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This chapter delves into important civil litigation in corrections, covering habeas corpus, torts, and Section 1983, exploring prisoners' rights and legal remedies available.
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Part I Sources of Corrections Law
Chapter 3 - Habeas, Torts, and Section 1983 Introduction: Most correctional litigation is in the civil area • Area is often referred to as “prisoners’ rights”
Chapter Outline • Habeas Corpus • Torts • Section (§) 1983
Habeas Corpus (Latin term for “have the body”) • Article 1, § 9, U.S. Constitution specifically provides for this • “(T)he writ of habeas corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in Cases of Rebellion or Invasion the public Safety may require it”
Habeas corpus: cont’d • Prisoner files a petition, asking for relief – focus must be legality of imprisonment (or detention) • Relief sought is release from confinement • Distinguished from complaint • Petition is filed by the individual (petitioner) against the entity holding the person in confinement (in the prison, this is the Warden - respondent)
Habeas Corpus: cont’d • In habeas action, court will order respondent to show cause why a writ of habeas corpus should not issue (why petitioner should not be released) • Response by respondent ordinarily due within a short time, such as 10 days
Habeas Corpus: cont’d • Types of habeas corpus: • Habeas corpus ad subjiciendum – intended to review the legality of confinement – this is the most common within corrections • Habeas corpus ad prosequendum – orders the custodian to bring the party to court for purposes of prosecution • Habeas corpus ad testificandum – orders the custodian to bring the party to court to give evidence in a court case
Habeas Corpus: cont’d • Habeas action ordinarily is filed in the court where the person is being held • Actions treated as an emergency – after all, challenging legality of confinement • Following response by respondent, court may dismiss petition, hold a hearing for more information, or grant the writ • Habeas actions do not test guilt or innocence of person in custody, nor are damages awarded
Habeas Corpus: cont’d • Provisions for inmates to seek habeas corpus relief in Title 28, United States Code, sections 2241 and 2254. • Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act (AEDPA) – amended habeas corpus requirements, placing limitations on the use of habeas corpus
Habeas Corpus: cont’d • AEDPA: • Requires exhaustion of state remedies prior to filing • Allows federal courts to dismiss application for a writ of habeas corpus, even if no exhaustion, upon finding the writ has no merit • Establishes a one-year period of limitation for federal prisoner to file a motion attacking the legality of his sentence
Torts • A private wrong or injury for which a court will provide a remedy in the form of damages • Always involves a violation of some duty owed to the person injured, other than by agreement of the parties (contract)
Torts: cont’d • Three elements: • A legal duty that is owed by the defendant to the plaintiff • A breach of that duty • Injury (damages) as a proximate cause of the breach of duty
Torts: cont’d • Two types of torts • Intentional torts – person intends to do what the law has said to be wrong • Negligent torts – person was careless, failed to exercise the degree of care required by the law in doing the act(s) that are otherwise permissible
Torts: cont’d • Damages that may be recovered in a civil tort suit – limited to an award of money • Compensatory – cover actual monetary loss, such as for medical, personal injury, and lost wages • Punitive – to punish the defendant for severely bad conduct – this requires a showing of gross negligence (recklessness) or willful negligence (Example: driving while drunk) • Nominal – acknowledgement that tort has been done, but judge or jury believes only a minimal monetary award is appropriate
Torts: cont’d • In the prison environment, the most common torts involve • The negligent loss of someone else’s property • Medical malpractice • (To a lesser degree) assault and battery
Section 1983 • Often referred to as constitutional torts • Involve injury or harm suffered by a person because of wrongful actions by another • Refer to injuries caused by a violation of rights guaranteed by the Constitution
Section 1983: cont’d • Federal Civil Rights Act of 1871, codified in Title 42, United States Code, section 1983 (42 USC 1983) • Since 1960s, most frequently used type of lawsuit in correctional litigation
Section 1983: cont’d • Lawsuits under this section allege that state official, acting under the color of state law, has deprived prisoner(s) of their constitutional rights • State prisoners have brought actions in federal courts, believing them to be more favorably disposed to prisoner claims than state courts
Section 1983: cont’d • Section 1983 suits allow both damages and injunctive relief • Two main types of injunctive relief • Restrictive injunctions – defendants are legally ordered to stop what they are doing (an example: stop putting people into an inadequately heated segregation unit) • Mandatory injunctions – defendants are required to do certain things (an example: put adequate heat into the segregation unit)
Section 1983: cont’d • However, prisoner’s claim for damages may not be tried or examined under § 1983 if a judgment for the plaintiff would imply that the conviction or sentence was invalid, unless such conviction or sentence had already been invalidated (Heck v. Humphrey; Edwards v. Balisok) • In such instances, habeas corpus would be the appropriate judicial remedy
Section 1983: cont’d • Under 42 USC § 1983: • Person can bring suit if she claims her constitutional rights were violated • Suit can be brought against the offending official, not against the state or correctional agency • Person sued must be operating under color of state law • Section 1983 defendants are always state employees or officials, or persons functioning as if they were working for the state
Section 1983: cont’d • Section 1983 covers only state officials • However, Supreme Court, in Bivens v. Six Unknown Federal Narcotics Agents, held federal officials could be sued for violating a person’s constitutional rights
Section 1983: cont’d • Bivens involved federal narcotics agents, acting under claim of federal authority, entering petitioner’s apartment without a warrant • They searched the apartment and arrested petitioner on narcotics charge • There was no probable cause • Petitioner sued, alleging unlawful arrest, and asking for monetary damages from each of the agents
Section 1983: cont’d • Lower courts ruled for the government, stating the complaint failed to state a federal cause of action • Supreme Court reversed – said that the actions of the federal agents in violation of the Fourth Amendment’s bar against unreasonable search and seizure was a federally protected interest
Section 1983: cont’d • Bivens allows persons to sue for constitutional civil rights violations against federal officials in the same manner as Congress allows such suits against state officials in Section 1983
Section 1983: cont’d • A significant aspect of both § 1983 and Bivens • A judgment for the inmate may mean the individual official defendant must pay any monetary award from her own financial resources • Government may still represent the defendant • If the person is held liable, she may receive indemnification from the government • These, however, are not automatic occurrences