Aрpellants (collectively the “prison officials”) appeal the district court’s
In 1977, the State of Iowa convicted Robert A. Cornell of first degree murder and sentenced him to life imprisonment with no possibility of parole. From 1976 until 1987, Cornell resided in the Iowa State Penitentiary (“ISP”), a maximum security prison. Cornell eventually achieved the designation of “honor lifer” due to his exemplary behavior and conduct at ISP. Because he also met certain other criteria,
On September 18, 1987, two rеpresentatives from the penitentiary’s internal affairs office interviewed Cornell concerning a suspected violation of institutional rules. Specifically, the officers were investigating allegations that Correctional Officer Harold Kropp had violated multiple rules prohibiting particular transactions between prison employees and inmates or members of inmates’ families. At the interview, Major Harry A. Grabowski, the head of the internal affairs division, promised Cornell immunity from discipline if the inmate would cooperate in the investigation. While Major Grabowski did not possess independent authority to offer a prisoner exemption from punishment, he claims that Deputy Warden John Henry, now deceased, granted permission to extend immunity to Cornell. In response to Major Gra-bowski’s pledge, Cornell admitted that he and Officer Kroрp had contracted for the officer to construct a fence surrounding a house owned by Cornell’s wife.
Four days after his conversation with Cornell, Major Grabowski questioned Kropp and informed the officer of the ongoing investigation and of the allegations against him. Correctional Officer Charles Wood, Kropp’s union steward, was also present when Major Grabowski questioned Kropp. The internal affairs investigatiоn culminated approximately three weeks later with Officer Kropp’s compelled resignation from his employment with the ISP. With Officer Wood’s assistance, Officer Kropp unsuccessfully attempted to obtain reinstatement through various grievance procedures outlined in the relevant union contract.
On October 26, 1987, subsequent to Kropp’s resignation, Officer Wood prepared a disciplinary report alleging that Cornell had violated the institutional rule prohibiting contracts between inmates and employees. Deputy Warden Henry, notwithstanding the permission he had allegedly given Major Grabowski to grant Cornell immunity from punishment, determined that the report justified immediate disciplinary action and ordered Cornell’s transfer from the medium security prison to ISP. Deputy Warden Henry apparently denied that he had authorized the immunity and refused, following several meetings with Cornell, to dismiss the charge.
Cornell thereafter initiated an administrative appeal in an attempt to obtain dismissal of the disciplinary report. As part of the process, Charles Harper presided over a three person committee that conducted a disciplinary hearing addressing Officer Wood’s report. At the hearing, Cornell informed the committee of his promised immunity; additionally, Major Grabowski submitted a statement on Cornell's behalf confirming that he had granted the prisoner exemption from retribution. Despite this evidence, the committee determined that Cornell had violated the institutional rule and sentenced him to ten days of disciplinary detention, sixty days of administrative segregation, and loss of sixteen days of good time.
Cornell continued to utilize the administrative process and pursued further unsuccessful appeals to Ron Welder, Executive Assis
Cornell later filed this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action against, among others, various prison officials mentioned above. Cornell’s complaint essentially alleged that the state actors engaged in three types of unconstitutional conduct: retaliatory transfer, retaliatory discipline, and violation of Cornell’s due рrocess rights. Following a two day bench trial, the district judge refused to grant qualified immunity to the prison officials. Further, the district court found that the inmate had established he would not have been returned to the maximum security prison but for an unconstitutional retaliatory motive. In particular, the court found that prison authorities impermissibly transferred Cornell based on the prisoner’s exercise of his First Amendment rights in talking to and cooperating with Mаjor Grabowski. Consequently, Cornell prevailed at trial on his claim of retaliatory transfer.
The district court also decided that Cornell’s transfer constituted retaliatory discipline. Largely because the additional sanctions ordered by the discipline committee were never imposed on Cornell, however, the court determined that Cornell did not state a viable retaliatory discipline claim for the punishment mandated after the disciplinary hearing. Finally, the district judge found in Cornell’s favor on the due process claim.
The district judge ordered the prison officials to reimburse Cornell for his actual damages of $2,163.67, but the court refused to impose punitive damages. The district judge also asked Cornell's court appointed attorney to submit an application for attorney’s fees to be paid by the prison officials. After the court, in response to defense objections, reduced the requested amount by $9,136.50, it ordered the officials to pay $29,039.00 in legal fees.
The prison officials timely appealed to this court. They assert that the district court committed error by: denying them qualified immunity; finding that they had impermissi-bly engaged in retaliatory discharge and retaliatory punishment; finding that Cornell was deprived of liberty without due process of the law; and awarding excessive attorney’s fees. Cornell also presents to this court a cross-appeal in which he alleges that the district court: mistakenly found as non-retaliatory the sanctions ordered against him by the disciplinary committee; and erroneously declined to impose punitive damages against the prison officials. We consider these arguments below.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Retaliatory Transfer
It is certainly true, as the prison officials assert, that generally “‘a рrisoner enjoys no constitutional right to remain in a particular institution_’” Goff v. Burton,
As a threshold inquiry, we must determine whether Cornell’s exercise of a constitutional right precipitated the alleged retaliatory relocation in this case. In other words, did Cornell have a constitutional right to cooperate with Major Grabowski in the internal prison investigation? The Supreme Court has held that “ ‘lawful incarceration brings about the necessary withdrawal or limitation of many privileges and rights, a retraction justified by the considerations underlying our penal system.’ ” Pell v. Procunier,
We believe it to be self evident that ordinary citizens enjoy a constitutional privilege to freely participatе in governmental investigations.
We find that the right to resрond to a prison investigator’s inquiries is not inconsistent with a person’s status as a prisoner or with the legitimate penological objectives of the corrections system. To the contrary, we agree with the district court that truthfully answering questions concerning a misconduct investigation against a correctional officer is “undoubtedly quite consistent with legitimate penological objectives.” Consequently, we conclude under the facts of this case that Cornell’s activity implicated his rights under the First Amendment. Cf. Franco v. Kelly,
The prison officials challenge the district court’s finding that impermissible retaliation was “the actual motivating factor” for Cornell’s transfer. This is a factual determination that we review for clear error. See Cox v. Dardanelle Pub. Sch. Dist.,
Our review of the record reveals ample evidence to support the district court’s decision. Officer Wood, the correctional officer who filed the report against Cornell, had no first-hand knowledge of the agreement between Cornell and Officer Kropp; Wood only learned of the incident through his representation of Kropp as the officer’s union steward. Also, although Wood learned of the prohibited transaction on September 20, 1987, he violated prison procedures by waiting over thirty days, until after Kropp’s forced resignation, to file the report. Indeed, Wood took this disciplinary action despite the fact that Major Grabowski had informed him of the grant of immunity to Cornell. After Officer Wood filed the report, prison authorities immediately transferred Cornell to the maximum security facility. This violated a prison guideline which provided that an inmate should normally remain in his existing housing pending the resolution of a disciplinary report. Though the prison officials have at various times claimed that Cornell’s transfer was effected to facilitate an investigation of the charges, the district court dеtermined that no investigation took place subsequent to the relocation.
B. Retaliatory Discipline
The district court also ruled in Cornell’s favor on his claim for retaliatory discipline. “Just as prison officials cannot lawfully transfer a prisoner for retaliatory reasons alone, [they likewise] cannot impose a disciplinary sanction against a prisoner in retaliation for the prisoner’s exercise of his constitutional right.” Goff,
In large measure, our discussion above guides the resolution of this claim. A cause of action for retaliatory disciplinе, though, differs in at least one important respect from a claim of retaliatory transfer. Namely, “ ‘if the discipline which the prisoner claims to have been retaliatory was in fact imposed for an actual violation of prisoner rules or regulations, then the prisoner’s claim that the discipline was retaliatory in nature must fail.’” Henderson v. Baird,
In this case, because the prison disciplinary committee found based upon some evidence that Cornell violated a prison rule, the prison officials argue that he should not have prevailed on his retaliatory discipline claim. We disagree. Although we reaffirm the sound reasоning represented in our previous decisions, we feel that this case presents a different situation. Here, a high ranking prison official, on whose authority Cornell was entitled to rely, promised the inmate immunity from discipline for the rule violation. In such circumstances, the prison has essentially made a retroactive determination that the prisoner, at the time of the misconduct, was engaged in activity that he was entitled tо perform. If the prison thereafter ignores the immunity and uses the rule violation as a pretext to punish the prisoner as retribution for the prisoner’s exercise of a constitutional right, it exposes itself to a claim of retaliatory discipline. Cf. Goff,
We believe the district court correctly found that the prison officials, by transferring Cornell because he performed a constitutionally protected activity, impermissibly engaged in retaliatory punishment. We also agree with the district court that the additional penalties the committee levied against Cornell did not constitute retaliatory punishment. The imposition of those sanctions was held in abeyance until the final disposition of Cornell’s administrative appeals. The acting director of the Iowa Department of Corrections ultimately expunged the disciplinary report from Cornell’s record, and the penalties were never actually imposed upon the prisoner. Therefore, we fail to see how Cornell was in any way disciplined as a result of the committee’s action.
The prison officials assert that the district court erroneously decided thаt, by failing to follow certain prison regulations, they violated Cornell’s rights under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment.
D. Qualified Immunity
The prison officials claim that the district court committed error by refusing to grant them qualified immunity. This is an issue that we review de novo. See Henderson,
We have long held that prison officials may not permissibly retaliate against a prisoner based on the inmate’s exercise of constitutional rights. See Garland v. Polley,
E. Attorney’s Fees
The prison officials maintain that the district court awarded Cornell excessive attorney’s fees. We review a decision regarding attorney’s fees only for an abuse of discretion, Loggins v. Delo,
F. Punitive Damages
Cornell contends that the district court wrongfully refused to impose punitive dаmages against the prison officials. Punitive damages are appropriate in a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 case “ “when the defendants’] conduct is shown to be motivated by evil motive or intent, or when it involves reckless or callous indifference to the federally protected rights of others.’ ” Walters v. Grossheim,
III. CONCLUSION
Because we find no reversible error, we affirm the district court’s order finding the prison officials liable under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, and awarding inmate Robert A. Cornell $2,163.67 in actual damages and $29,039.00 for attorney’s fees.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The HONORABLE DONALD E. O'BRIEN, Senior United States District Judge for the Southern District of Iowa.
. To quаlify for transfer to a less secure facility, a life term inmate at ISP must serve at least ten years within the maximum security prison, with at least the preceding two years as an honor lifer, and must not have received a major discipline report during that two year period.
. The district judge determined that, as far as many inmates are concerned, transfer to JBCC is considered a reward for outstanding behavior because of the more relaxed environment, increased comfort, and greater opportunity for leisure activity at that facility. Also, prisoners generally view transfer from JBCC to ISP as a punishment that most often occurs as a result of inmate misconduct.
. In light of the Supreme Court's recent decision in Sandin v. Conner, - U.S. -,
. Of course, neither ordinary citizens nor prisoners have an absolute right to provide government investigators with useless or irrelevant information. In this opinion, we merely refer to the right, after being approached by government investigators, to freely respond to those officials' inquiries concerning the subject matter of the investigation.
. "No State shall ... deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law....” U.S. Const, amend. XIV, § 1.
