RONALD L. REED, APPELLANT, V. ROBERT PARRATT ET AL., APPELLEES.
No. 42991.
Supreme Court of Nebraska
January 30, 1981
301 N.W.2d 343
Paul L. Douglas, Attorney General, and Linda A. Akers for appellees.
Heard before KRIVOSHA, C.J., BOSLAUGH, MCCOWN, CLINTON, BRODKEY, WHITE, and HASTINGS, JJ.
BOSLAUGH, J.
The petitionеr, Ronald L. Reed, escaped from the Lincoln Work Release Center on October 26, 1976. The facts relating to the escape are set out in State v. Reed, 205 Neb. 45, 286 N.W.2d 111 (1979), in which the conviction and sentence for the escape were affirmed.
On February 28, 1978, after a hearing before the Nebraska Penal Complex Adjustment Committee,
On May 8, 1978, the petitioner commenced this action in the District Court against the warden of the penitentiary, seeking a review of the decision of the disciplinary committee and a declaratory judgment that the respondents had violated the petitioner‘s constitutional rights and the rules and regulations of the Department of Correctional Servicеs. The petitioner also sought injunctive relief to restore his good time and expunge matters relating to his escape from the prison records. The petition alleged the District Court had jurisdiсtion of the action under “section 84-917 to 84-919 of Nebraska Revised Statutes, 1943.” The statute referred to is the Nebraska Administrative Procedure Act.
The respondents moved to dismiss the action on the grоund that the District Court had no jurisdiction of the subject matter of the action.
The trial court found that the petitioner had no right to relief under the Nebraska Administrative Procedure Act and dismissed the pеtition. The petitioner has appealed.
In 1976, the Legislature enacted a statute providing for disciplinary procedures in adult institutions administered by the Department of Correctional Services. See
The act provides that the department shall promulgate rules and regulations relating to disciplinary matters and grievance procedures.
It is a general principle that specific statutory provisions relating to a particular subject control over general provisions. Lentz v. Saunders, 199 Neb. 3, 255 N.W.2d 853 (1977).
The Administrative Procedure Act is a general act which prescribes procedures for proceedings before many state agencies. Generally, these proceedings involve the rights or privileges of members of the general public and are not related to the internal operation of an institution. Although there is general language in the Administrative Procedure Act upon which an argument may be based that the act is applicable in cases such as this, we do not find the argument persuasive.
It has been recognized that disciplinary procedures in penal institutions are summary in nature and the “full panoply of rights” due a defendant in a criminal prosecution are not applicable to a prison disciplinary proceeding. Only the minimum requirements of procedural due process appropriate for the circumstances must be obsеrved. Wolff v. McDonnell, 418 U.S. 539, 94 S. Ct. 2963, 41 L. Ed. 2d 935 (1974).
In the Wolff case, the U.S. Supreme Court further recognized that disciplinary proceedings are not adversary proceedings in the nature of a criminal trial and care must be taken to prevent such proceed-
Although there appears to be little precedent in this area, so far as we have been able to determine there is no case which has held that administrative prоcedure laws are applicable to prison disciplinary proceedings.
A recent text, Hermann & Haft, Prisoners’ Rights Sourcebook 248 (1973), states that no case has held the federal Administrative Procedure Act applicable to action taken by the federal Bureau of Prisons. In Lesser v. Humphrey, 89 F. Supp. 474 (M.D. Pa. 1950), the court held the Administrative Procedure Act was not applicable to a proceeding before the good time board at a federal correctional institution.
Although the District Court was correct in holding that the petitioner had no right to judicial review of the disciplinary proceeding under the Administrativе Procedure Act, it is not clear from the record that the petitioner had no right to declaratory judgment relief. Such relief, if available at all, would necessarily be limited in nature since suсh an action is a collateral attack upon the decision of the disciplinary committee and any issue concerning the fact of the escape was fully litigated in the criminal prosecution.
We reverse the judgment of the District Court and remand the cause for the limited purpose of determining if the petitioner has any right to declaratory judgment relief.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
WHITE, J., concurs in result.
KRIVOSHA, C.J., dissenting
I must respectfully dissеnt from the majority‘s opinion in its holding that the Nebraska Administrative Procedure Act, being
The majority suggests that while there is general language in the Administrative Procedure Act upon which an argument may be based that the act is applicаble, the majority does not find the argument persuasive. I find that the argument is not only persuasive but the result required by the clear language of the act. The State conceded during oral argument before this court that the Department of Correctional Services was a state agency and that the rules promulgated by the Department of Correctional Services involved in this aсtion had been filed with the Revisor of Regulations and Secretary of State, pursuant to
It seems clear beyond question that the order of the appeal board which found Reed guilty of escape and ordered that he lose all previously acquirеd good time and spend 6 months in the Nebraska Penal Complex Adjustment Center is a penalty and does, indeed, affect private rights.
The provisions of
While it may very well be that no court has heretofore required that provisions of the Administrative Procedure Act be made available to prisoners, it seems clear to me that our Legislature has so provided and this court cannot take it away. If the right of a prisoner to appeal from the action of the disciplinary review board to the court pursuant to the Administrative Procedure Act is to be denied, it must be done so by the Legislature in providing a specific exception to the Nebraska Administrative Procedure Act.
I would have held that the act applied; that the court had jurisdiction of the matter; and the inmate was entitled to a verbatim transcript of the proceedings before the prison disciplinary committee.
BRODKEY, J., joins in this dissent.
