In this case involving the constitutional rights of a federal prisoner, plaintiff-appellant Edward Joseph X. Chapman appeals the denial by the district court after a bench trial of his prayers for injunctive, declaratory, compensatory, and punitive relief. Chapman contends that defendants violated his First Amendment rights by punishing him for his refusal on religious grounds to handle pork during a kitchen cleanup detail. Finding that defendants enjoy a qualified official immunity from liability for damages and ruling that the adoption of a new policy by the Bureau of Prisons and plaintiff’s release on parole mooted his requests for injunctive and declaratory relief, the district court refused to reach the merits of Chapman’s First Amendment claim. Although agreeing with Chapman that the punishment he suffered was so disproportionate to the severity of the offense with which he was charged that it violated his Eighth Amendment rights, the district court ruled that he was not entitled to monetary damages because he had failed to show that actual damages were suffered. We affirm the district court’s finding of qualified immunity on the First Amendment issue but reverse on the question of mootness. As to *24 the Eighth Amendment claim, we affirm as to liability but reverse on the issue of damages.
I
Edward Joseph X. Chapman was a prisoner in the federal penitentiary at Leavenworth, Kansas when, on October 4, 1972, he was transferred to the Marion, Illinois penitentiary. On October 9 Chapman was assigned to the kitchen detail, which assignment included transporting food carts and clearing food off of them. When Chapman discovered that the food trays in the carts contained pork, he went to his supervisor, defendant J. E. Brown, and informed him that because of the beliefs of his Black Muslim faith, he could not handle the pork on the trays. According to his testimony at trial, Brown then offered Chapman the use of either gloves or various kitchen utensils to enable him to complete the task. While Chapman at trial denied that he was offered these, he did acknowledge that, regardless of such an offer, he would still have refused to do the work, since even indirect touching was forbidden. Brown then advised Chapman that he would be forced to write a disciplinary report on Chapman if the task were not performed. Chapman responded by saying that the last man who had written a report on him concerning an incident of this nature had been “blown out of an oven” at Leavenworth just two months previously.
After the incident Brown filed a report charging Chapman with violating Prison Code § 303, “Failing to perform work as instructed by a supervisor.” His report also mentioned the Leavenworth remark. An investigative report, completed the day of the incident by another official and sent to the prison’s Adjustment Committee, stated that “Chapman had a very good attitude.” It noted that “apparently through Chapman’s efforts someone had removed the pork from the cart and Chapman had finished cleaning the cart.”
On October 11 the Adjustment Committee, which included defendants Jack Culley, Earl Buzzard, and E. M. Cage, met to consider Brown’s report. Chapman was present and, upon having the report read to him, admitted the facts of the incident, again explaining that his refusal was the result of his Black Muslim beliefs. The Committee decided to punish Chapman by placing him in the segregation unit for an indeterminate term.
Chapman’s status in segregated confinement was reviewed periodically. At least once during this confinement Chapman sought a formal explanation of his confinement from defendant George Pickett, warden at Marion, and requested immediate release. No reply from Pickett was received. During Chapman’s confinement on March 15, 1973, Pickett received a copy of a letter dated March 9, 1973 from the Director of the Federal Bureau of Prisons, Norman A. Carlson, in which the Director stated to Congressman Charles Rangel that “We have re-examined the situation and have communicated to the heads of our facilities instructions not to assign individuals to the details where they must work with pork if it is against the religious beliefs of those men.” Chapman was not returned to the general prison population, however, until July 25, 1973. While in segregation, Chapman did not eat foods containing pork. He was not provided with added portions of items not containing pork.
Prior to his release from segregation, Chapman instituted this action. Following a one-day hearing held on October 9, 1973, the district court for the Eastern District of Illinois entered judgment for defendants, ruling that Chapman’s request for an injunction was mooted by his release from segregation and that Chapman had failed to prove his complaint. On appeal to this court we affirmed the denial of a mandatory injunction but otherwise reversed and remanded the cause for a new trial, finding that the claims for monetary, declarative, and prohibitive injunctive relief had not been mooted.
Chapman
v.
Kleindienst,
II
Chapman first appeals the district court’s ruling that the defendants enjoy qualified official immunity from liability for the damages he claims to have suffered as a result of their violation of his First Amendment rights. The test currently employed to determine the availability of the official immunity defense was enunciated by the Supreme Court in
Wood v. Strickland,
As the Court states in Navarette, the test is essentially two-pronged:
Under the first part of the Wood v. Strickland rule, the immunity defense would be unavailing to petitioners if the constitutional right allegedly infringed by them was clearly established at the time of their challenged conduct, if they knew or should have known of that right and if they knew or should have known that their conduct violated the constitutional norm.
* * * * * *
[T]he second branch of the Wood v. Strickland standard . . . would authorize liability where the official has acted with “malicious intention” to deprive the plaintiff of a constitutional right or to cause him “other injury.” This part of the rule speaks of “intentional injury,” contemplating that the actor intends the consequences of his conduct.
Id.
at 562, 566,
One of the requirements of this test is that the constitutional right allegedly infringed by the defendants must have been clearly established at the time of the challenged conduct. The general First Amendment right of a prisoner to be free from punishment or discrimination on account of his religious faith may be said to be clear.
Cooper v. Pate,
In
Navarette
a state prisoner sought relief for an alleged violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1983 when prison officials interfered with his outgoing mail. The Supreme Court held that, at the time of the alleged interference, no specific right protecting the mailing privileges of prisoners had been established. The Court so held even though a series of cases in the local United States district court had confirmed such rights as that of inmates to receive newspapers and magazines and that of parolees to make speeches to public gatherings without obtaining ad
*26
vanee permission.
Following the rationale of
Navarette,
it would appear that the specific right at issue here — that of a prisoner to refuse an order requiring him to handle foodstuffs forbidden by his religion — was not “clearly established” in October 1972. While
Cooper
noted the existence of a prisoner’s right to be free from punishment on account of his religious beliefs, it also noted that a prisoner is subject to various curtailments of his freedom to exercise his beliefs.
III
That defendants are immune from monetary damages based on the First Amendment claim does not, of course, render moot Chapman’s claims for injunctive and declaratory relief. Nor does the fact that Chapman is currently on parole moot these claims,.as the district court apparently reasoned. In
Chapman v. Kleindienst,
we noted that “[a]s long as Chapman remains at Marion, and as long as he may again be required to handle pork, or may again go before the Adjustment Committee, the possibility of the reoccurrence of these issues satisfies the ‘actual controversy’ requirement of the Declaratory Judgments Act, 28 U.S.C. § 2201, and the ‘case or controversy’ requirement of Article III.”
The instant case is distinguishable from
Preiser
v.
Newkirk,
Unlike the Court in
Preiser,
we have before us no indication of any kind that the record of Chapman’s punishment will not be used against him in the future. Thus, the issue of an injunction against such future use is not moot. On remand, which we order
infra,
the district court should address itself to the question of expurgation of the record of his punishment, which will entail an inquiry into whether' Chapman was wrongfully placed in segregation in violation of his First Amendment rights.
See Chapman v. Kleindienst,
With regard to Chapman’s request for declaratory and injunctive relief against future infringements of his religious freedom, following the rationale of Preiser, that request has been mooted by the adoption of a new Bureau of Prisons policy prohibiting the assignment of prisoners to details where they must work with pork if it is against their religious beliefs. See Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 4. Therefore, no further action on these claims need be taken on remand.
IV
Chapman also appeals the district court’s denial of his claim for relief based on the fact that he was not provided food substitutes for the pork items from which he abstained during confinement in segregation. The district court based its denial of relief on the doctrine of
Rizzo v. Goode,
V
Finally, Chapman appeals the district court’s rulings that his confinement in segregation did not constitute cruel and unusual punishment violative of the Eighth Amendment until May 5, 1973, and that even after that date Chapman failed to demonstrate that he was entitled to damages for his unconstitutional punishment. While we agree that an Eighth Amendment violation has occurred, we reverse as to the date of its occurrence and Chapman’s entitlement to damages.
In
Adams v. Carlson,
The district court also erred in its denial of Chapman’s claim for monetary damages based on the Eighth Amendment violation. The court found that plaintiff failed to show that actual damages were suffered, although it noted the conditions under which Chapman lived while confined in segregation, including lack of exercise, lack of society with other inmates or family and friends, and lack of work or vocational training. We recently held in
Buise v. Hudkins,
VI
One additional matter requires our attention. Although we have held that defendants enjoy a qualified official immunity from monetary damages regarding Chapman’s First Amendment claim, this does not extend to the Eighth Amendment violation. Indeed, it is arguable that the very nature of an Eighth Amendment violation would preclude the availability of a qualified official immunity defense. We need not reach that question, however, for, regardless of its theoretical availability, the defense may not be used here because defendants have failed to qualify under the Wood standards.
There can be no serious contention with the fact that the right to be free from disproportionate punishment has long been “clearly established.” At least as early as 1910, the Supreme Court declared it to be “a precept of justice” that punishment for crime must be proportioned to the offense, lest it be found to be cruel and unusual.
Weems v. United States,
The judgment of the district court is affirmed in part and reversed in part; the cause is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. It may be noted that
Wood, Knell,
and
Navarette
all were 42 U.S.C. § 1983 cases against state officials, whereas the instant case is an action against federal officials based directly on the Constitution in the manner of
Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Agents,
.
E. g.,
if Chapman should be returned to prison, computation of good time allowance may be affected by past punishment.
See
18 U.S.C. § 4161;
Black v. Warden,
. The district court also found that a 1970 Federal Bureau of Prisons policy statement provided that a committed offender may abstain from eating those food items which are prohibited by his religion and that he may receive added portions from the main line of non-rationed items to make up any nutritional deficiency. Absent any affirmative act on the part of defendants to circumvent this policy, however, its mere existence does not take the case out of the
Rizzo
doctrine.
See Rizzo v. Goode,
. Defendants assert that Chapman’s remarks concerning the supervisor at Leavenworth properly may have been considered in determining the length of Chapman’s confinement, even though defendants admit the Leavenworth investigation of the oven incident did not raise Chapman as a suspect. If the prison authorities had wished to charge Chapman with threatening another with bodily harm, they could have done so; it was, in fact, a separately listed “Prohibited Act” under Prison Code § 004. No such charge was ever made, nor was any hearing regarding it ever held. Defendant Pickett did not even reply to Chapman’s request for a formal explanation of his confinement. The mere fact that the remark was listed in the violation report and the investigator’s report is not sufficient.
Hayes v. Walker,
. The determination of that point in time is left to the district court on remand.
