Higgins v. Beyer , 293 F.3d 683 ( 2002 )


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  •                                                                                                                            Opinions of the United
    2002 Decisions                                                                                                             States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    6-12-2002
    Higgins v. Beyer
    Precedential or Non-Precedential: Precedential
    Docket No. 99-5556
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    Recommended Citation
    "Higgins v. Beyer" (2002). 2002 Decisions. Paper 350.
    http://digitalcommons.law.villanova.edu/thirdcircuit_2002/350
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    PRECEDENTIAL
    Filed June 12, 2002
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    No. 99-5556
    VINCENT M. HIGGINS,
    Appellant
    v.
    HOWARD L. BEYER, DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS;
    WILLIAM F. PLANTIER; GRACE ROGERS; JAMES
    DOOLEY; THOMAS MORAN; DANIEL BARRAJAS;
    LILLYANNE D. YEAGER; LINDA COOK; FRANK BRUNO;
    ANSELM JEEVERATNAM; MARGARET C. ZORSKY;
    BRENDA GIBB; GWINN GOODE; JOSEPH DOE, (LAST
    NAME A FICTITIOUS NAME), IN THEIR INDIVIDUAL
    CAPACITY, JOINTLY, SEVERALLY OR IN
    THE ALTERNATIVE
    On Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of New Jersey
    (D.C. Civ. No. 98-CV-03641)
    District Judge: Hon. Garrett E. Brown, Jr.
    Argued April 5, 2002
    Before: SLOVITER, BARRY, and ALARCON,*
    Circuit Judges
    (Filed: June 12, 2002)
    _________________________________________________________________
    * Hon. Arthur L. Alarcon, Senior Judge, United States Court of Appeals
    for the Ninth Circuit, sitting by designation.
    S. William Livingston, Jr.
    Jennifer E. Schwartz (ARGUED)
    Covington & Burling
    1201 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.
    Washington, DC 20004-2401
    Attorneys for Appellant
    John J. Farmer, Jr., Attorney
    General of New Jersey
    Michael J. Hass
    Jeffrey K. Gladden (ARGUED)
    R.J. Hughes Justice Complex
    25 Market Street
    Trenton, New Jersey 08625
    Attorneys for Appellees
    OPINION OF THE COURT
    ALARCON, Circuit Judge:
    Vincent M. Higgins appeals from the dismissal of his
    federal civil rights claim that Howard L. Beyer, the
    Assistant Commissioner of the New Jersey Department of
    Corrections, and 13 employees of the Adult Diagnostic and
    Treatment Center ("ADTC employees") violated 38 U.S.C.
    S 5301(a) by seizing money derived from a veteran’s
    disability benefits check from his inmate account to pay a
    state court-ordered fine, and that he was deprived of his
    constitutional right to due process because his request for
    a predeprivation hearing was ignored. He also seeks
    reversal of the dismissal of his claim, on the ground of
    mootness, that prison employees retaliated against him for
    exercising constitutionally protected rights.
    We reverse because we conclude that Higgins’s pro se
    complaint, when liberally construed, stated sufficient facts
    to state a cause of action for a violation of a federal right
    under S 5301(a), and a deprivation of his Fourteenth
    Amendment right to notice and hearing prior to the
    2
    deprivation of his property interest in the proceeds of his
    veteran’s benefits. We also hold that the district court erred
    in dismissing his claim that the prison officials retaliated
    against him for asserting his rights under the Due Process
    Clause.
    I
    Higgins alleged the following facts in his complaint.
    Higgins served in the United States Army from 1974 to
    1978. While in the Army, Higgins injured his left hand,
    leaving him partially disabled. This partial disability
    qualified Higgins to receive disability benefits from the
    Veteran’s Administration ("VA") for the remainder of his life.
    In 1992, Higgins pled guilty to the crime of First Degree
    Aggravated Sexual Assault in the Superior Court of New
    Jersey. The court sentenced Higgins to a 10-year term of
    imprisonment to be served at the ADTC in Avenel, New
    Jersey. The court also imposed a Victims of Crime
    Compensation Board ("VCCB") fine in the amount of
    $1,000, pursuant to section 2C:43-31 of the New Jersey
    Statutes Annotated. N.J. Stat. Ann. S 2C:43-3.1 (West
    1995). Section 2C:43-3.1 expressly requires a New Jersey
    Superior Court to order the Department of Corrections to
    collect a VCCB fine from the personal account of an inmate
    if the assessment was not paid at the time of sentencing.1
    _________________________________________________________________
    1. Section 2C:43-3.1 provides in pertinent part:
    In addition to any disposition made pursuant to the provisions of
    N.J.S. 2C:43-2, any person convicted of a crime of violence . . . shall
    be assessed at least $100.00, but not to exceed $10,000.00 for each
    such crime for which he was convicted which resulted in the injury
    or death of another person. . . . When a defendant who is sentenced
    to incarceration in a State correctional facility has not, at the time
    of sentencing, paid an assessment for the crime for which he is
    being sentenced or an assessment imposed for a previous crime, the
    court shall specifically order the Department of Corrections to collect
    the assessment during the period of incarceration and to deduct the
    assessment from . . . any personal account established in the
    institution for the benefit of the inmate.
    N.J. Stat. Ann S 2C:43-3.1(a)(1), (a)(3).
    3
    At the time of sentencing, Higgins had not yet received any
    disability benefits from the VA.
    On April 7, 1993, Higgins was transferred from the
    Monmouth County Correctional Center Facility to the
    ADTC. On or about April 1, 1998, he received a notification
    from the VA that his claim for benefits for partial disability
    had been approved. He was advised that he would receive
    a check for benefits due from January 1, 1991 to March 31,
    1998.
    On May 29, 1998, a United States Treasury Department
    check in the amount of $7,608, made out to Higgins as the
    payee, arrived at the ADTC. On the same date, Higgins was
    notified during mail call by an ADTC employee that the
    check had arrived. He was not handed the check nor did he
    authorize any prison employee to deposit it in his inmate
    account. The standard procedure at the ADTC when a
    check is received is to request the inmate to sign a form
    acknowledging receipt of the check and then endorse it "For
    Deposit Only." The ADTC employees did not follow this
    procedure.
    Later that day, Higgins wrote four "business remits,"
    which instructed prison employees to forward money in the
    amounts of $5,000, $2,000, and two for $200 apiece to
    various persons. A "business remit" is the term used at the
    ADTC for an inmate’s authorization that money be
    deducted from his account.
    On May 31, 1998, Higgins asked the social worker
    assigned to his wing to find out what had happened to his
    check. The social worker informed Higgins that ADTC
    employees intended to use part of the proceeds of the VA
    disability benefits check to pay the outstanding VCCB fine
    ordered by the New Jersey Superior Court. On the same
    date, Higgins filed a written complaint addressed to ADTC
    Superintendent William F. Plantier in which Higgins stated
    that a VA disability benefits check is not attachable
    pursuant to 38 U.S.C. S 5301.
    On June 2, 1998, ADTC Assistant Superintendent Grace
    Rogers sent a letter to Higgins in which she stated that
    Higgins’s VA disability benefits check had been received
    and would be deposited in his inmate account. On June 3,
    4
    1998, Higgins received written confirmation that his check
    had been deposited in his inmate account. On June 9,
    1998, Linda Cook, an ADTC social worker, notified Higgins
    that none of the checks that he had authorized would be
    sent out until he signed a business remit authorizing the
    withdrawal of $1,000 to pay the VCCB fine. Higgins refused
    on the ground that a VA disability benefits check is not
    attachable pursuant to 38 U.S.C. S 5301. He also stated
    that under the terms of his plea bargain, he was only
    required to pay an assessment of $30 and that he had filed
    a habeas corpus petition challenging the imposition of a
    VCCB fine in the amount of $1,000. Ms. Cook informed
    Higgins that only a portion of the checks he had authorized
    would be sent out so that there would be sufficient funds
    in his inmate account to satisfy the VCCB fine.
    On June 10, 1998, Daniel Barrajas, ADTC’s Assistant
    Mail Supervisor, asked Higgins to endorse the VA disability
    benefits check. Higgins refused. On the same date, Higgins
    wrote to Superintendent Plantier requesting a written
    explanation of the disposition of his VA disability benefits
    check. Higgins also stated that if he did not receive a
    written explanation by June 12, 1998, he would file an
    action in the United States District Court. Superintendent
    Plantier did not reply. Sometime thereafter, ADTC
    employees deducted $1,000 from Higgins’s inmate account
    to pay the VCCB fine ordered by the New Jersey Superior
    Court.
    II
    Higgins filed this S 1983 action on August 4, 1998. Prior
    to filing an answer, the ADTC employees moved to dismiss
    the complaint on October 14, 1998, pursuant to Rule
    12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, asserting
    that Higgins had failed to state a claim upon which relief
    can be granted. Higgins filed his opposition to the Rule
    12(b)(6) motion on November 9, 1998.
    While the motion to dismiss was pending, Higgins filed a
    pro se pleading styled as a "NOTICE OF MOTION IN
    SUPPORT OF AFFIDAVIT/DEPOSITION TO CONSOLIDATE
    THESE ARGUMENTS WITH THE ABOVE DOCKET CASE
    5
    AND/OR ORDER OF PROTECTION/INJUNCTION." In this
    motion, Higgins alleged that ADTC employees brought false
    charges against him, resulting in his confinement in
    administrative segregation for 365 days and the denial of
    his access to the courts, in retaliation for the filing of this
    action for damages for the deprivation of his rights
    pursuant to 38 U.S.C. S 5301(a) and the Due Process
    Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
    On June 10, 1999, without the benefit of oral argument,
    the district court granted the ADTC employees’ motion to
    dismiss this action, for failure to state a claim upon which
    relief can be granted. In a footnote to its memorandum
    opinion, the district court stated: "In light of this Court’s
    granting of the motion to dismiss plaintiff ’s complaint as to
    the fourteen individual defendants, the later-filed motion of
    pro se plaintiff Vincent Higgins for a preliminary injunction
    shall be denied as moot." The court did not explain how
    Higgins’s discrete claim that ADTC employees retaliated
    against him for asserting his right to access to the courts
    was rendered moot by his alleged failure to state a claim for
    the deprivation of his property in violation ofS 5301(a) and
    his constitutional right to a predeprivation hearing.
    Higgins has timely appealed the district court’s final
    judgment in this S 1983 action. Accordingly, we have
    jurisdiction over this appeal. 28 U.S.C. S 1291.
    III
    Higgins contends that the district court erred in ruling
    that he failed to allege sufficient facts to demonstrate that
    the ADTC employees violated S 1983. He argues that the
    complaint alleges sufficient facts to state a claim under
    S 1983 either for depriving him of money derived from a VA
    disability benefits check in violation of S 5301(a), or for
    denying him his constitutional right to a predeprivation
    hearing to challenge the threat to remove funds derived
    from his VA disability benefits check from his inmate
    account.
    Our review of the dismissal of an action pursuant to Rule
    12(b)(6) is plenary. Nami v. Fauver, 
    82 F.3d 63
    , 65 (3d Cir.
    6
    1996). This Court has described the nature of our review as
    follows:
    We must determine whether, under any reasonable
    reading of the pleadings, the plaintiffs may be entitled
    to relief, and we must accept as true the factual
    allegations in the complaint and all reasonable
    inferences that can be drawn therefrom. The complaint
    will be deemed to have alleged sufficient facts if it
    adequately put the defendants on notice of the
    essential elements of the plaintiffs’ cause of action.
    Since this is a S 1983 action, the plaintiffs are entitled
    to relief if their complaint sufficiently alleges
    deprivation of any right secured by the Constitution. In
    considering a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, we do not inquire
    whether the plaintiffs will ultimately prevail, only
    whether they are entitled to offer evidence to support
    their claims. Thus, the district court’s order granting
    the defendants’ motion to dismiss will be affirmed only
    if it appears that the plaintiffs could prove no set of
    facts that would entitle them to relief.
    
    Id.
     (citations omitted). Moreover, as Higgins filed his
    complaint pro se, we must liberally construe his pleadings,
    and we will "apply the applicable law, irrespective of
    whether a pro se litigant has mentioned it by name." Holley
    v. Dep’t of Veteran Affairs, 
    165 F.3d 244
    , 247-48 (3d Cir.
    1999).
    Section 1983 authorizes a person to file a private cause
    of action against state actors for a deprivation of rights
    protected by a federal statute or the United States
    Constitution. Section 1983 provides in pertinent part:
    Every person who, under color of any statute,
    ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State
    or Territory or the District of Columbia, subjects, or
    causes to be subjected, any citizen of the United States
    or other person within the jurisdiction thereof to the
    deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities
    secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be liable to
    the party injured in an action at law, suite in equity, or
    other proper proceeding for redress . . . .
    7
    42 U.S.C. S 1983. It is undisputed that the ADTC
    employees were state actors who deprived Higgins of funds
    derived from his VA disability benefits check without his
    consent under color of a state court order issued pursuant
    to N.J. Stat. Ann. S 2C:43-3.1(a)(3).
    A.
    We must first consider whether Higgins alleged sufficient
    facts to demonstrate a violation of 38 U.S.C. S 5301(a).
    Section 5301(a) provides in relevant part:
    Payments of benefits due or to become due under any
    law administered by the Secretary shall not be
    assignable except to the extent specifically authorized
    by law, and such payments made to, or on account of,
    a beneficiary shall be exempt from taxation, shall be
    exempt from the claim of creditors, and shall not be
    liable to attachment, levy, or seizure by or under any
    legal or equitable process whatever, either before or
    after receipt by the beneficiary. The preceding sentence
    shall not apply to claims of the United States arising
    under such laws nor shall the exemption therein
    contained as to taxation extend to any property
    purchased in part or wholly out of such payments.
    . . .
    38 U.S.C. S 5301(a).
    In order to state a claim under S 1983, a plaintiff must
    allege a "violation of a federal right, and not merely a
    violation of federal law." Pa. Pharmacists Ass’n v. Houstoun,
    
    283 F.3d 531
    , 535 (3d Cir. 2002) (en banc) (quotation
    omitted). This Court recently explained that "a plaintiff
    alleging a violation of a federal statute may not proceed
    under S 1983 unless 1) the statute creates enforceable
    rights, privileges, or immunities within the meaning of
    S 1983 and 2) Congress has not foreclosed such
    enforcement of the statute in the enactment itself." 
    Id.
    (quotations omitted).
    To create a right enforceable under S 1983, the federal
    statute at issue must meet three conditions:
    8
    First, Congress must have intended that the provision
    in question benefit the plaintiff. Second, the plaintiff
    must demonstrate that the right assertedly protected
    by the statute is not so "vague and amorphous" that its
    enforcement would strain judicial competence. Third,
    the statute must unambiguously impose a binding
    obligation on the States. In other words, the provision
    giving rise to the asserted right must be couched in
    mandatory, rather than precatory, terms.
    Blessing v. Freestone, 
    520 U.S. 329
    , 340-41 (1997)
    (citations omitted). Once all three conditions are met, a
    rebuttable presumption arises that the right is enforceable
    under S 1983. 
    Id. at 341
    ; Pa. Pharmacists Ass’n, 
    283 F.3d at 535
    . "This presumption may be rebutted by showing that
    Congress expressly or impliedly foreclosed an action under
    S 1983." Pa. Pharmacists Ass’n, 
    283 F.3d at 535
    .
    Congress may impliedly foreclose a remedy underS 1983
    "by creating a comprehensive enforcement scheme that is
    incompatible with individual enforcement under S 1983."
    Blessing, 
    520 U.S. at 341
    . Section 5301(a) contains neither
    express language nor a comprehensive enforcement scheme
    that demonstrates that Congress intended to foreclose a
    remedy under S 1983 for a violation of S 5301(a). We are
    persuaded that S 5301(a) provides a federal right that is
    enforceable under S 1983.
    The purpose of the prohibition against the attachment,
    levy, or seizure of a veteran’s disability benefits in S 5301(a)
    is to "prevent the deprivation and depletion of the means of
    subsistence of veterans dependent upon these benefits as
    the main source of their income." Rose v. Rose, 
    481 U.S. 619
    , 630 (1987) (quotation omitted). Even though Higgins,
    because he is a prisoner, does not presently need or rely
    upon his disability benefits for subsistence, his right
    nonetheless to receive those benefits free from attachment,
    levy, or seizure is expressly set forth in clear, mandatory
    language in the statute. Section 5301(a) also precludes
    anyone from using any "legal or equitable process" to
    attach, levy, or seize these benefits. Thus, S 5301(a)
    satisfies the conditions set forth in Blessing v. Freestone for
    creating a federal right enforceable under S 1983.
    9
    Our holding that a violation of a veteran’s rights under
    S 5301(a) is enforceable against state prison officials
    pursuant to S 1983 is supported by the Ninth Circuit’s
    decision in Nelson v. Heiss, 
    271 F.3d 891
     (9th Cir. 2001).
    In Nelson, the court held that future veteran’s benefits are
    exempt from a hold placed on an inmate’s account where
    the inmate consented to and the prison officials authorized
    the hold to cover purchases of medical-record copies and
    dental appliances when there were insufficient funds to
    cover the overdrafts. 
    Id. at 893-96
    . The Ninth Circuit held
    that the holds placed on the veteran’s inmate account by
    the prison officials violated S 5301(a) because a veteran’s
    benefits are exempt from assignment, attachment, levy, or
    seizure. 
    Id.
     In Nelson, the state actors were attempting to
    recoup funds advanced for the veteran’s medical needs. 
    Id. at 893
    . In rejecting the contention of the state actors that
    they had a right to the funds after providing overdraft
    protection, the Ninth Circuit reasoned: "Section 5301(a) was
    designed to protect veteran’s benefits against their creditors
    so that the veterans themselves could spend those funds as
    they saw fit when they actually got them, and not before."
    
    Id. at 894
    .
    In response to the prison officials’ argument that
    Congress could not have intended to prohibit the taking of
    a veteran’s disability benefits for his or her maintenance
    and care as allowed by a number of states, the Ninth
    Circuit observed: "But if Congress wanted to create
    exceptions to [non-attachment or seizure], it knew how to
    do so." 
    Id. at 896
    . In Nelson, the Ninth Circuit applied
    S 5301(a), notwithstanding the fact that the prisoner had
    specifically consented to the future payment for the goods
    and services from his account when he received a VA check
    that would cover his depleted inmate account. 
    Id. at 895
    .
    In this matter, Higgins did not consent to the taking of
    money from his inmate account. Instead, he warned the
    ADTC employees that the use of his disability benefits to
    satisfy the VCCB fine violated S 5301(a). Thus, the matter
    before us presents a more compelling factual basis for
    applying S 5301(a) to protect money derived from Higgins’s
    disability benefits from attachment, levy, or seizure than
    the circumstances before the Ninth Circuit in Nelson.
    10
    The Supreme Court has not yet construed S 5301(a) to
    determine whether prison officials can attach or seize funds
    in an inmate’s account derived from a VA disability benefits
    check. In Bennett v. Arkansas, 
    485 U.S. 395
     (1988), the
    Court was called upon to determine whether a State can
    attach Social Security benefits to help defray the cost of
    maintaining its prison system. 
    Id. at 396
    . The State of
    Arkansas filed an action in state court seeking to attach
    Bennett’s Social Security benefits to defray the cost of
    maintaining its prison system pursuant to the State Prison
    Inmate Care and Custody Reimbursement Act, Ark. Stat.
    Ann. S 46-1701 et seq. (Supp. 1985). 
    Id.
     The Arkansas
    statute expressly authorized the seizure of federal Social
    Security benefits for this purpose. 
    Id.
     at 396 n.1.
    In his opposition to the State’s action, Bennett argued
    that the Arkansas statute violated the Supremacy Clause
    because it was in conflict with 42 U.S.C. S 407(a), which
    exempts Social Security benefits "from legal process." 
    Id. at 397
    . Section 407(a) provides in relevant part that"none of
    the moneys paid or payable . . . under [the Social Security
    Act] shall be subject to execution, levy, attachment,
    garnishment, or other legal process." 42 U.S.C.S 407(a).
    The state trial court entered judgment in favor of the State
    and directed that a portion of Bennett’s Social Security
    benefits be seized. 
    485 U.S. at 397
    . The Supreme Court of
    Arkansas affirmed, holding that there was no conflict
    between the Arkansas statute and 42 U.S.C. S 407(a)
    because " ‘the [Social Security Act] contain[s] an implied
    exception to the exemption from legal process when the
    State provides for the care and maintenance of a
    beneficiary of social security . . . funds.’ " 
    Id. at 397
     (quoting
    Bennett v. State, 
    716 S.W.2d 755
    , 756 (Ark. 1986)).
    The Court granted Bennett’s petition for certiorari and
    reversed the judgment of the Supreme Court of Arkansas.
    Id. at 397-98. The Court reasoned as follows:
    We think--contrary to the conclusion of the Supreme
    Court of Arkansas--that there is a clear inconsistency
    between the Arkansas statute and 42 U.S.C. S 407(a)
    (1982 ed., Supp. III). Section 407(a) unambiguously
    rules out any attempt to attach Social Security
    benefits. The Arkansas statute just as unambiguously
    11
    allows the State to attach those benefits. As we see it,
    this amounts to a "conflict" under the Supremacy
    Clause--a conflict that the State cannot win.
    Id. at 397.
    We recognize that the language used by Congress in
    protecting Social Security benefits in S 407(a) is not
    precisely the same as the words it employed in S 5301(a)
    regarding the attachment or seizure of a veteran’s disability
    benefits. We agree with the Ninth Circuit, however, that "its
    reach is essentially the same." Nelson, 
    271 F.3d at 895
    .
    We next turn to the question whether the New Jersey
    statutes are preempted under the Supremacy Clause
    because they are inconsistent with S 5301(a). The ADTC
    employees argue that the doctrine of preemption is not
    applicable on several grounds. They first maintain that
    there is no conflict between N.J. Stat. Ann. S 2C:43-3.1 and
    S 5301(a). They assert that S 5301(a) is inapplicable because
    the VCCB is not Higgins’s creditor and the deduction from
    his inmate account was not accomplished by an
    attachment, levy, or seizure under legal or equitable
    process. We disagree. This contention ignores the
    unambiguous intent of the New Jersey legislature in
    enacting the Criminal Injuries Compensation Act of 1971
    ("CICA"). See N.J. Stat. Ann. S 52:4B-1 et seq. (West 2001).
    The CICA created the Violent Crimes Compensation Board.
    
    Id.
     S 52:4B-3.2 Under the provisions of the CICA, the VCCB
    may order the payment of compensation for personal
    injuries suffered by the victim of an aggravated sexual
    assault. 
    Id.
     SS 52:4B-2; 52:4B-11(b)(9).
    Section 2C:43-3.1 provides for the collection of funds for
    the VCCB through court-ordered fines assessed against
    persons convicted of a crime of violence which resulted in
    the injury of another person. The imposition of the VCCB
    assessment is mandatory. 
    Id.
     S 2C:43-3.1(a)(1). As noted
    above, if the assessment is not paid at the time of
    sentencing, the court must order the Department of
    _________________________________________________________________
    2. The name of the Violent Crimes Compensation Board was changed in
    1995 to the Victims of Crime Compensation Board. N.J. Stat. Ann.
    S 52:4B-3.1.
    12
    Corrections to collect the assessment during the period of
    incarceration by deducting funds from the defendant’s
    inmate account. 
    Id.
     S 2C:43-3.1(a)(3). Under such
    circumstances, employees of the Department of Corrections
    are required to forward the amount collected to the VCCB.
    
    Id.
    The ADTC employees rely on the Fifth Circuit’s decision
    in Department of Health & Rehabilitative Services v. Davis,
    
    616 F.2d 828
     (5th Cir. 1980), in support of their
    proposition that the VCCB is not a creditor within the
    meaning of S 5301(a). Their reliance on Davis is misplaced.
    In Davis, the Florida Department of Health and
    Rehabilitative Services filed an action seeking an order
    granting it reimbursement of $12,000 for the care and
    maintenance of an incompetent in the Florida State
    Hospital. 
    Id. at 829
    . During the years that the incompetent
    was hospitalized, his guardian accumulated $40,000 in
    Social Security and veteran’s benefits. 
    Id.
     His guardian
    refused to reimburse the Florida Department of Health and
    Rehabilitative Services on the basis that the moneys
    received from federal Social Security and veteran’s benefits
    statutes were exempt from a creditor’s claims. 
    Id.
     The
    district court denied relief. 
    Id.
     The Fifth Circuit reversed. 
    Id.
    It concluded that since the purpose of each federal statute
    was to provide for the care and maintenance of its
    beneficiaries, it was consistent with that goal to reimburse
    a state agency that provided for an incompetent person’s
    care and maintenance. 
    Id. at 831-32
    .
    In the matter sub judice, the intent of the New Jersey
    Legislature in enacting the CICA was not aimed at
    providing for the care and maintenance of persons
    convicted of violent crimes. The CICA’s purpose is to
    compensate victims of violent crimes for their injuries.
    Moreover, subsequent to Davis, the Supreme Court
    rejected, in the context of Social Security benefits, the very
    argument the state made in Davis. Bennett, 
    485 U.S. at 397-98
    . As we have explained, the Supreme Court
    interpreted the language of 42 U.S.C. S 407(a) as barring
    Arkansas from retaining an inmate’s Social Security
    benefits, regardless of its purpose in doing so. The very
    similar mandatory and all-inclusive language ofS 5301(a)
    requires the same conclusion here.
    13
    A creditor is a person or entity to whom a debt is owed.
    Black’s Law Dictionary 375 (7th ed. 1999). A debtor is a
    person who owes an obligation to another. 
    Id. at 411
    .
    Pursuant to the CICA, a court must order a person
    convicted of a violent crime to pay an assessment to the
    VCCB. N.J. Stat. Ann. S 2C:43-3.1(a)(1). The judgment is
    enforceable by requiring employees of the New Jersey
    Department of Corrections to seize the amount owing to the
    VCCB from the inmate’s account. 
    Id.
     S 2C:43-3.1(a)(3).
    Thus, contrary to the position of the ADTC employees, the
    VCCB is a creditor within the meaning of S 5301(a). The
    CICA has created a creditor-debtor relationship between a
    person convicted of the crime of aggravated sexual assault
    and the VCCB that is enforceable by a court order.
    The ADTC employees also maintain that the deduction of
    funds derived from Higgins’s VA disability benefits check
    did not violate S 5301(a) because it was not effected by
    attachment, levy, seizure by or under any legal or equitable
    process. As discussed above, the CICA requires a New
    Jersey court to "specifically order the Department of
    Corrections to collect the assessment during the period of
    incarceration and to deduct the assessment . . . from any
    personal account established in the institution for the
    benefit of the inmate." N.J. Stat. Ann. S 2C:43-3.1. The
    term "levy" is defined as the seizure of property to satisfy a
    judgment. Black’s Law Dictionary, supra, at 919. We are
    persuaded that the collection of funds from Higgins’s
    inmate account by the ADTC employees was clearly a levy
    or a seizure required by New Jersey law.
    The ADTC employees further assert that N.J. Stat. Ann.
    S 2C:43-3.1(a)(3) does not conflict with S 5301(a) because
    New Jersey law "mandates the care, government and
    maintenance of inmates by the Commissioner of the
    Department of Corrections, thereby fulfilling the
    Congressional intent of 38 U.S.C. S 5301(a)." Appellees Br.
    at 19-20. The Supreme Court rejected a similar argument
    in Bennett. There, the Court noted thatS 407(a) of the
    Social Security Act does not contain "an ‘implied exception’
    that would allow attachment of otherwise exempted federal
    payments simply because the State has provided the
    recipient with ‘care and maintenance.’ " 
    485 U.S. at 397
    .
    14
    Likewise, S 5301(a) does not contain an implied exception
    which would allow the collection of funds derived from a VA
    disability benefits check to compensate his or her crime
    victim merely because New Jersey law requires the
    Department of Corrections to provide for an inmate’s care
    and maintenance.
    As noted previously, Congress’s purpose in enacting
    S 5301(a) was to "prevent the deprivation and depletion of
    the means of subsistence of veterans dependent upon these
    benefits as the main source of their income." Rose, 
    481 U.S. at 630
    . Section 2C:43-3.1(a)(3) expressly allows the
    deduction of any funds located in an inmate’s personal
    account. To the extent this statute allows the deduction of
    funds derived from a VA disability benefits check, its
    provisions conflict with S 5301(a). "A state law is in conflict,
    and void under the supremacy clause, if it stands as an
    obstacle to the accomplishment and execution of the full
    purposes and objective of Congress." Finberg v. Sullivan,
    
    634 F.2d 50
    , 63 (3d Cir. 1980) (en banc) (quotation
    omitted). To the extent N.J. Stat. Ann. S 2C:43-3.1(a)(3)
    authorizes prison officials to deduct funds derived from a
    prisoner’s VA disability benefits check, it conflicts with the
    purpose and objectives of Congress in enacting S 5301(a)
    and is void under the Supremacy Clause.
    B.
    Higgins also challenges the dismissal of his claim that
    the ADTC employees took his VA benefits without notice or
    a hearing, in violation of his procedural due process rights
    under the Fourteenth Amendment. The Fourteenth
    Amendment prohibits the States from depriving "any person
    of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law." U.S.
    Const. amend. XIV, S 1. This Court has previously held that
    "[i]nmates have a property interest in funds held in prison
    accounts. Thus, inmates are entitled to due process with
    respect to any deprivation of this money." Reynolds v.
    Wagner, 
    128 F.3d 166
    , 179 (3d Cir. 1997) (citations
    omitted). The Supreme Court has explained the
    requirements of the Due Process Clause as follows:
    In situations where the State feasibly can provide a
    predeprivation hearing before taking property, it
    15
    generally must do so regardless of the adequacy of a
    postdeprivation tort remedy to compensate for the
    taking. Conversely, in situations where a
    predeprivation hearing is unduly burdensome in
    proportion to the liberty interest at stake, or where the
    State is truly unable to anticipate and prevent a
    random deprivation of a liberty interest,
    postdeprivation remedies might satisfy due process.
    Zinermon v. Burch, 
    494 U.S. 113
    , 132 (1990) (citations
    omitted).
    Higgins alleged in his complaint that the ADTC
    employees took money from his inmate account without
    providing him with a predeprivation hearing. The ADTC
    employees argue that they did not improperly deny Higgins
    a predeprivation hearing because the New Jersey Torts
    Claims Act provides Higgins with an adequate
    postdeprivation remedy to seek money damages for the
    seizure of his property. Higgins did not allege facts that
    demonstrate that his funds were seized as the result of a
    random, negligent, or unauthorized act of an ADTC
    employee. Rather, Higgins alleged that the ADTC employees
    were acting under the authority of an established state
    procedure for seizing a prisoner’s funds to satisfy court-
    ordered fines. The ADTC employees have argued before this
    Court that they were acting pursuant to N.J. Stat. Ann.
    S 2C:43-3.1(a)(3) when they deducted funds from Higgins’s
    account. Thus, under Zinermon, Higgins was entitled to
    notice and hearing before the ADTC employees deducted
    money from his account.
    Higgins has alleged sufficient facts to establish that he
    was entitled to a predeprivation notice and hearing. 3
    _________________________________________________________________
    3. We note that the alleged violation of Higgins’s Fourteenth Amendment
    right to due process occurred at the moment he was deprived of his
    property interest without notice and a predeprivation hearing (i.e., when
    the ADTC employees seized the money in his inmate account). Thus,
    Higgins’s procedural due process claim would not be rendered moot even
    if he is ultimately successful in recovering the $1,000 under his
    S 5301(a) claim. In such a situation, Higgins would still be entitled to
    nominal damages on a successful procedural due process claim despite
    the fact that he may be unable to prove actual injury from the
    16
    Moreover, Higgins’s procedural due process rights are
    enforceable under S 1983. See Zinermon, 
    494 U.S. at 125
    ("A S 1983 action may be brought for a violation of
    procedural due process . . . ."). The district court erred in
    dismissing Higgins’s procedural due process claim under
    Rule 12(b)(6).
    IV
    The district court did not disclose the basis for the
    dismissal of Higgins’s claim that the ADTC employees
    retaliated against him because he exercised his federal
    constitutional right to seek access to the courts for an
    adjudication of his claims that he was deprived of his rights
    under S 5301(a) and the Due Process Clause. A person may
    state an independent cause of action for retaliation for the
    exercise of his or her right of access to the courts,
    regardless of whether the allegations of a deprivation of
    federal statutory or constitutional rights are meritorious.
    See White v. Napoleon, 
    897 F.2d 103
    , 111-12 (3d Cir. 1990)
    ("Retaliation for the exercise of constitutionally protected
    rights is itself a violation of rights secured by the
    Constitution actionable under section 1983."). The district
    court erred in dismissing Higgins’s claim for retaliation for
    the exercise of his rights under federal law.
    Conclusion
    Higgins’s complaint alleged sufficient facts to support a
    S 1983 claim that he was deprived of his rights under
    S 5301(a) and the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
    Amendment. Accordingly, we VACATE the dismissal of this
    action. Upon REMAND, the district court is directed to
    _________________________________________________________________
    deprivation of his property interest in the $1,000. See Carey v. Piphus,
    
    435 U.S. 247
    , 266 (1978) (stating that "[b]ecause the right to procedural
    due process is ‘absolute’ in the sense that it does not depend upon the
    merits of a claimant’s substantive assertions, and because of the
    importance to organized society that procedural due process be
    observed, we believe that the denial of procedural due process should be
    actionable for nominal damages without proof of actual injury" (citations
    omitted)).
    17
    permit Higgins to amend his complaint so as to attempt to
    allege a S 1983 retaliation claim for the exercise of his
    federal rights.
    Costs are awarded to Higgins.
    A True Copy:
    Teste:
    Clerk of the United States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    18