PUBLISHED OPINION
Case No.: 94-2557
†Petition for
review filed
Complete Title
of Case:
TONY CHANEY,
Plaintiff-Appellant,†
v.
RUDY RENTERIA, SGT. SWEENEY,
OFFICER OTTO, OFFICER DELVAUX,
OFFICER HAMMOND and
PHARIS BROOKS,
Defendants-Respondents.
Oral Argument: May 14, 1996
COURT COURT OF APPEALS OF WISCONSIN
Opinion Released: July 2, 1996
Opinion Filed: July
2, 1996
Source of APPEAL Appeal from a judgment
Full Name JUDGE COURT: Circuit
Lower Court. COUNTY: Racine
(If
"Special", JUDGE: Dennis J. Flynn
so indicate)
JUDGES: Anderson, P.J., Brown and Nettesheim, JJ.
Concurred:
Dissented:
Appellant
ATTORNEYSOn behalf of the plaintiff-appellant, the cause was
submitted on the briefs of James M. Brennan and Elizabeth L.R. Donley
of Quarles & Brady of Milwaukee.
There was oral argument by James M. Brennan.
Respondent
ATTORNEYSOn behalf of the defendants-respondents, the cause was
submitted on the brief of James E. Doyle, attorney general, and Richard
A. Perkins, assistant attorney general.
There was oral argument by Richard A. Perkins.
COURT OF
APPEALS DECISION DATED AND
RELEASED July
2, 1996 |
NOTICE |
A party may file with the Supreme Court a petition to review an
adverse decision by the Court of Appeals.
See § 808.10 and Rule
809.62, Stats. |
This opinion is subject to further editing. If published, the official version will appear in the bound
volume of the Official Reports. |
No. 94-2557
STATE OF WISCONSIN IN
COURT OF APPEALS
TONY
CHANEY,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
RUDY
RENTERIA, SGT. SWEENEY,
OFFICER
OTTO, OFFICER DELVAUX,
OFFICER
HAMMOND and
PHARIS
BROOKS,
Defendants-Respondents.
APPEAL
from a judgment of the circuit court for Racine County: DENNIS J. FLYNN, Judge. Affirmed.
Before
Anderson, P.J., Brown and Nettesheim, JJ.
BROWN,
J. This
is a “prisoners' rights” case. Tony
Chaney sued several of his guards, who we collectively refer to as “the State,”
claiming that they breached his due process rights when they kept him in
adjustment segregation for twelve days longer than they were supposed to. Chaney challenges the circuit court's
finding that he did not suffer any tangible harm and its decision to grant
summary judgment to the State.
We
apply the Supreme Court's recent decision in Sandin v. Conner, 115
S. Ct. 2293 (1995), which requires us to look at the physical attributes of
Chaney's confinement and determine if it is atypical before we may conclude
that he has been deprived of a liberty interest. Under this test, we hold that Chaney has not suffered a
deprivation of liberty because the conditions he faced while in adjustment
segregation were not substantially different from what he previously
experienced as an inmate within the corrections system.
Chaney
challenges the circuit court's grant of summary judgment. On appeal, this court independently applies
the summary judgment methodology and redetermines if summary judgment is
appropriate. See Preloznik v.
City of Madison, 113 Wis.2d 112, 115-16, 334 N.W.2d 580, 582 (Ct. App.
1983). Therefore, we will present the
facts in a light most favorable to Chaney.
See State v. American TV, 146 Wis.2d 292, 300, 430 N.W.2d
709, 712 (1988).
In
June 1992, Chaney was an inmate at the Racine Correctional Institution. The prison's adjustment committee sentenced
Chaney to five days of adjustment segregation after it found that Chaney had
violated prison rules. See Wis. Adm. Code § DOC 303.69. Chaney, however, was not part of the general population when he
committed this offense; he was in program segregation. See § DOC 303.70. The State thus moved him from the program
segregation facility into the adjustment segregation area when he began the
sentence on June 5, 1992.
After
Chaney completed the five-day term, he contacted the guards and other prison
officials to remind them that his time was up and asked them to return him to
the program segregation facility where he was previously housed. According to Chaney, these guards and
officials knew that the maximum term of adjustment segregation is eight days
but nonetheless chose to rely on records which erroneously stated Chaney should
not be released. See § DOC 303.69(1).
During
his remaining time in adjustment segregation, Chaney continued complaining to
prison officials and tried filing a formal complaint. See generally ch. DOC 310. Still, his requests for relief went unanswered. Chaney was not released from adjustment
segregation until the error in the records was corrected on June 22. In total, Chaney was kept in adjustment
segregation for seventeen days.
Chaney
claims that he suffered various harms as a result of his confinement in the
comparatively spartan conditions of adjustment segregation for twelve days
beyond his official sentence. First, he
claims psychological and emotional injuries.
Second, he contends that he lost the opportunity to accrue six days
worth of good time since persons in adjustment segregation do not earn good
time. See § DOC
303.69(9). Third, he contends that
two of his unrelated civil actions were dismissed because he was not given
access to the prison library or a telephone and was unable to file responses.
In
November 1993, Chaney, acting pro se, filed a complaint for what he termed a
“Deprival of Due Process” under the United States and Wisconsin Constitutions
and claimed compensatory and punitive damages, as well as restoration of his
good time credit. Under the broad
reading that this court normally applies to pro se prisoner complaints, see
Culbert v. Young, 140 Wis.2d 821, 827-28, 412 N.W.2d 551, 554
(Ct. App. 1987), his complaint also suggests that he was pursuing a claim for
tortious confinement. However, Chaney
has retained pro bono counsel for the purposes of this appeal.[1] His counsel's appellate briefs and
statements at oral argument reveal that Chaney made a claim under 42 U.S.C. §
1983, and not any independent due process claim under the Wisconsin
Constitution or tort claim under Wisconsin civil law.
Chaney
outlines his due process theory as follows.
The applicable prison regulations mandate that he could only be placed
in adjustment segregation for a maximum of eight days and could only be placed
there after the State held a hearing where it proved that he had violated a
prison rule. See § DOC 303.69(1). The State, however, kept him in segregation
for seventeen days, which was twelve days beyond his original five-day sentence
and nine days beyond the permitted maximum.
Chaney argues that the extra days he spent in adjustment segregation
amounted to an unconstitutional deprivation of his liberty because the State
never held the hearing where it proved that it had reason to confine him for
the extra time, or where Chaney could have otherwise challenged the State's
decision to confine him for the extra time.
Thus, Chaney suffered a procedural due process violation when the State
stripped him of his protected liberty interest, that is, his “right” to return
to program segregation after completing the five-day sentence, without first
providing appropriate process.
In
response, the State points to the evidence it placed before the circuit court
when it moved for summary judgment.
First, the State submitted an affidavit describing the different
conditions for inmates in program segregation versus those placed in adjustment
segregation. While the State seems to
concede that Chaney's movement back to program segregation from adjustment
segregation would have provided him with a “gradual but controlled increase in
privileges,” it otherwise contended that the basics—food, clothing and
shelter—are the same in both types of confinement. Second, it provided affidavits showing that Chaney's records were
corrected so that he could be credited with any lost good time.[2] Third, the State cited court records showing
that Chaney's unrelated civil actions were not dismissed until October 1992 and
that the opposing parties in these actions did not even file a motion to
dismiss until July 23, about one month after Chaney left adjustment
segregation.
We
now turn to the sole question in this appeal, whether Chaney has stated a
viable § 1983 claim even in the face of the State's rebuttal proof. Our analysis, however, must account for the
United States Supreme Court's recent decision in Sandin, which
was released after the circuit court's ruling.
The
Sandin decision establishes a new methodology for evaluating
whether a prisoner has suffered a procedural due process violation. The old test, described in Hewitt v.
Helms, 459 U.S. 460, 471-72 (1983), required a court to examine the
applicable prison regulations and look for language which indicated if the
regulations mandated certain procedures.
In fact, the old test would seemingly apply to Chaney's claim because
the pertinent DOC regulations provide that “Adjustment segregation may not
exceed 8 days.” Section DOC 303.69(1).
The
goal of the exercise outlined in Hewitt was to gain insight about
the state's treatment of the right which might be taken away via administrative
procedures. The theory was that a state
would only require stringent procedures if it had determined that the right was
important. A prisoner who identified a
breach in these mandatory procedures could then bring a due process claim for
the loss of that liberty interest. See Hewitt, 459 U.S. at 471-72.
The
Sandin Court determined that the Hewitt methodology
had become impractical. Most notably,
the Supreme Court was concerned that its previous methodology encouraged
prisoners to comb through the various prison regulations, searching for the
magical mandatory language which signaled an entitlement to some liberty
interest. The Court believed that the Hewitt
methodology contributed to a burgeoning number of cases in which prisoners
tried to have the federal judiciary “fine tune” the states' prison
systems. See Sandin,
115 S. Ct. at 2299-2300.[3]
Accordingly,
the Court set forth a new means of
determining whether a prisoner held a liberty interest which would,
correspondingly, require the state to provide that prisoner with procedural
protection before the state took action against that liberty interest. The Supreme Court concluded that the analysis
should focus on the physical attributes of what the prisoner was exposed
to. It specifically held that
constitutionally protected liberty interests would be limited to the “type of
atypical, significant deprivation in which a state might conceivably create a
liberty interest.” Id. at
2301.[4]
After
the Sandin Court set out this new test, it turned to the facts of
the case. It rejected the prisoner's
claim that he was denied due process when the state did not allow him to present
witnesses at his disciplinary hearing.
Regardless of the state's violation of rules which mandated that the
prisoner be able to call witnesses, the Court concluded that the prisoner did
not present a procedural due process violation because the net effect on him,
being moved from the general population into special holding, did not present a
“major disruption” from what he normally experienced as a person confined to
the state prison system. See id.
As
one would expect, Chaney tries hard to distinguish his case from Sandin. Although what he experienced in adjustment
segregation may not have been much different from what he experienced in
program segregation, Chaney contends that his confinement to the twelve extra
days was nonetheless “atypical” because it was “indeterminant.” He argues that the State took from him the
only modest comfort that an inmate enjoys while he or she is confined or
segregated: the confidence that the
State can only keep him or her confined for the maximum period written in the
rules. Thus, Chaney explains that
prison officials who ignore the rules and hold an inmate in segregation beyond
the established maximums subject that inmate to an atypical deprivation, and,
similarly, prison officials who do not inform the inmate of the maximum time
which he or she will be in segregation deprive that inmate of a very
significant liberty interest.
The
State, however, argues that the time spent in segregation is not an important
factor under the Sandin test.
Rather, the only issue that courts should be concerned with is the
physical nature of confinement. In
support of this position, the State provides us with authority from other
jurisdictions that have applied the Sandin analysis to claims
similar to Chaney's and have held that confinement to segregated portions of a
correctional facility for disciplinary reasons cannot result in a deprivation
of liberty because such confinement is not “atypical” treatment within an
American correctional facility. For
example, in Williams v. Ramos, 71 F.3d 1246 (7th Cir. 1995), an
inmate at an Illinois prison claimed that he was deprived of a liberty interest
without due process when, contrary to Illinois' regulations, he was confined to
disciplinary segregation without a hearing.
The court held, however, that he failed to state a § 1983 claim
because his treatment while in segregation did not greatly exceed what a
prisoner could expect from prison life generally. Id. at 1249.
See also Luken v. Scott, 71 F.3d 192, 193 (5th Cir. 1995),
cert. denied, 116 S. Ct. 1690 (1996); Rimmer-Bey v. Brown,
62 F.3d 789, 790-91 (6th Cir. 1995); Davis v. Finney, 902 P.2d
498, 506-07 (Kan. App. 1995).
We
independently observe that another panel of this court has recently employed
the Sandin analysis to disciplinary rules at another Wisconsin
prison. In Kirsch v. Endicott,
201 Wis.2d 702, 715, 549 N.W.2d 761, 768 (Ct. App. 1996),the court concluded
that an inmate at the Columbia Correctional Institution lost no liberty
interest when prison officials placed him in a particularized system of
punishment, termed “management continuum.”
This program was developed for violent inmates who are already in
adjustment segregation. Under it, the
inmate was placed in a special “hardened” cell, given crayons instead of pencils
and pens, and was subjected to frequent strip searches. Id. at 708, 549 N.W.2d at
763. The Kirsch panel
reasoned that management continuum did not cause such a major change in the
physical conditions of the inmate's confinement and thus the prison officials
did not violate his liberty interests when it placed him there. Id. at 708-09, 549 N.W.2d at
764.
However,
the Kirsch panel and the other courts applying Sandin
have not answered the precise issue which Chaney believes makes his claim
unique: whether confinement in
segregation beyond the established maximum period constitutes atypical
treatment, or whether a prison official's decision not to inform the inmate of
when he or she will be released from segregation constitutes a significant
deprivation of a liberty interest.[5]
We
believe, however, that Sandin and the cases interpreting Sandin
instruct that we should focus only on the physical characteristics of the
confinement. We therefore hold that an
inmate's confidence in the maximum time he or she will be specially segregated
does not signal whether a protected liberty interest is involved.
We
rely not only on the cases cited by the State, but also on dicta within the Sandin
decision. As we noted above, the Court
did not face an inmate who had been confined in segregation beyond the maximum
allowed time. Still, the Supreme Court
implicitly suggested how an inmate's knowledge about the time he or she was
required to remain in segregation might affect the analysis of whether that
inmate had a protected liberty interest in knowing what that maximum time
was. The Court hinted that time was
only a factor when the question involved the inmate's ultimate sentence. We gather this from the Sandin
decision because the opinion carefully distinguishes the facts of that case
from a situation in which “the State's action will inevitably affect the
duration of [the prisoner's] sentence.”
See Sandin, 115 S. Ct. at 2302. Although Chaney may not have known when he
was going to be released from adjustment segregation, the only time factor that
courts are concerned with after Sandin is the time that the
inmate is ultimately required to spend confined under the authority of the
state prison system.
Accordingly,
when we consider the Sandin analysis together with the State's
rebuttal proof showing that there is little respective difference between the
conditions of adjustment segregation and program segregation, we conclude that
Chaney's improper confinement, in and of itself, provides no grounds for a
§ 1983 claim. Nevertheless, we
must also consider his claims for the possible loss of good time credit, which
does relate to the amount of time he will spend confined in the Wisconsin
prison system, and his consequential damages resulting from his inability to
pursue his unrelated court actions.
In
regard to these two latter claims, our independent review of the summary
judgment proof indicates that neither requires that Chaney's case go to
trial. The record shows that the State
has made the necessary adjustments to Chaney's prison record so that he will
receive any good time credit he is entitled to. Likewise, the State's proof rebuts Chaney's factual assertions
that he was somehow prevented from pursuing his unrelated civil actions.
In
sum, even when we view the facts of Chaney's theory as true, and accept that
the guards and officials at the Racine Correctional Institution were determined
to keep Chaney in adjustment segregation beyond the permitted maximum, he has
not stated a § 1983 claim because the physical nature of confinement that
he was subjected to in adjustment segregation was not atypical to, or
significantly different from, what he was subjected to while he was in program
segregation. Since there is very little
difference in treatment between adjustment segregation and program segregation,
Chaney did not suffer a loss of liberty when the State wrongly confined him to
adjustment segregation.
We
nonetheless caution that we do not read Sandin to license the
State to ignore its own rules and indiscriminately move prisoners into and out
of the various forms of detention.
First,
the Sandin decision only dictates how this court must construe
§ 1983 claims. In that regard,
Chaney's § 1983 claim is necessarily limited to the precise facts before
us: does a prisoner in program
segregation experience an atypical change in confinement when he or she is
moved into adjustment segregation.
Second,
and of equal importance, this case does not require us to explore the
possibility of whether prisoners claiming that they were confined in a manner
inconsistent with the administrative rules have a state remedy. The Supreme Court carefully tailored Sandin
only to address the issue of prisoner litigation within the federal
courts. The last footnote of Chief
Justice Rehnquist's majority opinion indeed explains:
Prisoners such as Conner, of course, retain other
protection from arbitrary state action even within the expected conditions of
confinement. They may invoke the First
and Eighth Amendments and the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment where appropriate, and may draw upon internal prison grievance procedures
and state judicial review where available.
Sandin, 115 S. Ct. at 2302 n.11. This
passage informs us that the Supreme Court was focused on who should be
enforcing prisoners' constitutional rights, as well as exactly what
those rights are.
When
the majority set out the “atypical” and “significant deprivation” test, it was
only referring to how the federal courts (and states applying federal law)
should handle claims arising under the Fourteenth Amendment. Since the Supreme Court rationalized its new
test on the concerns it had about the “involvement of federal courts in
the day-to-day management of prisons,” id. at 2299 (emphasis
added), this footnote summarizes the Court's conclusion that federal judicial
intervention should be limited to issues of cruel and unusual punishment and
core First Amendment values such as freedom of religion.
But
the Court's reference to possible state remedies otherwise suggests that it was
inviting state courts to open their doors and become more involved in settling
issues, presumably under the mantra of state constitutional law or common law,
which traditionally had been litigated in the federal system as § 1983
claims. That discussion, however, must
await a different case.
So
while Chaney and future prisoners who are equally situated will have no
§ 1983 claim, this opinion does not provide the State with a blanket
license to ignore the various administrative regulations and to treat prisoners
in any manner it sees fit. Furthermore,
this opinion does not shield the State from every possible § 1983 claim.
By
the Court.—Judgment affirmed.
[1] Attorney James
Brennan serves as Chaney's pro bono appellate counsel and represented him at
oral argument. This court commends
Brennan and his law firm, Quarles & Brady, for their commitment to pro bono
activities in this state.
[2] The State also
cites Wis. Adm. Code § DOC
303.84(2)(e), which suggests that good time credits accrue at the same rate for
prisoners in adjustment and program segregation. Thus, it appears that the State's decision to backdate Chaney's
records did not matter because the extra time Chaney spent in adjustment
segregation had no effect because he would not have earned any good time had
the State returned him to program segregation after the five days.
[3] As an example,
the Supreme Court cited Burgun v. Nix, 899 F.2d 733, 735 (8th
Cir. 1990), where the prisoner claimed that he had a liberty interest in
receiving a tray lunch rather than a sack lunch. See Sandin v. Conner, 115 S. Ct. 2293, 2300 (1995).
[4] We observe that
the new “atypical, significant deprivation” test overrules at least one of our
supreme court's earlier decisions involving a prisoner's § 1983 claim. In Irby v. Macht, 184
Wis.2d 831, 841-42, 522 N.W.2d 9, 13, cert. denied, 115 S. Ct. 590
(1994), the court premised its conclusion that the prisoner had suffered a loss
of liberty on the language used in the applicable regulations. See Kirsch v. Endicott, 201
Wis.2d 702, 712, 549 N.W.2d 761, 765 (Ct. App. 1996).
[5] The opinion in Kirsch,
201 Wis.2d at 708, 549 N.W.2d at 763, indicated that the prisoner in that case
was subject to specialized segregation for at least thirty days. But the opinion does not explain if the
rules stated the maximum time in which the prisoner was subject to specialized
confinement. Therefore, we conclude
that the Kirsch panel did not address the maximum time question
that Chaney presents.