(PC) Penton v. Hubard

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. California
DecidedFebruary 10, 2022
Docket2:11-cv-00518
StatusUnknown

This text of (PC) Penton v. Hubard ((PC) Penton v. Hubard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
(PC) Penton v. Hubard, (E.D. Cal. 2022).

Opinion

Case 2:11-cv-00518-TLN-KJN Document 256 Filed 02/10/22 Page 1 of 49

8 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

9 FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA

10 ANTHONY PENTON, No. 2:11-cv-0518 TLN KJN P 11 Plaintiff, 12 v. ORDER AND FINDINGS AND 13 RECOMMENDATIONS HUBARD, et al., 14 Defendants. 15

16 Plaintiff is a state prisoner, represented by counsel. This action proceeds under 42 U.S.C. 17 § 1983 on plaintiff’s claims that defendant Johnson violated plaintiff’s right of access to mail and 18 right of access to the courts. 1 Plaintiff filed a motion for partial summary judgment against 19 defendant Johnson. Defendant Johnson filed a motion for summary judgment and/or partial 20 summary adjudication. As set forth more fully below, it is recommended that both motions be 21 denied. 22 //// 23

24 1 Plaintiff’s third cause of action was solely pled as to defendant Pool. On April 14, 2020, defendants Pool, Quinn and Besenaiz were granted judgment on the pleadings. (ECF No. 207.) 25 Defendant Nunez, despite service of process, has not appeared; clerk’s default was entered (ECF 26 No. 142), and plaintiff’s motion for default judgment is pending. The motion for summary judgment filed by defendants Donahoo, Salas, Walker, Bradford, Lynch, Virga, Morrow and 27 Gaddi was addressed by earlier findings and recommendations, adopted by the district court on September 30, 2021. (ECF Nos. 251, 254.) The identities of Doe Defendants 1-11 remain 28 unknown. (ECF No. 104 at ¶ 79.) 1 Case 2:11-cv-00518-TLN-KJN Document 256 Filed 02/10/22 Page 2 of 49

1 Introduction

2 It is undisputed that plaintiff was deprived of all of his mail, both legal and personal, for

3 over eight months. There are very few cases addressing such a prolonged withholding of an

4 inmate’s mail, none of which issued in our circuit. In 1989, a district court in Nebraska addressed

5 “[w]hether the policy of the defendants not to forward incoming ‘legal mail’ to an inmate after

6 the inmate left the custody of DCCC, but rather to return the mail to the sender(s),

7 unconstitutionality deprived Sorich of his right of access to the courts. Sorich v. Terry, No. CIV.

8 86-L-722, 1989 WL 87386, at *1 (D. Neb. June 29, 1989). 2 In Sorich, the district court noted that

9 “only one other court has dealt with the precise mail forwarding issue in a case similar factually

10 to the case at bar,” which was “resolved in a resounding fashion against the defendants.” Id. at *8

11 (citing United States ex rel. Wolfish v. Levi, 439 F.Supp. 114, 145-46 (S.D. N.Y. 1977), aff’d in

12 part and rev’d in part on other grounds, 573 F.2d 118, 133 n.31 (2d Cir. 1978), rev’d in part on

13 other grounds, sub nom., Bell v. Wolfish, 441 U.S. 520, 529 n.10 (1979) (the district court’s

14 decision on mail forwarding was not appealed).)

15 In Wolfish, a habeas corpus action and an alternative 28 U.S.C. § 1361 action, the district

16 court addressed, in pertinent part, “the refusal of the Metropolitan Correctional Center (“MCC”),

17 a federal jail-type facility in New York City, to forward mail when an inmate was transferred

18 from the MCC to another institution, the MCC having instead returned the mail to the senders.”

19 Sorich, 1989 WL 87386, at *7 (citing Wolfish, 439 F.Supp. at 145). The respondents in Wolfish

20 had argued that “[s]ince there is no evidence indicating that inmates are unable to send change of

21 address notices to the local Post Office station either before or after the transfer, there is no reason

22 to impose that burden on the MCC.” Id. The district court emphatically rebuffed respondents’

23 argument:

24 It is not to be doubted that the distinguished respondents in this case appreciate the fundamental human needs answered by the mails to 25 people in confinement. See, e.g., if citation is needed, Taylor v. Sterrett, 532 F.2d 462, 481 (5th Cir. 1976). Yet the bureaucratic 26 indifference exercised in respondents’ names brushes past simple 27 2 The court in Sorich was addressing a challenge to the mail policy as unconstitutional. In this 28 case, plaintiff does not contend that the practice was unconstitutional. 2 Case 2:11-cv-00518-TLN-KJN Document 256 Filed 02/10/22 Page 3 of 49

1 decency for no good reason whatever. In the nature of the situation, inmates’ mail will be returned to sender, not forwarded, when they 2 have had no chance at all to redirect it for themselves by filing change-of-address notices. This is so, obviously, because transfers 3 are sudden, often occurring after the sending, but before receipt, of the letter MCC finds itself unwilling to forward. Even where this is 4 not so, the “burden” that worries respondents is inconsequential. The piece of mail must be handled in any case -- whether to be returned 5 or sent to its addressee. The extra trouble of digging out and writing a forwarding address -- a beneficence commonly performed by irate 6 former landlords, jaundiced ex-employers, and others not looked to for public examples of caring -- is of no meaningful weight in this 7 setting. Finally, as respondents must know as well as anyone, they deal with a group in which literacy, attention to workaday detail, and 8 knowledge of agency procedures may be less prevalent than it is in the population at large. If an inmate neglects (or does not know 9 about) a change-of-address notice, MCC personnel might find ready means to supply the omission rather than fight for the right to return 10 the mail to its sender. The court will not compel, though it presumes to suggest, this procedure. 11 The court holds, however, in any event, that the refusal to forward 12 mail is a species of obstinate neglect of vital needs that qualifies classically as arbitrary and capricious official conduct, totally 13 unsupportable by any reason that can be deemed sound or sufficient in the circumstances. The court will order the relief petitioners seek 14 in this respect.

15 Wolfish, 439 F. Supp. 114, at 145-46. The district court in Sorich was persuaded by the Wolfish

16 opinion, adopting its reasoning in whole, finding the:

17 forwarding practice of the DCCC as applied to Sorich to have been unconstitutional, as it denied Sorich his due process rights of access 18 to the courts. This policy violated Sorich’s constitutional right to access the courts, because the policy rendered the postal system 19 unavailable to Sorich during a time when he had no control over his movement between the prison and the DCCC; thus, the policy denied 20 Sorich the opportunity to receive and in turn to respond to legal matters in a timely fashion, resulting in the very real possibility that 21 important legal rights might have been forfeited.

22 Sorich, 1989 WL 87386, at *10. The court denied qualified immunity to the county jail official

23 over the defective forwarding policy for legal mail in part because other prisons, including the

24 Bureau of Prisons, had more robust forwarding policies that did not impinge on the inmate’s right

25 of access to courts and noting that its analysis would be the same under Turner v. Safley, 482

26 U.S. 78 (1987). Sorich, 1989 WL 87386, at 11 n.9.

27 Much later, the Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit addressed a case where the

28 prisoner’s mail had been held from March 2000 to March 2001 while he was temporarily 3 Case 2:11-cv-00518-TLN-KJN Document 256 Filed 02/10/22 Page 4 of 49

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