Lee MOORMAN, Jr., Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
John A. THALACKER, sued as John Thalacker; Larry Brimeyer;
Thomas Luensman, sued as C/O Luensman; Jerome
Manternach, sued as Jerry Manternach,
Defendant-Appellants,
Charles Lee, Defendant,
Harold Wood, Defendant-Appellant,
Lee MOORMAN, Jr., Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
John A. THALACKER, sued as John Thalacker; Larry Brimeyer;
Thomas Luensman, sued as C/O Luensman; Jerome
Manternach, sued as Jerry Manternach;
Charles Lee; Harold Wood,
Defendant-Appellees.
Nos. 95-2245, 95-2297.
United States Court of Appeals,
Eighth Circuit.
Submitted Feb. 12, 1996.
Decided May 14, 1996.
Dоuglas S. Knott, Assistant Attorney General, Des Moines, Iowa, argued (R. Andrew Humphrey, on the brief), for appellant.
Philip Mears, Iowa City, Iowa, argued, for appellee.
Before BOWMAN, BEAM, and LOKEN, Circuit Judges.
BEAM, Circuit Judge.
Lee Moorman was disciplined after he was found to have violated prison regulations. The discipline included the loss of sixteen days of good time. He filed suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claiming that prison officials violated his rights to due process. The district court1 denied the officials qualified immunity and ruled in favor of Moorman. Moorman appeals the determination of damages and the prison officials appeal both the district court's denial of qualified immunity and its determination of liability on the merits. We reverse.
I. BACKGROUND
In 1984, Moorman was sentenced to twenty-five years in prison for an armed robbery which he committed using his father's .357 magnum handgun. In September 1989, a prison guard overheard an interchange between Moorman and a fellow inmate about obtaining handguns. Moorman, who was anticipating release in the near future, stated that he intended to obtain his father's gun again immediately upon his release from prison. Moorman also stated that if he could not persuade his father to give him the .357 magnum (which both inmates agreed was the most desirable model), he would go out and purchase one.
The guard filed a disciplinary report and Moorman was disciplined under prison rules 41 and 11. Rule 11 forbids inmates from engaging in conduct which is a felony under state or federal law. Rule 41, among оther things, forbids inmates from "attempt[ing] to commit any of the [offenses covered in Rule 11] or [being] in complicity with others who are committing or attempting to commit any of the [offenses covered by Rule 11]." Information Guide, Iowa State Men's Reformatory, pp. 10, 14 (June 1989). Thus, Moorman was disciplined for an "attempt" to possess a firearm as a сonvicted felon. His discipline consisted of the loss of 16 days good time, 15 days of the highest level of disciplinary detention, and 107 days in progressively less restricted disciplinary detention.2 Moorman was paroled on October 26, 1990, after serving six years of his sentence.
Moorman's state court postconviction action challenging the disсiplinary action was declared moot because he was paroled before it came to trial.3 He filed this section 1983 action in July 1991. The district court determined there was no evidence that Moorman had violated Rules 41 and 11. It therefore ruled that the prison officials had violated Moorman's due process rights when they disciplined him. The court found that Moorman was injured by the disciplinary detention and by the loss of wages incurred due to his transfer to a higher security institution. It awarded $3,602.55 in damages for those injuries.
Moorman, who was paroled within a year of the incident, also claimed that but for the discipline he would have been paroled sooner. He requested damages for the delay. The district court found that there was no credible evidence that Moorman's parole was delayed by the discipline, and that, in any case, the exchange for which Moorman was disciplined would have been proper grounds for such a delay. Therefore, the court found that Moorman had suffered no injury аnd refused to award any damages for the alleged delay. The district court did not consider or award any damages for the loss of good time.
Moorman appeals the court's damages award, claiming that he should have been compensated not just for the disciplinary segregation but also for the transfer from a minimum to a medium sеcurity institution and for the alleged delay in parole. The prison officials appeal the district court's ruling on the merits and its denial of their claim of qualified immunity.
II. DISCUSSION
A. Claims of the Prison Officials
The question of qualified immunity is an issue of law which we review de novo. White v. Holmes,
In Sandin, the Court explained that whether an inmate has a liberty interest protected by due process depends on the nature of the interest at stake and not just on the mandatory or precatory nature of the institutional procedures governing that interest. Id. at ---- - ----,
Sandin concluded that the inmate had no liberty interest in avoiding the disciplinary confinement in issue in that case because that confinement did not present an atypical and significant deprivation in relation to the ordinary incidents of prison life. Id. at ----,
While we are unsure whether Moorman's confinement was a dramatic departure from the ordinary incidents of prison life, we think not. Admittedly, his environment was disrupted by the transfer, but there is no liberty interest in assignment to any particular prison. See Meachum v. Fano,
Therefore, the only deprivation of which Moorman may complain is that of his good time credits. However, as Wolff v. McDonnell makes clear, good time credits alone are not liberty interests.
However, even assuming that Moorman has alleged the violation of a constitutional right, we find that the district court should have granted the officers qualified immunity.
The district court based its ruling on its determination that the "some evidence" rule had bеen violated, i.e., that there was no evidence that Moorman violated the rule in question. See Superintendent, Mass. Correctional Inst. v. Hill,
The proper analysis was not whether there was "some evidence" of a rules violation, which goes to whether there is a sufficient quantum of evidence for the disciplinary committee to find that the prisoner actually committed the conduct of which he accused. See Superintendent v. Hill,
Where there is no clearly established judicial interpretation to the contrary, we defer to prison officials' interpretation and application of their rules to the facts so long as that interpretation and application is not objectively unreasonable. See Henderson v. Baird,
The law of "attempt" is complex and fraught with intricacies and doctrinal divergences. Qualified immunity protects prison officials from liability for their objectively reasonable efforts to divine whether a course of conduct amounts to an "attempt," even should their answer be arguably wrоng. See Malley v. Briggs,
B. Claims of Moorman
Since the district court erred in denying the prison officials' claim of qualified immunity, we do not address Moorman's complaints as to the inadequacy of his damages award. Moorman's motion to strike the state's Hеck argument (supra n. 4) is denied.
III. CONCLUSION
Because the prison officials should have been granted qualified immunity, we reverse the judgment of the district court and remand with directions that judgment be entered in the officials' favor.
Notes
The case was tried before a magistrate with the parties' consent
Moorman was also transferred from a minimum security institution to a medium security institution as a result of the disciplinary report
Moorman's motion for summary judgment claiming issue preclusion, which was based on an eventual state court finding in favor of the other inmate, was correctly denied by the district court. As the district court pointed out, the two inmates played different roles, with Moorman being the main player. That ruling has not been appealed
According to the state, even if Moorman has alleged a violation of his constitutional rights, other recent Supreme Court decisions put into question whether he may vindicate the particular violation alleged through a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action. See Heck v. Humphrey, --- U.S. ----, ----,
The prison regulations define attempt as "when, with intent to commit an offense, the inmate engages in conduct which tends to effect the commission of such offense." Information Guide at 8
