In December 2003, a South Dakota state court granted inmate Randy Lee Dahl a writ of habeas corpus after concluding that the Ex Post Facto Clause barred the South Dakota Department of Corrections (DOC) from withholding good-time credits based on a statute enacted after Dahl’s offense. The court ordered Dahl’s immediate release because his sentence would have expired in May 2002 had good-time credits not been withheld. Dahl v. Weber, Civ. 03-108 (S.D.Cir. Dec. 11, 2003). Dahl then commenced this § 1983 action, seeking damages for an unconstitutionally prolonged incarceration. Named as defendants were Jeff Bloomberg, the Secretary of DOC who made the December 1996 decision to withhold good-time credits; Warden Bob Dooley, who recommended that credits be withheld; and Warden Douglas Weber, the respondent in Dahl’s habeas action who admitted service of the *732 habeas petition on August 21, 2003. Ruling on defendants’ motion for summary judgment, the district court denied absolute immunity, granted Bloomberg and Dooley qualified immunity, and denied Weber qualified immunity for the period beginning with the admission of service and ending with Dahl’s release on December 15, 2003. Weber appeals that interlocutory ruling. We reverse.
I. Background
Dahl was convicted of two counts of sexual contact with a child and sentenced to consecutive five-year prison terms in November 1995. Under South Dakota law, an inmate imprisoned for a crime committed before July 1, 1996, was entitled to have his sentence reduced for good conduct.
See
S.D. Codified Laws § 24-5-1.
1
Prior to July 1, 1995, good-time credits could be withheld only if the inmate violated prison rules or evinced “an intent to reoffend.”
See
§ 24-2-18 (1994);
Delano v. Petteys,
In June 1997, a state court held that withholding mandatory good-time credits based on an amendment enacted after the inmate earned good-time credits violated the Ex Post Facto Clause of the United States and South Dakota Constitutions.
Hughes v. Bloomberg,
Civ. 96-1898 (S.D. Cir. June 27, 1997). Based on that decision, DOC restored credits that had been withheld from at least four sex offenders whose offenses were
committed
before July 1, 1995, and who refused sex offender treatment. This DOC practice was noted by the Supreme Court of South Dakota in
Meinders v. Weber,
Dahl committed his two sex offenses in December 1993 and June 1995, but his offense date was erroneously entered into DOC’s computerized records as August 14, 1995, the date of his arrest. After the decision in Hughes, Dahl learned that another inmate’s good-time credits had been restored. He made several unsuccessful requests that his withheld credits be restored, being told his credits were not restored “because of my date.” When he complained again at a March 2002 parole hearing, the DOC Records Administrator asked staff if the complaint was valid. Laurie Feiler, Special Assistant for Adult Corrections, responded that Dahl’s credits were properly withheld if his offense date was August 14, 1995, after the July 1, 1995, amendment. Feiler later discovered the error in recording Dahl’s offense date during a routine audit of DOC inmate files in November 2002. However, she did not recognize the impact of the error or bring it to anyone’s attention.
When Dahl later learned of the offense date’s significance from another inmate, he complained again, this time emphasizing that his offense date was prior to the July 1995 amendment. After consulting an inmate legal adviser, he filed a pro se habeas petition in state court, naming Weber as respondent and alleging that DOC’s retro *733 active application of the July 1, 1995, amendment violated the Ex Post Facto Clause and unconstitutionally increased his sentence. Weber signed an admission of service. Appointed counsel for Dahl filed an amended petition, and an Assistant Attorney General filed a motion to dismiss. Based on Dahl’s criminal file, the attorneys’ fact Stipulations, and a telephonic argument hearing, the court denied Weber’s motion to dismiss and granted the writ. Dahl was immediately released. This lawsuit followed.
In its summary judgment ruling, the district court held that increasing Dahl’s sentence by retroactively cancelling mandatory good-time credits was a clearly established violation of the Ex Post Facto Clause of the United States Constitution. The court denied Weber qualified immunity because Dahl’s habeas petition put Weber on notice that Dahl’s offenses occurred before the 1995 amendment took effect, Dahl’s prison record had by that time been corrected, and therefore “[gjenuine issues of material fact exist as to whether a reasonable official in Weber’s position would have known that the failure to restore Dahl’s good-time credits and release Dahl from incarceration violated the law.”
Dahl v. Weber,
Civ. 06-4264 (D.S.D. Aug. 5, 2008). We review the denial of qualified immunity
de novo. Ricker v. Leapley,
II. Discussion
Qualified immunity protects public officials from damage liability if “their conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.”
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
Section 1983 liability is personal.
Doran v. Eckold,
The district court denied Weber qualified immunity because Dahl’s habeas petition alleged that his offenses were committed before the July 1995 amendment to § 24-2-18, and therefore a jury could find that Weber reasonably should have known that the failure to restore Dahl’s good-time credits and release Dahl from incarceration violated the law. However, Dahl failed to present evidence that Weber had the authority to restore Dahl’s good-time credits and order his release. Weber testified that, while the warden “unlocks the gate,” the inmate’s release order comes from the Central Records Administrator. It is undisputed that DOC Secretary Bloomberg was responsible for restoring good-time credits that had been withheld. See S.D. Codified Laws § 24-5-1 (Secretary of Corrections’ decision to withhold good-time credits is final). Thus, Weber lacked the unilateral authority to restore Dahl’s credits and release him.
In
Davis,
we held that officials who detained an inmate for fifty-seven days with knowledge of a judicial release order violated the inmate’s clearly established right to liberty.
Dahl further argues that Weber “turned a blind eye” to allegations in Dahl’s habeas petition that established his right to immediate release. But there is no evidence Weber
knew
Dahl was entitled to be released. Dahl’s right to release could only be determined by consulting his central prison record (assuming that Feiler had in fact corrected that record) or by repeating Feiler’s November 2002 audit of Dahl’s underlying criminal file. The few decisions that have based a finding of deliberate indifference on a failure to investigate have uniformly involved defendants who had the
duty
to review the inmate’s status and the
authority
to release him.
See Alexander v. Perrill,
Moreover, it is undisputed that Weber did not simply ignore Dahl’s habeas petition. As the nominal respondent, he transmitted the petition to the Attorney General, relying on that office to respond appropriately. Dahl’s attorney then filed an amended petition, which included an additional Fifth Amendment claim. Rather than admit Dahl was entitled to the claimed relief, an Assistant Attorney General moved to dismiss the amended petition. The attorneys prepared fact stipulations, argued the issues in a telephonic *735 hearing, and — two months later — received a lengthy decision from the court granting habeas relief. In these circumstances, even if Weber had the authority to investigate Dahl’s offense date at Central Records, his conduct in accepting service of the habeas petition and transmitting it to DOC’s attorneys does not establish or even evidence deliberate indifference.
For the foregoing reasons, although we regret that a series of errors resulted in substantially extending Randy Dahl’s prison term, we conclude that Weber is entitled to qualified immunity from individual damage claims as a matter of law. We need not consider Weber’s additional contention that the district court erred in denying him absolute immunity. The order of the district court is reversed in part, and the case is remanded with directions to grant summary judgment in favor of defendant Weber.
Notes
. These good-time credit provisions do not apply to those imprisoned for crimes committed after July 1, 1996. See S.D. Codified Laws § 24-15A-3. Inmates convicted of crimes committed before July 1, 1996, such as Dahl, are referred to as "old-system" inmates.
