Cedric Franklin v. Dept. of Correction ( 2000 )


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  •                      IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF TENNESSEE
    AT NASHVILLE
    Assigned on Briefs August 2, 2001
    CEDRIC FRANKLIN v. TENNESSEE DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTION
    Appeal from the Chancery Court for Davidson County
    No. 00-2094-I   Irvin H. Kilcrease, Jr., Chancellor
    No. M2001-00279-COA-R3-CV - Filed November 8, 2001
    WILLIAM C. KOCH , JR., J., concurring.
    This appeal focuses on the type of notice that prisoners charged with disciplinary infractions
    must receive. While I agree with the results of the majority’s opinion, I write separately to
    emphasize that prisoners are constitutionally entitled to advance written notice of the claimed
    disciplinary infraction notwithstanding the potential punishment they are facing. In this case, the
    prisoner received minimally adequate notice.
    I.
    In August 1993, Cedric Franklin was indicted for one count of first degree murder, one count
    of first degree felony murder, and one count of a especially aggravated robbery. In January 1994,
    he pled guilty to one count of second degree murder and one count of especially aggravated robbery
    and received concurrent sentences of 35 and 20 years. During the events relevant to this case, Mr.
    Franklin was incarcerated at the West Tennessee State Penitentiary.
    Mr. Franklin and another prisoner, Robert Brown, were operating a tractor outside the prison
    on April 20, 2000. At some point, they stopped the tractor, and Mr. Brown instructed Mr. Franklin
    to pick up a black plastic bag containing rocks that was laying on the side of the public road. There
    is some evidence that the prisoners believed that the bag contained bottles of alcoholic beverages.1
    Messrs. Franklin and Brown continued on their way to the prison’s recycling center where they were
    met by another prisoner, Gary Reeves. At this point, several corrections officers accosted the three
    prisoners. When the officers asked for the plastic bag, Mr. Franklin stated that he did not know
    where it was. One of the officers eventually found the bag in another part of the recycling center.
    1
    A corrections officer had discovered the plastic bag earlier in the day and, upon opening it, had found five
    plastic bottles filled with liquid that smelled like alcohol. The officer’s superior had instructed him to replace the bottles
    with rocks, to return the bag to the side of the road, and to keep the bag under surveillance.
    Mr. Franklin and the other two prisoners were charged with “violation of state law”2 and
    were placed in administrative segregation pending a disciplinary hearing. The written disciplinary
    report provided to Mr. Franklin on April 20, 2000, gave the following recitation of the facts upon
    which the “violation of state law” disciplinary infraction was based:
    On 04/20/2000 at approx. 7:00 AM I CO [Corrections Officer] Ring
    was driving down the Chicken House Road when I noticed a black
    plastic bag lying on the side of the road. Upon investigating I found
    that the bag contained 4 plastic bottles of clear liquid and 1 bottle of
    a amber color liquid. When the bottles were opened they had a strong
    smell of alcohol. I then took the bottles to the sally port and notified
    Lt. Miller. Lt. Miller took charge of the bottles and had me replace
    them with rocks and return the bag where I found it. Sgt. K. Boyd
    was watching the bag and notified via radio that inmate Cedric
    Franklin #230639 and inmate Robert Brown #153069 were on a
    tractor pulling a cart and had stopped and inmate Franklin got off and
    picked up the bag. The tractor proceeded toward the recycle area.
    When inmate Gary Reeves #217481 came out of the recycle building
    heading toward the tractor I stopped the tractor and asked inmate
    Franklin where the bag was. He stated he didn’t have it. Sgt. Boyd
    located the bag by the cardboard area. Inmate then made the
    statement that inmate Reeves had told him to pick it up. Inmate
    Franklin, inmate Reeves and inmate Brown are charged with violation
    of state law and placed in unit 2 pending disciplinary hearing.
    At the April 25, 2000 hearing, a three-person disciplinary board heard the testimony of Mr.
    Franklin, Officer Ring, and Sergeant Boyd and received into evidence pictures of the five bottles that
    had been discovered in the black plastic bag. Thereafter, the board found Mr. Franklin guilty of
    “violating state law.” As a result of his conviction, Mr. Franklin received ten days in punitive
    segregation, the loss of his trustee status, and the loss of his prison job. Both the warden and the
    Commissioner of Correction affirmed the disciplinary board’s action.
    II.
    More than twenty-five years ago, the United States Supreme Court prescribed the minimum
    procedural due process rights of prisoners facing prison disciplinary proceedings. The Court stated
    that prisoners were entitled to (1) written notice of the claimed infraction at least twenty-four hours
    prior to the disciplinary hearing, (2) a hearing before a sufficiently impartial body, (3) a limited right
    to call witnesses and present documentary evidence, and (4) a written statement of the fact-finders
    as to the evidence relied upon and the reasons for the disciplinary action. Wolff v. McDonnell, 418
    2
    In 1994, the Departm ent of Corr ection’s policy defining disciplinary offenses included a separate offense for
    “Violation of State Law (VSL)” and defined this offense as “[a] ny violation of T .C.A. not sp ecifically addr essed in this
    policy.” Tenn. Dep’t of Corr., Policy Index No. 502.05 IV.VVV.
    -2-
    U.S. 539, 563-66, 
    94 S. Ct. 2963
    , 2978-79 (1974).3 These minimum rights exist independent of any
    further expansion of procedural safeguards that might be made available by statute, regulation, or
    policy.
    The Wolff v. McDonnell decision did not prevent prisons and jails from expanding the
    procedural safeguards in prison disciplinary proceedings or from providing details regarding how
    the constitutionally required minimum safeguards would be provided. In fact, during the past
    twenty-five years, prisons in Tennessee and elsewhere have enacted policies and rules defining the
    procedural steps in a prison disciplinary proceeding. 4 It is not uncommon that these procedures go
    beyond the minimum procedural due process requirements identified in Wolff v. McDonnell. For
    example, even though the Court had declined to extend to prisoners the right to counsel, the
    Tennessee Department of Correction permits attorneys to be present at disciplinary proceedings.
    Tenn. Dep’t of Corr., Policy Index No. 502.01 VI.E.2.h.
    During the twenty years following the Wolff v. McDonnell decision, the state and federal
    courts were deluged with prisoner lawsuits complaining of due process deprivations for even the
    most minor departures from prison disciplinary procedures. In 1995, to stem the tide of these sorts
    of suits, the United States Supreme Court revisited prison disciplinary proceedings to determine
    whether prisoners had a constitutionally protected liberty interest in the procedures prescribed in the
    statutes, regulations, or policies governing prison disciplinary proceedings. The Court held that the
    procedural rights afforded by statutes, regulations, or policies rose to the level of a constitutionally
    protected liberty interest only when the proceeding has imposed “atypical and significant hardship
    on the inmate in relation to the ordinary aspects of prison life.” Sandin v. Conner, 
    515 U.S. 472
    ,
    484, 
    115 S. Ct. 2293
    , 2300 (1995).
    In the wake of the Sandin v. Conner decision, it is important to recognize that the course of
    a prison disciplinary proceeding is shaped by two legal forces. First, it is shaped by the minimum
    procedural due process requirements imposed by the federal and state constitutions. These are the
    procedures recognized in Wolff v. McDonnell. Second, it is shaped by the statutes, rules, and
    procedures dictating how the discipline of prisoners should be carried out. The Sandin v. Conner
    decision addresses the latter, not the former. Accordingly, prisoners facing disciplinary proceedings
    are entitled to (1) timely written notice prior to the disciplinary hearing, (2) a sufficiently impartial
    hearing body, (3) a limited right to present evidence, and (4) a written statement of the evidence
    relied upon and the reasons for the disciplinary action, regardless of whether they are facing
    punishment that is atypical and significant in relation to the ordinary aspects of prison life.
    III.
    Our sole task in this case is to determine whether Mr. Franklin received minimally adequate
    notice of the disciplinary charges he was facing. Mr. Franklin asserts that he did not because the
    3
    The Court specifically declined to require that prisoners charged with disciplinary infractions be afforded the
    right of confronta tion and cro ss-examinatio n and the righ t to counsel. Wolff v. M cDon ald, 
    418 U.S. at
    567-57 0, 94 S.C t.
    at 2980 -82.
    4
    E.g. Uniform Disciplinary Procedures, Tenn. Dep’t of Corr., Policy Index No. 502.01 (Mar. 1, 2001).
    -3-
    written notice he received on April 20, 2000, did not cite the specific state statute that he and his two
    confederates allegedly violated when they picked up the black plastic bag and carried it to the prison
    recycling facility.
    As the United States Supreme Court noted, the purpose of providing a prisoner with timely
    written notice of disciplinary charges is to enable him or her to marshal the facts in his or her favor
    and to prepare a defense. Wolff v. McDonnell, 
    418 U.S. at 564
    , 
    94 S. Ct. at 2979
    . To be
    constitutionally sufficient, the notice must adequately inform the person to whom the notice is
    directed of the nature of the proceedings and the nature of the matters to be addressed. Due process
    requires that the notice must, under all the circumstances, apprise all interested persons of the
    pending action in order to afford them an opportunity to present their case. Brown v. Tennessee
    Dep’t of Safety, No. 01A01-9102-CH-00043, 
    1992 WL 63444
    , at *4 (Tenn. Ct. App. Apr. 1, 1992)
    (No Tenn. R. App. P. 11 application filed).
    At the time of Mr. Franklin’s disciplinary hearing, the Department’s policies did not require
    that written disciplinary reports for VSL infractions contain a citation to the statute allegedly
    violated.5 By the same token, neither the federal nor the state constitutions require a specific
    statutory citation, as long as the other facts included in the notice reasonably apprise the prisoner of
    the conduct deemed to be an infraction of the disciplinary rules. The facts included in the April 20,
    2000 disciplinary report plainly put Mr. Franklin on notice that the prison officials believed that he
    and his two confederates were attempting to obtain contraband when they picked up the black plastic
    bag from the side of Chicken House Road and carried it back to the recycling facility. For the
    purposes of procedural due process, it matters little that Mr. Franklin and his confederates were
    unsuccessful in their efforts. The information in the disciplinary report provided Mr. Franklin with
    sufficient information to defend himself at the April 25, 2000 disciplinary hearing.
    Accordingly, I would find that the April 20, 2000 disciplinary report complied with the
    written notice requirements of Wolff v. McDonnell because it contained sufficient information to
    enable Mr. Franklin to defend himself. The Sandin v. Connor analysis plays no role here because
    Mr. Franklin has not pointed to any departure from applicable regulations or procedures with regard
    to the April 20, 2000 report notifying him of the alleged VSL violation.6
    _____________________________
    WILLIAM C. KOCH, JR., JUDGE
    5
    The Department apparen tly added this requirement some months after Mr. Franklin’s disciplinary hearing when
    it amended the definition of the VSL offense by adding the following se ntence: “T he incident re port shall cite the state
    law and TCA code.” T enn. Dep’t of Corr., Policy Index No. 502.05 VI.A.73 (Dec. 1, 2000 ).
    6
    Even if Sandin v. Co nnor were applicable, the majority has correctly pointed out that the three punishmen ts
    meted out to Mr. Fran klin for the VSL infraction do not constitute punishment that is atypical and significant in relation
    to the ordinary aspects of prison life.
    -4-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: M2001-00279-COA-R3-CV

Judges: Judge Ben H. Cantrell

Filed Date: 4/20/2000

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/30/2014