The plaintiff sought a declaration that G. L. c. 127, §§ 83A, 83B, and 129C (1984 ed.), violated art. 1 of the Declaration of Rights of the Massachusetts Constitution, as amended by art. 106 of the Amendments (Equal Rights Amendment). A Superior Court judge ruled that G. L. c. 127, §§ 83A and 83B, were unconstitutional on their face, but upheld the constitutionality of G. L. c. 127, § 129C. The judge also allowed the plaintiff’s motion for attorney’s fees and costs, but did not allow the full amount of fees and costs sought by the plaintiff. The defendant appealed and the plaintiff cross appealed. We transferred the case from the Appeals Court on our own motion. We reverse and order dismissal because the case is moot.
When the plaintiff brought this action, she was serving two concurrent three-to-five-year prison sentences at the Massachusetts Correctional Institution at Framingham (MCI-Framing-ham). The plaintiff requested a transfer to the forestry prison camp at the Massachusetts Correctional Institution at Plymouth (MCI-Plymouth), but her request was denied because MCI-Plymouth is an all-male facility. Since there are no prison camps in Massachusetts for female prisoners, the plaintiff had no opportunity to earn the two and one-half days of extra good time credits to which prison camp inmates are entitled under G. L. c. 127, § 129C. The plaintiff’s sentence was reduced to time served, and she was released after serving approximately eight months. The defendants moved for summary judgment, but the judge rejected the defendants’ claim that the case was moot, concluding that the issues were “capable of repetition yet evading review.” After ruling that G. L. c. 127, §§ 83A and 83B, unconstitutionally discriminated on the basis of sex,
The judge erred in denying the defendants’ motion for summary judgment because the case became moot when the plaintiff was released from prison. Courts generally “decline to hear moot cases because (a) only factually concrete disputes are capable of resolution through the adversary process, (b) it is feared that the parties will not adequately represent positions in which they no longer have a personal stake, (c) the adjudication of hypothetical disputes would encroach on the legislative domain, and (d) judicial economy requires that insubstantial controversies not be litigated.”
Lockhart
v.
Attorney Gen.,
This was not a dispute where the life expectancy was so short that the case was “capable of repetition, yet evading review.”
Id.
at 783. In
Lockhart,
we said that a judge should not decide a moot issue if it has become a theoretical dispute, if it is not apt to evade review should it arise again, or if it is not likely to recur.
Id.
at 783-784. In the present case, the dispute became theoretical when the plaintiff was released from prison because the plaintiff was the only individual interested in the outcome of this litigation. The judge’s findings indicate that no other female prisoner has ever requested a transfer to a prison camp. In addition, there is no reason to conclude that a similar case would evade review if it arises. The judge took judicial notice of the fact that MCI-Framingham inmates typically are incarcerated less than two years. Even so, the issue presented here could easily be resolved within two years “if parties show even minimal resoluteness in carrying on litigation.”
See Blake
v.
Massachusetts Parole Bd.,
We have been particularly reluctant to decide an issue in a moot case where that issue is a constitutional one. Lockhart, supra at 784. In keeping with this practice, we decline to decide the issue raised here. To do otherwise would violate the principles of judicial restraint which require us to refrain from unnecessarily deciding constitutional questions. Id.
The judge awarded the plaintiff attorney’s fees and costs based on G. L. c. 231 A, § 7 (1984 ed.). On appeal, the plaintiff offers several additional theories which, she claims, support the judge’s order. We reverse the judge’s order, and we also reject the plaintiff’s arguments that she was entitled to attorney’s fees and costs.
The Commissioner of Correction and the Superintendent of MCI-Framingham were sued only in their official capacities. Rule 54 (d) of the Massachusetts Rules of Civil Procedure,
So ordered.
