This is an appeal from the denial of habeas corpus to a federal prisoner, Daniel Waletzki. 28 U.S.C. § 2241. A federal statute (since repealed, but applicable to the considerable number of prisoners who committed their offenses before November 1, 1987) allows a prison to award good-time credits, which reduce a prisoner’s sentence, for meritorious performance of the job to which the prisoner is assigned. 18 U.S.C. § 4162. Waletzki claims that he should have received such credits for his work in the food service department of his prison; he argues that the refusal to award them was arbitrary.
We must consider first whether habeas corpus is ever a proper remedy in such a ease. At first glance it seems odd that a dispute over a claim for a form of compensation for prison labor should be the basis for seeking habeas corpus. But good-time credits reduce the length of imprisonment, and habeas corpus is available to challenge the duration as well as the fact of custody.
Preiser v. Rodriguez,
So habeas corpus is, or at least could be, a proper remedy for a denial of
*1081
good-time credits. This would be clear beyond the possibility of doubt if 18 U.S.C. § 4162 created an
entitlement
to good-time credits, for their denial would then be a deprivation of liberty within the meaning of the Fifth Amendment’s due process clause and Waletzki would have a constitutional claim on which to base his application for habeas corpus.
Superintendent v. Hill,
The possibility remains that the prison behaved arbitrarily in denying Waletzki good-time credits. He claims that identically situated prisoners have been awarded such credits, and at this stage in the proceeding there is no evidence to the contrary. It does not follow that he can obtain relief in a habeas corpus proceeding. Habeas corpus is an extraordinary remedy, and many decisions say that it is available only to correct errors of a fundamental character — jurisdictional or constitutional, or, where statutory, similar to' constitutional defects or otherwise exceptional.
Reed v. Clark,
Of course remedies ought not be disproportionate to the wrongs they aim to rectify. As a remedy, habeas corpus lacks the flexibility of money damages, as it involves releasing,- whether at present or in the future, from custody a person who may be dangerous to the community. So even though habeas corpus is not confined to “fundamental” defects when it is not being used to challenge a judgment collaterally, it is not to be used as a remedy for harmless, technical violations — the sort of thing that in a system of money damages might get the plaintiff a few dollars, or even just a few cents.
White v. Henman,
We conclude that Waletzki’s claim is within the habeas corpus jurisdiction of the district court, but we do not think it can succeed on the merits. The statute in question makes the award of good-time credits for prison job performance avowedly discre
*1082
tionary, and, for fairly obvious reasons given the nature of the evaluation to be made, sets forth no guidelines to channel that discretion. It would not be feasible in these circumstances for a court to police the exercise of the prison officials’ discretion. Of course if the decision to deny Waletzki good-time credits had been based on his religion or race, or on some other constitutionally forbidden criterion, we would intervene. Nothing of that sort is alleged. The only claim is that discretion has been exercised capriciously — less deserving performers than Waletzki have received credits denied him, or in other words his work was better than that of other prisoners who received good-time credits. Such a claim resembles a charge of selective law enforcement. It is no more feasible for the courts to monitor prison officials’ evaluations of the work performed by prisoners than it is to monitor the enforcement decisions of law enforcement authorities, which courts refuse to do.
Wayte v. United States,
Affirmed.
