377 A.2d 1344 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1977
The eight plaintiffs named above have each filed an individual petition for the writ of habeas corpus and the defendant has demurred to the prayer for relief contained in each petition.1 The same legal issue is raised in each of the defendant's demurrers, and the following memorandum of decision applies equally to the demurrers to each of the eight above-named individual petitions.
In this petition for a writ of habeas corpus (hereinafter, the subject petition), the plaintiffs challenge the conditions of their confinement in administrative segregation at the Connecticut correctional institution at Somers. They allege, inter alia, *90 that those conditions constitute cruel and unusual punishment and deny them the right to practice their religious beliefs. In the prayer for relief, they ask that the court direct the defendant to prepare an administrative plan to remedy those conditions and to submit the plan to the court for review.
The defendant has demurred to the prayer for relief on the ground that the relief requested may not be granted in a petition for a writ of habeas corpus, and that such relief more properly belongs in an action of mandamus or in an action for an injunction. The defendant claims that since there is no prayer that the plaintiffs be released from detention, but only a prayer for an order designed to remedy the conditions of their confinement, the prayer for that relief may not be included in the subject petition. The demurrer to the prayer for relief thus raises a fundamental question concerning the scope of the relief that may be granted in a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in Connecticut.
Although the initial use of the writ throughout the United States was generally limited to an attack on the jurisdiction of the court ordering the detention, the writ has evolved as a remedy to effect a discharge from "any confinement contrary to the Constitution ... even though imposed pursuant to conviction by a court of competent jurisdiction."Preiser v. Rodriguez,
In Flaherty, a writ of habeas corpus was sought on behalf of Anthony J. Saia by his attorney, who alleged an unlawful denial of Saia's right to private consultation with his counsel. The court concluded that the prison regulation under attack did not concern the legality of Saia's detention, and that, therefore, the validity of the regulation could not properly be reviewed in an action seeking a writ of habeas corpus. The court (p. 39) recognized, however, the availability of the writ to a person restrained of his liberty who desires a hearing to determine the "legality of his detention." Since the petition for the writ must allege facts supporting a claim of illegal confinement, in Flaherty the writ had to be dismissed, there being no claim of an illegal detention. The case thus stands for the proposition that writs of habeas corpus are to be dismissed when they attack aspects of prison procedure that do not constitute a challenge to the legality of the confinement. On the other hand,Flaherty does not mean that challenges to the legality of the confinement, other than those directed to the legality of the judgment, may not come within the purview of a petition for a writ of habeas corpus. *93
To adopt the defendant's view, that habeas corpus is a remedy only when the inmate is challenging the legality of the judgment of conviction, would effectively deny a hearing on claims of inmates that, since their convictions, they have been illegally detained because of acts not related to the original judgment. The court should not adopt a rule that will have that practical consequence.
The demurrer to the prayer for relief is overruled.