Plaintiff-appellant Coates, then a sentenced prisoner housed in the general population at the Central Facility in Lorton, Virginia, was transferred to the Maximum Facility in October of 1997, where he remained in administrative segregation until April 1998. He later sought relief in Superior Court, contending that the placement in segregation violated his rights under the Lorton Regulatiоns Approval Act of 1982 (LRAA or the Act) and the underlying regulations. The Superior Court agreed, and the District of Columbia has not challenged that decision. Instead, the sole issue before us is whether the trial court correctly ruled that the LRAA and the regulations do not create an implied cause of action for damages resulting from unlawful administrative segregation. We agree with the trial court that the LRAA reveals no intention of the legislature to provide such a right of action, and we therefore uphold the dismissal of Coates’s amended complaint for damages.
I.
Coates’s transfer to administrative segregation stemmed from an accusation that he had incited a work stoppage at Lorton. A Department of Corrеctions adjustment board held a housing hearing and determined that his alleged conduct did not provide grounds for removing him from the general prison population. Warden Michelle Elzie reviewed the decision and disagreed, ordering that Coates be housed in the Maximum Security Facility. While maintained there in administrative segregation status, 1 Coates lost income because he could not work, was denied rehabilitative programs, and suffered restraints on his liberty greater than those at the Central Facility. After requesting unsuccessfully that Warden Elzie and her successor reconsider the segregation order, Coates brought suit against Elzie and others in their official capacity, alleging federal and local statutory violations. Eventually the claim was narrowed to one alleging violation of the LRAA and underlying regulations. Construing the applicable regulations, Judge Burgess concluded that Elzie had violated Coates’s rights by removing him from the Central Facility without a finding, required by 28 DCMR § 521.4 (1987), that he constituted a clear and present threat to the safety of himself or others or a definite escape risk. The judge asked Coates’s counsel to submit a proposed order implementing the decision.
Instead of that order, Coates filed an amended complaint for money damages from Warden Elzie in her individual capacity and equitable relief from the District of Columbia. He subsequently dismissed the latter claim voluntarily. Conceding that the LRAA contains no express provision for a cause of action for damages, Coates asserted that under
Cort v. Ash,
II.
On repeated occasions, we have summarized the history, purpose, and legally binding character of the Lorton regulations governing discipline and placement of Lorton inmates in administrative segregation.
See, e.g., Moore v. Gaither,
AN ACT 4-224
IN THE COUNCIL OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA
To approve certain regulations issued by the District of Columbia Department of Corrections. .
BE IT ENACTED BY THE COUNCIL OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, That this act may be cited as the “Lorton Regulations Approval Act of 1982”.
Sec. 2. The Council of the District of Columbia approves the regulations setting forth the administrative procedures for adjustment and housing actions and the code of offenses governing residents of the Lorton Correctional Complex as adoptеd by the Director of Corrections on February 18, 1981, and published in the D.C. Register on February 27, 1981 (25 DCR 865).
Sec. 3. This act shall take effect after a 30 day period of Congressional review following approval by the Mayor (or in the event of veto by the Mayor, action by the Council of the District of Columbia to override the veto) as provided in section 602(c)(1) of the District of Columbia Self-Government аnd Governmental Reorganization Act, approved December 24, 1973 (87 Stat. 813; D.C.Code, sec. l-233(c)(l)).
The issue this case presents is the limited but important one of whether the Council, in enacting the LRAA, intended to create a private right of action for money damages by prisoners alleging violation of the Lorton regulations. Since the statute creates no such right expressly, the parties agree that ordinarily the question would be answered by application of the three-part test of
Cort v. Ash, supra,
to determine whether there is an “implied” right of action.
See, e.g., In re D.G.,
*1000
Coates misreads our decision in
Vaughn,
which arose under a different statutory-scheme.
Vaughn
concerned an appeal from a sentencing judge’s decision sustaining a determination by thе Department of Corrections that Vaughn, a youth offender, would derive “no further benefit” from treatment under the Youth Rehabilitation Amendment Act.
See
D.C.Code § 24-805(a) (1996). Vaughn argued that the Department had violated regulations embodied in the LRAA in reaching its no-further-benefit determination. The government countered at the threshold that Vaughn could not raise any such irregularities before the sentencing judge, “because he could have raised the issue by filing a petition for a writ of habeas corpus” under D.C.Code § 16-1901 after exhausting administrative appeals.
Vaughn,
It is apparent at once that
Vaughn
does not support Coates’s claim of a general right to sue under the LRAA.
Vaughn
dealt with the narrow question of whether “in a hearing before the sentencing judge under D.C.Code § 24-805,” a prisoner can defeat a no-further-benefit determinаtion by citing regulatory violations, at least those implicating constitutional due process.
Id.
at 432. Our affirmative answer to that question understood the right to make such challenges to be implicit in § 24-805 of the Youth Rehabilitation Amendment Act,
3
which permits a youth offender to appeal to the sentencing judge — and obtain a stay of — proposed action by prison officials based on the no-further-benefit finding.
See
§ 24-805(a)(3) & (b). Our decision did not hold or suggest that the right derived from the LRAA itself. Coates cites no case of ours recognizing a general right of Lorton inmates to sue and seek “any available remedy,”
Franklin,
What our decisions have done is to construe the availability of habeas corpus to redress such violations somewhat broadly, recognizing that habeas corpus reaches “not only the fact but also the form of detention.”
Abdullah v. Roach,
In In re D.G., supra, the court recognized that only three of the four factors listed in Cort v. Ash are relevant to the question whether a state law creates an implied cause of action:
First, is the plaintiff “one of the class for whose especial benefit the statute was enacted” ... ‘I Second, is there any indication of legislative intent, explicit or implicit, either to create such a remedy or to deny one? ... Third, is it consistent with the underlying purposes of the legislative scheme to imply such a remedy for the plaintiff?
In re D.G.,
The District concedes that the Lorton regulations were prоmulgated for the special benefit of the inmates at Lorton, but argues that there is no evidence of the Council’s intent to create a broad civil right of action and that, indeed, such a remedy would be inconsistent with the LRAA’s purposes. Like the trial judge, we need not consider the third Cort factor because we agree with the government that Coates cannot dеmonstrate a legislative intent to provide the remedy he desires.
The text of the LRAA, set out entirely above, contains no hint of how the Council of the District of Columbia intended the regulations to be enforceable judicially. On its face, the statute does no more than — importantly—exercise the Council’s authority to approve the regulations which the Mayоr had promulgated for the administration of discipline at Lorton. Moreover, as accurately summarized by Judge Burgess, the legislative history of the Act carnes no suggestion of an intent to provide a cause of action for damages. He wrote:
The regulations were agreed on as part of a settlement of a class action suit by prisoners against the Department of Corrections. After they were adopted, they were submitted to the Council by the Department of Corrections pursuant ■to one of its promises in the agreement. It was thought that the Council needed to approve the regulations under D.C.Code § 24-442 (1945), which gives the Department of Corrections the power to promulgate rules and regulations “with the approval of the Commissioners” [now the Council]. The Committee on the Judiciary did not see its role in approving the regulations as “amending] current law or creat[ing] new law, but merely [as] the vehicle for the council to exercise its regulation-approval powers which it inherited from the pre-home Rule Council.” Council of the District of Columbia, Report on Bill 4-351, the “Lorton Regulations Act of 1982”, June 9,1982, at 2 [hereafter Committee Report].
The Council’s approval added to the force of law which the regulations have,
see Abdullah,
[W]hen undertaking, the factual inquiry of discovering the intent of the'Council in approving the regulations, it is signifi *1002 cant ... that the Council did not view itself as creating new law. It is difficult to discern an intent to create a statutory cause of action from action of a legislative body merely approving regulations that themselves say nothing about a cause of action.
As Judge Burgess pointed out, the regulations themselves lend no support to the cause of action Coates desires. Codified in 28 DCMR §§ 500
et seq.,
they establish a comprehensive system for notice, hearing, resolution, аnd administrative review of recommendations for disciplinary segregation. Indeed, to the extent they allow for administrative appeal of segregation decisions, that tends to “support[ the opposite] conclusion that no right to enforcement by civil action for damages exists.”
Brantley v. District of Columbia,
Coates relies on
Kelly v. Parents United for the District of Columbia Schools,
Finally, as the District argues (and as Judge Burgess conсluded), it is noteworthy that in enacting the LRAA the Council in fact considered the question of court review of the Lorton administrators’ actions, and in doing so was emphatic that the hearings afforded prisoners were not to be construed as making the administrative proceedings “contested cases” subject to review in this court. See D.C.Code § 1-1509 (1999). The Committee Report stated:
Besides there being no legal basis for рroviding “contested case” treatment for penal disciplinary hearings there is a practical barrier for providing appellate court review of these hearings, viz. There are approximately 7,000 hearing per year at Lorton.
Committee Report at 3, note 6. As Judge Burgess reasoned, “The Council’s reluctance to allow appeаls to the District of Columbia Court of Appeals because of the thousands of hearings held each year is some evidence arguing against a conclusion that, [at the same time, it] intended to confer an original cause of action [on] each prisoner who believed he had been aggrieved as a result of action at such hearings.” 5
For all of these reasons, Coates has failed to persuade us that either the LRAA or its underlying regulations provided a right to sue Warden Elzie for damages. The case might well be different had Coates advanced a claim of violation of the LRAA sufficient to meet the standards of 42 U.S.C. § 1983,
see Walton,
The decision of the’ Superior Court is, therefore,
Affirmed.
Notes
. In April 1998 Coates was transferred from the Maximum Facility to the Adult Unit at the Lorton Youth Center, where he remained at the time of suit.
. The court cited two previous decisions that involved similar challenges to no-further-benefit findings under the federal and local youth offender statutes.
See Vaughn,
.
See Walton v. District of Columbia,
. In
Brantley
the court assumed without deciding the "dubious proposition” that "a new tort, compensable by suit for money damages, ... could ever be created by a school board regulation.”
. In this connection, the District also points to the conclusion in the Committee Report that enactment of the LRAA would "have no negative fiscal impact upon the District of Columbia.” Committee Report at 3. Although it is not wholly implausible that before reaching that conclusion the Council gave thought to the prospect of suits for damages by prisoners aggrieved by the outcome of the "approximately 7,000 hearings per year,” it is unnecessary for us to assess the support which the fiscal impact statement provides for the District’s position.
