Mundy v. Winston

457 F. Supp. 678, 1978 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15806
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedAugust 30, 1978
DocketCiv. A. No. 78-0006-R
StatusPublished

This text of 457 F. Supp. 678 (Mundy v. Winston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mundy v. Winston, 457 F. Supp. 678, 1978 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15806 (E.D. Va. 1978).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM

WARRINER, District Judge.

On 10 February 1978 this Court entered an order dismissing without prejudice petitioner’s petition for a Writ of Habeas Corpus because the petitioner was no longer in the custody of the respondent. The Court advised the petitioner to refile his petition naming the warden or superintendent of the institution where he was then incarcerated as respondent and directed the Clerk of this Court to forward the proper forms to plaintiff.

Petitioner, rather than refile naming his current custodian as defendant, appealed the Court’s order of 10 February 1978 to the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit. That Court vacated the Court’s order of 10 February, and by unreported per curiam decision remanded this case for consideration in the light of Gordon v. Leeke, 574 F.2d 1147 (4th Cir. 1978).

The appeal of this case has delayed the consideration of the merits of plaintiff’s habeas corpus petition for over five months, and has consumed a portion of the valuable time of the Court of Appeals. The mandate of the Court of Appeals did not direct specific relief to the plaintiff but directed the Court to consider Gordon, supra. Gordon, according to the Court of Appeals in this case, requires that the district courts “employ technically-oriented dismissal sparingly and should endeavor to provide assistance to non-legally trained complainants. . .”

The defendant Winston was entitled to his outright dismissal as a party defendant not on any technical ground but because of the fact that he didn’t have custody of plaintiff. Even if a writ had issued the named defendant could not have released plaintiff or given him any other habeas relief. This disability on the part of defendant was based purely on the fact that he didn’t have the body.

[680]*680Further, defendant Winston had pled to the petition not by counsel furnished by the State Attorney General’s Office but, instead, by the local Commonwealth’s Attorney. The opinion of the Court of Appeals indicates that it read the record as showing that Mundy had been transferred from one State prison to another after the filing of his suit. However, Winston’s pleading indicated that plaintiff had been transferred from a local jail to the State correctional system. This change indicated to the district court that not only had custody changed but that the lawyer representing the custodian would be different upon refiling. A mere name change would not permit the case to proceed as would have been the case had the plaintiff merely been transferred from one State prison to another as the Court of Appeals opinion indicated. It was apparent that the local Commonwealth’s Attorney would properly have no further interest in the case in any event. It was also clear that he was no better situated than plaintiff to determine the identity of plaintiff’s current custodian.

Since, then, a new lawyer and a new defendant would be the result of an amendment the Court considered it best, in view of experience, to direct a refiling so the matter could be promptly routed in due and customary form to the State Attorney General’s Office for appropriate handling.1 Under the circumstances it seemed evident that plaintiff could find out where he was and who was his custodian quicker and with less trouble and expense than the Commonwealth’s Attorney — especially in view of the fact that the Commonwealth’s Attorney has no interest in the case while the plaintiff’s interest persisted. Thus, the decision was based on practicality not technicality.

As noted above, the Fourth Circuit also admonished the district court to “provide assistance.” Obviously, the Fourth Circuit does not want judges to abandon their position of indifference and become advocates or even legal advisors to litigants. What it desires, this Court assumes, is that the district courts make the rulings required by law and precedent, but at the same time, point out to pro se litigants proceeding in forma pauperis that other avenues of relief may be available or that obstacles may be removed if and when appropriate action is taken by the pro se litigant. The district court should not file a motion sua sponte for a pro se litigant any more than for any other litigant. Such a motion simply may not be in the interest of the litigant or, even if in his interest, it may not represent his desires. The litigant, with some rudimentary knowledge of his alternatives indicated by the Court, must still have preserved to him the right to decide what he wants to do.

This is precisely what the Court did in the first instance in this case. By law and precedent, Sgt. Winston had to be dismissed as a party defendant. Had the Court for any reason, technical or otherwise, refused to dismiss him and instead entered an order directing him to take any action or give any relief, such an order would have represented a raw exercise of power by the Court without justification or legal excuse. Though dismissal was mandatory, the Court, in the first instance, sought to assist plaintiff by noting that the dismissal was necessitated by the fact that he was no longer in Winston’s custody, by advising plaintiff that he should “refile his petition naming the warden or superintendent of the institution where he is now incarcerated as respondent,” and by directing the Clerk “to forward the necessary forms to plaintiff.”

None of these considerations and endeavors by the district court to provide assistance to plaintiff were mentioned by the Court of Appeals in its unreported decision in this case. It would appear from a reading of the appellate opinion that the district court had dismissed the case out of hand “for the sole reason” that plaintiff had been transferred to another custodian.

While it is true that that was the legal basis which required the dismissal it is not [681]*681true that the district court went no further and offered no assistance of plaintiff. As is pointed out above, the district court made an appropriate and sensible effort to afford plaintiff the most prompt and efficient means at hand of bringing the matter on for a hearing. The Court is unable, upon thorough consideration of Gordon, supra, to determine what it should have done that would have been better calculated to (1) preserve plaintiff’s control over his case; (2) preserve the Court’s role as an indifferent judicial officer; and (3) assist plaintiff by advising him what he might do if he so desired.

The mandate of the Court of Appeals was that this Court give the matter “consideration in light of Gordon v. Leeke supra.” In Gordon, the Court said:

A district court is not required to act as an advocate for a pro se litigant; but when such a litigant has alleged a cause of action which may be meritorious against a person or persons unknown, the district court should afford him a reasonable opportunity to determine the correct person or persons against whom the claim is asserted, advise him how to proceed and direct or permit amendment of the pleadings to bring that person or persons before the court. [At 1152.]

This Court has given the matter searching consideration in light of Gordon and it is the Court’s considered opinion that Gordon was fully and properly complied with by the district court in the first instance.

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457 F. Supp. 678, 1978 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 15806, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mundy-v-winston-vaed-1978.