BACKGROUND
Richard Sisk and James Piatt, Arizona state prisoners each serving sentences of twenty-five years to life, appeal pro se the district court’s order staying their 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action pending exhaustion of state remedies. Following a prison disciplinary hearing in which they were found guilty of drug use, Sisk and Piatt filed a section 1983 claim alleging that the actions of the State defendants throughout the disciplinary process violated due process and equal protection. Sisk and Piatt sought transfer back from high security to medium security, compensatory and punitive damages for being transferred to high security, and restoration of forfeited good time credits. The district court construed Sisk’s and Piatt’s complaint as a habeas petition and stayed the action pending exhaustion of state remedies. We have jurisdiction to review an order staying a civil rights action under the collateral order exception to the final judgment rule set forth in
Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp.,
DISCUSSION
Generally, when a state prisoner challenges the fact or duration of his confinement and seeks a determination that he is entitled to immediate release from imprisonment, his sole federal remedy is a writ of habeas corpus.
Preiser v. Rodriquez,
A prisoner may bring a section 1983 action to challenge disciplinary procedures having only a “speculative or incidental effect” on the length of his sentence.
Clutchette v. Procunier,
In
Offet v. Solem,
In the case at hand, Sisk and Piatt alleged that they each lost almost two years worth of good time credits, received fifteen days in isolation; suffered sixty days loss of privileges; were placed in a more restrictive parole status; and were reclassified from medium custody to maximum. In addition to restoration of their good time credits, they sought transfer back to medium security, and compensatory and punitive damages.
Significant sanctions other than the loss of good time credits were imposed in this case. Simply because the disciplinary action also involved a revocation of good time, should not prevent the prisoners from pursuing in federal court a remedy made available by Congress for deprivation of federal rights by the state. The Court in
Preiser
was careful to note that section 1983 was available to a prisoner “making a challenge to the conditions of his prison life.”
Perhaps more significant is the fact that relief sought from the federal court will not directly impact the sentences served by Sisk and Piatt. While the Governor may commute a prisoner’s sentence,
see
Az. Rev.Stat. § 31-443, he may do so only upon recommendation by the Board of Pardons and Paroles. Az.Rev.Stat. § 31-402;
Arnold v. Arizona Bd. of Pardons and Paroles,
If the credits were restored, they could only be applied to a determinate sentence. In order for Sisk and Piatt to receive determinate sentences they must: 1) apply for commutation; 2) receive a favorable recommendation from the Board; and 3) the Governor must grant commutation. Only after that could the restored credits be applied to the sentences. Thus, we conclude Sisk’s and Piatt’s section 1983 challenge to the disciplinary procedures has only a “speculative and incidental effect” on the duration of their confinement. Each received substantial punishment for the alleged drug use. We do not view their challenge to these sanctions as “close to the core of habeas corpus in attacking the very duration of their physical confinement itself.”
The order of the district court staying Sisk’s and Piatt's section 1983 claim pending exhaustion of state remedies and the order denying the motion for reconsideration are
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
