OPINION BY
¶ 1 Kenneth Fortune appeals, pro se, from the trial court’s order denying his petition for writ of habeas corpus and his request to proceed in forma pauperis. Fortune, a prison inmate, contends that prison -officials transferred him from one institution to another and imposed more restrictive conditions of confinement in retaliation for his prison reform activities and thus violated his constitutional rights. We conclude that Fortune’s allegations do not provide a cognizable basis for relief on a habeas corpus petition. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s order denying his petition and request to proceed informa pauperis (IFP).
¶ 2 Fortune is currently incarcerated at the State Correctional Institution (SCI) at Camp Hill (Camp Hill) following transfer in May 2001 from SCI-Huntingdon. Fortune is held in administrative custody in Camp Hill’s “Special Management Unit” (SMU) which, he alleges, imposes more stringent conditions of confinement than those under which he was held at SCI-Huntingdon. In response to his transfer, Fortune filed his petition for writ of habe-as corpus with the trial court. In his petition, Fortune asserts that he was transferred to Camp Hill and confined to the SMU in retaliation for filing prisoner grievances and commencing litigation against prison officials while at Hunting-don. Fortune asserts that written Department : of Corrections policy fails to provide grounds for his confinement in administrative custody, and that, accordingly, his detention infringes constitutionally protected “liberty interests,” and violates his rights to due process and equal protection. The trial court, upon review, dismissed Fortune’s petitions without hearing, concluding that'his IFP petition was frivolous and that his habeas petition failed to state a cognizable basis for relief. Fortune filed this appeal.
¶ 3 Fortune raises the following questions for our review;
I. Did the status of Appellant[’s] criminal conviction render that proper habeas venue jurisdiction [sic] was properly sought under Pa.R.Crim.P. 1701(b); and did the Appellant[’s] petition state sufficient material facts that would entitle Appellant to habeas relief?
II. Did the trial court err as a matter of law on ruling that Appellant’s requestto proceed in forma pauperis was frivolous where [the] underlying claim clearly alleged a violation of constitutional rights?
Brief for Appellant at 8.
¶ 4 We interpret Fortune’s first question as a challenge to the trial court’s conclusion that Fortune’s petition did not state a cognizable basis for
habeas corpus
relief. Our standard of review of a trial court’s order denying a petition for writ of
habeas corpus
is limited to abuse of discretion.
See Commonwealth, Dep’t of Collections v. Reese, 114
A.2d 1255, 1261 (Pa.Super.2001). Thus, we may reverse the court’s order only where the court has misapplied the law or exercised its discretion in a manner lacking reason.
See Lachat v. Hinchcliffe,
¶ 5 The availability of
habeas corpus
in Pennsylvania is both prescribed and limited by statute.
See
42 Pa.C.S. §§ 6502 (Power to issue writ); 6503 (Right to apply for writ). Subject to these provisions, the ■writ may issue only when no other remedy is available for the condition the petitioner alleges or available remedies are exhausted or ineffectual.
See Reese,
¶ 6 In this matter, Fortune asserts that prison officials directed his transfer to SCI-Camp Hill in retaliation for his prison grievance and litigation activities. Brief for Appellant at 7, 11. He contends farther that their decision to hold him in administrative custody is not consistent with the provisions of a Department of Corrections policy prescribing bases for a prisoner’s commitment to administrative custody. Brief for Appellant at 7. Both acts, he argues, deprived him of equal protection and due process of law and infringed a protected “liberty interest” under the Fourteenth Amendment. Brief for Appellant at 12. We find Fortune’s assertion of the foregoing constitutional deprivations “no more than an unwieldy tool to convince us to see the law differently than it is.”
Buehl v. Horn,
¶ 7 Similarly, Fortune’s limited allegations concerning living conditions in the SMU fail to raise grounds even remotely sufficient to establish entitlement to relief in a
habeas corpus
petition. Fortune does not contend that he is being illegally detained. Moreover, his sole claim of “cruel and unusual punishment” arises from the refusal of prison officials to make antiperspirant available to inmates in administrative custody. Brief for Appellant at 16. Although this condition may be unpleasant, it is by no means equivalent to the indignities we have recognized in prior cases as “cruel and unusual punishment.”
See Johnson v. Desmond,
¶ 8 In his second question on appeal, Fortune challenges the trial court’s dismissal of his petition to proceed
in for-ma pauperis
on finding the underlying petition frivolous. Brief for Appellant at 3. Fortune bases his assertion on Pennsylvania Rule of Civil Procedure 240, which prescribes prerequisites upon which indigent persons may pursue civil litigation free of customary court costs. Fortune provides no authority to establish that this rule of civil procedure applies to pursuit of a petition for
habeas corpus;
none of the cases Fortune cites in support of his reliance on this rule arose in the context of
habeas corpus.
Assuming the applicability of the rule, we conclude nonetheless that the court did not err in dismissing Fortune’s petition. Because Fortune’s petition for writ of
habeas corpus
failed to allege a cognizable basis for relief on the underlying claim, the court did not err in finding it “frivolous” for purposes of Rule 240(j).
See Thomas v. Holtz,
¶ 9 Accordingly, we affirm the trial court’s order dismissing Fortune’s petition for writ of habeas corpus and petition to proceed informa pauperis.
¶ 10 Order AFFIRMED.
