Brown v. Wayne County Sheriff

330 N.W.2d 335, 415 Mich. 658
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 23, 1982
DocketDocket Nos. 61875, 62006. (Calendar Nos. 12, 13)
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 330 N.W.2d 335 (Brown v. Wayne County Sheriff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Wayne County Sheriff, 330 N.W.2d 335, 415 Mich. 658 (Mich. 1982).

Opinions

[662]*662Levin, J.

The dispositive issue in these cases is whether a state court in the asylum state, faced with extradition papers proper on their face and a governor’s warrant for extradition of an escapee from the demanding state’s penal system, may inquire into the constitutionality of prison conditions in the demanding state in passing upon the fugitive’s habeas corpus petition. We are obliged by a decision of the United States Supreme Court to hold that it may not, and we therefore affirm the Court of Appeals in both cases.

I

A

Alphonsa Blount was arrested by Detroit police in September, 1974, and charged with being a fugitive from justice from the State of Alabama. Blount had been convicted of armed robbery and, according to his own testimony, sentenced to 45 years in prison. He escaped from Atmore State Prison while accompanying a prison band on a field trip.

On November 19, 1974, a Michigan governor’s warrant for Blount’s arrest and extradition was issued pursuant to the request of the Governor of Alabama. Blount was arraigned on the warrant before a Recorder’s Court Judge, who adjourned the proceedings to permit Blount’s attorney to seek a governor’s hearing and to prepare a complaint for writ of habeas corpus.

After his request for a governor’s hearing was denied, Blount petitioned the Recorder’s Court for a writ of habeas corpus, contending inter alia that [663]*663his right under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments1 to freedom from cruel and unusual punishment would be violated if he were extradited to Alabama. The court denied his application and the Court of Appeals affirmed.

The Recorder’s Court Judge stayed extradition while Blount appealed to this Court, which on July 24, 1975, remanded the matter to the trial court "for a hearing on appellant’s claim that returning him to the Alabama prison would subject him to cruel and unusual punishment in violation of his Eighth Amendment right.”2

Witnesses at the hearing on remand included a former inmate of Alabama’s Atmore Prison, a Roman Catholic sister who had been active in efforts to promote prison reform in Alabama, the Associate Commissioner of the Alabama Board of Corrections (who had served as warden of all of Alabama’s major prisons in the course of his career), and Blount himself.3 Introduced as exhibits [664]*664were opinions and orders entered by federal courts in Alabama in cases involving prison conditions.

In a January 21, 1976, opinion which relied heavily on an opinion issued by an Alabama federal court one week earlier (see part II, below), the judge found that if Blount were returned to Alabama he would be subjected to cruel and unusual punishment. The judge stayed the extradition warrant and adjourned the matter for one year to see whether the Alabama prison system would improve to a point where Blount’s extradition "would no longer be prohibited by Eighth Amendment considerations.” Blount was placed on personal bond with special conditions.

One year later, when the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office sought to submit a progress report as required by the judge’s order, the Alabama authorities did not cooperate in furnishing information regarding improvements in prison conditions. On March 18, 1977, the judge issued a final order quashing the extradition warrant and granting the writ of habeas corpus.

The prosecutor sought an order of superintending control in the Court of Appeals. The Court of Appeals attempted to certify to this Court the question whether the constitutional issues raised by Blount should have been litigated in the courts of Michigan. We denied the request for certification.4

In April, 1978, the Court of Appeals set aside the order granting the. writ, stating: [665]*665mandated by federal court orders and have been implemented in the Alabama penal system since the trial court conducted its hearing. The factual basis for the trial court’s findings has therefore altered substantially. We find no impediment to the present return of the fugitive to Alabama for determination in a forum of the demanding state of the present sufficiency or insufficiency of the Alabama prison system.”

[664]*664"We take judicial notice that changes have been

[665]*665We granted leave to appeal.5

B

Charles Brown was convicted of armed robbery in Alabama in January, 1974, and was sentenced to 25 years in prison. He was incarcerated at Atmore Prison and escaped from Atmore in June, 1976.

Brown was arrested in Michigan on a fugitive warrant in November, 1977. Alabama requested his return and the Governor of Michigan signed a warrant for his extradition on December 16, 1977. Brown then sought a writ of habeas corpus in Recorder’s Court, alleging that he was subjected to cruel and unusual punishment while imprisoned in Alabama and would again be subjected to unconstitutional treatment if returned to that state.

Brown alleges that while in prison he fractured his ankle in three places, but the prison authorities refused to provide him with immediate medical treatment and required him to perform his normal work assignment for two days before treating his injury. He filed an action in an Alabama federal court against the prison and two officers and was informed by a prison guard that if he prevailed, he would not live to collect the money damages. The inmate who helped him prepare his [666]*666pleadings was severely beaten, allegedly in connection with his having helped Brown.

The Recorder’s Court denied Brown’s petition on the basis of the Court of Appeals decision in Blount’s case, and the Court of Appeals dismissed an original complaint in that Court for a writ of habeas corpus. We granted leave to appeal.6

II

Eight days before the trial court issued its opinion in Blount, a United States district court in Alabama decided two consolidated class actions filed on behalf of inmates incarcerated in Alabama prisons. Pugh v Locke, 406 F Supp 318 (MD Ala, 1976). The judge’s opinion graphically described the severe inadequacies of Alabama’s prisons:7

"There can be no question that the present conditions of confinement in the Alabama penal system violate any current judicial definition of cruel and unusual punishment, a situation evidenced by the defendants’ admission that serious Eighth Amendment violations exist. In these circumstances, it is the very confinement itself which impermissibly contravenes the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment rights of the plaintiff classes.
"The conditions in which Alabama prisoners must live, as established by the evidence in these cases, bear no reasonable relationship to legitimate institutional goals. As a whole they create an atmosphere in which inmates are compelled to live in constant fear of vio[667]*667lence, in imminent danger to their physical well-being, and without opportunity to seek a more promising future.
"The living conditions in Alabama prisons constitute cruel and unusual punishment.

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Related

Reed v. State Ex Rel. Ortiz
1997 NMSC 055 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1997)
Parks v. Bourbeau
477 A.2d 636 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1984)
Deur v. Newaygo County Sheriff
336 N.W.2d 852 (Michigan Court of Appeals, 1983)
Brown v. Wayne County Sheriff
330 N.W.2d 335 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1982)

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Bluebook (online)
330 N.W.2d 335, 415 Mich. 658, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-wayne-county-sheriff-mich-1982.