OP ALA, Justice:
The issues to be answered in this proceeding are: [1] Did the trial curt err in declining to assume jurisdiction of a prisoner’s petition alleging denial of certain federally-protected liberty interests by prison authorities acting in contravention of state-fashioned internal prison discipline rules? [2] Are the prisoner’s allegations sufficient to raise constitutionally-cognizable claims to an administrative prison discipline hearing?
We hold that (a) access to district court must be accorded, of right, to a prisoner who asserts a federally-protected claim to a prison discipline hearing and (b) the facts alleged by the prisoner, both here and below, are sufficient to entitle him to a hearing on every claim which he anchored on the prison officials’ alleged invasion of his state-recognized liberty interests.
THE ANATOMY OF PRIOR LITIGATION
The petitioner, Timothy Prock [Prock], an inmate at the state penitentiary, petitioned the District Court, Pittsburg County, for a writ directing the warden to release him from solitary confinement and to restore certain of his privileges created by prison rules but withheld by an allegedly arbitrary internal discipline action. The trial judge summarily denied his petition, believing, no doubt, that he was without legal authority to interfere with internal management of prison facilities.
Prock now seeks in this court a writ to review the trial court’s adverse decision and to pronounce that the district court is by law invested with power necessary to afford him the relief he sought below.
PRISONER’S ALLEGATIONS
Prock’s allegations are:
Until August 21, 1979, he was classified as a medium security prisoner and was housed with the general inmate population. On that date he came to be transferred, without notice, to administrative lockup. This move resulted in his loss of certain privileges which include a monthly “bonus” and earned good-time credits. This was contrary to prison rules. Antecedent to his solitary confinement transfer, he was not allowed to appear before the institutional classification committee. He was merely informed by a prison employee that the transfer was being effected because he was then under investigation for alleged involvement in a fellow prisoner’s homicide. On August 27th Prock did complete a form for an inmate grievance report to the warden. That form was returned to him the next day. He was told that he had failed clearly to define the problem. From the rejection of his grievance he next lodged an appeal to the Deputy Director of the Oklahoma Department of Corrections [Department], That official responded with a written statement that the grievance was being returned to the warden who would provide him with an explanation for the transfer. Prock remained in solitary confinement some 29 days before being brought before the institutional classification committee. At his appearance before that body he was told that no change was possible in his custodial condition so long as he remained in the lockup. The administrative actions taken against him while he was kept segregated from the general inmate population are said to have been contrary to prison rules in the following particulars: (a) his case was not reviewed weekly, (b) he did not receive a written investigative report of the reasons leading to his segregation, (c) he did not receive a psychological evaluation every thirty days and (d) he was not allowed to have daily physical exercise, to attend educational classes nor to participate in any of the available rehabilitative programs.
During his five-month lockup he was not questioned by anyone with respect to the suspected misconduct which brought about his isolation from the general prison population. Nor was there placed in his file a followup investigation report with respect to his alleged complicity in the prison homicide. While the cloud of a suspected serious misconduct remains in his prison file, he has been afforded
no
administrative forum to clear himself or to procure a removal of the
detrimental information from his prison record. Prison rules provide for the deletion from an inmate’s record of all those references to a disciplinary breach of which he has been cleared. The cloud of homicide-complicity attribution remains in his file and adversely affects his eligibility for transfer to a trusty status or for parole.
APPOINTMENT OF COUNSEL
Prock is uncounseled in this court. His request for the appointment of an attorney has been denied by a predecisional order. The protection of the Federal Constitution’s Vlth Amendment extends only to “criminal prosecutions”. The issues for resolution here all deal with administration of internal prison discipline. This case does not fall under the protected Vlth Amendment rubric. The state’s own counterpart of the Vlth Amendment’s assistance-of-counsel clause — Art. 2 § 20, Okl.Con. — is also co-extensive with criminal prosecutions. It hence does not confer on Prock the right to secure a free lawyer. Moreover, Prock has not shown here any of those “special circumstances” which may make assistance of counsel essential as a matter of federal or state due process.
THE PROCEDURAL FRAMEWORK OF REVIEW
Prock’s
pro se
paperwork for review of the district court’s disposition is titled “Petition for Writ of Certiorari and/or Application to Assume Original Jurisdiction”. Since the plea for corrective relief sought by him from this court was filed here within the 30-day statutory time limit for appeal, we treat Prock’s complaint as a petition in error.
The question to be answered is whether the district court’s denial of Proek’s petition was anchored on a statutorily-imposed limitation of judicial authority 0r constituted mere self-abnegation of power whose exercise is constitutionally mandated,
I.
JURISDICTION OF THE DISTRICT COURT TO REVIEW A FEDERALLY-PROTECTED INMATE CLAIM TO A HEARING ON AN ALLEGED BREACH-OF-INTERNAL-PRISON-DISCIPLINE COMPLAINT
Our statutes provide
no
explicit access to the district court to a prisoner who seeks review of a warden’s administrative action taken in the course of maintaining internal prison discipline. Prock stands before us
without the benefit of a state-created claim
to question, in a judicial forum, any constitutionally impermissible agency behavior of prison authorities acting in the administration of correctional discipline.
This lacuna in our state law is itself offensive to constitutional notions of legality. A prisoner’s access to the courts to litigate constitutionally-cognizable claims to a denied liberty interest is clearly mandated by federal case law.
If the parties to the proceedings are subject to state-court jurisdiction, a state court is authorized—
nay required
— to review violations of federal constitutional rights which occur within its borders. In short, prisoners must be provided with “some clearly defined method
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OP ALA, Justice:
The issues to be answered in this proceeding are: [1] Did the trial curt err in declining to assume jurisdiction of a prisoner’s petition alleging denial of certain federally-protected liberty interests by prison authorities acting in contravention of state-fashioned internal prison discipline rules? [2] Are the prisoner’s allegations sufficient to raise constitutionally-cognizable claims to an administrative prison discipline hearing?
We hold that (a) access to district court must be accorded, of right, to a prisoner who asserts a federally-protected claim to a prison discipline hearing and (b) the facts alleged by the prisoner, both here and below, are sufficient to entitle him to a hearing on every claim which he anchored on the prison officials’ alleged invasion of his state-recognized liberty interests.
THE ANATOMY OF PRIOR LITIGATION
The petitioner, Timothy Prock [Prock], an inmate at the state penitentiary, petitioned the District Court, Pittsburg County, for a writ directing the warden to release him from solitary confinement and to restore certain of his privileges created by prison rules but withheld by an allegedly arbitrary internal discipline action. The trial judge summarily denied his petition, believing, no doubt, that he was without legal authority to interfere with internal management of prison facilities.
Prock now seeks in this court a writ to review the trial court’s adverse decision and to pronounce that the district court is by law invested with power necessary to afford him the relief he sought below.
PRISONER’S ALLEGATIONS
Prock’s allegations are:
Until August 21, 1979, he was classified as a medium security prisoner and was housed with the general inmate population. On that date he came to be transferred, without notice, to administrative lockup. This move resulted in his loss of certain privileges which include a monthly “bonus” and earned good-time credits. This was contrary to prison rules. Antecedent to his solitary confinement transfer, he was not allowed to appear before the institutional classification committee. He was merely informed by a prison employee that the transfer was being effected because he was then under investigation for alleged involvement in a fellow prisoner’s homicide. On August 27th Prock did complete a form for an inmate grievance report to the warden. That form was returned to him the next day. He was told that he had failed clearly to define the problem. From the rejection of his grievance he next lodged an appeal to the Deputy Director of the Oklahoma Department of Corrections [Department], That official responded with a written statement that the grievance was being returned to the warden who would provide him with an explanation for the transfer. Prock remained in solitary confinement some 29 days before being brought before the institutional classification committee. At his appearance before that body he was told that no change was possible in his custodial condition so long as he remained in the lockup. The administrative actions taken against him while he was kept segregated from the general inmate population are said to have been contrary to prison rules in the following particulars: (a) his case was not reviewed weekly, (b) he did not receive a written investigative report of the reasons leading to his segregation, (c) he did not receive a psychological evaluation every thirty days and (d) he was not allowed to have daily physical exercise, to attend educational classes nor to participate in any of the available rehabilitative programs.
During his five-month lockup he was not questioned by anyone with respect to the suspected misconduct which brought about his isolation from the general prison population. Nor was there placed in his file a followup investigation report with respect to his alleged complicity in the prison homicide. While the cloud of a suspected serious misconduct remains in his prison file, he has been afforded
no
administrative forum to clear himself or to procure a removal of the
detrimental information from his prison record. Prison rules provide for the deletion from an inmate’s record of all those references to a disciplinary breach of which he has been cleared. The cloud of homicide-complicity attribution remains in his file and adversely affects his eligibility for transfer to a trusty status or for parole.
APPOINTMENT OF COUNSEL
Prock is uncounseled in this court. His request for the appointment of an attorney has been denied by a predecisional order. The protection of the Federal Constitution’s Vlth Amendment extends only to “criminal prosecutions”. The issues for resolution here all deal with administration of internal prison discipline. This case does not fall under the protected Vlth Amendment rubric. The state’s own counterpart of the Vlth Amendment’s assistance-of-counsel clause — Art. 2 § 20, Okl.Con. — is also co-extensive with criminal prosecutions. It hence does not confer on Prock the right to secure a free lawyer. Moreover, Prock has not shown here any of those “special circumstances” which may make assistance of counsel essential as a matter of federal or state due process.
THE PROCEDURAL FRAMEWORK OF REVIEW
Prock’s
pro se
paperwork for review of the district court’s disposition is titled “Petition for Writ of Certiorari and/or Application to Assume Original Jurisdiction”. Since the plea for corrective relief sought by him from this court was filed here within the 30-day statutory time limit for appeal, we treat Prock’s complaint as a petition in error.
The question to be answered is whether the district court’s denial of Proek’s petition was anchored on a statutorily-imposed limitation of judicial authority 0r constituted mere self-abnegation of power whose exercise is constitutionally mandated,
I.
JURISDICTION OF THE DISTRICT COURT TO REVIEW A FEDERALLY-PROTECTED INMATE CLAIM TO A HEARING ON AN ALLEGED BREACH-OF-INTERNAL-PRISON-DISCIPLINE COMPLAINT
Our statutes provide
no
explicit access to the district court to a prisoner who seeks review of a warden’s administrative action taken in the course of maintaining internal prison discipline. Prock stands before us
without the benefit of a state-created claim
to question, in a judicial forum, any constitutionally impermissible agency behavior of prison authorities acting in the administration of correctional discipline.
This lacuna in our state law is itself offensive to constitutional notions of legality. A prisoner’s access to the courts to litigate constitutionally-cognizable claims to a denied liberty interest is clearly mandated by federal case law.
If the parties to the proceedings are subject to state-court jurisdiction, a state court is authorized—
nay required
— to review violations of federal constitutional rights which occur within its borders. In short, prisoners must be provided with “some clearly defined method
by which they may raise claims of denial of federal rights”.
While statutory state law does not authorize review of actions by prison officials in dealing with internal breach of discipline, claims for vindication of constitutionally-protected interests, which may arise from prisoner misconduct disputes, must receive judicial scrutiny by the command of the Federal Government’s fundamental law.
II.
THE NATURE OF THE INMATE’S CLAIMS
• Prock argues that certain arbitrary and summary action of the prison officials, acting in contravention of existing regulations, violated the minimum standards of due process. These actions are said to have consisted of (a) his transfer to solitary confinement and (b) improper treatment while he remained in that custodial surrounding.
The test for gauging a prisoner’s claim to a due-process-mandated administrative hearing that precedes imposition of disciplinary sanctions is whether his liberty or property interest was in fact threatened with invasion. Both the United States Constitution and Oklahoma's own fundamental law require that governmental action affecting life, liberty or property conform to that measure of fairness which accords with the minimum standards of due process.
The basis for Prock’s complaint is that he was deprived of liberty interest by a modification in his custodial surrounding which was so significant as to trigger a due process demand for a hearing.
We are not quite in accord with Prock’s view. The notion that every state action with adverse consequences for a prison inmate is
per se
capable of raising a due process shield stands rejected by the United States Supreme Court.
A change in the conditions of one’s confinement, although it may have a substantial adverse impact on a prisoner — no matter how drastic — will not
alone
suffice to raise due process implications.
While neither our state nor the federal constitution does guarantee any particular custodial condition to an incarcerated prisoner, the state may by statutory law or regulations limit its official latitude to change the conditions of confinement and limit the circumstances under which breach-of-discipline sanctions may be imposed.
When this occurs, a liberty interest is at once created. Due process will protect this state-fashioned interest to insure that it is neither arbitrarily meted out nor abrogated. A person’s liberty interest may thus receive federal protection, even though it is itself but a creature of state law. “The touchstone of due process is protection of the individual against arbitrary action of government.”
A. State Law and State Prison Regulations
Oklahoma prison authorities have fashioned written regulations dealing with procedures and policies for controlling prisoner misconduct. They have imposed limits on the sweep of their discretionary action in changing a prisoner’s custody status by conditioning intra-prison transfers on the existence of a specified standard.
Under these rules Prock has a justifiable “expectation”, conferred by state-fashioned regulations, to a written explanation for his extended lockup confinement and to a final resolution of the homicide investigation in which he is suspected of complicity. Should he be cleared of the charges, he may have his prison record purged of misconduct attribution. Implicit in this expectation is Prock’s claim to protection from an unreasonably extended curtailment of his rule-fashioned privileges.
B. Loss of Good-Time Credit
Loss of good-time credit, in this case, does not appear to violate Prock’s due-proeess-protected interests. Prock bases his claim to good-time credit on the holding in
Wolff v.
McDonnell,
a Nebraska case, where the Court held that a state prisoner was entitled to due-process protection of good-time credit because he had in it a special liberty interest created by state statute.
Oklahoma statutory law is distinguishable. The terms of 57 O.S.Supp. 1976 § 138
— the statute effective at the time of his administrative lockup — provide that good-time credit shall be given to an inmate who works or attends school. The privilege of receiving good-time credit, while in administrative segregation, is clearly discretionary because it is based on the warden’s recommendation.
The loss of good-time credit which results from a prisoner’s transfer to solitary confinement has been held not to deprive a prisoner of a due-process claim to a hearing.
This holding is premised on the rationale of
Meachum v.
Fano
and
Montanye v. Hay mes.
In the absence of a state-conferred right, there is thus no infringement of due-process-protected liberty interest when a prisoner’s good-time credits are curtailed following his administrative segregation.
We take cognizance of federal case law and hold that neither Oklahoma
statutory law nor state regulation entitles a prisoner transferred to close custody to a liberty interest in good-time credit.
Prock has not cited us to — nor do we know of any — statute or regulation that creates a liberty interest in the monthly “bonus” he received before his transfer to solitary confinement. We hence conclude that unless Prock is able to come up with a state-conferred interest or expectation, he is not entitled to claim a monthly bonus for the period during which he may have been improperly held in administrative lockup.
CONCLUSION
While state statutes do not authorize or require a judicial review of internal prison disciplinary actions, both the federal and the state Due Process Clauses
command that prisoners with claims to interests or expectations of a constitutionally-protected nature be afforded access to courts. The district court’s denial of jurisdiction must hence be treated as an act of self-abnegation of power with which the court is clearly invested — a power whose exercise is mandated by both federal and state fundamental law.
Judgment of the trial court is reversed and cause is remanded with directions to re-examine
all
the fact and law issues to determine if the allegations and proof support some cognizable claim or claims. Should the district court find that its review of the allegedly objectionable actions of prison officials is not now in order because administrative remedies had not been exhausted, then a writ should issue directing the warden forthwith to set in motion the rule-fashioned adjudicative machinery within the prison system for the purpose of resolving every essential fact issue that remains undetermined.
It is apt to admonish the judicial service of this State to be mindful of Justice Brennan’s observation in his concurring opinion in
Case v. Nebraska,
381 U.S. 336, 345-346, 85 S.Ct. 1486, 1492, 14 L.Ed.2d 422, 428 [1965], in which he said:
“None can view with satisfaction the channeling of a large part of state criminal business to federal trial courts. If adequate state procedures, presently all too scarce, were generally adopted, much would be done to remove the irritant of participation by federal district courts in state criminal procedure.”
This observation is equally apropos with respect to prison discipline cases. Judicial lethargy is unlikely to help the state solve whatever problems may still exist in its penal system.
Reversed and remanded.
IRWIN, C. J., and WILLIAMS, LAVENDER and DOOLIN, JJ., concur.
BARNES, V. C. J., and HODGES, SIMMS and HARGRAVE, JJ., dissent.