Thе plaintiff, Richard A. Kenney, an inmate at the Massachusetts Correctional Institution at Walpole (M.C.I., Walpole), brought this action in the Superior Court seeking damages and declaratory and injunctive relief against certain officials of the Department of Correction (department). In his pro se complaint Kenney claims thаt he was confined in the Departmental Segregation Unit (D.S.U.) in Block lOatM.C.I., Walpole, without being afforded the procedural safeguards required by the regulations of the department and the Federal and State Constitutions. He also contends that his right to due process of law was violated by the denial of his request to have certain witnеsses appear at his disciplinary hearing.
A judge in the Superior Court, after a hearing on the merits, vacated the findings of the prison’s disciplinary board (board) and ordered entry of judgment for Kenney. The judge also ordered that Kenney’s record be expunged of any reference to the offenses charged. The defendants appealed and we granted their application for direct appellate review. We affirm.
The facts which give rise to this case are as follows. On January 16, 1981, David Larrabee, an inmate at M.C.I., Walpole, was dragged into a cell and beaten. Two days later another inmate, Stephen M. Haynes, was stabbed during the showing of a movie at the prison. At one time, Larrabee accused Kenney of participating in the assault against him, but Haynes refused to identify his attacker. On March 19,1981, the Superintendent of M.C.I., Walpole (superintendent), ordered Kenney removed from the general prison population and placed him in a cell in the D.S.U. The judge found that Kenney was confined there under the same conditions as those inmates who had been transferred to the D.S.U. pursuant to a finding by the Commissioner of Correction (Commissioner) that their behavior posed a substantial threat to the residents, property, or operations of the institution.
2
The judge also found that Kenney was usually
On March 30, 1981, Kenney received two disciplinary reports charging him with assaulting both Larrabee and Haynes. 4 The board cоnducted a disciplinary hearing on the charges on May 28, 1981. 5 Kenney requested that Larrabee and Haynes be allowed to appear at the hearing as witnesses but the board denied his request, stating: “Board finds substantial risk. D.S.U. off limits to inmates other than those residing there. Board will accept offers of proof and/or affidavits.”
At the disciplinаry hearing, a correction officer testified that four reliable informants had told him that Kenney and two other inmates had committed the assaults on Larrabee and Haynes. Kenney submitted affidavits from Larrabee and Haynes
On appeal, the defendants contend that the superintendent’s initial confinement of Kenney in the D.S.U. was permissible because he was in “awaiting action” status. The defendants assert that as a general rule, as long as the superintendent complies with the procedural requirements of the department’s regulations governing awaiting action status, the superintendent may place inmates in the D.S.U. while they await action. With respect to Kenney’s claim that his request for witnesses at the disciplinary hearing was improperly denied, the defendants maintain that the board’s action was within its discretion.
First we consider whether Kennеy’s initial confinement in the D.S.U. was in violation of the regulations of the department.
6
The department has promulgated detailed regulations governing disciplinary actions in State correctional institutions, the relevant provisions of which are set out in the margin.
7
A
The department also has adopted a set of regulations gоverning segregation units.* ******
8
A related regulation defines an awaiting
A third set of regulations outlines the procedures involved in reclassifying an inmate to a higher custody status. 103 Code Mass. Regs. § 420.13 (1978). Thesе regulations provide for placement of an inmate in awaiting action status when there is an immediate threat to the health or safety of the inmate or others. 103 Code Mass. Regs. § 420.13(2)(b) (1978). The reclassification regulations do not specifically authorize placement of an inmate in awaiting action status in the D.S.U.
Administrative agency regulations promulgated pursuant to a legislative grant of power generally have the force of law.
Royce
v.
Commissioner of Correction,
In this case, in direсt contravention of the segregation unit regulations which govern transfers of inmates to the D.S.U., the superintendent placed Kenney in a D.S.U. cell for commission of specific disciplinary offenses before Kenney had been
Our decision in Royce v. Commissioner of Correction, supra, does not require a different result. In Royce, in order to determine whether the plaintiff had stated a claim (the case came to us on appeal from the dismissal of the complaint), we assumed on a limited record that the plaintiff could have been placed in the D.S.U. while he was awaiting action pursuant to the reclassification regulations. Id. at 429. We specifically stated in Royce that we did not decide whether the regulations provided for “any limitation of the superintendent’s discretion to designate ‘awaiting action’ areas.” Id. at 429 n.8. We agree with the judge’s conclusion that an inmate may be transferred (or placed) in the D.S.U. by the Commissioner only in compliance with the regulations. 103 Code Mass. Regs. § 420.13 (2)(b); § 421.07 (1978). The record of this case indicates that Kenney was placed in the D.S.U. without compliance with the governing regulations and therefore we conclude that his confinement in the D.S.U. in awaiting action status was contrary to law.
We turn next to Kenney’s claim that his due process rights were violated by the board’s denial of his request to call certain witnesses. Under Federal law, there is a limited right to call witnesses at prison disciplinary proceedings.
Wolff
v.
McDonnell,
The record in this case indicates that the board denied the request to call witnesses because the disciplinary hearing was held in the D.S.U. The board found that allowing inmates into the D.S.U. who were not D.S.U. residents created a “substantial risk.” We have determined, however, that Kenney’s initial placement in the D.S.U. was in violation of the regulations of the department. 10 It is therefore axiomatic that the defendants may not rely on Kenney’s illegal incarceration in the D.S.U. as the justification for the denial of his request to call witnesses. Also, the judge found that no applicablе regulation barred inmate witnesses from the D.S.U. area, and that the D.S.U. at M.C.I., Walpole had a secure visitation area in which the safety of witnesses could be assured. We hold, therefore, that the judge correctly ruled that the board’s denial of Kenney’s request to call witnesses violated his due process rights, as well as the regulatory requirements. 11
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
The department has promulgated regulations governing the procedures under which an inmate may be transferred to a D.S.U. See 103 Code Mass. Regs. § 421.07 (1978). The pertinent regulations are set out in notes 7 & 8, infra.
Kenney was permitted to have two one-hour “non-contact” visits each week (conducted in a room where the inmate and the visitor were separated by a wire screen). Weather permitting, he was allowed one hour of outdoor exercise three times a week. The exercise area was entirely enclosed by a chain link fence (top and sides) and measured approximately ten feet by thirty-five feet. Kenney was also allowed to shower twice a week. He was not permitted to have a radio or television in his cell but he was allowed to have three changes of clothing, three magazines, legal materials, correspondence, tobacco, and toiletries.
Kenney was charged with committing the following offenses: “(18) Fighting with, assaulting or threatening another person with any offense against his person or property. (31) Attempting to commit any of the above offenses, aiding another person to commit any of the above offenses, and making рlans to commit any of the above offenses shall be considered the same as commission of the offense itself.” 103 Code Mass. Regs. § 430.22 (18), (31) (1978).
The fifty-nine day interval between the issuance of the disciplinary reports on March 30,1981, and the hearing on May 28,1981, is attributable in part to the defendants and in part to Kenney. The hearing was originally schedulеd for April 17, 1981, but it was postponed by the defendants until April 29, 1981. Kenney’s attorney subsequently requested a continuance and the hearing was rescheduled to May 28, 1981.
We treat this action as one seeking declaratory relief.
Nelson
v.
Commissioner of Correction,
Title 103 Code Mass. Regs. § 430.19 (1978) was promulgated pursuant to G. L. c. 124, §§ 1
(b), (i), (q),
and G. L. c. 127, § 33. The regulation pro
“(2) The superintendent shall designate such person or persons as he deems appropriate to review the status of inmates housed in detention in awaiting action on a weekly basis. An inmate shall be released from detention when the reasons for his initial placement cease to exist or when his return to general рopulation no longer poses a serious threat to persons, property, or the security of the institution or when he is no longer in the status specified in any one of
Title 103 Code Mass. Regs. § 421.07, promulgated pursuant to G. L. c. 124, § 1 (b), (q), and G. L. c. 127, § 39, provides as follows: “(1) A resident may be transferred to a departmental segregation unit after a finding by the сommissioner that the record of the resident or other reliable information indicates that: (a) The resident poses a substantial threat to the safety of others; or (b) The resident poses a substantial threat of damaging or destroying property; or (c) The resident poses a substantial threat of interrupting the operation of thе state correctional facility if he is confined in the general population of any state correctional facility.
“(2) Notwithstanding any rule or regulation of the department to the contrary, a resident shall not be transferred to a departmental segregation unit for committing a specific punishable offense unless a disciplinary board has found him guilty of such specific offense and imposed a sanction pursuant to
“(3) Upon receipt of a request from a superintendent to the commissioner to transfer a resident to a departmental segregation unit, the rules set forth in
In their brief, the defendants argue that an inmatе may be placed or detained in the D.S.U. in awaiting action status consistent with the regulations governing segregation units because those regulations apply only to formal “transfers” to the D.S.U. by the Commissioner. See 103 Code Mass. Regs. § 420.07 (1978). The argument borders on the spurious and we reject it.
Our disposition of this case makes it unnecessary for us to аddress the other issues raised by the parties.
The defendants’ reliance on
Devaney
v.
Hall,
