Blake v. Commissioner of Correction

532 N.E.2d 671, 403 Mass. 764
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 11, 1989
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 532 N.E.2d 671 (Blake v. Commissioner of Correction) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blake v. Commissioner of Correction, 532 N.E.2d 671, 403 Mass. 764 (Mass. 1989).

Opinion

Abrams, J.

After we affirmed the judge’s allowance of the plaintiffs’ motions for partial summary judgment, see Blake v. Commissioner of Correction, 390 Mass. 537, 538 n.3 (1983), another judge of the Superior Court held hearings, and thereafter entered a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, eight Massachusetts prisoners. In Blake, we agreed “with the determination of a judge of the Superior Court that, under regulations of the Department of Correction . . . , an inmate in a Massachusetts correctional institution may not lawfully be transferred to a Federal correctional institution in another State unless the department has first afforded the inmate the procedural rights set forth in the department’s regulations concerning the recias-sification of inmates to higher custody status.” Blake, supra at 537-538.

After judgment entered, the defendants appealed, alleging three errors. They assert that the award of damages for lost visits separately from the award of damages for the illegal out-of-State transfers permits a double recovery for the same injury; that the defendants are not responsible for the amount of time each plaintiff spent in segregation in Federal facilities; and that the damages are so excessive as to shock the conscience. We transferred the case to this court on our own motion. We affirm.

In his memorandum of decision, the judge states the facts of each plaintiff’s case, including detailed summaries of the *766 conditions of his confinement in Massachusetts and in the Federal facilities to which the plaintiffs were transferred. The plaintiffs were held outside Massachusetts for periods ranging from 1.84 years to 3.4 years. In each case the plaintiff endured some “segregation” or “hard time” during the transfer and due to the transfer itself. In each case there had been loss of family visits or opportunity to attend other familial events because of the unlawful out-of-State transfers. Seven of the eight plaintiffs lost personal property during the transfers. Five lost the opportunity to earn credit for good conduct or “good time,” which might have made them eligible for early release or other benefits.

The judge assessed damages in each case according to a formula: For each day spent in “hard time” that could be attributed to the transfer and not the plaintiff’s own conduct or other conditions not attributable to the defendants, he assessed $100; for each lost visit (calculated on the basis of average number of visits while in Massachusetts), he assessed $100; and for each day out of Massachusetts, other than the days spent in “hard time,” he assessed ten dollars. Personal property losses were valued according to the evidence. In addition, the judge calculated the number of earned good time credits each plaintiff had lost, based on the rate at which each plaintiff had earned such credit while in Massachusetts, and ordered that each plaintiff be credited accordingly. The individual awards ranged from $14,890 to $41,180, and averaged about $24,000. 3

*767 1. Duplicative damages. The defendants argue that the award of damages both for being sent out of State and for lost visits is duplicative, and the judge therefore permitted double recovery for the same injury. We do not agree.

The judge clearly found two different injuries, and in his findings he distinguished between the two harms. According to the judge, the injury in being transferred out-of-State included the plaintiffs’ general sense of isolation, lost educational opportunities, their loss of opportunity to participate in Massachusetts prison programs, their inability to attend family events in Massachusetts, and their removal from friends in the community and in the general prison population. For these generalized hardships, the judge assessed ten dollars per day against the defendants.

The judge calculated lost visits from parents, spouses, and children separately. The plaintiffs had the burden to prove the number of family visits per month while in Massachusetts. For the number of visits lost, the judge awarded ten times the daily assessment. Although the loss of visits was occasioned by the transfer, the judge concluded that the injury to the prisoner from loss of family ties, and the loss of the emotional support the visits provided, were more harmful than and different from the daily injury suffered by a prisoner unlawfully transferred to an out-of-State Federal facility. The judge was entitled to weigh the various harms resulting from the unlawful transfers according to the harm inflicted and to calculate damages attributable to the defendants’ unlawful conduct. There is no error of law and no abuse of discretion.

2. Defendants’ responsibility for time spent in segregation. The defendants argue that part of the “hard time” awards assessed by the judge were attributable to the independent decisions of *768 the Federal authorities who had custody of the plaintiffs. These hardships, the defendants argue, were not predictable or foreseeable and the defendants’ part in causing them was “attenuated.” 4 Therefore, they argue, they cannot properly be held liable for all of the “hard time” the plaintiffs endured. The judge ruled that the defendants were “liable for the natural and probable consequences of [their] acts; not, however, for the results of intervening, superseding, unforeseeable acts of third parties.” He also ruled that the defendants were not responsible for any segregation due to the conduct of the plaintiffs.

The judge distinguished between those times attributable to the wrongful transfer and those attributable either to the misconduct of the plaintiffs or to unforeseeable conditions, for example, the fact that one of the Federal facilities was in a “lock down” condition at the time the plaintiff arrived. “The normal procedure ... of placing every new inmate who is transferred from another facility in administrative segregation until such time as an independent evaluation may be made of the appropriate treatment for and placement of the particular individual, is ... a prudent exercise of judgment in connection with the maintenance of security.” Mack v. Johnson, 430 F. Supp. 1139, 1149 (E.D. Pa. 1977). 5

The judge carefully detailed the amount of time each plaintiff spent in segregation. He included in his awards those times the plaintiffs spent in segregation while they were being transferred from one Federal facility to another, on the basis that these were the “natural and probable consequences” of the defendants’ actions.

*769 Neither the fact that some of the segregation was ordered by the Federal authorities, nor the lapse of time in some instances between the original wrongful transfer and the plaintiffs’ subjection to “hard time” in Federal facilities, relieves the defendants of liability. “The act of a third person, intervening and contributing a condition necessary to the injurious effect of the original [wrongful act], will not excuse the first wrongdoer, if such act ought to have been foreseen.

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Bluebook (online)
532 N.E.2d 671, 403 Mass. 764, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blake-v-commissioner-of-correction-mass-1989.