Plаintiff-appellant Alphonso Samuels, an inmate in the custody of the New York Department of Correctional Services, appeals from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Northern District of New York (McCurn, /.), entered November 22, 1994, denying his mоtion for summary judgment and granting the defendants’ motion for summary judgment dismissing Samuels’s pro se complaint. Samuels’s complaint alleged that the defendants placed him in a “limited privileges” prison program without affording him a hearing or giving him a statement of reasons fоr their action, in violation of his right to procedural due process. The district court adopted the magistrate judge’s report and recommendation, which (i) found that Samuels had refused a work assignment that the prison officials had offered him and (ii) concluded that, under New York law and prison regulations, Samuels could therefore be placed in a limited privileges program without a hearing. On appeal, Samuels contends that entry of summary judgment was inappropriate bеcause a genuine issue of material fact remains as to whether or not he refused a work assignment.
We vacate the order granting summary judgment for defendants and remand this case to the district court for further proceedings.
BACKGROUND
According to the regulations in force at Clinton Correctional Facility (“Clinton”), “all able-bodied inmates are expected to participate in work assignments ... when they are offered” and those who refuse work assignments are placed in the limitеd privileges program. Inmates in the limited privileges program are confined to their cells for 23 hours per day (with one hour for exercise), and have restricted access to, among other things, showers and the prison library. On or about April 21, 1989, inmаte Alphonso Samuels was placed in the limited privileges program at Clinton, supposedly for having refused a work assignment, and stayed there until his transfer to Attica Correctional Facility seven months later.
On March 20,1991, Samuels brought a pro se action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against defendants John Mockry, the Clinton education counselor; Geoffrey Hewston, a Clinton correctional officer; William Higgins, the Clinton industrial training supervisor; and James Dowdle, an instructor at Clinton. All defendants were members of the Clinton Program Committee, the bоdy charged with assigning work to prison inmates and with placing inmates that refuse work assignments in the limited privileges program. Samuels’s complaint alleged that he never refused a work assignment and was not afforded a hearing prior to being plaсed in the limited privileges program, and claimed that his placement therefore violated his right to procedural due process. The complaint also alleged that he was placed in the limited privileges program for “retaliatory” reasons.
Samuels’s case was referred to Magistrate Judge Ralph W. Smith, Jr., who recommended on August 15, 1994 that the district court deny Samuels’s motion for summary judgment and grant the defendants’ cross-motion for summary judgment. In an order entered November 22,1994, the district court approved and adopted the magistrate judge’s report and recommendations, denied Samu-els’s motion for summary judgment and granted the defendants’ cross-motion for summary judgment. Samuels appeals that decision.
DISCUSSION
A. Summary Judgment.
This Court reviews a district court’s grant of summary judgment
de novo. Giano v. Senkowski,
In one respect, we conclude that a material issue оf fact was resolved erroneously in favor of the defendants rather than Samuels. The magistrate judge’s Recommendation and Report states:
In their cross-motion, defendants have demonstrated that, during the time period at issue in this action, рlaintiff had been placed in a so-called “limited privileges program” at Clinton based upon his refusal to accept a program assignment within the prison. It is well settled in this district that' such confinement is administrative rather than disciplinary in nature, and that inmates who refuse to accept a program assignmеnt can be placed in limited privileges status without being issued a misbehavior report and without a hearing.
(Citations omitted and emphasis added). However, Samuels’s Rule
10(j)
statement, to which he swore, states that he “never refused to accept an assignment considered appropriate by the Program Committee.”
1
In deciding whether “a reasonable jury could return a verdict” for Samuels, the magistrate judge should have accepted this sworn allegation as true.
Anderson, 477
U.S. at 248,
Although Samuels should have prevailed on this issue of fact even if it was contested, we note that the defendants offеred no competent evidence to refute Samuels’s contention. In support of their cross-motion for summary judgment, the defendants relied on: (a) a Rule 10(j) statement by an assistant attorney general averring that Samuels was assigned to the limited privileges program “due to his refusal to accept an assignment considered appropriate by the program committee”; (b) an affirmation by the same assistant attorney general averring that “[tjhere is no dispute” that Samuels wаs placed in the limited privileges program “for his refusal to accept a program”; and (c) a document addressed to Samuels signed by defendant Mockry, the chairman of the Program Committee, informing him that he was being assigned to the limited рrivileges program for his refusal to accept a work assignment. Neither the Rule 10(j) statement nor the affirmation is direct evidence refuting Samuels’s allegations, since the statements they contain are merely conclusory allegations made by a person who lacks personal knowledge of what transpired at the Program Committee meeting on April 21, 1989. The document, if delivered to Samuels, would have informed him of the reason for his placement in the limited privileges prоgram, but no proof was offered that the document was delivered to him.
“[A]t the summary judgment stage the judge’s function is not himself to weigh the evidence and determine the truth of the matter but to determine whether there is a genuine issue for trial.”
Anderson,
B. Sandin v. Connor.
The defendants argue that there is an alternative ground for affirming the grant of summary judgment in their favor. Days after judgment was entered in the district court, the Supreme Court handed down its decision in
Sandin v. Conner,
- U.S. -,
The district court relied on cases decided using the then-determinative standard set forth in
Hewitt v. Helms,
that States may under certain circumstances create liberty interests whiсh are protected by the Due Process Clause. But these interests will be generally limited to freedom from restraint which, while not exceeding the sentence in such an unexpected manner as to give rise to protection by the Due Proсess Clause of its own force; nonetheless imposes atypical and significant hardship on the inmate in relation to the ordinary incidents of prison life.
Id.
(citations omitted and emphasis added). Applying this test to the case before it, the
Sandin
Cоurt ruled that the respondent’s thirty-day segregated confinement “though concededly punitive, does not present a dramatic departure from the basic conditions of [his] indeterminate sentence.”
Id.
at-,
The
Sandin
decision applies retroactively.
See Harper v. Virginia Dep’t of Taxation,
CONCLUSION
The judgment of the district court granting summary judgment to the defendants is vacated, and the case is remanded to the district court for further proceedings.
Notes
. Samuels’s memorandum oflaw opposing summary judgment, which of course was unsworn, also states that he “never refused a program and the defendants only said [he] refused a program so that they could retaliate against [him] for writing complaints against peers of the defendants."
