19-3482
Hurd v. Fredenburgh
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
______________
August Term 2020
(Argued: November 18, 2020 | Decided: January 12, 2021)
Docket No. 19-3482
DEVAR HURD,
Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
STACEY FREDENBURGH, IN HER INDIVIDUAL CAPACITY,
Defendant-Appellee. †
______________
Before:
WALKER, KATZMANN, WESLEY, Circuit Judges.
Appeal from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Eastern
District of New York (Matsumoto, J.), dismissing the complaint for failure to state
a claim.
Because of errors in his sentencing calculation, Plaintiff-Appellant Devar
Hurd was incarcerated for almost a year past the date on which state law
mandated his release. Hurd sued Defendant-Appellee Stacey Fredenburgh, a
New York State prison official, alleging that she violated his Eighth and
Fourteenth Amendment rights by keeping him imprisoned based upon those
errors. The district court concluded that Hurd’s alleged injury was not cognizable
† The Clerk of the Court is directed to amend the official caption as set forth above.
under either constitutional provision and, in the alternative, that Fredenburgh was
entitled to qualified immunity.
We agree with the district court that the complaint should be dismissed, but
agree with its reasoning only in part. Contrary to the district court’s
determination, we hold that Hurd alleged a harm of constitutional magnitude
under the Eighth Amendment because New York State lacked authority to detain
him past his mandatory conditional release date. We also hold that Hurd had a
liberty interest in his right to conditional release protected by the Fourteenth
Amendment’s substantive due process clause, and the district court erred in
concluding otherwise. But because neither of these rights was clearly established
before today, Fredenburgh is entitled to qualified immunity for any responsibility
she may have had for Hurd’s prolonged detention.
Accordingly, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
_________________
JACOB LOUP (Joel B. Rudin, on the brief), Law Offices of Joel B. Rudin,
P.C., New York, NY, for Plaintiff-Appellant.
LINDA FANG, Assistant Solicitor General (Barbara D. Underwood,
Solicitor General, Anisha S. Dasgupta, Deputy Solicitor
General, on the brief), for Letitia James, Attorney General of the
State of New York, New York, NY, for Defendant-Appellee.
_________________
WESLEY, Circuit Judge:
Devar Hurd was charged in a single state indictment with nine
misdemeanors and one felony, which took three trials to resolve. He remained in
local custody throughout the lengthy trial process. Hurd received a sentence
specific to each conviction, but those sentences merged into one by operation of
New York law. When Hurd was transferred into state custody to serve what
2
became his single felony sentence, his credit for time already served and good
behavior entitled him to immediate release. But Hurd was not released from state
custody for nearly a year. He contends this prolonged incarceration violated his
rights under the Eighth Amendment and the Fourteenth Amendment’s
substantive due process clause.
BACKGROUND 1
Devar Hurd was arrested in July 2013 and indicted for seven counts of
misdemeanor criminal contempt in the second degree, one count of misdemeanor
stalking in the fourth degree, one count of misdemeanor harassment in the first
degree, and one count of felony stalking in the second degree. He was held in the
custody of the New York City Department of Correction (“NYCDOC”) following
his arrest, where he remained during multiple trials on the indictment.
Hurd’s first trial in December 2014 ended in a mistrial. At his retrial in
October 2015, the jury convicted Hurd of the nine misdemeanor counts; the state
court declared a mistrial on the felony. The state court imposed a set of definite
sentences for the misdemeanors ranging from 90 days to one year each, to run
consecutive to the others, in the custody of NYCDOC. Under New York law,
1Except as otherwise noted, these facts are as alleged in Hurd’s First Amended
Complaint.
3
however, because the aggregate term of these definite sentences exceeded two
years, Hurd’s term of imprisonment on the misdemeanor counts was capped at
two years. See N.Y. Penal Law § 70.30(2)(b).
Hurd faced another retrial on the felony count in March 2016; the jury
convicted him of stalking in the second degree. The state court sentenced Hurd to
an indeterminate sentence with a minimum of one-and-one-third years and a
maximum of four years, to be served in the custody of the New York State
Department of Corrections and Community Supervision (“DOCCS”). Because the
state court did not specify the manner in which Hurd’s felony sentence was to run,
New York law mandated that it would run concurrently with his two-year
sentence on the misdemeanors. See id. § 70.25(1)(a). Hurd’s misdemeanor and
felony sentences also merged by operation of New York law. See id. § 70.35. Thus,
Hurd’s maximum sentence on the indictment was four years.
Hurd would not have to serve four full years in prison after his sentence
was imposed, however. New York law provides that any sentence “shall be
credited with and diminished by the amount of time the person spent in custody
prior to the commencement of such sentence as a result of the charge that
culminated in the sentence.” Id. § 70.30(3). This is known as “jail-time credit.”
4
Thus, Hurd was entitled to credit against his maximum four-year “state sentence”
for all the time he spent in NYCDOC custody from his arrest in July 2013 to his
transfer to DOCCS custody in April 2016.
New York law also provides for “good-time credit,” whereby an inmate
“may receive time allowance against the term or maximum term of his or her
sentence . . . for good behavior . . . .” N.Y. Corr. Law § 803(1)(a). Once good-time
credit is approved, an inmate “shall, if he or she so requests, be conditionally
released from the institution in which he or she is confined when the total good
behavior time allowed to him or her . . . is equal to the unserved portion of his or
her term, maximum term or aggregate maximum term.” N.Y. Penal Law
§ 70.40(1)(b) (emphasis added). This is known as the inmate’s “conditional release
date.”
The New York Court of Appeals has referred to a conditional release date
as “the statutorily mandated release date, calculated by applying both his good
behavior time and his jail time, or time served awaiting trial.” Eiseman v. New York,
70 N.Y.2d 175, 180 (1987) (Kaye, J.) (internal quotation marks and citations
omitted). Thus, conditional release under New York law is unlike parole, which
is a discretionary decision reserved to the judgment of the parole board. As then-
5
Judge Kaye’s explanation suggests, conditional release is a mathematical concept:
an inmate will have completed their term of imprisonment when (1) the number
of pre- and post-trial custody days served, plus (2) the number of approved days
earned for good behavior, equals the inmate’s sentence term. By sheer calculation
of days, the inmate has satisfied their term of imprisonment, and they are entitled
to immediate release from prison.
Hurd was transferred from NYCDOC custody into DOCCS custody in April
2016. Whenever an inmate is transferred from local to state custody, the local
jurisdiction must calculate the inmate’s jail-time credit and provide DOCCS with
a certified record of that credit. See N.Y. Corr. Law § 600-a. Accordingly,
NYCDOC officials issued a “Jail Time Certification” (“JTC”), confirming that Hurd
was entitled to 996 days of jail-time credit against his maximum four-year
sentence. DOCCS officials also produced a “Legal Date Computation,” indicating
Hurd’s eligibility for good-time credit of up to one year and four months and jail-
time credit of two years, eight months, and 26 days.
Assuming his good-time credit would be approved, the combination of his
jail-time credit and good-time credit gave Hurd a conditional release date of March
17, 2016—pre-dating his transfer into DOCCS custody. This conditional release
6
date was reflected on the Legal Date Computation. Thus, at the time of his arrival
in state custody, Hurd “was told that he was eligible to be immediately released.”
J.A. 17. DOCCS approved Hurd’s good-time credit on April 19, 2016, at which
point he satisfied the statutory requirements entitling him to conditional release.
DOCCS Inmate Records Coordinator Stacey Fredenburgh began to process
Hurd’s release documents. Hurd’s complaint sets out a series of interactions
between Fredenburgh and NYCDOC all centered around verifying the correct
computation of his local jail-time credit. Without identifying a reason for any
animus towards him, Hurd alleges that Fredenburgh and NYCDOC employees—
most notably Principal Administrative Associate for NYCDOC’s Legal Division,
Edwin Felicien—“agreed to reduce Mr. Hurd’s jail-time credit so that he would
not be released.” J.A. 17. Between April and June 2016, Felicien sent Fredenburgh
four amended JTCs, each of which reflected a different, and much lower, jail-time
credit than the 996 days reflected in the original JTC. It is undisputed that each of
these revised JTCs was wrong. The last amended JTC credited Hurd with 508 days
of jail-time credit. As a result, DOCCS no longer considered Hurd eligible for
conditional release; Hurd remained in prison.
7
Hurd pursued the official grievance process, filed two notices of claim, and
lodged informal letter complaints to prison officials, including Fredenburgh,
protesting that he was being held past his conditional release date. Fredenburgh
responded in a letter to Hurd, telling him “that she could do nothing to address
his concerns and that he must contact ‘Rikers Island’” (an apparent reference to
NYCDOC). J.A. 19. DOCCS took no other action in response to Hurd’s
complaints.
Finally, Hurd’s counsel contacted NYCDOC’s legal department on March
20, 2017. Three days later, NYCDOC sent an amended JTC crediting Hurd with
the original 996 days of jail-time credit. DOCCS released Hurd on March 30,
2017—11 months and 11 days after the date on which he was entitled to immediate
release.
Hurd filed the instant lawsuit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against New York City
(the “City”), an NYCDOC employee, and Fredenburgh for violating his rights
under the Eighth Amendment and the Fourteenth Amendment’s substantive due
process clause. Hurd settled with the City defendants. The district court thereafter
granted Fredenburgh’s motion to dismiss under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim, holding that the prolonged imprisonment
8
beyond Hurd’s mandatory conditional release date was not a cognizable injury
under the Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments, and, in the alternative, that
Fredenburgh was entitled to qualified immunity.
Hurd also filed a state law false imprisonment claim in New York’s Court
of Claims. Two weeks after the district court dismissed Hurd’s § 1983 complaint,
the Court of Claims granted summary judgment for the State, concluding that
Fredenburgh acted reasonably considering her state law obligations and that
Hurd’s prolonged detention was attributable to the City’s errors only. 2
The Court of Claims noted that NYCDOC has the obligation under Penal
Law § 600-a to send a JTC to DOCCS when an inmate is transferred from local to
state custody. It noted further that the State “is bound by the jail time certifications
it receives from local authorities and ‘may not add or subtract therefrom.’” Add.
34 (quoting McLamb v. Fischer, 70 A.D.3d 1090, 1091 (3d Dep’t 2010)); see also Torres
2 The parties dispute whether we can (or should) consider the Court of Claims record in
resolving this appeal. As discussed below, we need not answer this question. We take
judicial notice of that court’s decision only to establish its existence and that the court
made certain factual findings, which is necessary to complete the narrative of Hurd’s
federal action and provide context for Fredenburgh’s defenses. See Glob. Network
Commc'ns, Inc. v. City of New York, 458 F.3d 150, 157 (2d Cir. 2006) (citing Kramer v. Time
Warner Inc., 937 F.2d 767, 774 (2d Cir. 1991)). We do not give any effect to those factual
findings, nor do we consider them for their truth or use them to support any factual
determination (for we make none) in this appeal.
9
v. Bennett, 271 A.D.2d 830, 831 (3d Dep’t 2000). Although the State “changed its
policy in 2014 to take affirmative steps to review a local commitment order after
an inmate is returned to state custody from a local jail,” Torres v. New York, 149
A.D.3d 1290, 1292 n.* (3d Dep’t 2017), the Court of Claims found that
Fredenburgh’s communications with Felicien satisfied the necessary review.
The Court of Claims concluded that, although “Fredenburgh’s actions may
have resulted in DOCCS receiving incorrect information, . . . her actions were
reasonable at the time.” Add. 35. It reasoned that the City’s errors caused Hurd’s
prolonged detention, and Hurd’s proper recourse was against the City, not the
State. Hurd did not appeal the decision.
Hurd did appeal the dismissal of his federal complaint.
DISCUSSION
We review de novo a district court’s decision granting a Rule 12(b)(6) motion,
including on qualified immunity grounds. See Hernandez v. United States, 939 F.3d
191, 198 (2d Cir. 2019); Charles W. v. Maul, 214 F.3d 350, 356 (2d Cir. 2000). In
conducting our review, we “accept as true all factual allegations and draw from
them all reasonable inferences; but we are not required to credit conclusory
allegations or legal conclusions couched as factual allegations.” Hernandez, 939
F.3d at 198 (citation omitted).
10
The crux of both of Hurd’s constitutional arguments is that “[o]n April 19,
2016, Hurd had enough jail-time credit and approved good-time credit to make
his conditional release from prison mandatory under state law. However,
Fredenburgh worked with an official of [NYCDOC] to reduce Hurd’s jail-time
credit so that he would not be released on his mandatory conditional release
date . . . .” Appellant Br. 2–3. The district court rejected this theory, determining
that neither the Eighth Amendment nor the Fourteenth Amendment’s substantive
due process clause protects an inmate’s right to, or interest in, conditional release
under state law. The district court concluded that Hurd failed to plead a violation
of his Eighth Amendment rights because “he was released prior to the date his
maximum sentence expired,” J.A. 39, and that Hurd failed to allege a violation of
his Fourteenth Amendment rights because he “has no substantive due process
right to conditional release” before the expiration of his maximum sentence, J.A.
51, 54.
After finding that Hurd failed to state a claim for violations of his Eighth or
Fourteenth Amendment rights, the district court concluded in the alternative that
Fredenburgh was entitled to qualified immunity. We agree with the district
11
court’s latter determination, but we disagree with its conclusions that Hurd did
not plausibly allege harm to either his Eighth or Fourteenth Amendment rights. 3
I. Eighth Amendment
“A plaintiff asserting an Eighth Amendment claim pursuant to 42 U.S.C.
§ 1983 must meet two requirements. First, the alleged deprivation must be, in
objective terms, sufficiently serious. Second, the charged official must act with a
sufficiently culpable state of mind.” Francis v. Fiacco, 942 F.3d 126, 150 (2d Cir.
2019) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
To satisfy the first requirement, a plaintiff must plead “a harm of a
magnitude that violates a person’s eighth amendment rights.” Calhoun v. N.Y.
State Div. of Parole Officers, 999 F.2d 647, 654 (2d Cir. 1993) (internal quotation
3 Our qualified immunity analysis “is guided by two questions: first, whether the facts
show that the defendants’ conduct violated plaintiffs’ constitutional rights, and second,
whether the right was clearly established at the time of the defendants’ actions.” Golodner
v. Berliner, 770 F.3d 196, 201 (2d Cir. 2014) (internal quotation marks, alteration, and
citation omitted). “We may address these questions in either order,” and “[i]f we answer
either question in the negative, qualified immunity attaches.” Id. Although it has become
the virtual default practice of federal courts considering a qualified immunity defense to
assume the constitutional violation in the first question and resolve a case on the clearly
established prong, “it is often beneficial” to analyze both prongs of the qualified
immunity analysis. Pearson v. Callahan, 555 U.S. 223, 236 (2009). “[T]he two-step
procedure promotes the development of constitutional precedent and is especially
valuable with respect to questions that do not frequently arise in cases in which a
qualified immunity defense is unavailable.” Id. This is such a case.
12
marks and citation omitted). “The Eighth Amendment[] . . . proscribes more than
physically barbarous punishments. It prohibits penalties that are grossly
disproportionate to the offense, as well as those that transgress today’s broad and
idealistic concepts of dignity, civilized standards, humanity, and decency.” Hutto
v. Finney, 437 U.S. 678, 685 (1978) (internal quotation marks, alteration, and
citations omitted).
The constitutional claim is not measured by the punishment alone, for “an
Eighth Amendment violation typically requires a state of mind that is the
equivalent of criminal recklessness.” Francis, 942 F.3d at 150 (internal quotation
marks and citation omitted). “This standard requires that only the deliberate
infliction of punishment, and not an ordinary lack of due care for prisoner interests
or safety, lead to liability.” Id. (alteration and citation omitted). Under this
standard, prison officials can be found “deliberately indifferent to their own
clerical errors on the basis of their refusals to investigate well-founded complaints
regarding these errors.” Id. at 151 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
The district court concluded that Hurd failed to allege a harm of
constitutional magnitude because he was released before his maximum sentence
expired. We disagree. The Eighth Amendment prohibits “the unnecessary and
13
wanton infliction of pain,” including punishments that are “totally without
penological justification.” Gregg v. Georgia, 428 U.S. 153, 173, 183 (1976). There is
no penological justification for incarceration beyond a mandatory release date
because “any deterrent and retributive purposes served by [the inmate’s] time in
jail were fulfilled as of that date.” See Sample v. Diecks, 885 F.2d 1099, 1108 (3d Cir.
1989).
“Next to bodily security, freedom of choice and movement has the highest
place in the spectrum of values recognized by our Constitution.” Id. at 1109. For
that reason, unauthorized detention of just one day past an inmate’s mandatory
release date qualifies as a harm of constitutional magnitude under the first prong
of the Eighth Amendment analysis. 4 Hurd’s unauthorized imprisonment for
4We acknowledge that, in Calhoun, we stated that a “five-day extension of [the plaintiff’s]
release date did not inflict ‘a harm of a magnitude’ that violates a person’s eighth
amendment rights.” 999 F.2d at 654. But we did not announce this as a constitutional
rule. The single paragraph devoted to the plaintiff’s Eighth Amendment claim in Calhoun
included only a descriptive, rather than normative, discussion of this issue, and we are
not bound by its conclusion in announcing a constitutional rule here.
Indeed, in Calhoun we cited to Sample, which relied on the deliberate indifference prong
as dispositive in cases of unavoidable administrative delay, mistakes, errors, and
accidents. See, e.g., Sample, 885 F.2d at 1109 (“Because such discretion is necessary to the
administration of prisons, an official acting in good faith within that discretion, although
in the process perhaps injuring an inmate, has not inflicted a cruel and unusual
punishment upon that inmate.”). This approach—recognizing a harm of constitutional
magnitude whenever an inmate is detained without authorization but finding a
14
almost one year certainly qualifies under that standard. See id. (“Detention for a
significant period beyond the term of one’s sentence inflicts a harm of a magnitude
[recognized under the Eighth Amendment].”).
It matters not that Hurd was detained past his statutory conditional release
date as opposed to the expiration of the maximum sentence imposed on him by
the sentencing judge. By using the word “shall,” New York chose to make
conditional release mandatory upon the approval of good-time credit and the
inmate’s request for release. See N.Y. Penal Law § 70.40(1)(b). It is the mandatory
nature of that release, not the label of “conditional” or “maximum,” that is
dispositive.
In effect, Hurd’s conditional release date became the operative date on
which his maximum term of imprisonment expired. Once Hurd met the statutory
requirements for conditional release, his release from prison was mandatory
under state law. Fredenburgh does not dispute that DOCCS had no authority to
keep Hurd incarcerated past his conditional release date for the crimes of which
constitutional violation only where that harm is deliberately inflicted—avoids the
arbitrary task of distinguishing between the permissible and impermissible length of
unauthorized detention under the Constitution. Moreover, it reflects the notion that
freedom from unlawful restraint is a right so core to our understanding of liberty that
suffering even one day of unlawful detention is a harm recognized by the Constitution.
15
he was convicted and sentenced. Even assuming the State could impose some
supervisory conditions following Hurd’s release, 5 his continued imprisonment was
a punishment that was neither authorized by law nor justified by any penological
interest asserted by the State. See Sample, 885 F.2d at 1108. Because the State
detained him for over 11 months past the last date on which New York law
authorized his imprisonment, Hurd suffered a harm of constitutional magnitude
under the Eighth Amendment. The district court erred in concluding otherwise.
That does not mean Hurd suffered a violation of his Eighth Amendment
rights, however. Nor does it mean an inmate whose release is not processed on
their conditional release date is entitled to damages under § 1983. Far from it. If
a period of prolonged detention results from discretionary decisions made in good
faith, mistake, or processing or other administrative delays, as opposed to the
deliberate indifference of prison officials, then there is no Eighth Amendment
5 New York law provides that inmates granted conditional release “shall be under the
supervision of the state department of corrections and community supervision for a
period equal to the unserved portion of the [maximum] term,” and that “[t]he conditions
of release, including those governing post-release supervision, shall be such as may be
imposed by the state board of parole in accordance with the provisions of the executive
law.” N.Y. Penal Law § 70.40(1)(b); see also N.Y. Exec. Law § 259-c(2) (granting the state
board of parole authority of “determining the conditions of release of the person who
may be . . . conditionally released”). As noted above, the State’s right to impose some
form of punishment through supervision or other conditions of release (if any) does not
justify a punishment of imprisonment that is unauthorized by law.
16
liability. The deliberate indifference prong will do most of the work under these
and similar circumstances, as “[t]he degree to which a harm is ‘unnecessary’ in the
sense of being unjustified by the exigencies of prison administration will affect the
state-of-mind requirement a plaintiff must meet to demonstrate that a particular
prison official violated the eighth amendment.” Sample, 885 F.2d at 1109.
To that end, the district court concluded that “Fredenburgh’s alleged
conduct is troublesome and would certainly satisfy deliberate indifference if not
willfulness, as [Hurd] alleges Fredenburgh agreed with Felicien to keep [Hurd]
incarcerated past his conditional release date.” J.A. 57. Fredenburgh argues that
collateral estoppel applies here because of the Court of Claims’ finding that she
acted reasonably under the circumstances, and that Hurd is therefore precluded
from arguing that Fredenburgh acted with deliberate indifference.
Regardless of the Court of Claims’ decision, we are skeptical that
Fredenburgh—whom Hurd failed to demonstrate has any authority or duty to
change an erroneous JTC from the City—can be deliberately indifferent to any
harm suffered because of that error. There must be “a causal connection between
the official’s response to the problem and the infliction of the unjustified
detention,” Sample, 885 F.2d at 1110, and if Fredenburgh could not do anything
17
about Hurd’s prolonged detention as a matter of law, then any deliberate
indifference on her part would likely be irrelevant.
For example, in this case, Hurd cites to no authority or factual allegations
establishing that Fredenburgh had an obligation under New York law or DOCCS
policy to confirm the accuracy of the JTCs she received. Nor is it clear how
Fredenburgh would or could have accomplished that, given that Penal Law § 600-
a delegates the sole responsibility for certifying jail-time credit to NYCDOC, and
the relevant information would be contained within NYCDOC records regardless.
Nor are there any allegations that the prison had “procedures in place calling for
[Fredenburgh] to pursue the matter,” or that “given . . . [Fredenburgh’s] job
description or the role . . . she has assumed in the administration of the prison, [the
jail-time credit] calculation problem will not likely be resolved unless . . . she
addresses it or refers it to others . . . .” Id. Hurd’s legal conclusion that
Fredenburgh had such a duty or responsibility is not entitled to unquestioned
acceptance at the motion to dismiss stage.
We acknowledge that Hurd’s allegations do not concern only
Fredenburgh’s ability to change his jail-time credit but also her alleged conduct in
agreeing to create the erroneous JTCs to keep Hurd in prison in the first place. As
18
the district court concluded, such allegations could amount to deliberate
indifference. We need not resolve this issue. Nor do we reach the issue of whether
the Court of Claims’ reasonableness finding has preclusive effect here. Because it
was not clearly established that prolonged detention past one’s mandatory
conditional release date constitutes a harm of constitutional magnitude under the
Eighth Amendment, Fredenburgh is entitled to qualified immunity on Hurd’s
claim. Before addressing that point, however, we turn to Hurd’s Fourteenth
Amendment argument.
II. Fourteenth Amendment
The Fourteenth Amendment guarantees “more than fair process”; it
“cover[s] a substantive sphere as well, barring certain government actions
regardless of the fairness of the procedures used to implement them.” Cnty. of
Sacramento v. Lewis, 523 U.S. 833, 840 (1998) (internal quotation marks and citations
omitted). “Substantive due process rights safeguard persons against the
government’s exercise of power without any reasonable justification in the service
of a legitimate governmental objective.” Southerland v. City of New York, 680 F.3d
127, 151 (2d Cir. 2012) (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
“The first step in substantive due process analysis is to identify the
constitutional right at stake.” Kaluczky v. City of White Plains, 57 F.3d 202, 211 (2d
19
Cir. 1995). Next, the plaintiff “must demonstrate that the state action was so
egregious, so outrageous, that it may fairly be said to shock the contemporary
conscience.” Southerland, 680 F.3d at 151–52 (internal quotation marks and citation
omitted). “The interference with the plaintiff’s protected right must be so
shocking, arbitrary, and egregious that the Due Process Clause would not
countenance it even were it accompanied by full procedural protection.” Id. at 152
(internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
The district court rejected Hurd’s substantive due process claim, concluding
that he lacked a cognizable liberty interest in conditional release because it is a
state-created right. We disagree.
The district court reasoned that conditional release “is clearly a state-created
right, as the Supreme Court has held that conditional release is not protected by
the Constitution.” J.A. 51. Although “[t]here is no right under the Federal
Constitution to be conditionally released before the expiration of a valid sentence,”
Swarthout v. Cooke, 562 U.S. 216, 220 (2011), that does not establish that state
inmates lack a liberty interest in conditional release where the state has created a
statutory mechanism providing for mandatory conditional release for eligible
inmates. It means only that an inmate has no constitutional right to demand or
20
expect conditional release where the incarcerating authority does not offer such an
opportunity under its law. 6
Because “[f]reedom from bodily restraint has always been at the core of the
liberty protected by the Due Process Clause from arbitrary governmental
action[,] . . . commitment for any purpose constitutes a significant deprivation of
liberty that requires due process protection.” Foucha v. Louisiana, 504 U.S. 71, 80
(1992) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted); see also Davis v. Hall, 375
F.3d 703, 712 (8th Cir. 2004) (noting that individuals have a “protected liberty
interest in being free from wrongful, prolonged incarceration”). Inmates eligible
for mandatory conditional release are not limited to the confines of procedural due
process in protecting that right. Cf. Swarthout, 562 U.S. at 220. They also are
6 Along these lines, the district court relied on our reaffirmation in Graziano v. Pataki, 689
F.3d 110, 114–15 (2d Cir. 2012) (per curiam), that New York inmates lack a liberty interest
in parole because New York’s parole scheme does not create a legitimate expectation of
release. But New York’s parole scheme differs from the promise of conditional release.
No inmate is entitled to parole; it is a discretionary decision reserved to the judgment of
the parole board. See id. at 113–14. All state inmates are eligible for conditional release.
Unlike parole, where inmates have only a possibility or probability of being granted the
chance to complete their sentence outside prison, inmates such as Hurd who satisfy the
statutory requirements for conditional release are guaranteed immediate release from
prison. That difference creates a legitimate expectation of release, and by extension a
liberty interest protected by the due process clause.
21
entitled to substantive due process protection against egregious and arbitrary
government interference.
Substantive due process protects rights that are rooted in the principles of
ordered liberty. Freedom from unlawful restraint is exactly that. Hurd remained
in prison for almost one year while the State lacked any authority to further detain
him. Because New York’s conditional release scheme is mandatory, there is no
meaningful difference in Hurd’s liberty interest in release from prison at the
expiration of his maximum sentence and conditional release when he became
entitled to an earlier release date. Once Hurd’s good-time credit was approved,
the expiration date of his maximum term of imprisonment and his “conditional”
release date were one and the same for substantive due process purposes.
It is of no moment that conditional release is a state-created right. Although
many state-created rights are not recognized under the substantive due process
clause, state-created rights that trigger core constitutional interests are entitled to
its protection. Cf. Local 342, Long Island Pub. Serv. Emps. v. Town Bd. of Town of
Huntington, 31 F.3d 1191, 1196 (2d Cir. 1994) (explaining that the substantive due
process clause does not protect “simple, state-law contractual rights, without
more”). It is the nature of the right, not just its origin, that matters. Conditional
22
release under New York law is not akin to a state-created right of contract; it is a
state-created right of mandatory release from prison, preventing unlawful
continued physical restraint. Cf. Harrah Indep. Sch. Dist. v. Martin, 440 U.S. 194, 198
(1979) (“[I]nterest[s] entitled to protection as a matter of substantive due process
[must] resembl[e] the individual’s freedom of choice with respect to certain basic
matters of procreation, marriage, and family life.” (internal quotation marks and
citation omitted)); see also Local 342, 31 F.3d at 1196 (substantive due process
protects rights that are “so vital that neither liberty nor justice would exist if they
were sacrificed” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)). That distinction
makes all the difference. Once Hurd satisfied the statutory requirements for
conditional release, he had a liberty interest in freedom from detention upon his
conditional release date, as guaranteed by New York law. 7
7 Although Fredenburgh does not raise the issue, we acknowledge that the Supreme
Court cautions against expanding the substantive due process clause where a more
specific Amendment provides a source for protection against government conduct. See,
e.g., Lewis, 523 U.S. at 842. Our holding does not expand the protection of the Fourteenth
Amendment’s substantive due process clause, however. We are applying the clause to
one of the explicit concepts it exists to protect: liberty from unjustified restraint. Cf. Davis,
375 F.3d at 714. Our conclusion that Hurd also alleged a harm of constitutional
magnitude under the Eighth Amendment does not deprive him of a liberty interest in his
mandatory conditional release.
23
Fredenburgh’s error is considered at the second step of the substantive due
process analysis—the nature of the alleged interference with Hurd’s liberty
interest. Specifically, we must determine whether Fredenburgh’s conduct was
egregious and shocking to the conscience.
The district court reasoned that, “if true, [Hurd’s] allegations that
Fredenburgh intentionally took actions to keep [Hurd] imprisoned without
justification might shock the judicial conscience . . . .” J.A. 52. Here, too,
Fredenburgh argues that collateral estoppel applies because of the Court of
Claims’ finding that she acted reasonably under the circumstances, which
precludes any finding in this case that her conduct satisfied the high standard for
a substantive due process violation. Again, we need not reach this issue, because
it was not clearly established that Hurd had a liberty interest in his mandatory
conditional release at the time of the sentencing miscalculations.
III. Clearly Established Law
“Government actors are entitled to qualified immunity insofar as their
conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of
which a reasonable person would have known.” Okin v. Vill. of Cornwall-On-
Hudson Police Dep’t, 577 F.3d 415, 432–33 (2d Cir. 2009) (internal quotation marks
and citation omitted). “The relevant, dispositive inquiry in determining whether
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a right is clearly established is whether it would be clear to a reasonable officer
that his conduct was unlawful in the situation he confronted.” Id. at 433 (citation
omitted). “The principle of qualified immunity ensures that before they are
subjected to suit, officers are on notice their conduct is unlawful.” Id. (internal
quotation marks and citation omitted).
Fredenburgh is entitled to qualified immunity under this standard. It was
not clearly established during the period of Hurd’s prolonged detention that an
inmate suffers harm of a constitutional magnitude under the Eighth Amendment
when they are imprisoned past their mandatory conditional release date, nor was
it clearly established that an inmate has a liberty interest in mandatory conditional
release protected by the Fourteenth Amendment’s substantive due process clause.
Hurd nevertheless urges us to find that these rights were clearly established
because they follow from existing precedent. For his Eighth Amendment claim,
Hurd relies on Sample, 885 F.2d 1099, Calhoun, 999 F.2d 647, Sudler v. City of New
York, 689 F.3d 159 (2d Cir. 2012), and Francis, 942 F.3d 126. These cases confirm a
uniform legal principle that no federal, state, or local authority can keep an inmate
detained past the expiration of the sentence imposed on them. But in the qualified
immunity analysis, the Supreme Court has admonished that rights should not be
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defined at a high level of generality and instead must be “particularized to the
facts of the case.” White v. Pauly, 137 S. Ct. 548, 552 (2017) (internal quotation
marks and citation omitted). None of the cases upon which Hurd relies addresses
a conditional release scheme, let alone one in which an inmate is entitled to
mandatory release prior to the expiration of their maximum sentence. More to the
point, none of them confirm that prolonging an inmate’s detention past their
conditional release date might violate the inmate’s rights under the Eighth
Amendment.
Sample concerned Pennsylvania inmate Joseph Sample, who was granted
bail pending a new trial after his life sentence was vacated on appeal. 885 F.2d at
1102. The senior records officer at a Pittsburgh detention facility was instructed to
determine whether Sample could be released; the officer erroneously informed
authorities that Sample still had time left on another sentence. Id. Sample served
nine extra months in prison as a result. Id. at 1102–03.
Because of his authority and job responsibilities, the records officer’s error
rendered him liable under the Eighth Amendment. Id. at 1110–12. Specifically,
the Third Circuit held that prolonged incarceration past the expiration of a prison
sentence constitutes punishment under the Eighth Amendment. Id. at 1108.
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Where there is no penological justification for that incarceration, as determined by
the deliberate indifference prong, that punishment is cruel and unusual; and to be
liable under § 1983, the officer’s deliberate indifference must have caused the
prolonged incarceration. Id. at 1108–11.
To be sure, Sample clearly established that “imprisonment beyond one’s
term constitutes punishment within the meaning of the eighth amendment.” 885
F.2d at 1108. But it did not establish that the Eighth Amendment prohibits
imprisonment beyond a mandatory conditional release date that occurs prior to
the expiration of the maximum sentence.
Calhoun concerned New York inmate Bennie Calhoun, who was sentenced
to a maximum term of six years, released on parole, arrested for a parole violation
with two months left on the maximum term, and reincarcerated on a finding of
probable cause for the parole violation. 999 F.2d at 650. The parole board declared
Calhoun a “delinquent,” meaning the time between his arrest and reincarceration
—in this case, five days—was added to his maximum sentence. Id. at 650–51. New
York law entitled Calhoun to a final parole revocation hearing to determine his
guilt on the parole violation, but his amended maximum sentence expired before
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this hearing could take place, and Calhoun was administratively discharged. Id.
He sued based on this prolonged incarceration of five days. Id. at 651–52.
We focused on Calhoun’s due process claim—that he was sentenced based
on a parole violation charge, rather than any finding of guilt. Id. at 652–54. But in
a single paragraph, we noted (again, as a descriptive matter) that five extra days
in prison does not satisfy the constitutional harm prong of the Eighth Amendment
analysis, and even if it did, Calhoun could not show any deliberate indifference
and his Eighth Amendment claim failed. Id. at 654. We distinguished those five
days from the nine months of prolonged detention in Sample—long enough to
qualify as harm of a constitutional magnitude. Id. Thus, at most, Calhoun
reinforced Sample’s holding that unlawful detention past the expiration of a
maximum sentence constitutes punishment under the Eighth Amendment. Like
Sample, Calhoun did not touch on conditional release.
Sudler concerned New York inmates who were sentenced to felony state
prison terms, released on parole, convicted of misdemeanor parole violations,
sentenced to concurrent sentences in City custody for those parole violations, and
denied “parole jail-time credit” by prison officials upon their transfer back into
state custody to complete their original sentence terms. 689 F.3d at 162–65. By
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denying the inmates credit for the time served on their misdemeanor parole
violations against their felony prison terms, the prison officials effectively imposed
consecutive sentences and prolonged the terms of the inmates’ sentences, without
an order from the sentencing judges.
We held that the prison officials were entitled to qualified immunity because
it was not clearly established that an inmate’s procedural due process rights are
violated when an administrator alters a sentence imposed by the court. Id. at 174–
77. After introducing the inmates’ due process theory, we noted in a footnote that
“[w]e have suggested in the past, and other courts within and without this Circuit
have held, that detention beyond that authorized by law may violate the Eighth
Amendment.” Id. at 169 n.11. In addition to Sample, we cited to Calhoun for
support, describing the latter decision as “assuming that detention of a prisoner
beyond the end of his term could violate the Eighth Amendment in appropriate
circumstances, but finding no violation where the unauthorized detention lasted
only five days and the plaintiff failed to demonstrate the defendants’ deliberate
indifference.” Id. Because no party in Sudler raised the issue, however, any Eighth
Amendment claim was waived. Id. Accordingly, Sudler only reinforces the
principle established in Sample and acknowledged in Calhoun that the Eighth
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Amendment protects against prolonged imprisonment that is not authorized by
law. It too did not discuss conditional release or how conditional release relates
to the expiration of a maximum term of imprisonment.
Francis concerned New York inmate Byran Francis, who was sentenced in
state court to serve time concurrent with a federal sentence yet to be imposed,
contrary to New York law. 942 F.3d at 131–35. The subsequently imposed federal
sentence was not ordered to run concurrently with the previously imposed state
sentence. Id. at 132. After Francis commenced his federal sentence, DOCCS
officials realized the state court’s error, determined of their own accord that
Francis’s sentences were consecutive, and requested the federal authorities
transfer him back to state custody at the completion of his federal sentence,
without seeking clarification or providing Francis an opportunity to be heard. Id.
at 134–36. Upon release from federal custody into state custody, Francis sought
resentencing in state court and was released four months later. Id. at 136–37.
We held that this violated the Francis’s procedural due process rights. Id. at
141–45. The officials were entitled to qualified immunity, however, because the
specific procedural protections to which we found Francis entitled were not clearly
established before that decision. Id. at 148–49. By contrast, we declined to reach
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the merits of Francis’s Eighth Amendment claim in determining that the officials
were entitled to qualified immunity for any constitutional violation. Id. at 149–51.
We acknowledged in Francis that “[n]o case establishes that these four
months of additional incarceration, although of serious dimension, crossed the
threshold of sufficient objective seriousness to constitute cruel and unusual
punishment under the Eighth Amendment.” Id. at 150 (internal quotation marks,
alteration, and citation omitted). In doing so, we rejected the inmate’s argument
that Haygood v. Younger, 769 F.2d 1350, 1352–53, 1358 (9th Cir. 1985) (en banc)—
where an inmate remained incarcerated for five years due to an erroneous
interpretation of state law—and Sample, 885 F.2d 1099, clearly foreshadowed a
constitutional determination.
Although these courts hinted at the outcome in this case, our legal
conclusion was not manifest. Each case concerns detention beyond an inmate’s
maximum sentence. Before today, we have never held that an inmate suffers a
constitutional harm under the Eighth Amendment when they are detained beyond
a statutorily mandated release date, even if that mandatory release date precedes
the expiration of the maximum term of their sentence. It was clearly established
that New York State could not detain Hurd past the expiration of his maximum
31
sentence, but it was not clearly established that once Hurd’s conditional release
date was approved, continued detention beyond that date qualifies as a
constitutional harm for Eighth Amendment purposes.
As for his substantive due process claim, Hurd admits that no decision has
held that imprisonment past a mandatory conditional release date violates the
Fourteenth Amendment’s substantive protections. He nevertheless argues that
“such a conclusion follows inescapably from the procedural due process cases, as
a prisoner must have such a right once state officials have actually granted him
discretionary early release.” Appellant Br. 39.
We disagree. The substantive due process analysis differs from procedural
due process; and it is not the case that one must follow from the other. And for
the same reasons that our precedents do not dictate the outcome of his Eighth
Amendment claim, Hurd’s liberty interest in conditional release does not
obviously follow from the procedural due process cases upon which Hurd relies.
Fredenburgh is therefore entitled to qualified immunity on Hurd’s Eighth
and Fourteenth Amendment claims.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, we AFFIRM the judgment of the district court.
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