Plaintiff William Chavis, an inmate at the Menard Correctional Center, filed suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 seeking monetary damages, injunctive and declaratory relief against certain officials of the Illinois Department of Corrections who allegedly violated his Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment rights. The district court dismissed his complaint for failure to state a claim. Because we find that plaintiff stated both an Eighth Amendment claim and a Fourteenth Amendment due process claim, we reverse and remand for further proceedings.
I.
The facts alleged in plaintiff’s complaint are as follows. On September 28, 1976, correctional officer Robert H. Sipp was stabbed as he was escorting a group of residents, including Chavis, at the Stateville Correctional Center in Joliet, Illinois. In his Inmate Violation Report filed September 30,1976, Officer Sipp stated that he did not know his attacker. The report then states:
Chavis was standing there looking with his hands in his pockets. When someone said “Kill the son of a bitch,” inmate Chavis took his hands out of his pockets and moved toward me as if he was going to help the inmate. I broke and ran. There [were] other inmates moving with Chavis but [illegible]. I believe that inmate Chavis offered a further threat to [me] as I had already been [stabbed] twice by the inmate that attacked [me].
The Stateville Adjustment Committee held a hearing on the incident on October 2, 1976, after which Sipp’s ticket was dismissed as improperly written. 1 Captain J. Boles, a correctional officer named as a defendant in this action and a member of the Adjustment Committee, then wrote a second Inmate Violation Report, dated October 9, 1976, charging Chavis with “assaulting an employee.” The only other statement on this second report was: “Through investigation you have been identified as having stabbed Officer R. Sipp.” Chavis was served on October 10,1976 with Boles’ report and with a notice stating he had the right to appear at the hearing, present a defense and to call witnesses.
The Adjustment Committee, composed of defendants J. M. Check, Chairman, E. M. Camy, a State Correctional Counselor, and Captain T. Wheaton, a correctional officer, heard Boles’ charge against Chavis on October 12, 1976. Although Chavis did not present any witnesses, he did testify in his own behalf. He denied any involvement in the incident and informed the Committee of Sipp’s report indicating that he had not stabbed Sipp. Without telling Chavis about the information or witnesses relied on by Boles, the Committee found Chavis guilty and ordered him transferred to segregation, demoted to “C grade” and deprived of two years of statutory good time. The Committee’s written findings, in their entirety, were: “We recognize and consider the residentes statement^] however[,] we accept the reporting officer[’]s charges.” Chavis was then sent to segregation, where, he alleges, he was confined with four other men in a seven by five foot cell.
*1284 Chavis appealed the findings of the second Adjustment Committee to the State-ville Inquiry Board, which reported on November 1, 1976, that it “found no error in the processing of the disciplinary violation report ... and no basis for [Chavis’] grievance.” He then appealed to the Administrative Review Board of the Illinois Department of Corrections (hereinafter the “Review Board”). They met to consider Chavis’ appeal and to interview Chavis on February 4, 1977.
The Review Board members discussed the investigation of the stabbing incident with Assistant Warden Kapture, who provided them with a copy of the investigation report. This report, which was not provided to Chavis during the Adjustment Committee proceedings, contained the results of a polygraph examination administered to one of the residents providing information about the stabbing. The examination indicated that the resident was telling the truth when he identified another resident as having stabbed Officer Sipp. The Review Board concluded that the investigation report did not substantiate the allegations of Boles’ disciplinary report written on October 9, 1976. The Review Board therefore recommended that the disciplinary report be expunged from all institutional records, that Chavis be released from segregation and restored to grade, and that his two years of statutory good time be restored. Defendant Rowe, who was then Acting Director of the Department, ordered that these actions be taken, and further ordered that Chavis be transferred to Menard Correctional Center no later than March 31, 1977.
On September 26, 1977, Chavis filed a § 1983 pro se complaint alleging: (1) a denial of his right to confront his accuser and present evidence in his own behalf at the October 12, 1976 disciplinary hearing; (2) a denial of his Fourteenth Amendment due process right by not being given the investigation report relied on by the Adjustment Committee; (3) a denial of his Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment rights by defendants’ reliance on an investigation report which did not support their finding of guilty or their imposition of sanctions; (4) a denial of his Fourteenth Amendment due process rights in being transferred to Menard without being given a hearing or being informed of the reasons for the transfer; (5) a denial of his Eighth Amendment right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment in being confined for six months in a five by seven cell with four other men, without adequate bedding, lighting, food, toilet facilities, and without access to showers, yard, legal materials, medical and dental care, while he was appealing the Adjustment Committee’s finding of guilty. Chavis sought declaratory relief, a preliminary injunction ordering an immediate hearing on his transfer to Menard, $25,-000 in compensatory damages and $20,000 in punitive damages, against the defendants, respectively.
Defendants Boles, Check and Wheaton filed a Motion to Dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. The district court, by Order and Memorandum Opinion dated May 31,1978, granted the motion to dismiss in favor of all named defendants. It found that Chavis was not denied due process at his October 12, 1976 hearing. It further found that the Review Board’s action in vacating the Adjustment Committee’s finding of guilt mooted Chavis’ claim that the guilty verdict was not justified by substantial evidence. Furthermore, Chayis was not entitled to monetary relief for the time he spent in segregation, the court said, because he failed to allege bad faith by the correctional officers. Finally, the court held that he had no right, under either the Constitution or Illinois law, to a hearing prior to transfer from one state institution to another.
II. The Due Process Claims
A.
Three of Chavis’ four due process claims stem from his October 12, 1976 disciplinary
*1285
hearing: a denial of his right to confront his accuser and present evidence in his own behalf; a denial of his right to be given the investigatory report relied on by the Adjustment Committee; and a denial of his right to be punished only upon a finding of substantial evidence, and to be given written reasons for the punishment. Chavis seeks declaratory relief to the effect that defendants’ actions were an unconstitutional deprivation of his due process rights, and damages against the defendants Boles, Check, Camy and Wheaton, all of whom were members of the Adjustment Committee.
2
The district court, relying on
Wolff v. McDonnell,
We find that Chavis was accorded due process only to the extent that he was given proper written notice of the charges against him and offered the opportunity to present witnesses. Beyond this, however, the Adjustment Committee’s procedures did not meet the minimum due process standards required by Wolff.
1.
In his complaint, Chavis alleged that the Adjustment Committee’s failure to disclose to him the investigatory report deprived him of due process in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. This investigatory report contained statements by a witness to the incident which exculpated Chavis from stabbing Officer Sipp. Indeed, the statements so outweighed any other evidence pertaining to Chavis’ involvement in the incident that after the Review Board considered the report, it concluded that there was no evidence to substantiate the disciplinary charge against him.
If Chavis were being tried in a criminal prosecution, this allegation would present a claim based on
Brady v. Maryland,
If there is no reasonable doubt about guilt whether or not the additional evidence is considered, there is no justification for a new trial. On the other hand, if the verdict is already of questionable validity, additional evidence of relatively minor importance might be sufficient to create a reasonable doubt.
Id.
at 112-13,
The investigatory report at issue here meets the materiality standard as articulated by the Supreme Court in Agurs. Regardless of the standard of proof required for a finding of guilt in prison disciplinary proceedings, there was some doubt of Chavis’ guilt, based on Officer Sipp’s earlier report which stated that Chavis had his hands in his pockets during the incident. The other inmate’s statement, which indicated that someone other than Chavis stabbed Sipp, should have made Chavis’ guilt appear even more unlikely.
It can be argued that there is no
Brady
analogy because the fact-finder in this case,
*1286
the Committee, was given the report and could consider it in reaching its conclusion. After all, one of the aims of the
Brady
rule is to insure that the trier of fact considers
all
relevant evidence in reaching a conclusion as to guilt or innocence. But
Brady
is also based on the right of the defendant to prepare the best defense he can and bring to the court’s attention any evidence helpful to his case.
McDonald v. State of Illinois,
The reasons in favor of applying a Brady-type rule to prison disciplinary proceedings are obvious.
Wolff v. McDonnell,
however, requires consideration of whether imposing such a rule will adversely affect the state’s interests in maintaining institutional peace and security.
Turning now to the Brady situation, we see great importance in permitting the inmate to know of exculpatory evidence, and little reason to think that such disclosure would lead to prison disruption or danger. Conceivably there may be situations in which prison officials reasonably fear that disclosure of the entire report, certain names of other prisoners, or the like, may cause disruption or danger. At the complaint stage, however, there is no reason to presume that type of situation, nor any reason why at least the substance of the other inmate’s statement could not safely have been disclosed to Chavis.
In judging Chavis’ complaint, it appears that simple fair play required disclosure to him of the exculpatory material or its substance, and that failure to disclose resulted in a miscarriage of justice at the committee stage. We conclude that the complaint stated a due process claim in this respect.
2.
The Adjustment Committee violated another of Chavis’ due process rights by failing to provide Chavis with a written statement as to the evidence relied on and reasons for the disciplinary action.
Wolff v. McDonnell, supra
[T]he provision of a written record helps to insure that administrators, faced with possible scrutiny by state officials and the public, and perhaps even the courts, where fundamental constitutional rights may have been abridged, will act fairly. Without written records, the inmate will be at a severe disadvantage in propounding his own cause to or defending himself from others.
Id.
at 565,
This court, in discussing the
Wolff
requirement
for
a written statement, added that such a statement also protected the inmate’s substantive due process right not to be found guilty except by an appropriate quantum of evidence.
Aikens v. Lash,
That the Adjustment Committee’s statement was inadequate can be seen from the Review Board’s conclusion, after making detailed, written findings of fact, that the Adjustment Committee’s holding that Chavis was guilty of stabbing Officer Sipp was not substantiated by the facts. By this time, Chavis had spent five months in segregation. Had the Adjustment Committee made detailed findings to begin with, Chavis may never have been sent to segregation, or, the Inquiry Board may have been compelled to reverse the Committee’s decision upon its first review. We therefore hold that in failing to provide Chavis with a written statement giving facts relied on and reasons for the conclusions reached, defendants violated Chavis’ due process rights under Wolff, and also his right not to be found guilty except by an appropriate quantum of evidence.
3.
The district court held that Chavis’ due process claim was mooted by the Re- *1288 view Board’s vacation of that finding and its expungement from his record. It further stated that even if his claim for damages for the time he spent in segregation was not moot, he could not be awarded damages in this § 1988 action unless his complaint included the allegation that defendants acted in bad faith. It is true that the Review Board cleared Chavis’ record of any disabilities which would impair his opportunities for parole and other benefits. Nonetheless, we hold Chavis stated a live claim for damages against defendants, based on the time he spent in segregation, even though his complaint did not specifically allege defendants’ bad faith.
While defendants, as state prison officials, enjoy a qualified immunity from damages in § 1983 actions,
Procunier v. Navarette,
Under the rule of
Wood v. Strickland,
First of all, the due process right defendants violated by failing to provide Chavis with a written statement setting forth the facts relied on and the reasons for the conclusions reached was clearly established at the time of Chavis’ hearing. The Supreme Court mandated such a statement in
Wolff v. McDonnell,
decided in 1974, and this court had consistently enforced this requirement.
See Hayes I, supra,
The second prong of the test is met because defendants knew, or should have known of this right by the time of Chavis’ hearing in 1976. Indeed, Department of Corrections Regulations promulgated shortly after the
Wolff
decision provide that a prisoner be given a written statement of the evidence relied on and the reasons for the disciplinary action.
6
It is no defense for defendants to claim, two years after
Wolff
was decided, that they were unaware of this right, for we have previously charged prison officials with “be[ing] sensitive and alert to the protections afforded prisoners by the developing judicial scrutiny of prison conditions and practices.”
Little v. Walker,
Finally, given the regulations, and this court’s previous statements regarding the importance of a written statement setting out all the facts relied on and the reasons for the conclusions reached, defendants must have known that their meager statement did not satisfy the constitutional norm. The third prong of the
Wood v. Strickland
test is therefore fulfilled and defendants cannot claim immunity from damages for this due process violation.
See Mary and Crystal v. Ramsden,
On the other hand, we are unable to apply the three prong objective test to defendants’ failure to inform Chavis of the substance of the investigatory report containing exculpatory evidence because we cannot fairly say that the constitutional right to exculpatory evidence in a prison disciplinary proceeding was clearly established at the time of Chavis’ hearing. We come to this conclusion reluctantly because it seems to us that common sense alone should have told defendants that their failure to provide Chavis with the substance of this report was fundamentally unfair. Nevertheless, on remand to the district court, defendants must be given the opportunity to prove that they acted in “good-faith fulfillment of their responsibilities and within the bounds of reason under all the circumstances.”
Wood v. Strickland, supra,
B.
Chavis’ fourth due process claim stems from defendant Rowe’s order to transfer Chavis from Stateville to Menard. Defendant Rowe simply appended to his concurrence in the Review Board’s February 4, 1977 decision an crder transferring Chavis to Menard Correctional Center no later than March 31,1977. This order gave no reason for the transfer, nor did it state that Chavis would be given a hearing regarding the action. Chavis alleged that this transfer, which appeared to him to be for punitive reasons, violated minimal due process requirements because he was not given a transfer hearing and informed of the reasons for the transfer. He further alleged that the transfer interfered with his rehabilitation and jeopardized his parole opportunities. He sought injunctive relief ordering an immediate hearing on his transfer. The district court, relying on Meachura v.
Fano,
Meachum
v.
Fano
held that inmates have no liberty interest in remaining in any particular institution unless state law, practice or procedure conditions transfer on the occurrence of specified events, such as misconduct.
Id.
at 228,
In his complaint, Chavis alleged that his transfer may have been for punitive reasons because he was placed in segregation upon his arrival at Menard, although he was released shortly thereafter. This temporary assignment to segregation on arrival may well have been incidental to transfer rather than punitive. If Chavis wishes to pursue the claim that it was punitive, leave is given to amend his complaint on remand, for if he can establish that his transfer was disciplinary, he has stated a valid claim.
Durso v. Rowe,
III. The Eighth Amendment Claims
Chavis alleged that the conditions to which he was exposed during his nearly six months in segregation amounted to cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the Eighth Amendment. He alleged that while in segregation, he was confined to a cell measuring 5 feet by 7 feet, along with four other residents, and received inadequate bedding, light, toilet facilities, showers, access to legal materials, medical and dental care and food. He requested declaratory relief to the effect that such practices were unconstitutional, and damages. The district court appears to have overlooked this allegation in its Order and Memorandum Opinion dismissing Chavis’ complaint. 9
Confinement in a prison or in an isolation cell is a form of punishment subject to scrutiny under Eighth Amendment standards, which are made applicable to the
*1291
states by the Fourteenth Amendment.
Hutto v. Finney,
Chavis’ allegation that he was confined for six months with four other men in a cell measuring 5 feet by 7 feet states an Eighth Amendment transgression as such confinement, if true, shocks the general conscience. Courts have found conditions of overcrowding to be
per se
unconstitutional because the purpose of the prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment is to protect and safeguard a prison inmate from an environment where degeneration is probable and self-improvement unlikely due to conditions which inflict needless mental or physical suffering.
Battle v. Anderson,
Defendants argue that the overcrowding alleged by Chavis to have occurred during his time in segregation is not cruel and unusual because it was “temporary.” Defendants forget that Chavis was sentenced to an indefinite period in segregation and actually spent almost six months there before the Review Board ordered him released. Thus, the conditions alleged by Chavis are far more serious than those suffered by the plaintiff in
Haines v. Kerner,
Chavis states a further Eighth Amendment claim in his allegation that while he was in segregation, he received inadequate bedding, light, toilet facilities, showers, access to legal materials, medical and dental care and food. Defendants, relying on
Adams v. Pate,
The judgment of the district court is therefore reversed and the cause is remanded for proceedings consistent with this opinion. Circuit Rule 18 shall apply on remand.
Notes
. Chavis alleged in his complaint that he was found not guilty. The Adjustment Committee Summary dated October 2, 1976 states “DISMISSED. Ticket is improperly written.” The minutes of the meeting of the Administrative Review Board, Illinois Department of Corrections, dated February 4, 1977 state that Mr. Chavis was found “not guilty” by the Adjustment Committee.
. Chavis, in his supplemental brief to this court, agrees with the district court’s dismissal of these claims against defendant Rowe, the Director of the Illinois Department of Corrections, as there is no evidence of his personal involvement in the disciplinary hearing matter until his approval of its reversal by the Review Board.
See McKinnon v. Patterson,
.
Wolff v. McDonnell
sets forth the minimum due process requirements for prison disciplinary proceedings when the prisoner has been charged with serious misconduct which could result in loss of good time credits, punitive segregation, or which might also be punishable in state criminal proceedings.
Baxter v. Palmigiano, supra,
at 323,
.
Cf. United States v. Alberico,
. The statement also violates regulations of the Illinois Department of Corrections, adopted shortly after the Supreme Court’s decision in Wolff, which provide:
The resident must be given a written statement, signed by the Chairman, of the evidence relied upon by the majority of the committee and the specific disciplinary action taken, as well as the reasons for the disciplinary action. If personal or institutional safety is involved, this statement may properly exclude certain items of evidence, but the statement should then indicate the fact of the omission. The statement of decision should include, wherever appropriate, a short explanation of why information purporting to exonerate the resident was discounted, if it was discounted. It will not be sufficient for the committee’s decision to simply adopt and copy the exact wording of the Resident Information Report... .
State of Illinois Department of Corrections, Administrative Regulation No. 804, Section IIB(9), cited in
Burbank v. Twomey,
. See note 5, supra.
. In Hayes II, supra, this court upheld the district court’s finding that the Institutional Adjustment Committee could, in good faith, believe that their statement as to the facts relied on and reasons for conclusions reached in Hayes’ prison disciplinary proceeding met the Wolff v. McDonnell requirement. That situation is distinguishable from the present one because Hayes, unlike Chavis, was provided with a full transcript of the proceedings, including the summary of the investigator’s report. Hayes II, supra at 491-492.
. State of Illinois Department of Corrections, Administrative Regulation No. AR 819, Section II-B, reprinted in
Stringer v. Rowe,
. Chavis’ failure to name a particular defendant in connection with his Eighth Amendment allegation is no bar to this claim.
Maclin v. Paulson,
. In Haines v. Kerner, supra,.this court held that confinement in an eight by sixteen foot “isolation cell” for 15 days, with one other inmate for ten days, and three or four inmates for the last five days was not unconstitutional.
.
See Battle v. Anderson, supra
at 395, 401. While the Supreme Court has recently criticized that the practice of establishing a constitutional right to a minimum number of square feet per prisoner,
see Bell v. Wolfish,
. In Chapman, supra, plaintiff alleged that while in segregation, he suffered lack of exercise, lack of society with other inmates or family and friends, and lack of work or vocational training. Id. at 28. Plaintiff in Buise merely alleged that his room at the State Farm “would be almost like having an apartment in free society compared to what he had at the prison,” id. at 233, which this court said was sufficient for stating damages for being transferred to the prison.
