George Lombardi, William Armontrout, and Donald Cline appeal from the district court’s 1 denial of their request for summary judgment on Missouri inmate Harvey Lu-cious Hall’s 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1988) suit. Hall claims that the appellants violated his Fourteenth and Eighth Amendment rights by failing to release him from the Missouri State Penitentiary’s Special Management Facility after he had been approved for reassignment to the general population’s Protective Custody Unit. The appellants argue that they are entitled to summary judgment based on qualified immunity. Armontrout and Lombardi also contend that they are entitled to summary judgment because they did not have personal knowledge of and were not involved in Hall’s continued confinement. We affirm the judgment of the district court.
In June 1987, Hall was transferred to Level I of the Special Management Facility 2 for possessing dangerous contraband. The Classification Committee reviewed Hall’s placement later that same month and moved him to Level II. In September 1987, the Committee transferred Hall to Level III, and in December 1987, the Committee recommended that Hall be released to the general population’s Protective Custody Unit. Although the Warden’s designee approved the Committee’s recommendation, Hall was not reassigned. ' The Committee reviewed Hall’s status again on four different occasions during 1988 and each time recommended that he be released from the Special Management Facility. The recommendations were always approved, but Hall was not released. In February 1989, Hall committed another conduct violation, the Classification Committee recommended that Hall be reclassified for Level I housing in the Special Management Facility, and the recommendation was approved. Hall worked his way through the Special Management Facility levels again, and in June 1989, the Committee’s recommendation that Hall be assigned to an “acceptable level” was approved. In August 1989, the Committee again recommended that Hall be released, the recommendation was approved, and Hall was finally reassigned to the Protective Custody Unit.
Hall filed suit, claiming that the appellants violated his Fourteenth and Eighth Amendment rights by failing to release him after the recommendations for release had been approved. The appellants requested summary judgment, arguing that Hall did not have a constitutional right to be transferred, that Hall received procedural due process, that other inmates who were moved before Hall were different, that the Special Management Facility conditions were not cruel and unusual, and that qualified immunity applied.
The district court referred the ease to a magistrate judge, 3 who recommended that the appellants’ request for summary judgment be denied. Hall v. Lombardi, No. 89-4221-CV-C-5, Slip op. at 8 (W.D. Mo. Feb. 13, 1992) (Magistrate’s Report and Recommendations). The magistrate judge found that Hall “spent approximately fourteen months in the Special Management Facility after he was approved for release in December, 1987, and approximately two months in the Special Management Facility after he was approved for release in June, 1989.” Id. at 4. The magistrate judge rejected the appellants’ arguments regarding qualified immunity because, although Hall had received procedural protection regarding his housing assignment, “the failure to release [Hall] from administrative segregation and retransfer him to protective custody was an arbitrary failure to restore the measure of liberty to which [Hall] was entitled — a substantive right.” Id. at 6-7. The magistrate judge determined that Hall had a liberty interest in being released from the Special Management Facility, and stated that “any reasonable person should know that neglect *957 ing [Hall] for seventeen months may well be in violation of his rights.” Id. at 7. The magistrate judge examined the appellants’ reasons for keeping Hall in the Special Management Facility and concluded that a material issue of fact existed, namely, whether the appellants arbitrarily had deprived Hall of his liberty interest keeping him in the Special Management Facility for such a long period of time after he was approved for release. Id. at 7-8. The district court adopted the magistrate judge’s recommendations and denied the motion for. summary judgment. Hall v. Lombardi, No. 89-4221-CV-C-5 (W.D. Mo. June 11,1992). Lombardi, Armontrout, and Cline appealed.
I.
The appellants argue that the'district court erred in denying their motion for summary judgment based on qualified immunity.
A denial of a motion for summary judgment is not a final judgment, and therefore, is not usually appealable.
See Wright v. South Ark. Regional Health Ctr.,
We review the district court’s denial of summary judgment under the same standard as the district court applied to the motion. A party is entitled to summary judgment only when “there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and ... the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). We view the evidence in the light most favorable to Hall, the nonmovant, and give him the benefit of all reasonable inferences.
Johnson,
Prison officials may generally rely on the defense of qualified immunity to protect them from liability for civil damages.
Brown v. Frey,
A.
In
Knight v. Armontrout,
Apparently believing that the law regarding Hall’s liberty interest was not clearly established, the magistrate judge determined that “[djefendants are not entitled to qualified immunity for actions which are arbitrary and capricious.” Slip op. at 6. Relying on
*958
Childs v. Pellegrin,
As the appellants point out, “[w]e have yet to decide whether substantive due process provides a right to be free from arbitrary and' capricious state action.”
See Weimer v. Amen,
To. demonstrate that the law is “clearly established,” there must be a showing that a “reasonable official would understand that what he is doing violate[s]” plaintiffs rights.
Anderson v. Creighton,
We believe that in this case a reasonable official would have understood that he was violating Hall’s rights.
See Anderson,
The prison regulation at issue here provides:
(11) RELEASE FROM THE SPECIAL MANAGEMENT FACILITY: Most inmates assigned to the Special Management Facility will work toward release from the facility to the general population. This will be accomplished by demonstrating progressively more positive and responsible behavior, as he is promoted through the level system.
(A) Influencing Factors: The primary performance objectives will be satisfactory work and training evaluations, demonstrated positive attitude and conduct, and meaningful participation in available self-improvement activities.
(B) Actual Release: An inmate’s release to the general population will be accomplished by being promoted from Level I through Level II to Level III as a result of positive reviews by the Special Management Facility Classification Committee and the inmate’s Unit Classification Treatment Team. A significant period of continuing and progressively more responsible behavior in Level III will be required for the Special Management Facility Classification Committee to recommend and the Warden or designee to approve release to the general population.
Regulation 20-212.040(ll)(A), (B). When determining whether an inmate has “accomplished” release from the Special Management Facility, the prison officials must review the influencing factors to see if “[a] significant period of continuing and progressively more responsible behavior in Level III” has been achieved. Id. This finding is “required” before a recommendation for release may be made or approved. Id. The language tells “most” inmates that release “will be accomplished” once the criteria have been met. Id. (emphasis, added). Hall met all of these criteria, the Classification Committee recommended his release many times, and the recommendations were approved each time. Nevertheless, Hall spent an additional sixteen to seventeen months in the Special Management Facility.
Any reasonable official would understand that once Hall obtained final approval for release, he had a legitimate expectation of being released in a reasonable amount of time, and that failing to meet that expectation for such a long time violated Hall’s rights. The unlawfulness of the prison officials’ actions is apparent in view of preexisting law. The right is not abstract, and the situation did not require the officials to guess about the future development of constitutional doctrine. Although the prison officials followed the general procedure in recommending and approving release many times, they withheld the end result of that procedure — -release.
We recognize that the regulations say “most,” not all, inmates will work toward release from the Special Management Facility. Hall did not fall into the category of inmates who could not work toward release as he had already worked his way toward release, met all the requirements, and even obtained’final approval. Similarly, we reject the appellants’ argument that Hall fell within the listed exceptions to the general release rule. See Regulation 20-212.040(ll)(C). 5 We agree with the magistrate judge’s determination that the exceptions expressly apply to an inmate’s eligibility for a recommendation of release or approval of that recommendation,, not to inmates like Hall who have been through the entire process and received a recommendation which was approved. Moreover, each exception requires a specific directive from the Warden, and we find ho *960 evidence in the record before us of such a directive regarding Hall. 6
The appellants also argue that in light of our decision in
Williams v. Armontrout,
The appellants also argue that this case is substantially similar to
Sanders v. Woodruff,
Finally, relying on
Weimer,
We conclude that “general, well-established legal principles,” so evident that they would be confirmed by general common sense, would have alerted a reasonable prison official to the fact that Hall’s rights were being violated by the extended delay.
B.
The appellants also argue that Hall has not alleged sufficient facts to demonstrate that the appellants violated his rights. For many of the same reasons discussed in Part A, we reject this argument.
More specifically, the appellants contend that there were legitimate reasons for keeping Hall in the Special Management Facility, and that they did not act intentionally. Hall, however, disputes the appellants’ claimed reasons and points to other inmates who were approved for release after he was, but released before him. Moreover, as the appellants .conceded at oral argument, a dispute exists with regard to the differences between the privileges and conditions of the Special Management Facility and the Protective Custody Unit.
Given the extended delay and the factual disputes, we conclude that a material issue of fact exists as to whether Hall was deprived of a constitutionally protected liberty interest by the prison officials failure to release him from the Special Management Facility once he had been approved for release. The district court did not err in refusing to grant the appellants’ motion for summary judgment.
II.
Appellants Armontrout and Lombardi argue that the district court should have granted their request for summary judgment because they had no personal knowledge of or involvement in the failure to release Hall. Armontrout and Lombardi contend that they were only sued because they were within the “chain of command;” therefore, as no re-spondeat superior liability exists under section 1983, they cannot be held liable.
Although Armontrout and Lombardi may not be liable under a respondeat superi- or theory, proof of actual knowledge is not an absolute prerequisite for imposing supervisory liability.
See Howard,
Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to Hall, we cannot say that a factual dispute does not exist. Prison regulation 212.040(9)(A) requires Cline to report to Armontrout the names of all inmates assigned to the Special Management Facility, the reason for assignment, and the length of time assigned. If an inmate has been assigned to the Special Management Facility for more than one year, Armontrout or his representative must personally review the inmate’s file and determine, in writing, whether the prisoner will be retained in the Special Management Facility. Regulation 212.040(9)(C). If the inmate is retained “for an additional year or years,” Armontrout must send a report to Lombardi for review and advice. Id. Thus, their compliance or noncompliance with these regulations may establish actual knowledge or reckless disregard.
Lombardi and Armontrout argue that because the magistrate judge found no procedural due process violation, the retention regulation is irrelevant to this situation. We, however, are not looking to these regulations to establish a possible procedural violation. Instead, these regulations are relevant in the context of linking Lombardi and Armontrout to Hall’s situation. Whether they actually knew or should have known of Hall’s status and acted or failed to act in such a way that *962 would cause them to be liable is for the jury to decide.
We affirm the district court’s decision to deny the appellants’ motion for summary judgment.
Notes
. The Honorable Scott O. Wright, Senior United States District Judge for the Western District of Missouri.
. The Special Management Facility serves as the behavior modification and administrative segregation unit of the Missouri State Penitentiary. The Special Management Facility consists of three housing units — Levels I through III — which are progressively less restrictive.
.The Honorable William Knox, United States Magistrate Judge for the Western District of Missouri. See 28 U.S.C. § 636 (1988).
. We note that keeping an inmate in the Special Management Facility for sixteen to seventeen months after that inmate has been repeatedly approved for release appears to be the type of arbitrary and capricious activity that might warrant such a holding — it seems abusive, shocks our conscience, and offends our judicial notions of fairness.
See Weimer,
. Regulation 20 — 212.040(11)(C) provides:
... Exceptions: There will be some inmates assigned to the Special Management Facility who will not become eligible for release to general population due to administrative reasons which may include security considerations, the inmate’s personal safety, or other related correctional management concerns. Such inmates may progress as far in the SpeT cial Management Facility level system as their particular circumstances will permit. Decisions in these cases will. consist of specific directives from the Warden.
. In fact, on appeal, Warden Armontrout argues that he did not have personal knowledge of or involvement in Hall’s situation.
. At oral argument, the appellants asked us to specify exactly what amount of time is reasonable. We will not give an advisory opinion. Although there is no static test for determining how long a prisoner’s confinement may continue before his rights arc implicated, common sense is helpful.
See Howard v. Adkinson,
