In the Matter of the Alleged Contumacious Conduct of Clovis Carl Green, Jr.

586 F.2d 1247
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedNovember 9, 1978
Docket78-1442
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 586 F.2d 1247 (In the Matter of the Alleged Contumacious Conduct of Clovis Carl Green, Jr.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In the Matter of the Alleged Contumacious Conduct of Clovis Carl Green, Jr., 586 F.2d 1247 (8th Cir. 1978).

Opinion

HENLEY, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal by Clovis Carl Green, Jr., an inmate of the Missouri State Penitentiary, which is located at or near Jefferson City, Missouri, from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Western District of Missouri (District Judge Russell G. Clark) holding Green guilty of criminal contempt of the district court in that he willfully violated an injunction issued by that court in 1976 restraining him from “writ writing” activities in behalf of other convicts. 1 Appellant, who will hereinafter be referred to either by surname or as “respondent,” was found guilty on three out of eight charges of contempt after a bench *1249 trial before Judge Clark. He was found not guilty on the other charges. He was sentenced to imprisonment for five months on each of the three charges on which he was found guilty, with the sentences to be served concurrently after Green completes service of the sentence or sentences that he is now serving in the state institution.

Final judgment of the district court was entered on June 8, 1978, and respondent immediately filed notice of appeal. 2 For reversal respondent contends:

1. That the 1976 injunction was unconstitutional and void under the rules laid down in Johnson v. Avery, 393 U.S. 483, 89 S.Ct. 747, 21 L.Ed.2d 718 (1969), and cases following and applying that decision in various situations.

2. That the injunction encroached on religious rights of respondent and of other inmates of the Penitentiary.

3. That the documents referred to in Paragraphs VI, VII and VIII of the show cause order issued by Judge Hunter in April of this year did not in fact violate the 1976 injunction. 3

I.

We are not advised as to the details of respondent’s criminal record; it appears, however, to be extensive. At the moment it seems that respondent is serving a ten year sentence in the Missouri Penitentiary which sentence was imposed by the Circuit Court of Jackson County, Missouri in 1975 following respondent’s plea of guilty to a charge of rape. Respondent has persistently attacked that conviction since at least 1976, but we are not concerned in this proceeding with the validity of that conviction; we simply remark in passing that his attacks on the conviction have not been successful.

Respondent is not only a recidivist criminal; he is also an inveterate writ writer for his own benefit and for the benefit of other convicts from whom he receives fees for his services. In other words, respondent engages in the practice of law while in prison.

Judge Hunter found in 1976 that respondent’s writ writing activities have been completely irresponsible and that many of them were not undertaken in good faith. Since his confinement in the Missouri institution respondent has been in constant conflict with Warden Donald W. Wyrick and other prison personnel, complaining about the conditions of his confinement and about institutional practices.

One of the controversies in which respondent has been engaged was with the Protestant Chaplain of the Penitentiary, a Reverend Garrott. Some idea of the extent of Green’s writ writing for his own benefit can be gained from a reading of Judge Hunter’s opinion dismissing respondent’s civil rights complaint against Garrott. Green v. Garrott, 71 F.R.D. 680, 685-92 (W.D.Mo.), aff’d without opinion (8th Cir. 1976, Misc. No. 76-8184). Judge Hunter found that between September 20,1972 and July 15, 1976 Green had filed on his own behalf in federal court in the Western District of Missouri 92 separate petitions, not one of which had been upheld. And the Judge further found that 14 of those petitions had been filed between June 4 and July 15, 1976. It was further found that during roughly the same period respondent had filed 47 petitions in other federal district courts, and had filed 24 petitions in the trial courts of the State of Missouri.

In August, 1976 respondent was permitted to file in the district court a petition which in part was an attack by way of *1250 habeas corpus on his 1975 rape conviction and in part a civil rights complaint against Warden Wyrick and other prison personnel complaining of his confinement in administrative segregation and loss of good time and seeking affirmative relief including a large award of damages.

That case was docketed as No. 76 CV 147-C. In due course Warden Wyrick filed an answer denying liability, and in addition he filed what amounted to a counterclaim praying that Green be enjoined from writing any further writs for use in connection with litigation in federal court in the Western District of Missouri. Judge Hunter severed the habeas corpus claim from the civil rights claim.

The district court dealt with the habeas corpus claim in an opinion filed on November 1, 1976 and reported as Green v. Wyrick, 428 F.Supp. 728 (W.D.Mo.1976). That opinion is not involved here.

As to the Warden’s counterclaim, the district court conducted an evidentiary hearing and on November 10, 1976 dealt with the counterclaim in a full opinion reported as Green v. Wyrick, 428 F.Supp. 732 (W.D.Mo. 1976). Judge Hunter made the following detailed findings:

[T]hat petitioner [Green] has engaged in a flagrant and gross abuse of the judicial process, that he repeatedly files frivolous and harassive lawsuits, that he has deliberately and intentionally deceived this Court with respect to his financial status, that he fails to follow the rules and procedures of the Court in filing actions, that he does not faithfully represent the interests of other inmates whose actions he files, that he misleads other inmates in preparation of their own lawsuits, that he charges other inmates for his legal services, and that an adequate and available alternative exists to assure other inmates access to the courts without -the aid of petitioner

Id. at 743.

On the basis of the findings above summarized the district court concluded that respondent should be enjoined from writing any more writs for other inmates for use in federal court in the Western District of Missouri and from otherwise practicing law in the Penitentiary with litigation in the district court in view. In due course we will set out the exact terms of the injunction that was issued.

Judge Hunter refused to allow Green to appeal from the decree in forma pauperis, and a panel of this court likewise refused leave to so appeal. Green v. Wyrick (8th Cir. 1976, No. 76-8253) (unpublished opinion). Thus no appeal was ever perfected.

II.

It does not appear that respondent violated the injunction during 1977. However, in early 1978 he began to submit documents to the clerk of the district court on behalf of himself and other inmates, and on April 11, 1978 Judge Hunter, proceeding under Fed. R.Crim.P. 42

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