This appeal is from an order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, Richard Owen, Judge, granting a motion for a preliminary injunction. The order prohibits state and union officials from assigning male correction officers to parts of the housing and hospital units of the Bedford Hills Correctional Facility (Bedford Hills), a women’s prison, pending a final determination of the action.
In February, 1977, male correction officers were assigned to the housing units at Bedford Hills for tjie first time. This new assignment policy was an attempt by the Department of Correctional Services to eliminate sex certification in the assignment and transfer of correction officers
Shortly after filing their complaint, ap-pellees moved for a preliminary injunction pursuant to Rule 65 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The motion was supported by the affidavits of four inmates specifying instances when their privacy rights allegedly had been violated by male guards. The state and union appellants submitted affidavits
On this appeal, the State and the union attack the preliminary injunction
It is well established that motions for preliminary injunctions should not be resolved on the basis of affidavits which evince disputed issues of fact. Normally, an evidentiary hearing is required to decide credibility issues. SEC v. Spectrum, Ltd.,
Generally, of course, a judge should not resolve a factual dispute on affidavits or depositions, for then he is merely showing a preference for “one piece of paper toanother.” Sims v. Greene, 161 F.2d 87 , 88 (3d Cir. 1947). This is particularly so when the judge without holding an evi-dentiary hearing, resolves the bitterly disputed facts in favor of the party who has the burden of establishing his right to preliminary relief. See id.1, 7 Moore, Federal Practice § 65.04[3], This caveat is most compelling “where everything turns on what happened and that is in sharp dispute; in such instances, the inappropriateness of proceeding on affidavits attains its maximum . . . ” Securities and Exchange Comm'n v. Frank,388 F.2d 486 , 491 (2d [sic] 1968) (Friendly, C. J.).
Dopp v. Franklin National Bank, supra,
Judge Owen determined that the motion raised no issues of fact requiring a hearing because none of the charges of privacy invasion contained in appellees’ affidavits was denied in appellants’ papers.
In finding no issues of fact, Judge Owen focused on appellants’ failure to make an express denial of the “specific”
Judge Owen’s decision to dispense with an evidentiary hearing was further based on appellants’ failure to submit affidavits challenging the truth of two allegations against named correction officers (the particularized allegations).
Because of the important interests of the parties in both preventing privacy invasions and retaining work assignments, the district judge should conduct an evidentiary hearing on the preliminary injunction motion as soon as convenient, but no-later than December 15, 1977.
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. Male correction officers were assigned to Bedford Hills in response to the defendants’ jointly held belief that Title VII of the 1964 Civil Rights Act requires nondiscriminatory work assignments. Forts v. Ward,
. Under a seniority system established in the collective bargaining agreement, the officers bid for the housing unit assignments.
. The plaintiffs sued under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and its jurisdictional ■ counterpart, 28 U.S.C. § 1343.
. The state appellants submitted the affidavit of Margery Evans Reifler, an Assistant Attorney General in the office of the Attorney General of the State of New York. The union appellants filed an affidavit of Carl F. Gray, Executive Director of the Security Unit Employees, Council 82, American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employees, AFL-CIO.
. The district court also denied without prejudice appellees’ motion for class certification.
. The Union’s application to this court for a stay pending appeal was denied on July 7, 1977.
. Appellants assert additional bases for reversal. Both the State and the union claim that the standards for granting an injunction .were not met. The union appellants assert that nullification of their contractual rights without a hearing denies them due process. The American Civil Liberties Union, in a brief amicus curiae, suggests that the exclusion of male guards from the living areas may violate Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000e et seq. (1970 & Supp. V 1975). The limited nature of our holding makes it unnecessary to address these additional issues.
. When a district court renders its decision without an evidentiary hearing, an appellate court is not limited to reviewing the district court’s exercise of discretion. In the absence of a district court assessment of the credibility of witnesses, an appellate court is as well equipped as a district court to evaluate the parties’ pleadings, affidavits and depositions. Diversified Mortgage Investors v. U. S. Life Title Ins. Co.,
. While Judge Owen labeled these charges as “specific”,
. The district court relied on the following allegations:
The men correction officers look over the curtains which we use to cover the doorways to our cells when we are on the toilet. They pull these curtains down for no good reason
Affidavit of Bernidienne Watkins sworn to on May 3, 1977, JA at 17a.
Men guards have come into the shower room while I am drying myself and watched as I dried and dressed myself.
Affidavit of Carol Crooks sworn to on May 3, 1977, JA at 19a.
It is also embarrassing that male guards are sent around to take the 6:30 a. m. count. I am usually asleep, and I feel very awkward about being awakened and peered at by these men guards when I am completely unable to control what position they observe me sleeping in.
Affidavit of Yvonne Lee sworn to on May 3, 1977 (Lee Affidavit), JA at 21a-22a.
Finally, I feel very awkward that men are assigned as C.O.’s at the hospital. One time (March 24, 1977), I went to the hospital and was describing to the nurse what my problem [sic] which was of a personal, female nature. There was a man guard directly in front of the medication window, where the nurse was. I was very embarrassed to have to describe the problem in front of the man guard.
Id. at 22a; see
The district court did not consider the charges that male guards enter the housing unit corridors unannounced because on May 9, 1977, after the affidavits were executed, appellant Ward issued a directive requiring that correction officers announce their presence in the housing areas.
. While Yvonne Lee specified the date of an embarrassing hospital visit, she did not indicate the approximate time of the incident or the name of the guard involved. Lee Affidavit, JA at 22a.
. Appellants expressly denied the charge of inadequate privacy in the hospital, to the extent that they could without more information. They asserted that no male or female correction officer is allowed beyond the waiting room of the prison clinic absent an emergency, that the screening clinic and examining rooms are private, and that the patient may request that the doors to the examination rooms be closed to insure her privacy. Affidavit of Margery Evans Reifler sworn to on June 8, 1977 (Reifler Affidavit), JA at 49a. Appellees concede this denial. Brief for Appellees at 6 n.4. The district court’s opinion does not mention this refutation.
. Yvonne Lee alleged that “[o]n several occasions, C.O. Andrew Jackson, while walking down 114-D to take count, looked over the curtain drawn across my cell doorway and caught me on the toilet.” Lee Affidavit, JA at 21a.
Linda Maroon charged that “[o]n our [sic] about January 27, 1977, I was seated on the toilet in my cell, when I looked up and saw corrections [sic] officer Lopez looking in on me.” Affidavit of Linda Maroon sworn to on May 3, 1977, JA at 23a.
. While Ms. Maroon alleges that Officer Lopez saw her on the toilet in January, 1977, the district court opinion indicates that male officers were not assigned to the housing and hospital units until February, 1977.
. For example, appellants argued that the inmates may request that their cell doors be closed while they attend to personal needs. This expedient eliminates the possibility of guards looking over the doorway curtains. Reifler Affidavit, JA at 47a; affidavit of Carl F. Gray sworn to on June 7, 1977 (Gray Affidavit), JA at 71a. They further averred that the women can avoid observation by dressing and drying themselves in the curtained shower stalls before entering the anteroom. Reifler Affidavit, JA at 48a; Gray Affidavit, JA at 71a.
. The district judge found that these self-help remedies do not sufficiently protect appellees’ right to privacy.
. If appellees are responsible for their own exposure, arguably the conduct of the guards
. The parties appear to disagree on the precise scope of the injunctive order. We assume that before entering another order, in the event that this occurs, the court will explore with counsel the scope and form of the order that best accommodates the interests of all parties.
