana Carter’s cell. During that search,
    Corrections Officer Toth discovered an excessive amount of
    property in the cell, belonging to both Dana and Richard
    Carter, as well as other inmates, which was deemed to
    constitute a fire and safety hazard. Mooney ordered the
    search team to confiscate the property and take it to the
    security area. Mooney subsequently called Carter (the
    plaintiff - not his cellmate, Dana) to the security office
    where he advised him that he was limited to two file boxes
    of property in his cell. Carter was then allowed to select the
    paperwork that he wanted to keep, and was told that his
    remaining paperwork would be stored in the property room,
    but that paper belonging to other inmates would be
    returned to those inmates.
    Later in August 1997, staff at SCI-Greene, another
    Pennsylvania prison, advised McGrady that Carter had
    circumvented mail policies by corresponding with an
    inmate at SCI-Greene, Donny Unger. Carter concedes that
    he wrote a note to Unger without seeking authorization for
    that correspondence. Inmates in DOC custody are
    prohibited from corresponding with inmates in other state
    correctional institutions. On the basis of this information,
    a routine misconduct search of Carter’s cell was conducted
    in late August. During that search, prison officials
    confiscated a copy of a newsletter drafted by Carter, "The
    Last Line of Defense," which advocated prisoner litigation
    and argued that prison paralegals like himself stood as the
    "last line of defense." Carter had not requested or obtained
    approval by the SCI-Mahanoy administration for this
    newsletter. On August 29, 1997, Carter was charged with
    misconduct for unauthorized use of the mail. He was found
    guilty and sentenced to RHU for thirty days.
    Carter served thirty days in RHU for the unauthorized
    use of the mails. He was not thereafter returned to SCI-
    Mahanoy, but was placed instead in administrative custody
    pending transfer. He was ultimately transferred to SCI-
    Dallas, where he remains incarcerated. The transfer was
    initiated by McGrady, who petitioned the DOC to transfer
    Carter to another state correctional institution. This
    transfer decision was based on security concerns,
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    specifically, Carter’s attempts to establish at SCI-Mahanoy
    various unauthorized groups, including the Ma’at Karast
    Temple, a religious group that Carter wanted the prison to
    recognize as an official religion. McGrady also believed that
    Carter was affiliated with groups that advocate violence.
    Carter, in contrast, urges that the transfer was done in
    order to punish him for assisting other inmates, and to
    prevent him from continuing to help them in the future. He
    also contends that defendants filed negative parole
    recommendations against him in May 1995 and February
    1996 despite the fact that he has been a nonviolent and
    generally exemplary inmate, and that this was done in
    retaliation for his jailhouse lawyering.
    Carter filed two separate pro se complaints alleging
    violations of 42 U.S.C. S 1983. The protracted history of this
    litigation, not relevant to the outcome, is described in the
    margin.1 An amended complaint was filed on February 12,
    1999, alleging claims under 42 U.S.C. S 1983, based on
    both access to courts and retaliation for exercise of his First
    Amendment rights. Carter also pled a conspiracy count
    under 42 U.S.C. S 1985. Defendants moved to dismiss the
    _________________________________________________________________
    1. In September 1996, Carter filed this S 1983 action against SCI-
    Mahanoy, Dragovich, and Klem. (C.A. No. 96-6496). He challenged the
    adequacy of the law library and legal reference aides policy, as well as
    the legality of the prison restrictions on his ability to practice as a
    "jailhouse lawyer." Carter alleged that the defendants had violated his
    right of access to the courts, and that certain actions were taken against
    him in retaliation for the exercise of his First Amendment rights.
    Defendants moved pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6) to dismiss the
    complaint. They maintained that: 1) an inmate had no constitutional
    right to act as a jailhouse lawyer; 2) Carter’s access-to-courts claim
    failed since he had not suffered any actual injury as a result of their
    conduct; and 3) Carter’s retaliation claim failed since he had no
    constitutional right to be a jailhouse lawyer, and had failed to allege
    facts which showed that the defendants had taken any retaliatory action
    against him, or knew of or acquiesced in any such retaliation. The
    District Court denied the motion, concluding that Carter was not
    asserting an access-to-courts claim. The District Court also granted
    Carter’s motion to consolidate this case with another case he had
    previously filed, C.A. No. 94-7163, which has a long procedural history.
    Carter subsequently filed an amended complaint, which subsumes the
    two consolidated cases and lays the foundation for this appeal.
    8
    amended complaint pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6).
    The Court dismissed Carter’s claims against the
    Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, the DOC, and SCI-
    Mahanoy on grounds of Eleventh Amendment immunity.
    Carter’s access-to-courts claim was dismissed because he
    failed to allege an "actual injury" within the meaning of
    Lewis v. Casey, 
    518 U.S. 343
     (1996). The S 1985 claim was
    dismissed because "jailhouse lawyers" are not protected
    under that statute. Thus, all that was left was Carter’s
    retaliation claim against McGrady, Dragovich, and Klem.
    Defendants subsequently moved for summary judgment,
    arguing inter alia that Carter’s retaliation claim failed as a
    matter of law and that they were entitled to qualified
    immunity. The District Court concluded that the
    defendants were entitled to qualified immunity because
    Carter did not have a constitutional right to act as a
    jailhouse lawyer and granted their motion for summary
    judgment, from which Carter now appeals. The District
    Court had jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. S 1331. We
    have appellate jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C.S 1291.
    We exercise plenary review over a district court’s grant of
    summary judgment. See Pi Lambda Phi Fraternity, Inc. v.
    Univ. of Pittsburgh, 
    229 F.3d 435
    , 441 n.3 (3d Cir. 2000).
    We set forth the familiar standards governing review of
    summary judgment motions in the margin.2
    II. Discussion
    A prisoner alleging that prison officials have retaliated
    against him for exercising his constitutional rights must
    prove that: 1) the conduct in which he was engaged was
    constitutionally protected; 2) he suffered "adverse action" at
    the hands of prison officials; and 3) his constitutionally
    _________________________________________________________________
    2. Summary judgment is proper if there is no genuine issue of material
    fact and if, viewing the facts in the light most favorable to the non-
    moving party, the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of
    law. See Fed. R. Civ. Pro. 56(c); Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 
    477 U.S. 317
    (1986). The judge’s function at the summary judgment stage is not to
    weigh the evidence and determine the truth of the matter, but to
    determine whether there is a genuine issue for trial. See Anderson v.
    Liberty Lobby, Inc., 
    477 U.S. 242
    , 249 (1986).
    9
    protected conduct was a substantial or motivating factor in
    the decision to discipline him. Rauser v. Horn , 
    241 F.3d 330
    , 333 (3d Cir. 2001) (adopting Mount Healthy Bd. of
    Educ. v. Doyle, 
    429 U.S. 274
    , 287 (1977)). Once a prisoner
    has made his prima facie case, the burden shifts to the
    defendant to prove by a preponderance of the evidence that
    it "would have made the same decision absent the protected
    conduct for reasons reasonably related to penological
    interest." 
    Id. at 334
     (incorporating Turner v. Safley, 
    482 U.S. 78
    , 89 (1987)).
    The Supreme Court has made clear that decisions of
    prison administrators are entitled to great deference. In
    crafting the appropriate standard of review for prisoners’
    constitutional claims, the Court observed that "[r]unning a
    prison is an inordinately difficult undertaking." Turner, 
    482 U.S. at 85
    . Moreover, the Court noted that " ‘courts are ill
    equipped to deal with the increasingly urgent problems of
    prison administration and reform.’ " 
    Id.
     (quoting Procunier v.
    Martinez, 
    41 U.S. 396
    , 405 (1974)). Thus, "[p]rison
    administrators should be accorded wide-ranging deference
    in the adoption and execution of policies and practices that
    in their judgment are needed to preserve internal order and
    discipline and to maintain institutional security." Bell v.
    Wolfish, 
    441 U.S. 520
    , 547 (1979).
    In this case, Carter was never charged with misconduct
    for helping other inmates with legal matters or having their
    legal materials in his cell. Rather, he was charged with
    misconduct for undisputed violations of prison policy. The
    search and seizure of items from his cell were related to
    these various violations. Carter was discovered with a
    stolen typewriter in his cell. The cell search uncovered an
    envelope containing two receipts for the typewriter,
    identical to the sales receipt and credit card sales slip faxed
    by the vendor. As a result, Carter was disciplined with sixty
    days in the RHU.
    Moreover, it is not disputed that Carter corresponded
    with Unger in violation of prison policy. Carter conceded
    that he wrote a note to Unger without seeking authorization
    for that correspondence. His cell was searched in
    connection with this allegation; he was written up and
    subsequently disciplined with thirty days for this conduct.
    10
    Additionally, there is no dispute that the amount of
    property kept by Richard Carter and Dana Carter in their
    cell exceeded the amount allowed by fire and safety
    regulations. The materials were seized for this reason, and
    Carter was allowed to select up to two boxes of his personal
    material to keep in his cell. Finally, in the course of
    searching Carter’s cell in connection with the unauthorized
    use of the mails, prison officials found the newsletter, "The
    Last Line of Defense," a publication of which Carter was the
    editor and for which he had not requested or obtained
    approval by the SCI-Mahanoy administration. The foregoing
    represents a sizeable quantum of misconduct evidence.
    Carter contends that notwithstanding these facts all of
    the actions taken against him were a reflection of
    defendants’ bias against jailhouse lawyers. We note in
    passing that inmates at SCI-Mahanoy are in fact permitted
    to act as jailhouse lawyers provided that they do not
    demand or receive payment for their services. The
    institution also provided both a law library and inmates
    assigned to work as legal aides in that library. All inmates
    have access to the law library, which was open all day,
    including evenings, from Monday to Friday; on weekends, it
    was open six to eight hours. Inmates are allowed to confer
    with each other in the library as long as they are not
    disruptive. Nevertheless, even assuming, for purposes of
    this case, that Carter’s activity was constitutionally
    protected, but see Shaw v. Murphy, 
    532 U.S. 223
    , 230-31
    (2001), supra, and that the searches and subsequent
    disciplinary action were motivated by hostility to this
    protected activity, Carter still cannot prevail.
    As this Court has previously held, "once a prisoner has
    demonstrated that his exercise of a constitutional right was
    a substantial or motivating factor in the challenged
    decision, the prison officials may still prevail by proving
    that they would have made the same decision absent the
    protected conduct for reasons reasonably related to a
    legitimate penological interest." Rauser , 
    241 F.3d at 334
    (emphasis added). Given the quantum of evidence of
    Carter’s misconduct, we cannot say that the prison officials’
    decision to discipline Carter for his violations of prison
    policy was not within the "broad discretion" that we must
    11
    afford them. Thornburgh v. Abbott, 
    490 U.S. 401
    , 413
    (1989). Even if prison officials were motivated by animus to
    jailhouse lawyers, Carter’s offenses, such as receiving
    stolen property, were so clear and overt that we cannot say
    that the disciplinary action taken against Carter was
    retaliatory. Rather, we conclude that the there is no
    genuine issue of material fact that such action was
    "reasonably related to legitimate penological interests," and
    that Carter would have been disciplined notwithstanding
    his jailhouse lawyering. Turner, 
    482 U.S. at 90
    . The
    judgment of the District Court will therefore be affirmed.
    A True Copy:
    Teste:
    Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    12