“One Strike Further”: Hale-El v. Doe and the Tenth Circuit’s Clarification that (1) a Mis-Captioned Notice of Appeal Does Not Defeat Jurisdiction and (2) Frivolous Prisoner Appeals Trigger PLRA Strikes and IFP Denials

“One Strike Further”: Hale-El v. Doe and the Tenth Circuit’s Clarification that (1) a Mis-Captioned Notice of Appeal Does Not Defeat Jurisdiction and (2) Frivolous Prisoner Appeals Trigger PLRA Strikes and IFP Denials

1. Introduction

In Hale-El v. Doe, Nos. 25-1044 & 25-1045 (10th Cir. June 25 2025), the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit disposed of two consolidated pro se appeals brought by Colorado state prisoner Colby Jerome Hale-El. The decision, delivered in a non-precedential order but citable for its persuasive value, re-affirmed long-standing screening standards for prisoner litigation, clarified that a notice of appeal erroneously directed to the U.S. Supreme Court does not defeat circuit jurisdiction, and imposed yet another “strike” under the Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA).

The appeals stemmed from district-court dismissals of two separate § 1983 actions in which the plaintiff alleged constitutional violations centering on (i) an allegedly premature transfer to county jail to serve a consecutive sentence and (ii) wide-ranging claims against public defenders and prison staff for racial discrimination, conspiracy, denial of due process, and obstruction of access to courts. Both district courts had dismissed the complaints at the screening stage as frivolous or as failing to state a viable claim and denied leave to proceed in forma pauperis (IFP) on appeal. The Tenth Circuit affirmed, found the ensuing appeals themselves frivolous under 28 U.S.C. § 1915(e)(2)(B)(i), denied IFP status, and warned the litigant that—having now accumulated more than three strikes—future IFP filings are barred absent imminent-danger allegations.

2. Summary of the Judgment

  • Disposition: Both appeals dismissed as frivolous; IFP motions denied; an additional PLRA strike assessed.
  • Key Holdings:
    1. A prisoner’s mistaken caption directing a notice of appeal to the “Supreme Court of the United States” does not deprive the relevant court of appeals of jurisdiction, so long as the notice is timely and otherwise adequate (relying on Graves v. General Ins. Corp.).
    2. District courts did not abuse their discretion in dismissing the complaints under § 1915(e)(2)(B) and § 1915A: the pleadings were conclusory, violated the minimal Rule 8 standard, and stated no actionable constitutional claim.
    3. Because the consolidated appeals were themselves frivolous, they count as a PLRA strike, and the court must deny IFP status.

3. Analysis

3.1 Precedents Cited and Their Influence

The panel invoked a familiar constellation of authorities that frame PLRA screening and appellate review:

  • Neitzke v. Williams, 490 U.S. 319 (1989) – Provides the foundational definition of a “frivolous” filing: one in which legal points are indisputably lacking in merit.
  • Brooks v. Raemisch, 717 F. App’x 766 (10th Cir. 2017) – Restates liberal‐construction principles for pro se pleadings and sets the standard of review (abuse of discretion vs. de novo) when a dismissal hinges on fact-intensive versus purely legal determinations.
  • Randle v. Romero, 610 F.2d 702 (10th Cir. 1979) and Meachum v. Fano, 427 U.S. 215 (1976) – Establish that prisoner transfers, absent a state-created liberty interest, do not implicate due-process hearings.
  • Hampton v. Dillard Dep’t Stores, Reynolds v. School Dist. No. 1, and Tilton v. Richardson – Frame elements of § 1981 race discrimination and § 1985 civil-rights conspiracy claims.
  • Lewis v. Casey, 518 U.S. 343 (1996) – Requires a showing of actual injury to sustain an access-to-courts claim.
  • Strope v. Cummings, 653 F.3d 1271 (10th Cir. 2011) – Articulates the “three-strike” rule barring future IFP filings.

By integrating these authorities, the panel placed the plaintiff’s allegations next to established doctrinal yardsticks and found them wanting—illustrating how precedent streamlines PLRA screening by providing ready checklists for essential elements.

3.2 Legal Reasoning of the Court

  1. Jurisdiction despite mis-caption. The notices of appeal—incorrectly addressed to the U.S. Supreme Court—were nevertheless considered timely and effective. Relying on Graves, the court underscored that substance, not nomenclature, governs appellate jurisdiction. The holding is a practical safeguard for pro se litigants: a drafting blunder will not necessarily forfeit appellate rights.
  2. Frivolousness determination. Applying § 1915(e)(2)(B)(i), the court parsed the complaints’ theories: vague references to “civil conspiracy,” “racial profiling,” and “premature sentencing” lacked factual underpinning. The pleadings neither identified an unlawful meeting of minds (crucial for conspiracy) nor articulated any protected‐class membership or contract impaired (required under § 1981). Because the district courts’ dismissals turned on fact-specific deficiencies rather than disputed legal propositions, the appellate standard was abuse of discretion—one not met here.
  3. Access-to-courts and retaliation claims. Echoing Lewis v. Casey, the panel held that a bare assertion of missing legal documents is not “actual injury.” Likewise, retaliation requires “but-for” causation—missing from the pleadings.
  4. PLRA strike and IFP denial. Having found the appeals frivolous, the panel was statutorily compelled to record a strike and reject IFP status. The opinion carefully tracked § 1915(g), emphasizing that a prisoner who has “struck out” may file future actions only if under “imminent danger of serious physical injury.”

3.3 Impact on Future Litigation

  • Procedural Safety Net for Mis-Captioned Appeals — Although non-precedential, the decision is persuasive authority confirming that a pro se notice of appeal does not fail merely because the filer names the wrong appellate tribunal. Practitioners defending against a timeliness challenge or clerks triaging mis‐addressed notices may cite Hale-El for guidance.
  • Reinforcement of the “Short and Plain” Pleading Mandate — The court’s insistence on Rule 8 clarity serves as a reminder that even lenient pro se standards do not excuse scattershot allegations. Prisoner litigants must articulate concrete facts linking each defendant to each legal theory.
  • PLRA Strike Accounting — The opinion’s explicit accounting of the plaintiff’s strike history, and its conversion of the present appeals into yet another strike, illustrates the judiciary’s heightened vigilance in tracking frivolous filings and curbing resource-draining litigation cycles.
  • Substantive Guidance on Common Prisoner Claims — By reiterating what suffices (and what does not) for conspiracy, discrimination, and access-to-courts claims, the decision provides a concise roadmap for future plaintiffs and for district courts screening complaints.

4. Complex Concepts Simplified

§ 1983 Action
A civil lawsuit enabling individuals to sue state officials for constitutional violations under color of state law.
Frivolous Filing
A claim that lacks any arguable basis in law or fact. Courts must dismiss such filings under § 1915(e)(2)(B).
PLRA “Strike”
Under 28 U.S.C. § 1915(g), each dismissal of a prisoner action as frivolous, malicious, or for failure to state a claim counts as one “strike.” Accumulation of three strikes bars future IFP filings absent imminent danger.
In Forma Pauperis (IFP)
Permission to litigate without prepaying filing fees if the litigant is indigent and the appeal is taken “in good faith.”
Rule 8 Pleading Standard
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 8 requires a “short and plain statement” showing entitlement to relief. Conclusory or verbose pleadings that fail to link facts to legal claims are subject to dismissal.
Civil-Rights Conspiracy (§ 1985)
An agreement between two or more persons to deprive another of equal protection or equal privileges. Requires specific facts showing a “meeting of the minds.”

5. Conclusion

Hale-El v. Doe is less about new substantive rights than about procedural rigor. The Tenth Circuit reinforced three practical lessons:

  1. Technical missteps in a notice of appeal—especially by a pro se prisoner—will not automatically defeat jurisdiction if the intent to appeal is plain.
  2. Pleadings must do more than recite constitutional buzzwords; they must tether concrete facts to each element of each claim, or they will be dispatched swiftly at the screening stage.
  3. Frivolous appeals invite PLRA strikes and consequent loss of IFP privileges, a sanction the court is not hesitant to apply.

For practitioners, the decision offers persuasive authority on notice-of-appeal mishaps, PLRA strike calculus, and the standards governing screening dismissals. For incarcerated litigants, it is a cautionary tale: each meritless filing inches one strike closer to the pay-to-play threshold.

Case Details

Year: 2025
Court: Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit

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