D. Hill v. PA DOC ( 2022 )


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  •             IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Donna Hill,                                    :
    Petitioner               :
    :
    v.                       :
    :
    Pennsylvania Dept. of Corrections;             :
    Superintendent of SCI Benner and               :
    Smart Communications,                          :   No. 684 M.D. 2018
    Respondents                 :   Submitted: July 9, 2021
    BEFORE:       HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, Judge1
    HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge
    HONORABLE CHRISTINE FIZZANO CANNON, Judge
    OPINION BY
    JUDGE COVEY                                        FILED: February 17, 2022
    Before this Court are Smart Communications’ (Smart) preliminary
    objections (Preliminary Objections) to Donna Hill’s (Hill) pro se Second Amended
    Petition for Review in the Nature of a Complaint (Second Amended Petition) filed in
    this Court’s original jurisdiction. Therein, Hill, Inmate Dwayne Hill’s (Inmate Hill)
    wife, challenges the Department of Corrections’ (Department) inmate mailing policy
    (Mailing Policy), and seeks injunctive relief against Smart - the Department’s mail
    handling contractor - and the Department enjoining them from “delaying, confiscating,
    [and/or] recording her mail,” plus compensatory and punitive damages.                     Second
    Amended Petition at 3.         After review, this Court overrules Smart’s Preliminary
    Objections.
    1
    This matter was assigned to the panel before January 3, 2022, when President Judge Emerita
    Leavitt became a senior judge on the Court.
    Background
    The instant matter has a complicated procedural history. Inmate Hill is
    currently incarcerated at State Correctional Institution (SCI)-Phoenix. On October 30,
    2018, Inmate Hill, then incarcerated at SCI-Benner, and Hill (collectively, Petitioners),
    filed a petition for review (Original Petition) with this Court seeking to enjoin the
    Department from enforcing its Mailing Policy. Petitioners also challenged the Mailing
    Policy’s validity, arguing that the Department improperly destroyed, delayed,
    confiscated, and recorded all mail.2 The Department filed preliminary objections to the
    Original Petition, asking this Court to dismiss the petition. The Department maintained
    that this Court lacked jurisdiction over the matter. Additionally, the Department
    averred that Hill had not stated a claim for relief because she did not have a cognizable
    interest in original pieces of mail, and because she did not establish irreparable harm
    resulting from the Mailing Policy. Lastly, the Department argued that its Mailing
    Policy is constitutional because it reasonably relates to preventing drug entry into SCIs,
    which is a legitimate penological interest. On September 12, 2019, this Court overruled
    the Department’s preliminary objection to the Court’s jurisdiction, sustained its
    demurrer without prejudice, and granted Hill leave to amend her Original Petition. See
    Hill v. Commonwealth (Pa. Cmwlth. No. 684 M.D. 2018, filed Sept. 12, 2019) (Hill I).
    On October 17, 2019, Hill filed an amended petition for review (First
    Amended Petition) adding Smart as a defendant. On October 28, 2019, the Department
    filed its answer and new matter. On November 27, 2019, Hill filed a new amended
    petition (New Amended Petition). On December 10, 2019, the Department filed an
    2
    This Court initially granted Petitioners’ in forma pauperis (IFP) application in November
    2018. However, the Court subsequently granted the Department’s motion to revoke Inmate Hill’s
    IFP status under Section 6602(f) of what is commonly referred to as the Prison Litigation Reform
    Act, 42 Pa.C.S. § 6602(f), based on his history as an abusive litigator. Because Inmate Hill failed to
    pay the filing fee within the requisite time period, this Court dismissed Inmate Hill as a party in March
    2019. The Pennsylvania Supreme Court denied review of that Order.
    2
    application to strike the New Amended Petition. On December 23, 2019, Smart filed
    preliminary objections to the First Amended Petition, alleging that the First Amended
    Petition was insufficiently specific, and that it was legally insufficient, in that Smart is
    not a state actor and, thus, cannot be liable to Hill for violating her constitutional rights.
    On January 8, 2020, this Court granted the Department’s application to strike the New
    Amended Petition.
    On July 17, 2020, Hill filed a Motion to File Second Amended Petition,
    which the Court granted on November 30, 2020. On January 21, 2021, Hill filed the
    Second Amended Petition, which was substantially similar to her First Amended
    Petition. On February 5, 2021, Smart filed the Preliminary Objections to Hill’s Second
    Amended Petition, again alleging insufficient specificity in pleading and legal
    insufficiency because Smart is not a state actor. On March 2, 2021, the Department
    filed a motion seeking additional time to respond to the Second Amended Petition,
    which the Court granted on March 4, 2021. On March 15, 2021, Hill filed her response
    to the Preliminary Objections. On March 29, 2021, the Department filed its Answer
    and New Matter to the Second Amended Petition (Answer and New Matter). On April
    22, 2021, Hill filed her reply to the Department’s New Matter.
    Second Amended Petition
    In her Second Amended Petition, Hill avers that, pursuant to the
    Department’s Mailing Policy, which was implemented to prevent the entry of drugs
    into the SCIs, all non-legal inmate mail must be sent to Smart’s Florida facility for
    processing, where the originals are destroyed and the inmate receives copies.
    3 Hill 3
    Hill’s Second Amended Petition references “Exhibit A,” an undated, untitled document on
    Department letterhead, which was attached to Hill’s Original Petition and First Amended Petition.
    Exhibit A describes the Mailing Policy in relevant part, including frequently asked questions and
    answers thereto, and attributes the new mail procedures to the need to “combat the introduction of
    drugs into the facilities[.]” Ex. A at 1. In its Answer and New Matter, the Department references
    3
    further alleges that Smart maintains an incoming correspondence database. According
    to Hill, she has sent mail to Inmate Hill at both the SCI and Smart’s mail processing
    center and it disappeared. She contends that she used to write to Inmate Hill every
    Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, until her mail started disappearing. She estimates
    that approximately 38 pieces of mail are unaccounted for, including photos, children’s
    drawings, and announcements of family achievements and occasions. She complains
    that the Mailing Policy amounts to a constructive ban on all mail, for which she seeks
    injunctive relief and monetary damages.
    Discussion
    Initially,
    [i]n ruling on preliminary objections, we accept as true all
    well-pleaded material allegations in the petition for review
    and any reasonable inferences that we may draw from the
    averments. The Court, however, is not bound by legal
    conclusions, unwarranted inferences from facts,
    argumentative allegations, or expressions of opinion
    encompassed in the petition for review. We may sustain
    preliminary objections only when the law makes clear that
    the petitioner cannot succeed on his claim, and we must
    resolve any doubt in favor of the petitioner.
    Highley v. Dep’t of Transp., 
    195 A.3d 1078
    , 1082 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2018) (citations
    omitted).
    Hill’s Exhibit A as a memorandum summarizing the inmate mail policy and acknowledges that “upon
    the reopening of all Department facilities, the Department’s new inmate mail policy (DC-ADM 803)
    went into effect.” Dep’t Answer and New Matter at 2. The Department attached a copy of Section 1
    (Mail Processing Procedures) of the Inmate Mail and Incoming Publications Procedures Manual, DC-
    ADM 803, to its Answer and New Matter.
    4
    I. First Preliminary Objection - Legal Insufficiency
    Smart first objects that Hill’s Second Amended Petition is legally
    insufficient in that Smart is not a state actor, but rather, is the Department’s arm’s
    length independent contractor, and, thus, Smart cannot be liable for violating Hill’s
    constitutional rights.
    Section 1983 of the Civil Rights Act of 1871 (Section 1983) provides:
    Every person who, under color of any statute, ordinance,
    regulation, custom, or usage, of any [s]tate . . . 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, suit in equity, or other proper proceeding for
    redress[.]
    
    42 U.S.C. § 1983
    .
    The United States Supreme Court has held that “[t]o state a claim under
    [Section] 1983, a plaintiff must allege the violation of a right secured by the
    Constitution and laws of the United States, and must show that the alleged
    deprivation was committed by a person acting under color of state law.” West v.
    Atkins, 
    487 U.S. 42
    , 48 (1988) (emphasis added); see also Owens v. Shannon, 
    808 A.2d 607
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 2002). However, “a plaintiff is not required to set forth the statute
    by stating a ‘Section 1983’ cause of action in his complaint[.]” Weaver v. Franklin
    Cnty., 
    918 A.2d 194
    , 200 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2007) (quoting Clark v. Se. Pa. Transp. Auth.,
    
    691 A.2d 988
    , 990 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1997)).
    Hill did not specifically assert a Section 1983 civil rights violation in her
    Second Amended Petition, but this Court recognized in Hill I, that Hill “raises a
    discernible constitutional challenge to the Mailing Policy predicated on her First
    Amendment[, U.S. Const. amend. I,] right as a non-prisoner to communicate by mail
    with Inmate [Hill].” Hill I, slip op. at 8.
    5
    “To be sure, the First Amendment to the United States Constitution
    protects an inmate’s general right to communicate by mail.” Rivera v. Silbaugh, 
    240 A.3d 229
    , 238 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2020). “Indeed, interference with an inmate’s mail can
    rise to the level of a constitutional violation.” 
    Id.
     The United States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit4 has explained:
    [T]he [United States] Supreme Court has generally treated
    interference with the mail as implicating the First
    Amendment right to free speech.
    In Procunier v. Martinez, 
    416 U.S. 396
     . . . (1974), the
    Supreme Court invalidated California prison regulations
    which provided for the routine censorship of inmates’
    outgoing personal correspondence, on the grounds that the
    regulations violated the free speech rights of the prisoners’
    correspondents. [Id.] at 408 (“whatever the status of a
    prisoner’s claim to uncensored correspondence with an
    outsider, it is plain that the latter’s interest is grounded in the
    First Amendment’s guarantee of freedom of speech”). See
    also Wolff [v. McDonnell], 418 U.S. [539,] 576-77 [(1974)].
    In the years after Procunier and Wolff, however, the
    [Supreme] Court abandoned the distinction between the free
    speech rights of inmates and their correspondents on the
    outside. [Thornburgh v. ]Abbott, 490 U.S. [401,] 411, n.9
    [(1989)] (“any attempt to forge separate standards for cases
    implicating the [First Amendment] rights of outsiders [and
    inmates] is out of step with the intervening decisions”).
    4
    [W]e recognize that we are not bound to follow the decisions of federal
    district and intermediate appellate courts on issues of federal law.
    However, although decisions of the federal courts lower than the
    U[nited] S[tates] Supreme Court are not binding on Pennsylvania
    courts, they may be considered as persuasive authority with regard to
    federal questions.
    W. Chester Area Sch. Dist. v. A.M., 
    164 A.3d 620
    , 630 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2017) (citations omitted).
    6
    Clearly, then, prisoners do not forfeit their First Amendment
    rights to use of the mails.[5]
    Bieregu v. Reno, 
    59 F.3d 1445
    , 1451-52 (3d Cir. 1995) (citations omitted), overruled
    on other grounds by Lewis v. Casey, 
    518 U.S. 343
     (1996).
    Smart contends that, to the extent Hill’s Second Amended Petition is
    construed as asserting a First Amendment claim, Smart is not a state actor and, thus,
    cannot be liable for violating Hill’s rights. In support of its claim, Smart cites Hennessy
    v. Santiago, 
    708 A.2d 1269
    , 1276 (Pa. Super. 1998), for the proposition that “[a]cts of
    [] private contractors do not become acts of the government by reason of their
    significant or even total engagement in performing public contracts.” 
    Id.
     (quoting
    Rendell-Baker v. Kohn, 
    457 U.S. 830
    , 841(1982)). See also Marmolejos v. Global
    Tel*Link Corp. (W.D. Pa., No. 1:17-CV-13, filed Jan. 9, 2019), 
    2019 WL 981882
    , at
    *2-*3, Magistrate’s Report and Recommendation adopted by (W.D. Pa., No. C.A. 17-
    13 Erie, filed Feb. 28, 2019), 
    2019 WL 977888
     (dismissal of prisoner plaintiffs’ Section
    1983 claims against a private corporate supplier of tablet devices sold in the prison
    commissary that allegedly caused prisoners to receive different versions of downloaded
    songs than they thought they were purchasing).6
    The United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit has also
    described:
    “Under color of law” and “state action” are interpreted
    identically under the Fourteenth Amendment[, U.S. Const.
    5
    “Although it is well settled that inmates have a right to receive mail, that right may be limited
    by prison regulations that are reasonably related to legitimate penological interests.” Weiler v.
    Purkett, 
    137 F.3d 1047
    , 1050 (8th Cir. 1998).
    6
    Hennessy and Marmolejos are inapposite. Hennessy did not involve prison operations.
    Instead, it involved a lawsuit for an alleged civil rights deprivation arising from Hennessy’s alleged
    wrongful dismissal from her position as a habilitative counselor where her employer, pursuant to
    county contracts, provided community living arrangements for county residents. The Marmolejos
    Court held that the plaintiffs failed to allege any facts from which the Court could infer that a private
    corporation supplying the tablets to the Department was a state actor.
    7
    amend. XIV]. [Leshko v. Servis, 
    423 F.3d 337
    ,] 339 [(3d Cir.
    2005)]. . . .
    Although there is no “simple line” between state and private
    actors, Brentwood Acad. v. Tenn. Secondary Sch. Athletic
    Ass’n, 
    531 U.S. 288
     . . . (2001), we have explained that “[t]he
    principal question at stake is whether there is such a close
    nexus between the [s]tate and the challenged action that
    seemingly private behavior may be fairly treated as that of
    the State itself.” Leshko, 
    423 F.3d at 339
     (internal quotation
    marks and citation omitted). To answer that question, we
    have outlined three broad tests generated by [United States]
    Supreme Court jurisprudence to determine whether state
    action exists: (1) “whether the private entity has exercised
    powers that are traditionally the exclusive prerogative of the
    state”; (2) “whether the private party has acted with the help
    of or in concert with state officials”; and (3) whether “the
    [s]tate has so far insinuated itself into a position of
    interdependence with the acting party that it must be
    recognized as a joint participant in the challenged activity.”
    Mark[ v. Borough of Hatboro,] 51 F.3d [1137,] 1142 [(3d
    Cir. 1995)] (other alterations, internal quotation marks and
    citations omitted). Under any test, “[t]he inquiry is fact-
    specific.”[7] Groman v. Twp. of Manalapan, 
    47 F.3d 628
    , 638
    (3d Cir. 1995)[.]
    Kach v. Hose, 
    589 F.3d 626
    , 646 (3d Cir. 2009). However, “[i]t is clear that a private
    entity that voluntarily assumes through contract with a state entity the obligation to
    fulfill a traditional state function, such as providing medically prescribed diets to
    inmates housed within the prison system, acts under color of state law for purposes of
    [Section] 1983.” Nelson v. ARA Food Serv. (E.D. Pa., No. 94-4542, filed May 17,
    1995), slip op. at ___, 
    1995 WL 303990
    , at *3 (emphasis added).
    The United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania
    clarified:
    It has been well[ ]established that “the function of
    incarcerating people, whether done publicly or privately, is
    7
    Notably, “state-hired private contractors are not automatically state actors under [Section]
    1983, even if the state is their only patron.” Leshko, 
    423 F.3d at 342
    .
    8
    the exclusive prerogative of the state.” Giron v. Corr[.]
    Corp. of Am., 
    14 F. Supp. 2d 1245
    , 1249 (D.N.M. 1998).
    Largely, the courts have considered whether private entities
    in prisons should be considered state actors in the context of
    privately-run prisons, finding that the state actor requirement
    was met for [Section] 1983 purposes. See Street v. Corr[.]
    Corp. of Am., 
    102 F.3d 810
    , 814 (6th Cir. 1996) (holding that
    private prison company was a state actor when it incarcerated
    inmates for the state); Kesler v. King, 
    29 F. Supp. 2d 356
    ,
    370-71 (S.D. Tex. 1998) (same); Giron . . . , 14 F. Supp.
    2d . . . at 1247-51 [] (finding that a corrections officer
    employed by a private prison company was a state actor for
    [Section] 1983 purposes when he raped an inmate); Plain v.
    Flicker, 
    645 F. Supp. 898
    , 907 (D.N.J. 1986) (“[I]f a state
    contracted with a private corporation to run its prisons it
    would no doubt subject the private prison authorities to
    [Section] 1983 suits under the public function doctrine.”).
    Furthermore, our colleagues in the Eastern District have
    considered what individual functions of incarceration are
    “public functions.” In McCullum v. City of Philadelphia,
    the court found that a company which privately contracted
    with a public prison to provide dining services could be
    considered a state actor under the public function test
    because “providing food service, like medical care, to
    those incarcerated people is one part of the government
    function of incarceration.” [(E.D. Pa., No. CIV. A. 98-
    5858, filed July 13, 1999), slip op. at ___, 
    1999 WL 493696
    ,
    at *3]. In McCullum, the court held that, since the
    government had an Eighth Amendment[, U.S. Const. amend
    VIII,] duty to provide “humane conditions of confinement,”
    providing adequate food could be considered acting under
    the color of state law. 
    Id.
     In addition, “[i]f a state
    government must satisfy certain constitutional obligations
    when carrying out its functions, it cannot avoid those
    obligations and deprive individuals of their constitutionally
    protected rights by delegating governmental functions to the
    private sector.” Giron, 
    14 F. Supp. 2d at 1249
    .
    Amig v. Cnty. of Juniata, 
    432 F. Supp. 3d 481
    , 486-87 (M.D. Pa. 2020) (emphasis
    added). In Amig, the court
    similarly f[ou]nd that drug-testing in a prison may be
    considered a traditional state function. Under the Eighth
    9
    Amendment, the state is required to provide “humane
    conditions of confinement.” Such conditions must
    necessarily include providing a safe environment in which
    inmates may serve their periods of incarceration. An
    inmate’s safety must, in part, include maintaining a drug-
    free setting to the greatest extent possible. [The court] can
    easily conceive of the safety concerns that could arise from
    unchecked drug overdoses, inmates acting under the
    influence of illicit drugs, or even, as is the case here, the
    danger of a work-release inmate ingesting illicit drugs
    outside of the prison and potentially causing harm to herself,
    other inmates, or innocent bystanders. Because the [f]acility
    has a duty to provide a safe environment to its inmates,
    [it] also ha[s] a duty to monitor [its] prison population for
    illicit drug use. Indeed, drug crimes account for a significant
    number of incarcerations. The [f]acility cannot then
    delegate the duty to monitor drug use [to] a private party
    and absolve inmates of constitutional rights by doing so.
    Id. at 487 (emphasis added). This Court finds Amig instructive and persuasive.
    Here, the Department implemented the Mailing Policy to prevent drugs
    from entering the facility through the SCI mailing system. In its Answer and New
    Matter to the Second Amended Petition, the Department acknowledged that it “has a
    constitutional duty under the Eighth Amendment to ensure the health and safety of all
    inmates in its care and to prevent their exposure to opioids and synthetic cannabinoids.”
    Dep’t Answer and New Matter at 9.
    The safety concerns that the Department describes are substantially
    similar to those referenced in Amig. Because the Department has a duty to provide a
    safe prison environment for the inmates, it has a corresponding duty to prevent the
    introduction of drugs into its facilities. Thus, this Court finds prison mail screening for
    that purpose is a traditional state function. Smart voluntary assumed the obligation to
    perform that traditional state function of prison mail screening and, as a result, it acts
    under color of state law for purposes of Section 1983. Accordingly, this Court
    overrules Smart’s first Preliminary Objection.
    10
    II. Second Preliminary Objection – Specificity of Pleading
    Smart alleges in its second Preliminary Objection that Hill’s Second
    Amended Petition should be dismissed for insufficient specificity.8 Smart argues in its
    brief to this Court:
    In her [Second Amended Petition], [] Hill still fails to allege
    her claim with specificity. She vaguely alleges that some
    mail she has sent to her spouse has gone missing. She does
    not specify the date of any piece of mail she sent.
    As the processor of all non-privileged inmate mail, Smart
    handles thousands of mail items. The few mail pieces here
    are a few needles in a massive haystack. For Smart to
    investigate and respond to [] Hill’s allegations, it needs as
    many details as possible. But [] Hill has not provided almost
    any.
    Smart Br. at 6 (citation omitted).
    The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has declared:
    Pennsylvania is a fact-pleading state. “As a minimum, a
    pleader must set forth concisely the facts upon which his
    cause of action is based.” Line Lexington Lumber &
    Millwork Co[.], Inc. v. P[a.] Publ[’g] Corp., . . . 
    301 A.2d 684
    , 688 ([Pa.] 1973). The complaint must not only apprise
    the defendant of the claim being asserted, but it must also
    summarize the essential facts to support the claim. Landau
    v. W[.] P[a.] Nat[’l] Bank, . . . 
    282 A.2d 335
    , 339 ([Pa.] 1971)
    (“The purpose of [Pennsylvania Rule of Civil Procedure
    (Rule) 1019, Pa.R.Civ.P. 1019,] is to require the pleader to
    disclose the ‘material facts’ sufficient to enable the adverse
    party to prepare his case.”) (citation omitted).
    Rule 1019(a) requires that “[t]he material facts on which a
    cause of action or defense is based shall be stated in a concise
    and summary form.” Pa.R.[Civ.]P. 1019(a). “Each cause of
    action and any special damage related thereto shall be stated
    8
    On March 29, 2021, the Department filed its Answer and New Matter to the Second
    Amended Petition without objecting to the Second Amended Petition’s alleged insufficient
    specificity.
    11
    in a separate count containing a demand for relief.” Id.,
    1020(a).
    McShea v. City of Phila., 
    995 A.2d 334
    , 339-40 (Pa. 2010) (citation omitted).
    This Court has explained:
    [Rule] 1028(a)(3) permits a preliminary objection based on
    insufficient specificity of a pleading. To determine if a
    pleading is sufficiently specific, a court must ascertain
    whether the facts alleged are sufficiently specific to enable a
    defendant to prepare his defense. Preliminary objections in
    the nature of a motion for a more specific pleading raise the
    sole question of whether the pleading is sufficiently clear to
    enable the defendant to prepare a defense. Further, in
    pleading its case, the complaint need not cite evidence but
    only those facts necessary for the defendant to prepare a
    defense.
    Unified Sportsmen of Pa. v. Pa. Game Comm’n, 
    950 A.2d 1120
    , 1134 (Pa. Cmwlth.
    2008) (emphasis added; citation omitted).
    Importantly, “[t]he allegations of a pro se [petitioner] are held to a less
    stringent standard than that applied to pleadings filed by attorneys. If a fair reading of
    the [petition for review] shows that the [petitioner] has pleaded facts that may entitle
    [her] to relief, the preliminary objections will be overruled.” Danysh v. Dep’t of Corr.,
    
    845 A.2d 260
    , 262-63 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2004), aff’d, 
    881 A.2d 1263
     (Pa. 2005).
    In Hill I, this Court stated:
    To assert a constitutional violation of the First Amendment
    right to correspond by mail, a petitioner must allege a
    “pattern and practice” of mail interference or actual injury.
    Jones v. Doe, 
    126 A.3d 406
    , 409 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2015). The
    United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit has held
    that a “single, isolated interference with [an inmate’s]
    personal mail was insufficient to constitute a First
    Amendment violation.” Nixon v. Sec’y Pa. Dep’t of Corr.,
    501 F. App’x 176, 178 (3d Cir. 2012). The Court declined
    to establish a minimum number of mail interferences that
    would rise to a constitutional violation, but rather found
    12
    actual injury is a factual inquiry to be determined on a case-
    by-case basis. See Bieregu . . . .
    Here, [Hill] claims she and Inmate [Hill] “correspond
    regularly,” but Inmate [Hill] has not received mail from her
    “since September 8, 2018.” [Original Petition], ¶10. [Hill]
    alludes to a pattern and practice of mail interference, but does
    not specify the dates of her mailed correspondence or the
    number of alleged interferences in the petition. As a result,
    her [Original Petition] lacks sufficient facts that, if true,
    reflect a pattern and practice of mail interference, or show an
    actual injury.
    Hill I, slip op. at 7-8 (emphasis added, footnotes omitted). Hill filed her Original
    Petition on October 30, 2018. Thus, it appears that the missing mail to which Hill
    refers was allegedly lost between September 8 and October 30, 2018.
    Hill’s Second Amended Petition contains the following additional
    substantive factual allegations:
    11. Since th[e] [O]riginal [Petition] was filed, there ha[ve]
    been a number of changes. First, prisoners are now being
    given the original, of all legal material, that falls neatly into
    the Department’s new practices. Second, they created
    different mailing addresses for books, legal mail and non-
    legal mail.
    12. [Hill] used to write to her husband every Monday,
    Wednesday and Friday until her mail started disappearing.
    [Inmate Hill] is missing around 38 pieces of mail.
    13. There were photos, drawings by children in the family,
    announcements of family achievements and occasions, and
    none of these things can be replaced.
    Second Amended Petition at 2-3.
    Although sparse, Hill’s Second Amended Petition contains sufficient facts
    necessary for Smart to prepare a defense. Hill alleges in her Second Amended Petition
    that, following a system-wide lockdown on August 29, 2018, the Department
    implemented the Mailing Policy and, as a result, since September 8, 2018, and until the
    13
    day she filed her Original Petition on October 30, 2018, approximately 38 pieces of
    mail she sent to Inmate Hill, including photos, drawings and other family items, have
    not been delivered to him.      Hill, thus alleges a “pattern and practice” of mail
    interference sufficient to assert a constitutional violation of her First Amendment right
    to correspond by mail. Jones, 126 A.3d at 409 (quoting Jones v. Brown, 
    461 F.3d 353
    ,
    358 (3d Cir. 2006)). Accordingly, this Court overrules Smart’s second Preliminary
    Objection.
    For all of the above reasons, this Court overrules Smart’s Preliminary
    Objections.
    _______________________________
    ANNE E. COVEY, Judge
    14
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Donna Hill,                             :
    Petitioner     :
    :
    v.                   :
    :
    Pennsylvania Dept. of Corrections;      :
    Superintendent of SCI Benner and        :
    Smart Communications,                   :   No. 684 M.D. 2018
    Respondents     :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 17th day of February, 2022, Smart Communications’
    Preliminary Objections to Donna Hill’s Second Amended Petition for Review are
    OVERRULED. Smart Communications is directed to file its answer to the Second
    Amended Petition for Review within 30 days from the date of this Order.
    __________________________________
    ANNE E. COVEY, Judge
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 684 M.D. 2018

Judges: Covey, J.

Filed Date: 2/17/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/17/2022

Authorities (20)

alphonse-w-groman-jane-m-groman-v-township-of-manalapan-chief-jimmie-r , 47 F.3d 628 ( 1995 )

karen-m-leshko-v-greg-servis-judy-m-servis-dauphin-county-social , 423 F.3d 337 ( 2005 )

William Street v. Corrections Corporation of America, Jimmy ... , 102 F.3d 810 ( 1996 )

Clyde Weiler v. James Purkett Leah Embly , 137 F.3d 1047 ( 1998 )

ronald-c-jones-v-m-brown-internal-affairs-ofc-s-sootkoos-associate , 461 F.3d 353 ( 2006 )

Polyns Bieregu v. Janet Reno L. Yearby G. Berman, All ... , 59 F.3d 1445 ( 1995 )

Clark v. Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority , 691 A.2d 988 ( 1997 )

Weaver v. Franklin County , 918 A.2d 194 ( 2007 )

Danysh v. Department of Corrections , 845 A.2d 260 ( 2004 )

Hennessy v. Santiago , 708 A.2d 1269 ( 1998 )

Unified Sportsmen v. Pennsylvania Game Commission , 950 A.2d 1120 ( 2008 )

Owens v. Shannon , 808 A.2d 607 ( 2002 )

Plain v. Flicker , 645 F. Supp. 898 ( 1986 )

Giron v. Corrections Corp. of America , 14 F. Supp. 2d 1245 ( 1998 )

Procunier v. Martinez , 94 S. Ct. 1800 ( 1974 )

Rendell-Baker v. Kohn , 102 S. Ct. 2764 ( 1982 )

West v. Atkins , 108 S. Ct. 2250 ( 1988 )

Lewis v. Casey , 116 S. Ct. 2174 ( 1996 )

Brentwood Academy v. Tennessee Secondary School Athletic ... , 121 S. Ct. 924 ( 2001 )

Kesler v. King , 29 F. Supp. 2d 356 ( 1998 )

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