In 1993, James Higgason filed a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 complaint against Indiana prison officials, alleging that he was denied due process when he was transferred to the D-Cellhouse (DCH) at Indiana State Prison. The district court dismissed Higgason’s claims for injunc-tive relief as moot because he had been transferred to a different prison, and granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment, finding no liberty interest in remaining in the general population. Higgason appeals. We affirm in part, vacate and remand in part, and reverse and remand in part.
We review
de novo
a grant of summary judgment.
Green v. Shalala,
Higgason’s principal claim is that Indiana has created a liberty interest with respect to segregation from the general prison population. At the time of the district court’s judgment, courts would investigate the language
*809
of relevant laws, regulations, or policies, in order to determine whether the state had created a liberty interest protected by procedural due process. If the language was of a mandatory character, cabining the prison official’s discretion, then the prisoner had a liberty interest. If the language was discretionary, no liberty interest would be found.
Hewitt v. Helms,
This past June, subsequent to the filing of this appeal, the Supreme Court changed the method of determining a prisoner’s liberty interest, in
Sandin v. Conner,
— U.S. -,
Higgason contends that DCH residents were segregated from the general prison population, and that the east and west sides of DCH were segregated from each other. According to Higgason, DCH residents generally had to stay in the range of their cell, and they could never enter another prisoner’s cell. DCH was “regularly” put on lockdown status, “for almost every minor disruptive or violent incident,” more frequently and for longer periods of time than the general prison population, and more frequently even than disciplinary segregation.
The Due Process Clause itself does not create a right for prisoners to leave the area around their cells, to visit other prisoners, or not to be subjected to lockdowns; only the Eighth Amendment limits these restrictions.
Smith v. Shettle,
Higgason also argues that DCH residents are denied access to various kinds of privileges, such as social and rehabilitative activities. But, as
Sandin
emphasized, “ ‘[l]awful incarceration brings about the necessary withdrawal or limitation of many privileges and rights, a retraction justified by the considerations underlying our penal system.’ ”
Sandin,
— U.S. at -,
One claim concerning loss of privileges deserves elaboration. Higgason argues that the denial of educational programs deprived him of the opportunity to earn good time credits under Ind.Code § 35-50-6-3.3, and thus deprived him of a liberty interest.
Wolff v. McDonnell,
Higgason’s next assertion is that of the 350 prisoners in DCH, only 36 are permitted to go to the law library for one hour every week, and those who go are not allowed to check out or bring back legal materials from the law library to their cells. Higgason relies on
Bounds v. Smith,
The Court in
Sandin
also noted that even if a prisoner does not have a state-created liberty interest, the prisoner still “re-taints] other protection from arbitrary state action even within the expected conditions of confinement. [The prisoner] may invoke the First and Eighth Amendments and the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment where appropriate.”
Sandin,
— U.S. at -n. 11,
Thus far, Higgason has no claims that survive summary judgment. However, Higgason also contends that he was trans-ferred into DCH because he was a prisoner who filed lawsuits on his own, and because he assisted other prisoners in filing lawsuits. If a prisoner is transferred for exercising his own right of access to the courts, or for assisting others in exercising their right of access to the courts, he has a claim under § 1983.
Matzker v. Herr,
The district court held that Higgason’s transfer from Indiana State Prison (ISP), where DCH was located, to Wabash Valley Correctional Institute (WVCI) rendered his claims for injunctive relief moot. The court rejected Higgason’s argument that the actions of the defendants were capable of repetition but avoiding review. Being a question of law, we review
de novo
the dismissal of a claim as moot.
See Sanders v. Venture Stores, Inc.,
The district court’s judgment is Reversed and REMANDED with respect to Higgason’s claim for damages concerning his contentions that he was transferred into or kept in DCH because he filed legal claims for himself or for others. The district court’s judgment with respect to Higgason’s claims for declaratory relief is Vaoated and Remanded with instructions to dismiss those claims as moot. In all other respects, the district court’s judgment is Affirmed. The ease is Remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. The defendants' brief, filed on July 12, 1995, addressed the effect of Sandin on this case. Hig-gason's original brief was filed before Sandin was decided; he failed to file a reply brief.
. Higgason sought class action treatment for all of his claims, but the judge denied class action status. Higgason does not argue on appeal against the denial of class action status.
. The district court discussed only whether Hig-gason had a liberty interest in avoiding administrative segregation, and evidently overlooked Higgason’s claim that he was transferred because of his being a “jailhouse lawyer”. Higga-son adequately presented the latter claim to the district court: he appears to specifically include himself among "jailhouse lawyers" who were transferred to DCH "as a means to delay and/or deny access to the court,” (R.5 at 5-E to 5-F), and states in his response to the summary judgment motion that "Higgason and other offenders have been placed in [DCH] because they have sued employees of the [Indiana State Prison] and have assisted other prisoners in pursuing their constitutional right for redress” (R. 66 at 9-10; see also R. 68 at 28, 29, 32-33). We are concerned by the possibility that Higgason "sandbagged” the appellees by not referring to this claim (even generally) in the statement of issues section of his brief on appeal, and that this failure on Higgason’s part could explain why the appellees did not address the claim in their own brief. See Fed.R.App.P. 28(a)(3). However, Higgason does refer to this claim both in his statement of facts (Appellant's Br. at 5) and the summary of argument section (Id. at 12), and presents an argument on this claim in the argument section (Id. at 33, 36). Especially given Higgason’s pro se status, we feel that Higgason has raised this claim on appeal sufficiently to alert the appellees to it.
