A state prisoner seeks federal habeas corpus, claiming to have been deprived of liberty within the meaning of the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment by being placed in disciplinary segregation. The principal though not only question presented by his appеal from the dismissal of his claim is whether, in determining whether such a deprivation has occurred, the district court must compare conditions in disciplinary segregation with those in which the general population of the prison is confined or with those in which the general population of any prison in the state is confined.
The question arose less frequently before
Sandin v. Conner,
Our prisoner, Wagner, was ordered to serve a year in disciplinary segregation in the Wabash Valley Correctional Institution, in Indiana, as punishment for committing a battery. He seeks federal habeas corpus, сlaiming that he had been denied due process of law in the proceeding that resulted in this sanction. The district judge dismissed the suit, citing Sandin, but without elaboration. The record is limited to the complaint, and contains no information about the relation between the conditions of disciplinary segrеgation in the Wabash Valley Correctional Institution and the conditions in which the rest of the prison’s population is confined, the conditions in which prisoners in administrative ■ segregation or protective custody are confined in that prison, or the conditions of confinement of inmates of other Indiana prisons. The state has told us that Indiana has some “Level V” prisons in which the entire inmate population is confined to its cells for 23 hours of the day. It has not told us whether the Wabash Valley Correctional Institution is one of these, but in its brief in another habeas corpus cаse brought by Wagner (a case that arose out of another battery, resulted in an identical punishment, and is being decided in an unpublished opinion issued today), it tells us that the Wabash Valley Correctional Institution has both Level III and Level IV facilities. But it does not tell us how restrictive these are, оr which one Wagner is confined in, or how the conditions in the disciplinary unit compare with conditions either of the general population of either facility or of those prisoners who are in nondisciplinary forms of segregation. So, at least if the proper comparison is intraprison rather than interprison (an important qualification, and one that we shall relax shortly), the case has to be remanded. It is true that the complaint does not allege that the conditions of disciplinary segregation at Wabash are “atypical,” but it does allege a “loss of liberty,” and no more is required to satisfy the requirements of notice pleading under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
We want to give the district court as much guidance as possible, both for this and future cases. So we begin by noting that if Wabash were a Level V prison, it would be highly unlikely that Wagnеr could satisfy
Sandin’s
test. The reason is not that disciplinary segregation could not in principle be made more restrictive than even the virtuaEy solitary confinement that one finds in Level V prisons and their counterparts in other states and in the federal prison system; for even maximum-security prisоns have segregation units. E.g.,
Gometz v. Henman,
Since Wabash is not a Level V prison, it is more likely that confinement in disciplinary segregation constituted a substantial incremental deprivation of Wagner’s Eberty. More likely, but not very likely, because the prison is Ekely to provide facEities for, and
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create conditions of, administrative segregation and protective custody that are virtually identical to the facilities for and conditions of disciplinary segregation, and no more is necessary under
Sandin
to deny the рrisoner’s claim. The manual of policies and procedures issued by the Indiana Department of Corrections indicates that the facilities and conditions are indeed the same in disciplinary and nondisciplinary segregation except that prisoners in administrative segregation or protective custody may be permitted “contact” visits and are entitled to make phone calls to persons other than lawyers. The denial of so limited an increment of privileges would be unlikely to effect a
significant
deprivation of liberty, but we hesitate to base decisiоn on a procedures manual that may not be accurate or up to date. Cf.
Brooks v. DiFasi,
We add for completeness that if Wabash were one of those “country club” prisons in which the prisoners enjoy a great deal of freedom, spending little time in their cells or even in the prison buildings, confinement for a protracted period in what amounts to solitary confinement would indeed work an atypical and significant deprivation of Wagner’s liberty. See, e.g.,
Greaves v. New York,
We do not think that comparison can be limited to conditions in the same prison, unless it’s the state’s most secure one.
Griffin v. Vaughn,
When
Sandin
is interpreted in light of the transfer cases, it becomes apparent that the right to litigate disciplinary confinements has become vanishingly small. Cf.
Beverati v. Smith,
This is a harsh result and perhaps the Court did not actually intend it; it is not discussed in the
Sandin
opinion; the Court remarked that Conner was an inmate of a maximum-security prison in which even nonsegregated inmates were kept in their cells between 12 and 16 hours a day,
A subsidiary issue on which authoritative guidance would also be most welcome is whether the comparison group can be confined to a single state. Indiana points out that it frequently swaps prisoners with other states pursuant to an interstate compact to which it is a party. Ind.Code § 11-12-8-2; see also Criminal Justice Institute, Inc., supra, at 46 (1997 ed.). It makes a good deal of sense to view the entire federal and state jail and prison system as a single system in order to balance thе total prisoner load now well in excess of one million people. And this is how the prison authorities do view it. But this means that a prisoner in Indiana could well end up serving a portion of his sentence in another state, and that state might have even more restrictive conditions than Indiаna. The logic of Sandin implies that the conditions of Wagner’s disciplinary segregation are atypical only if no prison in the United States to which he might be transferred for nondisciplinary reasons is more restrictive. But we need not decide whether logic should be pressed so far. The likelihood that another state has more restrictive conditions than Indiana’s Level Y prisons is slight, given what would appear to *1177 be the small space between Level V as described to us by the state and the prohibitions of the Eighth Amendment.
Although it is extremely unlikely that Wagner can establish that the conditions of his disciplinary segregation are significantly more restrictive than conditions of confinement elsewhere within the Indiana prison system, the absence of any factual record in the district court on the issue makes it inappropriate for us to affirm out of hand. The judgment dismissing Wagner’s suit is therefore vacated and the ease remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Vacated And Remanded, With Directions.
