*495 OPINION
In this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action, a district court jury found that defendant Officer Hector Guerra violated plaintiff Mary Ann Carlo’s civil rights by denying her access to a telephone while she was jailed after her arrest on charges of driving while under the influence of alcohol. The district court overturned the jury verdict as a matter of law, holding that the Constitution does not recognize a right to a post-booking telephone call. Further, the court held that even if such a right does exist, it was not clearly established when Carlo was arrested; and, therefore, Guerra was entitled to qualified immunity. We reverse the district court and reinstate the jury verdict. In so doing, we hold that the state right to a post-booking telephone call creates a liberty interest protected by the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution, and that due process protections of prisoners’ liberty rights were clearly established long before Carlo was arrested in 1991.
I.FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
On March 9, 1991, at or about 12 a.m., plaintiff Mary Ann Carlo was arrested for driving while under the influence of alcohol and taken to a jail in San Bernardino County, California, where she was held overnight. Several times during the night Carlo asked to use a telephone. Defendant Hector Guerra, the watch commander at the jail that evening, refused to permit Carlo to place a telephone call. After a shift change in personnel and a trip to the hospital for medical attention to injuries allegedly caused by the arresting officer, Carlo finally was permitted to use a telephone at about 2:00 p.m. the following day.
Carlo filed this section 1983 action alleging that her civil rights were violated when Guerra and the other officials at the jail prevented her from making a phone call. She alleged several other civil rights violations as well, none of which is the subject of this appeal. At trial, a jury found that Guerra had deprived Carlo of a constitutional right by denying her the opportunity to make a telephone call (a right provided for by state law), and it awarded Carlo $1.00 in nominal damages. The district court then granted the defendant’s motion for judgment as a matter of law, overturned the jury verdict against Guerra, and denied the plaintiffs request for attorney’s fees. Carlo challenges both the judgment as a matter of law on behalf of Guerra and the denial of attorney’s fees.
II. STANDARDS OF REVIEW
Judgment as a matter of law is reviewed de novo.
See Pierce v. Multnomah County,
We also review the district court’s decision on qualified immunity de novo.
Newell v. Sauser,
III. VIOLATION OF CARLO’S CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHTS
a. State Right to Make Telephone Calls
California grants arrestees the right to place three telephone calls. Section 851.5 of the California Penal Code provides in whole:
Right of arrested person to make telephone calls; posting of sign
(a) Immediately upon being booked, and, except where physically impossible, no later than three hours after arrest, an arrested person has the right to make at least three completed telephone calls, as described in subdivision (b).
The arrested person shall be entitled to make at least three such calls at no expense if the calls are completed to telephone numbers within the local calling area.
(b) At any police facility or place where an arrestee is detained, a sign containing the following information in bold block type shall be posted in a conspicuous place:
That the arrestee has the right to free telephone calls within the local dialing *496 area, or at [her] own expense if outside the local area, to three of the following:
(1) An attorney of [her] choice or, if [she] has no funds, the public defender or other attorney assigned by the court to assist indigents, whose telephone number shall be posted. This phone call shall not be monitored, eavesdropped upon, or recorded.
(2) A bail bondsman.
(3) A relative or other person.
(c) These telephone calls shall be given immediately upon request, or as soon as practicable.
(d) This provision shall not abrogate a law enforcement officer’s duty to advise a suspect of [her] right to counsel or of any other right.
(e) Any public officer or employee who willfully deprives an arrested person of any right granted by this section is guilty of a misdemeanor.
Cal.Penal Code § 851.5 (1985). This section clearly establishes Carlo’s right to place telephone calls under state law. The jury found that by violating the statute, Officer Guerra violated her constitutional rights. While the right to use a telephone may not per se rise to the level of a liberty interest protected by the procedural mandate of the Fourteenth Amendment, the right of an arrestee not to be held incommunicado involves a substantial liberty interest.
b. Substantive and Procedural Due Process
At trial, Carlo contended that the Due Process Clause contained a substantive due process right to a telephone call. The district court disagreed. Despite the district court’s reliance on
substantive
due process analysis, we may consider a legal argument not presented in the district court to avoid injustice and where public policy so requires. This is especially true here, where despite arguing that a substantive due process right existed, Carlo in fact relied substantially on
procedural
due process cases.
Donovan,
The judge’s decision to reverse as a matter of law was based on her determination that there was no violation of Carlo’s substantive constitutional rights under the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Although the Constitution provides an arrestee with an independent right under the Fourteenth Amendment to communicate with the outside world,
see Procunier v. Martinez,
Further, Carlo did not claim a violation of First Amendment rights. In
Strandberg v. City of Helena,
c. Liberty Interest Protected by Procedural Due Process
Section 1983 of title 42 of the United States Code provides in part: “Every person who, under color of any statute, ordinance, regulation, custom, or usage, of any State ... *497 subjects ... any citizen of the United States ... to the deprivation of any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws, shall be hable to the party injured....” 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Thus to impose liability under that section, the plaintiff must prove a violation of a federal statute or the United States Constitution. Because she does not contend that Guerra violated a federal statute, Carlo relies on the provision of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution that provides that no state shall “deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law.” U.S. Const, amend. XIV, § 1.
Moreover, Carlo does not argue that the process provided by the California statute is inadequate. She argues instead that Guerra and the other officers in the jail that night provided inadequate process by violating the statute. It is clear that once a liberty interest has been found, federal law rather than state law dictates how much process is due.
Cleveland Bd. of Educ. v. Loudermill,
The Supreme Court has “repeatedly held that state statutes may create liberty interests that are entitled to the procedural protections of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.”
Vitek v. Jones,
Traditionally, the Due Process Clause has been particularly protective of the minimal liberty interests granted to prisoners.
Cf. Bell v. Wolfish,
It is true that the Constitution itself does not guarantee good-time credit for satisfactory behavior while in prison. But here the State itself has not only provided a statutory right to good time but also specifies that it is to be forfeited only for serious misbehavior. Nebraska may have the authority to create, or not, a right to a shortened prison sentence through the accumulation of credits for good behavior, and it is true that the Due Process Clause does not require a hearing “in every conceivable ease of government impairment of private interest.” But the State having created the right to good time and itself recognizing that its deprivation is a sanction authorized for major misconduct, the prisoner’s interest has real substance and is sufficiently embraced within Fourteenth Amendment “liberty” to entitle him to those minimum procedures appropriate under the circumstances and required by the Due Process Clause to insure that the state-created right is not arbitrarily abrogated.
Wolff,
After
Wolff,
a number of cases were handed down in which courts explained which state statutes and regulations granted protected liberty interests to prisoners. Picking up on the quoted passage from
Wolff,
courts began asking whether the state entitlement uses mandatory language and whether the entitlement cannot be eviscerated absent meeting specific substantive preconditions.
Hewitt v. Helms,
The Ninth Circuit has likewise used the mandatory language test to determine that state statutes or regulations have' created a liberty interest within the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment. In
Mendoza v. Blodgett,
this court held that a state regulation that provided that a prisoner can “be placed upon Feces Watch only upon determination that there is reasonable suspicion that [the prisoner] is currently secreting contraband” created a liberty interest within the meaning of the Fourteenth Amendment.
Recently in
Sandin v. Conner,
the Supreme Court again reached the question of how to determine whether a state statute grants prisoners a liberty interest recognized by the Due Process Clause. — U.S. —,
Whether
Sandin
applies in this case, however, is unclear.
Sandin
arose in the context of disciplinary segregation of a convicted prisoner, and explicitly criticized the
Helms
test for its undesirable effects on prison management.
Id.
at —,
While
Sandin
abandoned the reasoning in
Helms,
at least as to convicted prisoners, it explicitly did not overrule
Helms. Sandin,
— U.S. at — n. 5,
We believe that under either standard the California statute creates a protected liberty interest. Under Helms, the statute substantively limits an officer’s discretion because it makes a telephone call mandatory unless physically impossible. Cal.Penal Code § 851.5(a).
The
Sandin
test also results in finding a protected liberty interest. In the context of an arrestee, the
Sandin
standard can be restated as recognizing liberty interests in state laws where they grant “freedom from restraint which ... imposes atypical and significant hardship on the [arrestee] in relation to the ordinary incidents of [being held following an arrest].” — U.S. at —,
Whether a restraint is “atypical” under
Sandin
is not a purely empirical question, but rather one of the measure of a restraint in relation to an inmate’s limited liberty rights. Under
Bell v. Wolfish,
a pretrial detainee may not be “punished.”
In addition to imposing an atypical restraint, the inability to use a telephone shortly after being booked amounts to a "significant hardship." First, a telephone call allows an arrestee to contact an attorney almost immediately. This often will be of paramount importance in marshalling evidence in defense of the charged offense. In this case, Carlo was arrested for driving while under the influence of alcohol. Evidence (in the form of her blood alcohol content) of whether or not she had committed the crime of which she was accused dissipated as the hours wore on, and "[b]y denying [her] access to a telephone ... after her arrest for DUI, the State denied her the means by which she could establish her defense." State v. Carr,
While these examples are not an exhaustive recital of the important benefits of a post-booking telephone call and the hardship created by its denial, they demonstrate that the right granted by the California statute is one of "real substance" and merits constitutional due process protections. Wolff,
IV. GTJERRA'S QUALIFIED IMMUNITY
Guerra argues that even if he violated Carlo's civil rights, his qualified immunity prevents liability for that violation. After de novo review of the doctrine of qualified immunity as it applies to this case, we disagree.
In order to hurdle a defendant's claim of qualified immunity, a plaintiff must satisfy a two-part test. First, the alleged violation must be of a right that is clearly established. Alexander v. County of Los Angeles,
Qualified immunity creates a "balance between the interests in vindication of citizens' constitutional rights and in public officials' effective performance of their duties" by making it possible "for officials reasonably [to] anticipate when their conduct may give rise to liabifity for damages.... It should not be surprising, therefore, that our cases establish that the right the official is alleged to have violated must have been `clearly established' in a more particularized, and hence more relevant, sense: The contours of the right must be sufficiently clear that a reasonable official would understand that what he is doing violates that right." Anderson,
*501 It is not enough to say simply that the right was clearly established by the California statute. The statute is relevant, however, in determining whether Carlo’s constitutional right was clearly established.
Davis v. Scherer,
Davis was careful to point out, however, that in that case there was “no claim that the ... violation of the state regulation either [was] itself actionable under § 1983 or bears upon the claim of constitutional right that appellee asserts under § 1983.”
Id.
at 193,
The existence of due process protection for state-created liberty interests for prisoners has been clearly established at least since 1974. That year
Wolff
held that where a state-created right has “real substance and is sufficiently embraced within Fourteenth Amendment ‘liberty5 ” it is entitled “to those minimum procedures appropriate under the circumstances and required by the Due Process Clause to insure that the state-created right is not arbitrarily abrogated.”
*502 The California statute at issue drastically limits an officer’s discretion. It requires that an arrestee be permitted to make three telephone calls. Its mandatory language entitles an arrestee to phone calls “immediately upon being booked” or “no later than three hours after arrest,” providing exceptions only for physical impossibility. Cal.Penal Code § 851.5(a), (c). Moreover, it holds criminally liable an officer who “willfully deprives an arrested person” of this right. CaLPenal Code § 851.5(e). As required by the test applied in 1991, the statute uses mandatory language to bind an officer’s discretion regarding whether to permit an arrestee to use a telephone. Under Helms, it was clearly established that the California statute created a liberty interest.
Two other circuits have addressed this qualified immunity question. The Sixth Circuit in 1985 interpreted
Davis v. Scherer
in a case involving a prisoner’s state-created right to possess books not threatening to the security of the prison. The court held that a violation of a state statute “is sufficient to cause officials to forfeit their qualified immunity” when the statute “provides the basis for the cause of action sued upon.”
Spruytte v. Walters,
Given the clarity of the statute and the law defining liberty interests at the time, no reasonable officer could have believed that denying Carlo telephone calls did not violate her constitutional rights.
V. ATTORNEY’S FEES
Carlo is the prevailing party and as such is entitled to attorney’s fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988. Farrar
v. Hobby,
VI. CONCLUSION
The right to a telephone call, as detailed in California Penal Code § 851.5, constitutes a liberty interest recognized by the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The constitutional protections of such a liberty interest were clearly established at the time Guerra denied Carlo the right to place telephone calls. Therefore we reverse the district court’s judgment as a matter of law and reinstate the jury verdict. We further remand to the. district court to determine appropriate attorney’s fees, including fees incurred upon appeal.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. In
Mitchell,
a pretrial detainee claimed several due process violations. First, he claimed that a prison regulation created a liberty interest in being present during a search of his legal papers. To decide whether the regulation created a Fourteenth Amendment liberty interest this court applied the
Sandin
test. Although
Sandin
"refers to the ordinary incidents of imprisonment under a sentence after conviction,” a cell search is a "general security measure of the kind that the Supreme Court has said pretrial detainees may be subjected." Thus we concluded that for the
*499
purposes of a cell search, the plaintiff was more like a convicted prisoner than a pretrial detainee.
Id.
at 523. The plaintiff also contended that his liberty interest in being free from disciplinary segregation was denied without due process of law. While
Sandin
held that “an incarcerated prisoner had no liberty interest in being free from segregated confinement imposed as a disciplinary measure/' "its rationale regarding incarcerated prisoners is not applicable to pretrial detainees.
Sandin
leaves
Bell v. Wolfish
untouched.”
Id.
at 523-24,
Thus, Mitchell holds that pretrial detainees' liberty interests arising directly out of the Constitution are governed by Bell v. Wolfish. It further holds that in some pretrial detainee cases Sandin will apply to determine whether a state law creates a liberty interest protected by the Fourteenth Amendment. Mitchell leaves unanswered the question, however, of what test to apply in the remainder of the pretrial-detainee, state-created right cases.
. Although Sandin has articulated a new test, at least for convicted prisoners, for determining when a state statute creates an interest protected by the Fourteenth Amendment, Sandin did not address the question of qualified immunity. Qualified immunity asks what law was clearly established at the time the alleged violation occurred. In 1991, the Helms test was the clearly established law.
