In September 1971 Carlton Bryant was transferred from the federal reformatory at Lorton,- Virginia, to the federal penitentiary at Marion, Illinois. He subsequently filed a pro se petition, cast as a petition for either mandamus or habeas corpus, in which he claimed he was entitled to notice of the proposed transfer and a hearing, and that the failure to grant either constituted a denial of procedural due process. The district court dismissed his petition sua sponte without requiring the United States to answer, and Bryant appealed. We reverse and remand with instruc *73 tions to require the government to answer the petition.
The law governing procedural due process within prisons is in a state of flux. Several courts have recently held that prisoners must be given some form of hearing when they are disciplined.
E.g.,
Miller v. Twomey,
Because no answer was filed in this ease, we do not know the reasons for the transfer nor can we gauge its consequences. The record contains no comparison of Lorton and Marion. Bryant alleges that he spent five days in segregation upon arriving at Marion, but if true we do not know whether the segregation was punitive, and if so, whether it was a consequence of the transfer. Bryant alleges that the Lorton warden later told him that he had been transferred because of alleged involvement in drug traffic at Lorton. Without an answer, we are unable to determine if a factual dispute actually existed, or whether the transfer was a method of disciplining Bryant or was reasonably necessary as a matter of internal prison security and control. And because we do not know what prison rules apply to such transfers, we cannot judge whether the prison administrators followed their own regulations.
Consequently we are in no position to determine whether Bryant should have been given some form of notice and hearing.
See
Haines v. Kerner,
Reversed and remanded.
