Murphy v. Beauchamp ( 1994 )


Menu:
  • USCA1 Opinion









    October 18, 1994
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 93-2385

    ROBERT C. BEAUCHAMP,

    Petitioner, Appellee,

    v.

    PAUL MURPHY, THE SUPERINTENDENT OF THE
    OLD COLONY CORRECTIONAL CENTER,

    Respondent, Appellant.

    ____________________



    ERRATA SHEET
    ERRATA SHEET



    The opinion of this court issued on September 26, 1994, is
    amended as follows:

    On page 13, delete the first full paragraph and replace with the

    following paragraph:

    "In the state court proceeding, the Department of
    Correction also provided an affidavit from the chief of its
    fugitive apprehension unit making similar contentions; but
    this, too, was essentially a litigation document and did not
    suggest that Washburn had any personal involvement in making
    the decision to deny credit to Beauchamp. It is questionable
    whether either the arguments made in the state's brief or the
    Washburn affidavit amount to anything more than a kind of
    "post hoc rationale" that courts do not normally accept as a
    _________
    basis for appraising administrative action. NLRB v. Yeshiva
    ____ _______
    Univ., 444 U.S. 672, 675 n.22 (1980). In any event, neither
    _____
    document suggests any individualized attempt to target
    Beauchamp."

























    October 4, 1994 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    _______________

    No. 93-2385

    ROBERT C. BEAUCHAMP,

    Petitioner, Appellee,

    v.

    PAUL MURPHY, THE SUPERINTENDENT OF THE
    OLD COLONY CORRECTIONAL CENTER,

    Respondent, Appellant.

    ___________________

    ERRATA SHEET

    The opinion of this Court, issued on September 26, 1994, is
    amended as follows:

    On page 13, line 1 of footnote 2, continued from page 12, replace
    "context" with "contest".

    On page 17, second line from bottom, replace "But" with "By".

    On page 19, line 8 of second full paragraph, replace "does" with
    "do".





































    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 93-2385

    ROBERT C. BEAUCHAMP,

    Petitioner, Appellee,

    v.

    PAUL MURPHY, THE SUPERINTENDENT OF THE
    OLD COLONY CORRECTIONAL CENTER,

    Respondent, Appellant.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. A. David Mazzone, Senior U.S. District Judge]
    __________________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Selya, Circuit Judge,
    _____________
    Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge,
    ____________________
    and Boudin, Circuit Judge.
    _____________

    ____________________

    William J. Duensing, Assistant Attorney General, with whom Scott
    ___________________ _____
    Harshbarger, Attorney General, was on brief for appellant.
    ___________
    Joseph H. Zwicker with whom Massachusetts Correctional Legal
    __________________ __________________________________
    Services was on brief for appellee.
    ________


    ____________________

    September 26, 1994
    ____________________





















    BOUDIN, Circuit Judge. This appeal presents the
    ______________

    question whether Massachusetts was constitutionally obliged,

    under the circumstances of this case, to give an escaped

    convict credit against his Massachusetts sentence for time

    spent in an Illinois jail resisting extradition back to

    Massachusetts. The district court in a habeas corpus

    proceeding held that the Constitution required such a credit.

    We disagree, and reverse.

    The facts are straightforward. On February 23, 1973, a

    jury found Richard Beauchamp guilty of second degree murder

    in Massachusetts. He received a life sentence but, under

    Massachusetts law, was nevertheless eligible for parole after

    14 years. Scarcely a year later, on April 29, 1974,

    Beauchamp was released from prison on a 12-hour furlough. He

    fled from Massachusetts. Beauchamp thereafter lived "in

    various places under different names with false

    identification and largely by his wits and deception."

    United States ex rel. Beauchamp v. Elrod, 1987 WL 15164, *2
    ________________________________ _____

    (N.D. Ill. 1987).

    On July 6, 1981, Beauchamp was arrested on federal

    charges in California. Shortly thereafter, Massachusetts

    learned of the arrest and notified the federal authorities of

    the Commonwealth's desire to have Beauchamp returned to

    Massachusetts prison. After serving a nine-month sentence in

    California on federal charges, Beauchamp waived his



    -2-
    -2-















    objections to extradition to Illinois where federal mail

    fraud charges had been lodged against him. While there, he

    was convicted and sentenced to a brief term of imprisonment.

    After that sentence expired, he appeared on February 17,

    1983, in Illinois state court on an Illinois misdemeanor

    charge of deceptive practice.

    Illinois dismissed its misdemeanor charge on March 11,

    1983, anticipating Beauchamp's extradition to Massachusetts.

    In April the governor of Illinois issued a rendition warrant,

    but Beauchamp refused to waive extradition. Instead he

    brought a state habeas corpus action challenging his

    extradition on a variety of inventive grounds. The state

    habeas corpus petition was denied on November 10, 1983, but

    by an appeal and then a rehearing petition Beauchamp delayed

    a final disposition until November 1985. Beauchamp v. Elrod,
    _________ _____

    484 N.E.2d 817 (Ill. App. 1985).

    Beauchamp then began a federal habeas corpus proceeding.

    In Illinois, Beauchamp claimed that the Massachusetts murder

    had been committed at the CIA's behest and that Massachusetts

    prison officials had thereafter connived at Beauchamp's

    escape from Massachusetts prison. The district court held an

    evidentiary hearing but then denied relief, concluding that

    the facts alleged by Beauchamp would not in any event furnish

    a defense to extradition. United States ex rel. Beauchamp v.
    _______________________________

    Elrod, supra, 1987 WL 15164, *2.
    _____ _____



    -3-
    -3-















    On August 7, 1987, Beauchamp was finally returned to

    Massachusetts. He pleaded guilty to a separate charge of

    escape from prison, but no separate sentence was imposed.

    Beauchamp then began a campaign to obtain credit, against his

    Massachusetts second-degree murder sentence, for a four-year

    period (March 11, 1983, to August 7, 1987) that he had spent

    in the Illinois jail while resisting extradition to

    Massachusetts. Although credit would not reduce his formal

    sentence, which was for life imprisonment, credit would

    reduce the wait before Beauchamp was eligible for parole.

    The Massachusetts authorities were prepared to give

    Beauchamp credit for his very brief period in Illinois

    custody after his extradition challenges had failed so that

    Massachusetts was free to take him into custody. The

    authorities refused his request for any further credit, and

    Beauchamp then sought judicial review. The superior court

    granted Beauchamp's request for full credit but the Supreme

    Judicial Court reversed, holding that no credit was due for

    the time spent in Illinois resisting extradition.

    Commonwealth v. Beauchamp, 595 N.E.2d 307 (Mass. 1992).
    ____________ _________

    On October 1, 1993, Beauchamp commenced the present

    action for habeas corpus in the district court. 28 U.S.C.

    2254. In a thoughtful decision rendered on November 18,

    1993, the district court granted the writ, ordering the state

    to allow the 1,574 days' credit sought by Beauchamp. The



    -4-
    -4-















    court ruled that to deny the credit would unconstitutionally

    burden Beauchamp's right to contest extradition. In the

    alternate, the court held that denial of the credit was

    unconstitutional retaliation by the state.

    On this appeal, the Commonwealth first claims that

    Beauchamp did not adequately exhaust his state remedies. In

    the district court, as here, Beauchamp has invoked both due

    process and equal protection concepts. Due process underlay

    Beauchamp's argument that the Commonwealth has

    unconstitutionally burdened his right of access to the courts

    and impermissibly retaliated against him. The equal

    protection claims were of two kinds: first, that

    Massachusetts provides credit for time spent contesting

    extradition to some extradited persons but not to prison

    escapees; and second, that denial of such credit favors

    affluent fugitives over those who cannot make bail.

    In arguing a failure to exhaust state remedies, the

    Commonwealth singles out the equal protection claim that

    Massachusetts grants credit to some extradited persons and

    withholds it from others based on irrational criteria. Under

    Rose v. Lundy, 455 U.S. 509 (1982), Beauchamp's federal
    ____ _____

    petition may be dismissed if he failed to present to the

    state courts any of the federal claims now asserted. The
    ___

    district court must dismiss such "mixed petitions," "leaving

    the prisoner with the choice of returning to state court to



    -5-
    -5-















    exhaust his claims or of amending or resubmitting the habeas

    petition to present only exhausted claims to the district

    court." Id. at 510.
    ___

    In his brief to the Supreme Judicial Court, Beauchamp

    had a separate section devoted to "state and federal

    guaranties of due process," whose adequacy (for exhaustion

    purposes) the Commonwealth does not challenge, and a section

    on "federal equal protection," which makes the indigency

    argument briefly but adequately. The equal protection

    argument based on irrational classification was set forth in

    a prior section, under the heading "state constitution--equal
    _____

    protection," which begins with a reference to "the state

    guaranty of equal protection." As the last paragraph of this

    section--after the supposedly irrational classifications have

    been described--the brief concludes:

    Over and above state constitutional
    requirements governing by which branch
    and on what basis the rule proposed [by
    the Commonwealth denying credit] can be
    adopted, the rule violates state and
    Federal Constitutional constraints on
    how, why, and upon whom a denial of
    liberty can be imposed. These are the
    constraints of Federal equal protection
    and due process guaranties under both
    Constitutions.

    It is possible to read this final paragraph, as the

    district court apparently did, to be a federal equal-

    protection attack on the classifications just criticized at

    length in the same section of Beauchamp's brief. The more



    -6-
    -6-















    natural meaning of the paragraph may be to read it as a

    transition to the two sections that follow which, as

    mentioned above, address "federal equal protection" (where

    the indigency issue is discussed) and "state and federal

    guaranties of due process" (where the access to the courts

    issue is discussed).

    However this may be, we have no intention of dismissing

    the case under Rose v. Lundy. The substance of the
    ____ _____

    irrational classifications argument was amply explained in

    Beauchamp's state brief and his criticisms were not premised

    on any peculiarity of language in the Massachusetts

    Constitution or any unusual state court precedent. The

    Supreme Judicial Court can hardly have been misled merely

    because the reference to federal equal protection occurred at

    the end of the argument instead of the beginning. Had the

    caption of the argument read "federal and state constitution-

    -equal protection," the substance would have been exactly the

    same.

    Rose v. Lundy assures that state courts have the chance
    ____ _____

    to pass on federal constitutional issues before federal

    courts intrude on the state criminal process. Where the

    state court has not fairly been apprised of a constitutional

    argument, exhaustion is required. See Nadworney v. Fair, 872
    ___ _________ ____

    F.2d 1093 (1st Cir. 1989). But in this context "substance

    rather than form" is critical, 872 F.2d at 1101, and the



    -7-
    -7-















    Supreme Judicial Court would not have viewed the matter

    differently if the word "federal" had appeared in the heading

    ofthesection thatsetoutthe irrationalclassificationsargument.

    We turn, therefore, to the merits and begin with the

    district court's holding that the denial of credit to

    Beauchamp impermissibly forecloses or burdens the "right of

    access" to the courts. Undoubtedly, Beauchamp has a

    constitutional right of access to the courts, e.g., Bounds v.
    ____ ______

    Smith, 430 U.S. 817, 821 (1977), and if Illinois had barred
    _____

    Beauchamp from filing a federal habeas action to challenge

    his detention, serious constitutional concerns would arise.

    We will assume arguendo that the federal right of access
    ________

    included the state habeas proceeding as well.

    No one, however, prevented Beauchamp from filing his

    successive habeas actions in Illinois. Rather, the issue is

    whether Massachusetts' refusal to credit the time spent in

    this litigation is an unconstitutional burden upon
    ________________ ______

    Beauchamp's right of access. Here, the Supreme Court's

    decisions provide relatively little direct guidance. Burden

    issues, presenting the familiar problem of how much is too

    much, peculiarly depend on facts and context, and the Supreme

    Court has not had much to say about the relationship between

    extradition challenges and the refusal to credit time served

    in an out of state jail.





    -8-
    -8-















    Where burdens are laid upon the exercise of

    constitutional rights by prisoners, the Supreme Court's

    current approach is to give very substantial latitude to the

    state's judgment. E.g., Turner v. Safley, 482 U.S. 78
    ____ ______ ______

    (1987); compare Procunier v. Martin, 416 U.S. 396 (1974).
    _______ _________ ______

    But such cases differ because they involve the actual running

    of prisons and the most practical considerations of

    discipline, security, administrative feasibility and cost.

    While some of these concerns may apply in this case, they are

    greatly diluted when the issue is the calculation of a

    sentence, a task performed by an administrator with a pencil.

    If one looks for analogies to our own case, the closest

    ones in the Supreme Court appear to be two decisions, both of

    which concern burdens on litigation choices provided to the

    defendant. In United States v. Jackson, 390 U.S. 570 (1968),
    _____________ _______

    the Court held it unconstitutional to subject a kidnapper to

    a possible death penalty if, but only if, the defendant

    elected a jury trial. North Carolina v. Pearce, 395 U.S. 710
    ______________ ______

    (1969), with equal firmness, held that a defendant who

    chooses to appeal a conviction may, where successful, be

    given a higher sentence in a subsequent retrial. Jackson was
    _______

    plainly influenced by the enormity of the penalty, so that

    Pearce--where seven justices seemed unconcerned about
    ______

    deterring appeals--may be the more pertinent guidepost.





    -9-
    -9-















    Taking together Turner, Jackson and Pearce, the best we
    ______ _______ ______

    can say is that the burden on the opportunity to litigate

    cannot be unreasonable, and reasonableness largely turns upon

    the facts. With some emphases peculiar to prison regulation,

    Turner itself identifies pertinent criteria: whether the
    ______

    state's policy serves a valid governmental interest; the

    extent to which the prisoner is foreclosed or burdened in

    exercising his rights; and the presence or absence of

    reasonable alternatives for the government to achieve the

    same ends by other means without significant cost or

    impairment of the governmental interest at stake. 482 U.S.

    at 89-91.1

    In this case the governmental interest is patent:

    Massachusetts is entitled to shape its own sentences and,

    within very broad limits, is entitled to insist that a

    sentence of so many years means years served in a
    _____________________

    Massachusetts prison. E.g., Boutwell v. Nagle, 861 F.2d 1530
    ____________________ ____ ________ _____

    (11th Cir. 1988), cert. denied, 490 U.S. 1099 (1989); Pernell
    ____________ _______

    v. Rose, 486 F.2d 301 (6th Cir. 1973), cert. denied, 415 U.S.
    ____ ____________

    985 (1974). True, serving part of the sentence in Illinois

    may not be very different. But this is a practical matter on

    which views may vary. Further there is a symbolic importance


    ____________________

    1A fourth consideration mentioned in Turner--any ripple
    ______
    effect of the remedy sought upon the correctional institution
    and other inmates--was linked peculiarly to prison operations
    and the special need for deference to corrections officials.
    Id. at 90.
    ___

    -10-
    -10-















    to the state's ability, as a separate sovereign in criminal

    law enforcement, to shape its own procedures and penalties.

    Turning to the impact on escaped prisoners, the denial

    of credit clearly does not foreclose access to the courts,

    and we think it unlikely that colorable claims against

    extradition will be discouraged. The legitimate grounds for

    challenging a rendition warrant are narrow and reasonably

    clear-cut. See Commonwealth v. Beauchamp, 595 N.E.2d at 309-
    ___ ____________ _________

    10. If an alleged escapee subject to such a warrant has a

    substantial defense to extradition and thus a fair to good

    prospect of avoiding a return to certain imprisonment, he or

    she is not likely to be discouraged by a penalty (denial of

    credit) that will never be visited if extradition is blocked.

    Finally, there is no "ready alternative" to the denial

    of credit. See Turner, 482 U.S. at 90. If Massachusetts
    ______

    does give credit to Beauchamp, it defeats the very interest

    that underlies the no-credit rule: that the Commonwealth

    fixes the place of imprisonment, not the prisoner. "To rule

    otherwise would allow the defendant to choose the State where

    he would serve a significant portion of his sentence."

    Beauchamp, 595 N.E. at 310. "[T]he absence of ready
    _________

    alternatives is evidence of the reasonableness of a

    [challenged state policy]." Turner, 482 U.S. at 90.
    ______

    Accordingly, if the choice is between the burden laid on

    legitimate challenges and the state's interest in defining



    -11-
    -11-















    its own sentences, we think that the state interest is

    legitimate, the burden is very light, and no obvious

    alternative is available to achieve the former and avoid the

    latter. But two further questions remain: one is whether the

    state's decision to deny Beauchamp credit is tainted by a

    retaliatory motive, and the other is whether the singling out

    of escaped prisoners presents an equal protection problem.

    We address these issues in that order.

    The district court, in addition to finding an undue

    burden upon Beauchamp's right of access to the courts,

    declared that the Commonwealth sought to penalize Beauchamp

    for resisting extradition:

    The Department of Corrections' refusal to credit
    [Beauchamp's] sentence with the time he spent in
    custody challenging extradition cannot stand. The
    record suggests that in refusing Beauchamp's
    request for credit, the Commonwealth
    unconstitutionally penalized him for exercising his
    right to contest rendition to Massachusetts; [the
    Commonwealth] has not shown otherwise.

    Although this may look like a "finding" of the motive for the

    Commonwealth's action, the situation is somewhat more

    complicated than that.

    First, there is no record evidence concerning the motive
    __

    of Department of Corrections' personnel who made the initial

    decision. Both the district court decision and Beauchamp's

    brief rely upon arguments made in the attorney general's
    _________

    brief in the state's highest court that "to provide credit

    toward [an escapee's] sentence . . . for time spent


    -12-
    -12-















    contesting extradition opens the floodgates to a significant

    increase in extradition contests by escaped inmates."2 We

    are in the same position as the district court to reason from

    the attorney general's written argument, so that the clear

    error doctrine has no application here.

    In the state court proceeding, the Department of

    Correction also provided an affidavit from the chief of its

    fugitive apprehension unit making similar contentions; but

    this, too, was essentially a litigation document and did not

    suggest that Washburn had any personal involvement in making

    the decision to deny credit to Beauchamp. It is questionable

    whether either the arguments made in the state's brief or the

    Washburn affidavit amount to anything more than a kind of

    "post hoc rationale" that courts do not normally accept as a
    _________

    basis for appraising administrative action. NLRB v. Yeshiva
    ____ _______

    Univ., 444 U.S. 672, 675 n.22 (1980). In any event, neither
    _____

    document suggests any individualized attempt to target

    Beauchamp.

    Second, we do not think that unconstitutional

    retaliation is involved even if we assume arguendo that the
    ________



    ____________________

    2The district court does say that if Beauchamp had not
    contested extradition, he would have received credit for time
    spent in Illinois "for those same days of imprisonment." But
    those "same days" would never have existed if Beauchamp had
    agreed to extradition, and in fact Massachusetts did credit
    Beauchamp with the very brief time spent in Illinois after
    his extradition contest failed and he was available to
    Massachusetts.

    -13-
    -13-















    correctional authorities do believe that giving credit would

    spur time-wasting challenges to extradition. General rules

    often rest upon multiple considerations, and concerns about

    abusive litigation underlie a number of federal rules adopted
    _______

    by the courts themselves. These include restrictions on

    habeas corpus itself, e.g., McKleskey v. Zant, 499 U.S. 467,
    ____ _________ ____

    491 (1991), and sanctions under Fed. R. Civ. P. 11, not to

    mention various common law torts such as malicious

    prosecution.

    The Commonwealth's policy, even if resting in part on

    litigation concerns, seems to us a mile away from a warden's

    decision to disadvantage a prisoner because that prisoner
    _______

    filed a law suit against the warden. This is not, or at

    least has not been shown to be, a case of individual

    retaliation for pursuing constitutional rights. At most, as

    one element in a legitimate decision generally to deny credit

    to escaped prisoners for time spent outside Massachusetts,

    the state has given some weight to the benefits of getting

    the escapee back promptly where he or she belongs.

    We turn finally to the claim that Massachusetts has

    denied equal protection to Beauchamp, a claim not addressed

    by the district court but advanced by Beauchamp as an

    alternative basis to sustain the judgment. Beauchamp is

    entitled to defend the district court's judgment on any

    properly preserved ground that would serve to sustain it,



    -14-
    -14-















    whether or not adopted by the district court. E.g., Martin
    ____ ______

    v. Tango's Restaurant, 969 F.2d 1319, 1325 (1st Cir. 1992).
    __________________

    The equal protection claim based on indigency made in state

    court has not been renewed before us. Cf. Palmer v. Dugger,
    ___ ______ ______

    833 F.2d 253 (11th Cir. 1987) We proceed, therefore, to

    Beauchamp's claim that Massachusetts applies its no-credit

    rule based on irrational classifications.

    As the foundation for his argument, Beauchamp asserts

    that "Massachusetts awards sentence credit to parole

    violators and pre-trial detainees for time served in other

    states contesting extradition to Massachusetts." It is true

    that by statute, Massachusetts requires that prisoners be

    credited with time served during pretrial detention. Mass.
    ________

    Gen. L. ch. 127, 129B, ch. 279, 33A. Another statute

    denies credit to a parole violator for time spent out of

    prison during revocation proceedings. Id., ch. 127, 149.
    ___

    Where no statute applies--as in the case of time spent in

    detention out of state while resisting extradition--the

    Massachusetts courts apply a test of fairness.3

    Other than Beauchamp the only other decision by the
    _________

    Supreme Judicial Court involving an escaped prisoner is

    Chalifoux. In that case, the escapee was sentenced to time
    _________


    ____________________

    3E.g., Beauchamp, 595 N.E.2d at 926; Chalifoux v.
    ____ _________ _________
    Commissioner of Correction, 377 N.E.2d 923, 926 (Mass. 1978);
    __________________________
    Commonwealth v. Grant, 317 N.E.2d 484, 486-87 (Mass. 1974);
    ____________ _____
    Brown v. Commissioner of Correction, 147 N.E.2d 782, 784
    _____ ____________________________
    (Mass. 1958).

    -15-
    -15-















    by a California court intended to be served concurrently, in

    Massachusetts, upon extradition there. Massachusetts refused

    to accept immediate rendition because of overcrowding and

    then, after the California sentence had been served, refused

    to reduce the Massachusetts sentence for the time spent in

    California. On fairness grounds, the Supreme Judicial Court

    ordered a credit. Taking the two cases together, we think

    that the prevailing practice in Massachusetts is apparently

    to deny credit to escaped prisoners for time spent litigating

    extradition, absent extraordinary circumstances or distinct

    equities.4

    One must tread cautiously in generalizing about equal

    protection, for there are countless Supreme Court precedents

    that cannot all be reconciled even in hundreds of pages of

    erudite discussion. See, e.g., L. Tribe, Constitutional Law
    ___ ____ __________________

    1436-1672 (2d ed. 1988). The classification here, however,

    is between prison escapees and other fugitives and is far

    from any previously deemed suspect. Compare, e.g., Palmore
    _______ ____ _______

    v. Sidoti, 466 U.S. 429 (1984) (racial classification).
    ______

    Similarly, the classification does not in any sense deprive

    or deny to anyone a fundamental right; at most, it may impose




    ____________________

    4See also In re Kinney, 363 N.E.2d 1337, 1338 (Mass.
    ________ _____________
    App. Ct. 1977) (stating the general rule that an escape
    "suspend[s] the running of the original sentence until such
    time as [the defendant] should be returned to" the
    institution from which he escaped).

    -16-
    -16-















    a conjectural and incidental burden unlikely to discourage

    any substantial objections to extradition.

    Since there is no suspect classification here involved,

    nor any deprivation of fundamental rights, the ordinary equal

    protection test is extremely deferential. The standard

    formula is that a non-suspect classification is

    unconstitutional only if no legitimate basis can be imagined

    to support it. E.g., Harrah Independent School District v.
    ____ __________________________________

    Martin, 440 U.S. 194 (1979). And "support" means only that a
    ______

    legislature--or, here, a state court acting in its stead--

    could provide a rational basis for the choice. E.g., Vance
    ____ _____

    v. Bradley, 440 U.S. 93, 111 (1979).
    _______

    Turning to the distinctions assertedly drawn by

    Massachusetts, pretrial detainees (whether held in

    Massachusetts or held outside the state while contesting

    extradition) are a peculiarly sympathetic case for credit;

    these are presumptively innocent individuals held primarily

    to assure their presence at trial. Credit for such detention

    is widely available. There is nothing whatever irrational

    about a general rule that pretrial detention time should be

    credited as a matter of course, nor does it conflict with a

    presumptive rule against credit for time spent out of state

    by one who is convicted and later escapes from prison.

    A closer case is presented by the fact, if fact it is,

    that credit is given to a parolee who violates parole, flees



    -17-
    -17-















    the state and then contests extradition back to

    Massachusetts.5 But an escape from prison, even by one on a

    12-hour pass, can rationally be treated as a more serious

    default than a parole violation. By the same token the state

    may take a more sympathetic view of time spent in detention

    out of state by one who was out on liberty than by one who

    was suppose to be residing in a Massachusetts prison. Again,

    the distinction is not irrational.

    Beauchamp says that these supposed exceptions undercut

    any assertion by the Commonwealth that it is interested in

    having a Massachusetts sentence served only in Massachusetts

    jails. But a legitimate interest does not cease to be so

    because rational exceptions are made on account of

    countervailing general concerns or individual equities.

    Here, some of the exceptions are more compelling than others,

    but none involves a suspect classification or is outside the

    bounds of minimal rationality so as to violate the equal

    protection clause of the 14th Amendment.

    Beauchamp's final claim is that the denial of credit

    violates the Fifth Amendment's prohibition against double

    jeopardy made applicable to the states through the 14th

    Amendment's due process clause. The Supreme Court precedent



    ____________________

    5The state has submitted a letter agreeing that this is
    the policy followed and arguing that it is consistent with
    Mass. Gen. L. ch. 127, 149. See also Blake v. Rapons, C.A.
    ________ _____ ______
    No. 91-0795B (Mass. Super. Ct., April 21, 1991).

    -18-
    -18-















    relied upon by Beauchamp is North Carolina v. Pearce, a
    ______________ ______

    different aspect of which was discussed above. In Pearce a
    ______

    defendant served part of his sentence for an offence before

    getting the conviction overturned on appeal. Then on retrial

    he was convicted and resentenced. In the new sentence,

    Pearce was denied credit for the time he served incident to

    the first conviction for the same crime.

    In the ruling relied on by Beauchamp, the Supreme Court

    held that this denial of credit violates the double jeopardy

    clause's prohibition against "multiple punishments for the

    same offense," 395 U.S. at 717, observing:

    [T]his basic constitutional guarantee is violated
    when punishment already exacted for an offense is
    not fully "credited" in imposing sentence upon a
    new conviction for the same offense.

    Id. at 718. We think that the formal holding of Pearce on
    ___ ______

    this issue has no application to Beauchamp. In our case, the

    time spent in Illinois was not formally a "punishment" for

    the Massachusetts second-degree murder conviction but a

    decision by Illinois to hold Beauchamp--who had already fled

    once--pending extradition to complete his Massachusetts

    sentence.

    Formalities deserve weight in applying a fairly

    technical constitutional prohibition such as the double

    jeopardy clause. That is the lesson of the Court's further

    holding in Pearce that a stiffer sentence on retrial after a
    ______

    successful appeal does not offend the clause. See 395 U.S.


    -19-
    -19-















    at 711. The same formal approach is implicit in the even

    more famous holding that separate state and federal

    punishments for the same conduct do not violate the double

    jeopardy clause. E.g., Heath v. Alabama, 474 U.S. 82, 89
    ____ _____ _______

    (1985).

    The force of Beauchamp's argument does not lie on the

    technicalities of double jeopardy. Its essence is a due

    process appeal to concepts of fundamental fairness: after

    all, but for the Massachusetts detainer, Beauchamp would not

    have spent four years in an Illinois jail; and the result of

    denying him credit is to hold him in custody, if the Illinois

    and Massachusetts terms are combined, for more than the

    minimum term otherwise available in Massachusetts. This

    argument would have special force if, for example, a state

    denied credit to a convicted prisoner for time spent in

    pretrial detention.

    But this is a one-sided portrayal of the events in this

    case. Beauchamp's stay in the Illinois jail is causally

    related not only to his Massachusetts sentence but also to

    his own action in escaping from Massachusetts prison and then

    resisting extradition (mainly on spurious grounds). And, as

    we have explained above, Massachusetts has a legitimate, if

    partly symbolic, interest in having the full sentence served

    in its own prison. To deny Beauchamp credit is simply not a





    -20-
    -20-















    case of fundamental unfairness in the constitutional sense.

    Compare Rochlin v. California, 342 U.S. 165 (1952).
    _______ _______ __________

    The Massachusetts rule could strike some observers as a

    severe one, but an arguably severe rule is not automatically

    unconstitutional. Where as here the underlying issue is one

    of minimum fairness and rationality, a federal court polices

    the outer perimeter. Where issues are ones on which rational

    and civilized men and women can reasonably differ, the

    resolution of such choices is not for us.

    Reversed.
    ________

    Dissent follows.
    Dissent follows.































    -21-
    -21-















    BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge, dissenting.
    BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge, dissenting.
    ____________________________

    The court has written a very persuasive opinion.

    This is due to a combination of two factors: the outstanding

    skill and writing style of the author; and its invocation of

    the doctrine of "fundamental fairness" to reach a result that

    seems at first blush to be fair and just. After all, why

    should an escaped felon be rewarded for resisting extradition

    to the state from which he fled prison? I dissent, however,

    because I think the court's opinion does not meet head-on an

    important constitutional issue raised by petitioner. This

    issue was, in my judgment, squarely confronted and correctly

    decided by the district court.

    With respect, I do not think that the basic issue

    is "fundamental fairness"; instead, I believe it is whether

    petitioner's constitutional right of access to the courts was

    violated. For the reasons that follow I think that this

    constitutionally guaranteed right was abridged.

    An inmate has no independent federal constitutional

    right to credit on a sentence lawfully imposed by one state,

    for time spent in the custody of another state, absent a

    statute in the sentencing state so providing. See Boutwell
    ___ ________

    v. Eagle, 861 F.2d 1530, 1531 (11th Cir. 1988), cert. denied,
    _____ _____ ______

    490 U.S. 1099 (1989); Palmer v. Dugger, 833 F.2d 253, 254
    ______ ______

    (11th Cir. 1987). Petitioner does not have a constitutional

    right to credit for the time spent in custody in Illinois



    -21-
    -21-















    fighting extradition to Massachusetts. The question is

    whether the practice of the Massachusetts Department of

    Corrections (DOC), pursuant to which he was denied credit,

    amounts to retaliation against escapees who exercise their

    right of access to the courts.

    It is well settled that prisoners, no less than any

    other citizens, have a constitutional right of access to the

    courts. See Bounds v. Smith, 430 U.S. 817, 821 (1977); Wolff
    ___ ______ _____ _____

    v. McDowell, 418 U.S. 396 (1974); Johnson v. Avery, 393 U.S.
    ________ _______ _____

    483 (1969). "[S]tates have an affirmative obligation to
    ___________

    assure that inmates have meaningful access to courts."

    Germany v. Vance, 868 F.2d 9, 14 (1st Cir. 1989) (internal
    _______ _____

    quotation marks and citation omitted); see also Bounds, 430
    ___ ____ ______

    U.S. at 832-24.6

    The right of access has been developed primarily in

    prisoner cases where the inmate seeks to challenge the

    conditions of his confinement or his underlying conviction.

    See Crowder v. Sinyard, 884 F.2d 804, 811 (5th Cir. 1989),
    ___ _______ _______

    cert. denied, 496 U.S. 924 (1990). These cases generally
    _____ ______

    concern the adequacy of prison libraries, access to legal



    ____________________

    6. Although the Supreme Court has, at various times, viewed
    the right of access as one aspect of the Due Process Clause
    of the Fourteenth Amendment, the First Amendment right to
    petition government for grievances, and the Privileges and
    Immunities clause of Article IV, section 2 of the
    Constitution, see generally Germany, 868 F.2d at 17 & n. 9,
    ___ _________ _______
    we believe that it is most appropriate to view the Due
    Process Clause as the source of that right. Id. at 17.
    ___

    -22-
    -22-















    assistance, or the availability of pens, paper, postage and

    other non-legal materials without which court documents

    cannot be drafted. See, e.g., Alston v. DeBruyn, 13 F.3d
    ___ ____ ______ _______

    1036 (7th Cir. 1994) (denial of access to law library and

    adequate legal assistance); Petrick v. Maynard, 11 F.3d 991
    _______ _______

    (10th Cir. 1993) (inadequate law library); Davidson v. Smith,
    ________ _____

    9 F.3d 4 (2d Cir. 1994) (destruction of inmate's legal

    materials); Gluth v. Kansas, 951 F.2d 1504 (9th Cir. 1991)
    _____ ______

    (high postage, copying and supply costs); Ching v. Lewis, 895
    _____ _____

    F.2d 608 (9th Cir. 1990) (right of access includes attorney

    visitation); see also Bounds, 430 U.S. at 824-25 ("[I]ndigent
    ___ ____ ______

    inmates must be provided at state expense with paper and pen

    to draft legal documents, with notarial services to

    authenticate them, and with stamps to mail them."). The

    right of access is not, however, limited to such cases. As

    the Supreme Court held in the context of a diversity tort

    action nearly a century ago:

    The right to sue and defend in courts is
    the alternative of force. In an
    organized society it is the right
    conservative of all other rights, and
    lies at the foundation of orderly
    government. It is one of the highest and
    most essential privileges of citizenship
    . . . granted and protected by the
    federal constitution.

    Chambers v. Baltimore & Ohio R.R., 207 U.S. 142, 148 (1907).
    ________ _____________________

    And at least, one court of appeals has explicitly rejected

    the proposition



    -23-
    -23-















    that a prisoner's right of "adequate,
    effective, and meaningful" access to the
    courts, as recognized by the Supreme
    Court in Bounds v. Smith, is limited to
    ______ _____
    the presentation of constitutional, civil
    rights, and habeas corpus claims . . . .
    [T]he Bounds opinion was primarily
    ______
    concerned with constitutional and civil
    rights claims and with the minimum legal
    resources that prisons must afford to
    inmates to ensure effective access to the
    courts. Recognition of the
    constitutional right of access to the
    courts, however, long precedes Bounds,
    ______
    and has from its inception been applied
    to civil as well as constitutional
    claims.

    Jackson v. Procunier, 789 F.2d 307, 311 (5th Cir. 1986)
    _______ _________

    (collecting cases); accord Straub v. Monge, 815 F.2d 1467,
    ______ ______ _____

    1470 (11th Cir.), cert. denied, 484 U.S. 946 (1987). The
    _____ ______

    constitutional right of access to the courts is broad, and is

    not limited to an inmate's right to challenge conditions of

    confinement or an underlying conviction. It covers an

    inmate's right to bring a divorce action, Corpus v. Estelle,
    ______ _______

    441 F.2d 68, 70 (5th Cir. 1977), and a common law nuisance

    lawsuit, Harrison v. Springdale Water & Sewer Comm'n, 780
    ________ _________________________________

    F.2d 1422, 1427-28 (8th Cir. 1986). I believe that it also

    encompasses the right of an escaped felon to challenge his

    extradition.

    Under Illinois law petitioner had a statutory right

    to challenge his extradition. See Ill. Ann. Stat. ch. 725,
    ___

    225/10 (Smith-Hurd 1992). Petitioner also had a federal

    right to challenge his extradition through a habeas corpus



    -24-
    -24-















    proceeding in federal court. Crummley v. Snead, 620 F.2d
    ________ _____

    481, 483 (5th Cir. 1980) (citing Roberts v. Reilly, 116 U.S.
    _______ ______

    80 (1885)).

    It is now firmly established that an act taken in

    retaliation for the exercise of a constitutionally protected

    right is forbidden, even if the act, if taken for a different

    purpose, would have been proper. McDonald v. Hall, 610 F.2d
    ________ ____

    16, 18 (1st Cir. 1979); Matzker v. Herr, 748 F.2d 1142, 1150
    _______ ____

    (7th Cir. 1984). Retaliation by prison officials against an

    inmate for pursuing legal action constitutes interference

    with that inmate's right of access to the courts. McDonald,
    ________

    610 F.2d at 18; see also Smith v. Maschner, 899 F.2d 940, 947
    ___ ____ _____ ________

    (10th Cir. 1990); Valandingham v. Bojorquez, 866 F.2d 1135,
    ____________ _________

    1138 (9th Cir. 1989). Thus, although an inmate may not, for

    example, have a constitutional right to remain in a

    particular institution or hold a particular job assignment,

    prison officials may not transfer him or deny him a job

    assignment in retaliation for the exercise of a

    constitutionally protected activity. See Williams v. Meese,
    ___ ________ _____

    926 F.2d 994, 998 (10th Cir. 1990) (inmate transfer cannot be

    used as retaliation); Howland v. Kilquist, 833 F.2d 639, 644
    _______ ________

    (7th Cir. 1987) (same); McDonald, 610 F.2d at 18 (same). The
    ________

    same rationale applies to the denial of credit against a

    prisoner's sentence for time spent in another state's custody

    while challenging extradition.



    -25-
    -25-















    In addressing petitioner's claim of retaliation,

    the district court found:

    The circumstances of this case . . .
    strongly suggest the presence of a
    retaliatory response to a prisoner's
    exercising his constitutional right of
    access to the courts. The facts indicate
    a reasonable likelihood that in denying
    Beauchamp's request that it credit his
    sentence with the time he spent in
    custody in Illinois solely on the basis
    of the Massachusetts escape charges, the
    Commonwealth's Department of Corrections
    impermissibly penalized him for invoking
    his statutory right to challenge
    rendition. Undisputedly, only because
    Petitioner invoked his right to contest
    extradition was he deprived of sentencing
    credit for 1,574 days he spent in
    custody; had he waived extradition and
    returned immediately to Massachusetts'
    custody, he would have received full
    credit for those same days of
    imprisonment.

    Beauchamp, slip op. at 13. We review the district court's
    _________

    factual finding of retaliation for clear error, and will

    reverse only if we are firmly and unequivocally convinced

    that an error has been committed. See Tresca Bros. Sand &
    ___ ____________________

    Gravel v. Truck Drivers Union, Local 170, 19 F.3d 63, 65 (1st
    ______ ______________________________

    Cir. 1994); American Title Ins. Co. v. East West Financial,
    _______________________ ___________________

    16 F.3d 449, 453 (1st Cir. 1994). In other words, if the

    district court's factual finding is plausible based on a

    whole-record review, we must affirm even if we would have

    reached a different result in the first instance. See
    ___

    Anderson v. Bessemer City, 470 U.S. 564, 573 (1985).
    ________ _____________




    -26-
    -26-















    The district court inferred the existence of

    retaliation from the fact that respondent had previously

    argued that the denial of credit to petitioner for the time

    he served in Illinois challenging extradition was essential

    to discourage extradition contests by escapees. Respondent

    argues that this is not enough on which to base a finding of

    retaliation, and that "[p]ositive evidence of retaliatory

    action is necessary." Brief for Respondent at 24. Although

    I am not sure what respondent means by "positive," I assume

    that it means direct as opposed to circumstantial evidence.

    Time and time again courts have stressed that

    "[p]recisely because the ultimate fact of retaliation turns

    on defendants' state of mind, it is particularly difficult to

    establish by direct evidence." Smith, 899 F.2d at 949
    _____

    (citing McDonald, 610 F.2d at 18). Thus, circumstantial as
    ________

    opposed to direct evidence may be enough to support a finding

    of retaliation. See Mesnick v. General Elec. Co., 950 F.2d
    ___ _______ _________________

    816, 828 (1st Cir. 1991), cert. denied, 112 S. Ct. 2965
    _____ ______

    (1992). In the present case, however, there was direct

    evidence in the record to support petitioner's allegation of

    retaliation. In the Superior Court of Massachusetts,

    respondent submitted evidence showing how quickly escapees

    are generally returned to Massachusetts after being

    apprehended. It then argued that petitioner should not be

    credited for his Illinois time because doing so would



    -27-
    -27-















    improperly provide escapees with an incentive to challenge

    extradition. Clearly respondent was advocating that

    petitioner's claim for credit should be denied so that other

    escapees would be deterred from challenging extradition in

    the future, despite their established right to do so. My

    review of the record leads me to conclude that there was

    sufficient evidence from which a rational factfinder could

    find that petitioner was retaliated against for having

    challenged his extradition. And this is as far as an

    appellate court can go. I believe that the court had no

    choice but to uphold the district court's finding that

    respondent impermissibly retaliated against petitioner for

    exercising through habeas corpus proceedings his right of

    access to the courts.

    The court neatly avoids the issue of retaliation by

    pointing out that petitioner himself was not denied access to

    the courts. This ignores the fact that petitioner's claim

    for credit was denied by DOC to discourage the bringing of

    such claims in the future, regardless of the merits, and in

    the face of the recognized right of escaped felons to contest

    extradition in the courts.

    As part of its "fundamental fairness" rationale the

    court, in effect, finds that petitioner's basis for

    contesting extradition had no merit. I do not think that the

    right of access to the courts hinges on the probability that



    -28-
    -28-















    a given claim will succeed. The resolution of the

    constitutional question should not turn upon a post hoc
    ____ ___

    determination that petitioner's extradition challenges were

    frivolous.

    It is settled that, "when a prison regulation

    impinges on inmates' constitutional rights, the regulation is

    valid if it is reasonably related to legitimate penological

    interests." Turner v. Safley, 482 U.S. 78, 89 (1987).
    ______ ______

    Although Turner concerned prison rules and regulations, I see
    ______

    no reason why its rationale should not apply to other prison

    actions that threaten an inmate's access to the courts, such

    as the denial of credit on a sentence, as in the case at bar.

    Cf. Frazier, 922 F.2d at 562 (applying Turner to inmate
    ___ _______ ______

    transfer).

    In conducting a Turner analysis, the district court
    ______

    found it dispositive that "[r]espondent . . . [had]

    proffer[ed] no legitimate penological interests which might

    justify the Commonwealth's response to Petitioner's exercise

    of his right to challenge rendition." Beauchamp, slip op. at
    _________

    15. Respondent has repeated its omission by failing to

    provide this court with any penological interests that are

    advanced by denying sentence credit to petitioner. Those

    interests (real or imagined) did not prevent the Commonwealth

    from crediting the petitioner with the time he spent in

    Illinois after his extradition challenge. See ante at 12
    _____ ___ ____



    -29-
    -29-















    n.2. This belies the court's characterization of the no-

    credit rule as a "decision generally to deny credit to

    escaped prisoners for time spent outside Massachusetts," ante
    ____

    at 14. Application of the rule only to the time associated

    with the petitioner's exercise of his constitutional right

    bolsters the inference that the denial of credit was

    retaliatory. See supra at 8-9. Respondent simply argues
    ___ _____

    that the Turner analysis is inappropriate in the case at bar.
    ______

    See Brief for Respondent at 23-24. But respondent does not
    ___

    explain why this is so, nor does it offer an alternative

    test. Respondent does argue that principles of federalism

    require this court to defer to state court decisions to

    credit or not to credit a prisoner's sentence with time

    served in another state. I have been unable to find any

    legal basis for respondent's theory.

    I recognize that prison administrators must be

    given wide latitude in formulating policies and procedures

    for running their prison systems, see Procunier v. Martinez,
    ___ _________ ________

    416 U.S. at 405 ("courts are ill equipped to deal with the

    increasingly urgent problems of prison administration and

    reform"), particularly where state prisons are involved, see
    ___

    Turner, 482 U.S. at 85 ("Where a state penal system is
    ______

    involved, federal courts have . . . additional reason to

    accord deference to the appropriate prison authorities.").

    States, however, cannot implement, without justification,



    -30-
    -30-















    practices or policies that interfere with the exercise of

    prisoners' constitutional rights. See id. at 89-90. While
    ___ ___

    there may exist some legitimate penological interest that

    would justify denying petitioner credit for the time he

    served in Illinois, I can only speculate as to what it might

    be.

    Petitioner is not a person who evokes sympathy.

    Nor does his plight suggest that a great injustice has been

    done him. Nevertheless, he has raised an important

    constitutional issue involving the right of access to the

    courts. And I do not think that the issue should be avoided

    by masking it in the garb of "fundamental fairness." The

    court today decides that a Massachusetts escaped felon has no

    right to credit against his time spent in custody while

    exercising his undoubted right to contest extradition. I

    respectfully disagree. For the reasons stated herein I would

    affirm the judgment of the district court. I, therefore,

    dissent.

















    -31-
    -31-







Document Info

Docket Number: 93-2385

Filed Date: 10/18/1994

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 9/21/2015

Authorities (31)

Suzanne Germany v. Carol Vance, Suzanne Germany v. Carol ... , 868 F.2d 9 ( 1989 )

American Title Insurance v. East West Financial , 16 F.3d 449 ( 1994 )

Lynn Martin, Secretary of Labor, United States Department ... , 969 F.2d 1319 ( 1992 )

rick-dean-petrick-v-gary-d-maynard-director-department-of-corrections , 11 F.3d 991 ( 1993 )

Tresca Brothers Sand and Gravel, Inc. v. Truck Drivers ... , 19 F.3d 63 ( 1994 )

jerry-wayne-smith-v-herb-maschner-director-dale-bohannon-deputy , 899 F.2d 940 ( 1990 )

Grady Boutwell v. Eddie Nagle and the Attorney General of ... , 861 F.2d 1530 ( 1988 )

Andrew Lee Jackson v. Raymond K. Procunier, Director, Texas ... , 789 F.2d 307 ( 1986 )

Clayton Palmer v. Richard L. Dugger, Robert A. Butterworth, ... , 833 F.2d 253 ( 1987 )

William Lee Howland v. William Kilquist and Gene Truitt , 833 F.2d 639 ( 1987 )

ervin-t-valandingham-jr-v-sg-bojorquez-law-library-officer-at , 866 F.2d 1135 ( 1989 )

nancy-crowder-individually-and-as-independent-of-the-estate-of-james , 884 F.2d 804 ( 1989 )

Edward James Matzker, Jr. v. Raymond Herr, Sheriff, Richard ... , 748 F.2d 1142 ( 1984 )

John Henry Pernell v. James H. Rose, Warden and State of ... , 486 F.2d 301 ( 1973 )

Vance v. Bradley , 99 S. Ct. 939 ( 1979 )

Harrah Independent School District v. Martin , 99 S. Ct. 1062 ( 1979 )

Beauchamp v. Elrod , 137 Ill. App. 3d 208 ( 1985 )

Procunier v. Martinez , 94 S. Ct. 1800 ( 1974 )

Balistrieri v. United States , 395 U.S. 710 ( 1969 )

alan-l-gluth-thomas-a-rice-donald-k-nelson-david-m-bandstra-v , 951 F.2d 1504 ( 1991 )

View All Authorities »