James Brooks, a prisoner at the Elmira Correctional Facility, appeals from a grant of summary judgment by the United States District Court for the Western District of New York (John T. Elfvin, Judge), dismissing his civil rights action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Brooks allеges that defendants Cheryl Lee and Donald Selsky, who are prison officials, deprived him of procedural due process in disciplinary proceedings. Lee presided over a hearing at which Brooks was sentenced to 365 days of segregated cell confinement with loss of privileges. Brooks appealed that sentence to Selsky, director of the Department of Corrections’ Special Housing/Inmate Disciplinary Program, who affirmed the imposition of discipline, although reducing the period of confinement to 180 days. Brooks claims that he was denied his due process right to call witnesses at the disciplinary hearing.
The district court ruled, without considering the duration or conditions of the punishment imposed, that Brooks had no liberty interest in being free of disciplinary cоnfinement because'it did not impose a hardship that is “atypical and significant” under Sandin v. Conner,
Background
In October 1990, Brooks had a physical altercation with four prison guards. After-wards, all four guards filed written reports, and two filed additional misbehavior reports charging Brooks with refusal to obey a direct order, violation of frisk procedures, and рossession of a weapon (a broken razor). Brooks claims that the guards attacked him without provocation and then filed false complaints to cover up their own misbehavior.
Broоks was charged with a disciplinary infraction, and defendant Lee, a corrections officer at the Elmira facility, presided over the disciplinary hearing. Brooks asked to call all four guards and two inmates as wik nesses. After taking the testimony of one inmate and one guard, Lee told Brooks that she was denying his request for additional witnesses because “their testimony would be redundant.” Lee found Broоks guilty on all charges and imposed a penalty of one year in keeplock with the loss of privileges and good time credit. Brooks appealed to Selsky in his capacity as Director of the Special Housing/Inmate Disciplinary Program. In his appeal Brooks claimed he was denied his right
Brooks then filed an Article 78 petition in New York State Supreme Court, Chemung County. The state court, in an opinion dated November 12, 1991, concluded that Brooks was denied “his constitutional and regulatory rights to call witnesses on his behalf’ and ordered his good time credits restored and his disciplinary record expunged. The court thus annulled the disciplinary finding. By this time Brooks had comрleted the service of the 180-day confinement.
In 1993 Brooks filed this lawsuit pro se, claiming that his constitutional rights had been violated by the guards’ use of excessive force, by Lee’s refusal to allow him to call witnesses at his hearing, and by Selsky’s affirmance of the imposition of discipline. Counsel was appointed for Brooks and filed an amended complaint. In January 1996, the district judge granted Lee’s and Selsky’s motion for summary judgment and dismissed the case against them. In May 1996, the court heard a jury trial of Brooks’s claims against the guards. The jury found for Brooks against two of the guards and awarded token damages of one dollar against each. Judgment was entered on these awards. In this appeal, Brooks challenges only the summary dismissal of his claims against Lee and Selsky.
In granting summary judgment, the district court did not decide whether the procеdure at Brooks’s hearing would satisfy constitutional due process. Instead, the court ruled that Brooks’s discipline did not implicate any due process right. The court held that, under Sandin, prisoners in New York have no liberty interest in avoiding disciplinary confinement, regardless the duration. The judge reasoned that because New York regulations permit extended administrative, or protective, confinemеnt — subject to periodic review — even lengthy disciplinary confinement could not constitute an “atypical and significant hardship.” Id. Accordingly, Judge Elfvin dismissed Brooks’s claim.
Discussion
The district court eorrectly found that, after Sandin, a prisoner has no constitutional right to any procedural sаfeguards— regardless what state statutes or regulations provide — unless the deprivation complained of imposed an “atypical and significant hardship on the inmate in relation to the ordinаry incidents of prison life.” 515 U.S. at-,
In reaching his decision, Judge Elfvin did not have the benefit of our recent opinion in Miller v. Selsky,
Concluding that the “durational aspect” of Brooks’s confinement was of “little import,” Judge Elfvin did not consider the length of the confinement in determining whether it imposed an atypical and significant hardship. Nor did the judge make any findings about the restrictiveness of Brooks’s disciplinary keeplock or about the рrevailing conditions in administrative confinement or in the prison at large. Instead, the district judge concluded that disciplinary confinement could not impose an atypical hardship under Sandin
A comparison between administrative and disciplinary confinement was part of the Court’s analysis in Sandin. The Court did not suggest, however, that regulations pеrmitting lengthy administrative confinement compel the conclusion that extended disciplinary confinement is necessarily compatible with due process. To the contrary, the decision in Sandin entаiled careful examination of the actual conditions of the challenged punishment compared with ordinary prison conditions. Miller at 8-9, citing — U.S. at ---,
After Sandin, in order to determine whether a prisoner has a liberty interеst in avoiding disciplinary confinement, a court must examine the specific circumstances of the punishment. Miller at 8-9. Cf., Frazier v. Coughlin,
The district court must reconsider the defendants’ motion for summary judgment. Because Sandin was decided after the parties briefed the motion, neither side submitted evidence or made arguments оn the issue of whether Brooks’s confinement was an “atypical and significant” deprivation. Nor did the state have the opportunity to make the argument it raises on appeal that New York statutes and prison regulations do not create a liberty interest in avoiding segregated confinement. Unless the court decides the motion on a different basis, the state should be offered the opportunity to expand the record on the pertinent issues, and Brooks to reply. If, after reviewing the record, the district court again decides that Brooks’s confinement did not impose an “atypical and significant hardship,” the court should identify with specificity the facts upon which its conclusion is based. The district court is also free to decide the motion on the basis of the other issues raisеd in defendants’ motion, including whether defendants are entitled to qualified immunity and whether Brooks received due process at his hearing.
Conclusion
The summary judgment is vacated, and the ease is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
