While incarcerated at the Massachusetts Correctional Institution at Walpole (M.C.I., Walpole), the plaintiffs, Gerald Hill and Joseph Crawford, filed pro se complaints
The rights and privileges that citizens ordinarily enjoy are necessarily diminished with respect to prison inmates, but an inmate is “not wholly stripped of constitutional protections.”
Wolff v. McDonnell,
The Supreme Court in Wolff was not required to rule, nor did it do so, on whether an inmate who is deprived of a State-created liberty interest by a disciplinary board is constitutionally entitled to judicial review of the sufficiency of the evidence to warrant the board’s findings. However, such an entitlement logically follows from the court’s holding with respect to the requirements of procedural due process, together with its reasoning that “a written record helps to insure that administrators, faced with possible scrutiny by state officials and the public, and perhaps even the courts, where fundamental constitutional rights may have been abridged, will act fairly” (emphasis added). Wolff v. McDonnell, supra at 565.
Since “[t]he touchstone of due process is protection of the individual against arbitrary action,”
id.
at 558, we conclude that before a prison inmate can be deprived of good time credits, in which he has a State-created liberty interest protected by due process guarantees of the United States Constitution, he is entitled not only to the procedural due process articulated in
Wolff,
but to judicial review of the sufficiency of the evidence to warrant the findings of the disciplinary board as well. Accord
Smith
v.
Rabalais,
The defendant predicts substantial cost increases to the Department of Correction flowing from the necessity to keep meticulous records, and to the courts as well, if we rule that judicial review of disciplinary board findings leading to the deprivation of good time credits is constitutionally required. We are not persuaded that the Department’s record keeping costs will increase as a result of our recognizing inmates ’ rights to judicial review. Written records of disciplinary board proceedings are constitutionally required in any event. Wolff v. McDonnell, supra at 563-567. Undoubtedly, implementation of a right to judicial review will involve costs to the courts, and perhaps to the Department of Correction, but that consideration cannot justify a failure to ensure fundamental fairness in disciplinary proceedings.
Contrary to the defendant’s argument, the availability of judicial review will not undercut the correctional goal of swift and sure punishment for misconduct in the prison setting. The forfeiturc of good time credits does not ordinarily result in swift punishment because its impact is not felt by the inmate until, but for the forfeiture, his period of incarceration would be at an end.
The defendant presents two further arguments, the first being that since the Department of Correction is not subject to § 14 of the State Administrative Procedure Act, G. L. c. 30A, providing for judicial review of the decisions of administrative agencies, see G. L. c. 30A, §§ 1 & 1A, the Legislature’s intent that there be no judicial review in the circumstances of this case is clear. We do not consider the exclusion of the
The defendant’s final argument with respect to the availability of judicial review is that prison cases should get no greater judicial review than do military cases and, the defendant says, military cases do not receive judicial review of the sufficiency of the evidence to warrant court-martial findings. We will assume, in the defendant’s favor, that judicial review is not available to determine the sufficiency of the evidence relied on by a military tribunal as the basis for its findings. The fact that Federal or State court review is unavailable in the military context, however, is not persuasive. No contention has been made that adequate review is not available within the system of military courts created by Congress.
The trial judge reviewed the evidence to determine whether there was some evidence which, if believed, would rationally permit the board’s findings.
5
He concluded that such evidence had not been produced. We agree. The evidence, viewed as favorably to the defendant as logic will permit, demonstrates only that the plaintiffs, in the company of a third undisclosed inmate, were the only inmates seen by the guard in the fenced area with the inmate who had been beaten, and that they fled the scene when the guard appeared. Of course, evidence of consciousness of guilt, together with other sufficiently proba
Judgments affirmed.
Notes
The complaints are entitled “writ of habeas corpus ad testificandum.” The defendant does not challenge the form of the complaints. The actions should have been brought as civil actions in the nature of certiorari pursuant to G. L. c. 249, § 4. See
Boston Edison Co.
v.
Selectmen of Concord,
The plaintiffs’ arguments are based solely on the United States Constitution. They make no claims under the Massachusetts Constitution, nor do they rely on any rules and regulations promulgated by the Department of Correction as supporting their right to judicial review of the adequacy of the evidence to warrant the disciplinary board’s findings.
There is no statutory right of review. Decisions of the Department of Correction are not reviewable under G. L. c. 30A, § 14. See G. L. c. 30A,
The plaintiffs were charged with the following disciplinary offenses which are found in 103 Code Mass. Regs. § 430.22 (18), (19), and (31) (1978):
“(18) Fighting with, assaulting or threatening another person with any offense against his person or property.
“(19) Use of obscene, abusive, or threatening language, action or gesture to any inmate or staff member.
“(31) Attempting to commit any of the above offenses, aiding another person to commit any of the above offenses, making plans to commit any of the above offenses, shall be considered the same as commission of the offense itself.”
An alternative standard of review would be whether the board’s findings were supported by “substantial evidence.” Substantial evidence is “such evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion,” taking “into account whatever in the record fairly detracts from its weight.”
New Boston Garden Corp.
v.
Assessors of Boston,
