45 Mass. App. Ct. 304 | Mass. App. Ct. | 1998
Acting on Robert Hutton’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus, a judge of the Superior Court determined that officials of the Department of Correction (department) and the parole board (board) had miscalculated his release date and ordered Hutton to be discharged from confinement. That calcula
1. Facts. There is no dispute about the material facts. On August 2, 1979, Hutton received a sentence of from eight to ten years in State prison. On December 11, 1979, he received three concurrent four- to five-year sentences to be served from and after the first sentence.
On April 26, 1983, Hutton was released on parole.
2. Differences as to how discharge date was to be calculated. As calculated by the State, Hutton’s discharge date would be January 13, 1990. What the department had done, based on its interpretation of G. L. c. 127, §§ 129, 133, and 149, and G. L. c. 279, § 8A, was to add up the unserved time in Hutton’s sentences and to credit him one day for each day successfully on parole. Hutton said the statutory scheme required that the
By the time the defendants’ motions for summary judgment in Hutton’s subsequent damages case were brought forward, we had decided Crooker v. Chairman of the Massachusetts Parole Bd., 38 Mass. App. Ct. 915 (1995). In that case the prisoner also was subject to an A sentence and a from and after set of concurrent B sentences. We concluded that “because [the prisoner] began to serve his B sentences when he was released on parole, he should receive day-for-day credit against both his sentences during the time he spent on parole.” 38 Mass. App. Ct. at 916. The decisive statute, the Crooker opinion said, was G. L. c. 279, § 8A, as added by St. 1924, c. 165, which provides:
“For the purpose only of determining the time of taking effect of a sentence which is ordered to take effect from and after the expiration of a previous sentence, such previous sentence shall be deemed to have expired when a prisoner serving such previous sentence shall have been released therefrom by parole or otherwise. Nothing in this section shall be construed to alter or control any provision of [§ 131 or § 149 of c. 127].”
Although that text leaves no doubt that “a from and after, sentence, ‘takes effect’ when a prisoner is released from an earlier sentence by parole,” Crooker v. Chairman of the Massachusetts Parole Bd., supra at 916, it is not self evident that it
3. Liability of the department and the board. An action for damages may be the most realistic and effective redress against lawless and abusive governmental action. Harlow v. Fitzgerald, 457 U.S. 800, 814 (1982). Reciprocally, public officials need to be guarded against baseless but, because of its cost, ruinous litigation lest those officials flinch in the discharge of their duties or shrink from taking them on at all. Ibid. The resolution of those competing interests has been that government officials are protected by a qualified immunity, i.e., they are immune from an action for civil damages unless the right the official has violated is a “clearly established statutory or constitutional right[] of which a reasonable person would have known.” Id. at 818. Anderson v. Creighton, 483 U.S. 635, 640 (1987). The clearly established right is not one discernible at a high level of abstraction, for example the right to equal protection of the laws, but must be a particularized right. “The contours of the right must be sufficiently clear that a reasonable official would understand that what he is doing violates that right. This is not to say that an official action is protected by qualified immunity unless the very action in question has previously been held unlawful, (citations omitted) but it is . to say that in the light of pre-existing law the unlawfulness must be apparent.” Anderson v. Creighton, supra. See Duarte v. Healy, 405 Mass. 43, 46-47 (1989); Martino v. Hogan, 37 Mass. App. Ct. 710, 718-719 (1994). Compare Breault v. Chairman of the Bd. of Fire Commrs. of Springfield, 401 Mass. 26, 33 (1987), cert, denied, 485 U.S. 906 (1988) (ministerial act); Dobos v. Driscoll, 404 Mass. 634, 646-650, cert, denied sub nom. Kehoe v. Dobos, 493 U.S. 850 (1989) (law very clearly established).
The defendants’ motions for summary judgment were correctly allowed and the judgment is affirmed.
So ordered.
Section 129 of c. 127 was repealed by St. 1993, c. 432, § 10. It was applicable during the times material to this case.
Plaintiff received further sentences on July 22, 1980, of three to five years for unlawful carrying of a firearm and assault with a dangerous weapon. Through unrelated procedures those sentences were commuted to terms in a house of correction; they play no role in this appeal.
He had received credit for time served while awaiting trial.
The time between April 25, 1988, and January 13, 1990, is obviously a great deal more than three and one-half months. Hutton’s calculation had not been right either. As recalculated by the proper method, his release date was toward the end of April, 1989 (the record does not tell the precise date). The judgment granting the writ of habeas corpus is dated August 16, 1989. Hutton was released August 18, 1989. There is no dispute that the excess confinement was approximately three and one-half months.
Hutton has not appealed from the denial of his claim under G. L. c. 258.