Skinner v. Cunningham

430 F.3d 483, 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 25223, 2005 WL 3116552
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedNovember 23, 2005
Docket05-1046
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 430 F.3d 483 (Skinner v. Cunningham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Skinner v. Cunningham, 430 F.3d 483, 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 25223, 2005 WL 3116552 (1st Cir. 2005).

Opinion

BOUDIN, Chief Judge.

James Skinner, currently serving a life sentence, appeals from the district court’s grant of summary judgment against him on two constitutional claims in his civil suit against prison authorities. We recite the facts in the light most favorable to Skinner, the nonmovant here. Landrau-Romero v. Banco Popular De Puerto Rico, 212 F.3d 607, 611 (1st Cir.2000).

Skinner, a Massachusetts inmate serving a sentence for murder, was transferred to the New Hampshire State Prison on May 27, 1998, after being involved in a series of violent incidents in the Massachusetts penal system. Classified as a high-security prisoner, Skinner was housed in the prison’s Special Housing Unit. On July 24, 1998, Skinner was involved in a fight started by another inmate, Eric Balagot, which resulted in Balagot’s death. Skinner was immediately transferred to N-Tier, a restricted area of the prison reserved for “special circumstances.”

Skinner was held in N-Tier for forty days. In N-Tier, he was isolated from the other inmates; his only human contact was when the staff opened the door for hourly checks or to deliver food. According to Skinner, the staff intentionally slammed his metal cell door during such checks, depriving him of sleep. The lights were on at all hours of the day. Skinner had nothing in his cell besides clothes and bedding, and he was permitted to leave his cell only to shower.

On August 5, 1998, a disciplinary charge was filed against Skinner for the incident leading to Balagot’s death. Although a disciplinary hearing was set for August 19, a prison hearings officer (Ray Guimond) suspended the proceeding because the state intended to charge Skinner with murder. In early September, Skinner was returned to normal confinement. Because Skinner was eventually acquitted of murdering Balagot after a jury trial, the disciplinary proceeding never occurred, and Skinner was eventually transferred back to Massachusetts in 2000.

On May 15, 2000, Skinner brought the present suit in the federal district court in New Hampshire, charging a number of the prison officials there with violating his civil rights. 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (2000). The charges fell into three categories:

(1) that the authorities had violated Skinner’s rights under the Eighth Amendment’s cruel and unusual punishment clause by exposing him to an attack by Balagot, who was a white supremacist (Skinner is black);
(2) that Skinner’s right to due process had been violated by confining him in N-Tier for forty days without a hearing; and
(3) that he had been subject to cruel and unusual punishment by abusive treatment during three forcible “cell extractions” and by other acts of harassment.

On the first claim, a trial was later conducted and the jury held for the defendants. On the second and third claims, the district judge granted summary judgment for the defendants, and it is these latter rulings that Skinner now appeals. *486 Our review of a district court’s order of summary judgment is de novo, and we “constru[e] the record in the light most favorable to the nonmovant and re'solv[e] all reasonable inferences in that party’s favor.” Landrau-Romero, 212 F.3d at 611.

Skinner’s due process claim, which we consider first, raises a difficult issue, but one entirely legal in character. That Skinner was moved immediately to N-Tier after Balagot’s death, with no hearing or other process whatsoever, gives rise to no claim under the due process clause. Skinner had just killed another inmate, and whoever might prove to be at fault, the authorities were entitled to isolate Skinner on a summary basis — for his own sake and for the protection of others — while investigating the circumstances.

Due process, even where it is due, does not invariably mean process before the fact. A warrantless arrest for a felony is a classic example. Skinner was already in custody; the circumstances were exigent; and his immediate transfer to N-Tier was proper. Cf. Reardon v. United States, 947 F.2d 1509, 1522 (1st Cir.1991) (en banc) (“The absence of notice and a hearing may be justified by exigent circumstances.”). Skinner’s main, and more colorable, due process grievance is'that he was kept in N-Tier for forty days while his disciplinary hearing was indefinitely deferred.

Although Skinner’s brief focuses on the deferral of the disciplinary hearing, the fact that the Attorney General was investigating with a view toward murder charges was a perfectly good reason for avoiding a duplicative inquiry. The better version of Skinner’s claim is an argument that it was constitutionally unfair to keep Skinner for forty days in N-Tier’s standard conditions without “some kind of hearing.” See Wolff v. McDonnell, 418 U.S. 539, 557-58, 94 S.Ct. 2963, 41 L.Ed.2d 935 (1974). More precisely, the question is whether Skinner was deprived of “liberty” without “due process of law.”

This in turn poses two different questions: '(1) how to define the “liberty” interest, which on a straightforward reading of the due process clause is a condition of due process protection (“nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law,” U.S. Const, amend. XIV, § 1); and (2) what kind of process is due, even where “liberty” is at stake, in the peculiar context of prison administration, where dangerous conditions exist and prisoner liberty is already limited.

The history of the Supreme Court’s oscillations on both issues is candidly traced in the governing opinion, Sandin v. Conner, 515 U.S. 472, 115 S.Ct. 2293, 132 L.Ed.2d 418 (1995), itself a 5-to-4 decision. There, the Court held that no due process denial could be made out unless the change in conditions imposed on the prisoner “atypical and significant hardship” departing from the ordinary conditions of prison life. Id. at 484, 115 S.Ct. 2293. Of course, such a hardship does not mean a violation: it is merely the precondition for a due process hearing. The Supreme Court’s phrase has now (inevitably) become a touchstone for the lower federal courts. In this case, the district court ruled. that Skinner’s confinement did not meet this test of “atypical and significant hardship.”

The hardship test has itself become the source of major disagreement. See Wilkinson v. Austin, - U.S.-,-, 125 S.Ct. 2384, 2394, 162 L.Ed.2d 174 (2005). Some circuits compare the confinement conditions to those of the general prison population, while others look to the conditions of nondisciplinary administrative seg *487 regation. 1 One circuit holds that disciplinary segregation never implicates a liberty interest unless it lengthens a sentence. Carson v. Johnson,

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Bluebook (online)
430 F.3d 483, 2005 U.S. App. LEXIS 25223, 2005 WL 3116552, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skinner-v-cunningham-ca1-2005.