Dayutis v. Brodeur, et al.

CourtDistrict Court, D. New Hampshire
DecidedJune 23, 1999
DocketCV-96-156-B
StatusPublished

This text of Dayutis v. Brodeur, et al. (Dayutis v. Brodeur, et al.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. New Hampshire primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dayutis v. Brodeur, et al., (D.N.H. 1999).

Opinion

Dayutis v. Brodeur, et al. CV-96-156-B 06/23/99

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE

Dean Dayutis

v. Civil N o . 96-156-B

Paul Brodeur, et a l .

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

Dean Dayutis brings this three-count complaint pursuant to

42 U.S.C. § 1983. Dayutis seeks compensatory and punitive

damages from the 18 Defendants, various New Hampshire State

Prison employees, Department of Corrections officials, and New

Hampshire Adult Parole Board members. He argues that the

defendants unconstitutionally deprived him of good time credits during his incarceration, denied him parole in violation of his

right to due process of law, and transferred him to a prison

facility in Connecticut in retaliation for engaging in conduct

protected by the First Amendment. Defendants have moved for

summary judgment as to all of Dayutis’ claims. For the reasons

explained below, I grant defendants’ motion. I. FACTS

Dayutis is a former New Hampshire State Prison inmate. In

1983, he was convicted of second-degree murder and received an

18-to-40-year prison sentence. The New Hampshire Parole Board

granted Dayutis parole in August 1998. Dayutis filed the present action in 1996, while still incarcerated pursuant to his murder conviction.1

Dayutis’ stay in the New Hampshire prison system was not

trouble-free. Prison officials cited Dayutis for numerous

disciplinary violations, which resulted in his loss of 385 days

of good time credits between 1988 and 1992. The loss of good

time credits, in turn, delayed Dayutis’ earliest date of parole

eligibility.

Dayutis alleges that the prison disciplinary policy prior to

July 1992 was rife with discrimination, leading to “inconsistent and arbitrary punishment . . . handed out at the whim of

officials.” Violations warranting “major hearings” were

punishable by loss of good time credit, while “minor” violations

1 Dayutis’ amended complaint also sought various forms of declaratory and injunctive relief. Because Dayutis was subsequently released on parole, I dismissed his claims for declaratory and injunctive relief as moot. See Dayutis v . Brodeur, et a l . , CV-96-156-B, (D.N.H. August 2 7 , 1998)(Endorsed Order).

-2- were not. See Aff. of John Vinson at ¶4(a), p p . 13-15 (N.H.

Dept. of Corrections Policy & Procedure Directive, Effective

2/3/92). He claims that prison officials had discretion under

the policy to decide whether a prisoner’s alleged violation was

“minor” or “major.” See id. at 2 0 .

In July 1992, a new policy went into effect. See Vinson

Aff. at ¶4(b), p . 24 (N.H. Dept. of Corrections Policy &

Procedure Directive, Effective 7/23/92). As with the prior

policy, prison officials had discretion to determine the severity

of a violation. Only “major” violations warranted loss of good

time credits. The new policy, however, created three categories

of rules and set maximum penalties for each category. See id. at

42-46. For example, under the prior policy, a “major” violation

could result in a prisoner’s loss of up to 100 days of good time

credit. See id. at ¶4(a), p p . 14-15. Under the new policy, a

“major” violation was subject to a maximum of either 1 0 0 , 25 or

10 lost days, depending on the category of rule the prisoner

violated. See id. at ¶4(b), p . 4 2 . Some of Dayutis’ pre-July

1992 violations, if prosecuted under the revised policy, would

have subjected him to more lenient penalties and fewer lost

-3- days. 2

The New Hampshire State Prison houses inmates according to a discipline-based classification system. Custody levels range from C-1 to C-5, with C-5 as the highest level of security. From August 1992 to June 1993, Dayutis was classified at level C-4 and was housed in the maximum-security Special Housing Unit (SHU). Prison officials ordered Dayutis moved to the maximum-security Close Custody Unit (CCU). Defendants claim that Dayutis refused to be moved to CCU on several occasions.

Dayutis engaged in much litigation against prison officials during his stay in New Hampshire, both on his behalf and on behalf of fellow prisoners. He filed several petitions for a writ of habeas corpus in both state and federal court, all of which were denied. He also appeared as a witness in proceedings brought by another inmate against Corrections Officer Richard

2 Dayutis rarely lost the maximum number of good time days under either policy. For example, according to the Offender Record Face Sheet submitted by Defendants, Dayutis lost 100 days of good time on February 2 7 , 1991, for two violations: encouraging a work stoppage and participating in “conduct which disrupts or interferes with the security or orderly operation of the institution.” See Vinson Aff. at ¶4(n), p . 219. Under the policy in effect at that time, Dayutis could have lost up to 200 days of good time - 100 for each violation. Under the revised policy, Dayutis could have lost a maximum of 125 days for the violations - 100 for the “Class A” violation (encouraging a work stoppage) and 25 for the “Class B” violation (conduct which disrupts).

-4- Parrish, one of the defendants in this action. Dayutis claims

that as a result of his litigation activity, he was subjected to

a cell search on April 6, 1993, during which prison officials

wrongfully confiscated 1,500 pages of legal documents. Several

days later, Dayutis was notified that a discipline report had

been filed, alleging he had possession of other prisoner’s

papers.

On April 1 9 , 1993, Dayutis was brought before three of the

Defendants for a transfer hearing. Defendants Gregg Crompton, a

classification officer; Michael Sukolow, SHU manager; and David

Martinelli, a SHU corrections officer; voted to transfer Dayutis

to an out-of-state facility. Dayutis claims that the transfer

was in retaliation for his litigation activities. Defendants,

however, claim that Dayutis was transferred because of his

numerous refusals to move from SHU to CCU. Dayutis was

transferred to a Connecticut facility on June 1 , 1993, where he

continued as a C-4 status prisoner.

While Dayutis was housed in Connecticut, the New Hampshire

prison classification board lowered his status to C-3. Although

he was eligible for parole on June 5 , 1994, the Parole Board

denied his requests for parole on several occasions. See Vinson

Aff. at ¶4(n), p . 217. Dayutis claims that he was denied parole

-5- because he was classified at C-3 status, rather than minimum-

security C-2 or C-1 status. Dayutis was not eligible for a lower

custody status, however, while he remained at the Connecticut

facility. An April 1997 letter to Dayutis from Defendant John F.

Eckert, Executive Assistant to the Parole Board, states: You will have another hearing when you do what the board told you at your last hearing: attain C-2, or minimum custody status. We realize that Connecticut classification rules prevent you from reaching that status any time soon. Therefore, I suggest that you request a transfer to Massachusetts. Not only will that place you closer to your family, but it may very well enable you to reach C-2 - and therefore qualify for another hearing - sooner than if you remain in Connecticut.

See Pl.’s O b j . to Defs.’ Motion for Summary Judgment and

attachments (document n o . 5 4 ) . New Hampshire prison officials

offered to seek a transfer to a Massachusetts facility, but

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