PUBLISHED
OPINION
COURT OF
APPEALS
DECISION
DATED AND FILED
June 1,
2000
Cornelia G. Clark
Clerk, Court of Appeals
of
Wisconsin
NOTICE
This opinion is subject to further editing. If
published, the official version will
appear in the bound volume of the Official
Reports.
A party may file
with
the Supreme Court a petition to review an adverse decision by the
Court of Appeals.
See
Wis. Stat.
§808.10
and Rule 809.62.
No. 00-0127
STATE OF
WISCONSIN IN COURT OF APPEALS
DISTRICT
IV
William J. Evers,
Clifford A. Ferguson, Barry L.
Smalley,
Petitioners-Respondents,
Roger P. Vander
Logt,
Petitioner-Respondent-Cross-
Appellant,
v.
Michael P. Sullivan,
Stephen Puckett, Molly
Sullivan-Olson,
Wendy
Monfils, Diane Fergot, J.
Warden Smith, and
Jon
Litscher,
Respondents-Appellants-Cross-
Respondents.
APPEAL from a judgment of the circuit court for Dane
County:MORIA KRUEGER,
Judge.Reversed and cause remanded with directions.
Before Vergeront, Roggensack and Deininger, JJ.
¶1. DEININGER,J.Officials of the Department of
Corrections appeal a judgment
declaring that the department lacks legal authority to transfer
the petitioning inmates
"to facilities outside of the state of Wisconsin without
their
consent."1 The
department
claims that the trial court erred in concluding that it lacked
statutory authority to transfer the
inmates to out-of-state facilities. We agree and thus reverse
the appealed judgment. The
department also claims the trial court erred in not declaring the
instant action moot with
respect to inmate Evers, and in ordering certain documents to be
returned to him. For
reasons we discuss below, we decline to address these two claims
of error.
BACKGROUND
¶2. The inmates filed this action alleging that the
department had improperly
classified each of them as eligible for incarceration at an
out-of-state facility.2 They requested the circuit court to
declare that it
would be unlawful for the department to transfer them out of
state, and to grant "a
permanent injunction that will prohibit the [department] from
evaluating, classifying,
recommending, or transferring any Wisconsin Inmate out of state
for the purpose of
incarceration and punishment without the individual[']s freely
given consent and
permission." The department moved to dismiss for failure to
exhaust administrative
remedies and for failure to state a claim upon which relief may
be granted.
¶3. The trial court determined that the inmates' claims
were "not within
the scope of the Inmate Complaint Review System," and that
no other administrative
remedy appeared to be available to them. The court thus declined
to dismiss the inmates'
action for failure to exhaust administrative remedies.3 The court also concluded that the
inmates had
failed to state claims for relief based on (1)federal and state
statutes governing the
"Interstate Corrections Compact"; (2)the department's
lack of authority to
contract with the Corrections Corporation of America; and
(3)various constitutional theories
(cruel and unusual punishment, access to the courts, ex post
facto laws, extradition, and
slavery). However, in what it deemed "the crux of this
case," the court
concluded that, under Wis. Stat. §301.21 (1997-98),4 the department was authorized to
"contract for the transfer and confinement of inmates
in [its] custody"
at out-of-state facilities, but that it lacked statutory
authority to actually transfer the inmates
to those locations. The court also determined that, because the
inmates' sole surviving cause
of action "is based on purely legal considerations and
involves no factual
determinations," its decision on the motion, in effect,
resolved the issue in favor of the
inmates.
¶4. Accordingly, the court entered a judgment declaring
that the department
"lack[s] the legal authority to transfer these petitioners
to facilities outside the State of
Wisconsin without their consent." It ordered the department
not to transfer the two
inmates who had not yet been transferred out of state, and to
return two others, who were
then incarcerated in out-of-state facilities, to a Wisconsin
correctional institution within thirty
days of its order.5 The
department
appeals this judgment, as well as two interlocutory
orders.6
ANALYSIS
¶5. A trial court's ruling on a motion to dismiss for
failure to state a claim, as
well as its interpretation of a statute, present questions of law
which we review denovo, and
thus we owe no deference to the trial court's conclusions.
See Atkinson v. Everbrite,
Inc., 224 Wis.2d 724, 727, 592 N.W.2d 299 (Ct. App.
1999); Truttschel
v. Martin, 208 Wis.2d 361, 364-65, 560 N.W.2d 315 (Ct.
App. 1997). Our
chief objective when interpreting a statute is to ascertain the
intent of the legislature.
See Truttschel, 208 Wis.2d at 365. We first look to
the plain language of
the statute to discern the legislature's intent. See Anderson
v. City of
Milwaukee, 208 Wis.2d 18, 25, 559 N.W.2d 563 (1997). If
the plain language
of the statute clearly sets forth the legislative intent, we
apply the statute accordingly to the
facts and circumstances before us. See Jungbluth v. Hometown,
Inc., 201
Wis.2d 320, 327, 548 N.W.2d 519 (1996). If the statute's
language is ambiguous, however,
we will consult its legislative history, scope, context and
purpose in order to apply the statute
consistent with the legislature's intent. See id.
¶6. Thus, we begin by examining the language of the
statute. Wisconsin Stat.
§301.21 provides, in relevant part, as follows:
(1m)(a)The department may enter into one or
more contracts
with another state or a political subdivision of another state
for the transfer and confinement
in that state of prisoners who have been committed to the custody
of the
department....
....
(2m)(a)The department may enter into one or more contracts
with a private person
for the transfer and confinement in another state of prisoners
who have been committed to
the custody of the department....
....
(6)Contracts under this section are subject to approval
under s.
302.26,7 except that for
purposes of
s.302.26 this section constitutes legislative approval of
contracts between the department and
the state of Minnesota.
¶7. Neither party to this appeal
asserts that the
statute is ambiguous, although they do disagree as to its proper
interpretation. The
department claims that the legislature's grant of authority to
contract for the transfer and
confinement of Wisconsin inmates at public and private facilities
in other states carries with
it the authority to do the thing contracted for, and that any
other reading of the statute is
unreasonable. The inmates, on the other hand, urge us to
interpret the statute as did the trial
court, and to conclude that the department may indeed enter into
such contracts, but that
absent the consent of an individual inmate, the department may
not effect an out-of-state
transfer. They claim that this result is mandated by the fact
that they have not been
"committed to the custody of the department," but have
been sentenced to
"the Wisconsin state prisons," in which they have the
right to remain during the
terms of their sentences. See, e.g., Wis. Stat.
§§973.013(1)(a) and
973.02.
¶8. A statute is not ambiguous simply because parties
disagree as to its meaning
or proper application; rather, the determination of whether
ambiguity exists is a question of
law. See State v. Setagord, 211 Wis.2d 397,
406, 565
N.W.2d 506 (1997). We will find a statute to be ambiguous only
if it is capable of being
understood by reasonably well-informed persons in two or more
different ways. See
id. We conclude that Wis. Stat. §301.21 presents no
ambiguity
regarding the present issue.
¶9. The language of the statute plainly evinces a
legislative intent to authorize
the department to both enter into contracts with entities
operating correctional facilities in
other states, and to then transfer Wisconsin inmates for
incarceration at those facilities
pursuant to those contracts. The statute lists numerous matters
that must be addressed in the
authorized contracts, including the "delivery and retaking
of inmates," and the
waiver of extradition between Wisconsin and "the state to
which the prisoners are
transferred." See Wis. Stat. §301.21(1m)(a)4
and 5. Additionally,
the statute directs the parole commission to conduct hearings
"to which an inmate
confined under this contract may be entitled" according to
rules established by the
department. See §301.21(1m)(c). In short, there is
simply no reasonable
way to read these and other provisions of §301.21 without
concluding that the
legislature envisioned that the department would indeed transfer
prisoners out of state under
the authorized contracts.
¶10. The phrases quoted above show that the legislature
clearly contemplated
that the department would incarcerate some "inmates" or
"prisoners"
in other states under the authorized contracts. Neither Wis.
Stat. §301.21, nor any
other statute cited by the inmates, limits the department's
authority to select inmates for
transfer out of state, or restricts the department to transfer to
out-of-state facilities only those
inmates who consent to be transferred. The legislature did
impose a requirement for final
approval by the legislature or its joint finance committee for
all but the smallest contracts
with out-of-state facilities in any given fiscal year.
See Wis. Stat.
§§301.21(6) and 302.26.8 Had the legislature wished to
restrict the
department's authority to implement the contracts authorized
under §301.21, or to limit
its authority to the transfer of "volunteers" only, it
could easily have said so,
just as it imposed the fiscal review and approval requirement for
larger contracts. We will
not read into §301.21 a restriction on the department's
authority to transfer and
incarcerate in other states those inmates which it deems
appropriate for transfer under its
contracts with out-of-state institutions.9
¶11. We turn now to the arguments advanced by the inmates
in support of the
trial court's conclusion that the department lacked statutory
authority to transfer them to
out-of-state facilities. They contend that because several
sentencing statutes,10 and indeed, their own judgments
of
conviction, provide that they are "sentenced to the
Wisconsin state prisons," Wis.
Stat. §301.21 cannot be read to grant the department
authority to place them other than
in those institutions identified in Wis. Stat. §302.01, all
of which are located in
Wisconsin. The inmates note, as did the trial court, that Wis.
Stat. §302.18(1)
authorizes the department to transfer "inmates of a
prison" to "another
prison," but that out-of-state correctional facilities are
not, by definition,
"prisons." Cf. State ex rel. Speener v.
Gudmanson, 2000 WI App 78, No. 99-0568. And, because
other provisions of
§302.18 grant or refer to specific transfer authority in
certain circumstances, the
inmates claim that the legislature's failure to likewise spell
out the department's authority to
effect inmate transfers to out-of-state facilities is fatal to
the department's position on appeal.
We disagree.
¶12. We read the provisions in Wis. Stat. ch. 973 which
refer to sentences
"to the Wisconsin state prisons" as simply identifying
the initial place of
imprisonment for those who receive sentences of more than one
year, thereby differentiating
sentences of less than one year, which "shall be to the
county jail." See
Wis. Stat. §973.02. By so providing, the legislature
has allocated to the state
the responsibility for incarcerating persons sentenced to serve
more than one year, and to the
counties the responsibility for incarcerating those with shorter
sentences. This division
between the state and counties of the custodial and fiscal
responsibilities for housing
prisoners creates neither a "right" of the inmates to
remain in an institution
described in Wis. Stat. §302.01 during the entire term of
their sentences, nor a
restriction on the department's authority to place inmates
committed to its custody wherever
it deems appropriate.
¶13. The inmates deny, however, that they have been
"committed to the
custody of the department." Noting that, by its terms, Wis.
Stat. §301.21
applies only to "prisoners who have been committed to the
custody of the
department," the inmates contend that they were
"sentenced to the custody of a
Wisconsin State Prison," and that the department "may
have custody of the
prisons and State property but it does not have custody of the
Wisconsin State prison
inmates." The trial court similarly concluded that
"[t]hese inmates are
not committed to the custody of the department,"
ostensibly because only
participants in the intensive sanctions program are specifically
identified by statute as having
that status.11 Because the
inmates
are not free to leave their present surroundings, however, they
are clearly in someone's
custody, and we conclude that the department is indeed their
custodian.
¶14. Wisconsin Stat. §301.03(2) provides that the
department shall
"[s]upervise the custody and discipline of all prisoners and
the maintenance of state
correctional institutions and the prison industries...." We
agree with the department,
therefore, that the inmates have "been committed to the
custody of the
department," as provided in Wis. Stat. §301.21(1m) and
(2m). To conclude
otherwise would be to conclude that when the legislature enacted
§301.21, it did so
intending that no prisoners, except perhaps intensive sanctions
program participants, would
ever be transferred for confinement in another state. Such a
conclusion is unreasonable,
given that §301.21 makes no reference whatsoever to the
intensive sanctions program,
which, although it contains an incarceration component, is
designed to provide an alternative
to incarceration "that is less costly than ordinary
imprisonment." See
Wis. Stat. §301.048(1)(a). Thus, the inmates' attempt to
distinguish a "sentence
to the Wisconsin state prisons" from a "commitment to
the custody of the
department" is of no avail.
¶15. We are similarly unpersuaded that, in failing to
expressly grant transfer
authority apart from the authority to contract for the
out-of-state placement of prisoners, the
legislature intended to withhold the authority from the
department to transfer inmates out of
state. We acknowledge that the legislature has specifically
spelled out in other statutes the
department's authority to transfer inmates among certain types of
facilities. But that fact
does not mean it must do so in every case. The department points
to numerous other statutes
which grant it the authority to contract for facilities and
services, for which there is no
separate implementation authority stated, but which nonetheless
convey the authority to carry
out the subject matter of the contracts. These include Wis.
Stat. §302.27, which
provides that "[t]he department may contract with local
governments for temporary
housing or detention in county jails ... for persons sentenced to
imprisonment in state
prisons," and Wis. Stat. §303.065(3) which permits the
department to
"arrange and contract for" suitable facilities
"for the purpose of quartering
inmates with work release privileges." In neither case is
separate "transfer
authority" granted, either in the contracting provision or
in Wis. Stat. §302.18,
but in both cases, there can be little question that the
legislature has authorized the
department to place inmates in the facilities for which it has
contracted.
¶16. Thus, we conclude that the trial court erred in its
interpretation of Wis.
Stat. §301.21, and that the statute indeed authorizes the
department to transfer any
inmates it deems appropriate for incarceration at facilities in
other states, pursuant to
contracts which it enters into under the statute. The inmates do
not renew on appeal their
claims that their transfers out of state violate a federal
statute and several constitutional
provisions, all of which the trial court rejected. They do,
however, offer an alternative
rationale for sustaining the trial court's conclusion which
appears to be grounded in the Due
Process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. The inmates claim
that their sentences
"to the Wisconsin state prisons" give them an
"expectation" that they
will serve their entire sentences in Wisconsin correctional
facilities, and that they thus have a
"liberty interest" enforceable under state law (the
sentencing statutes and their
judgments of conviction), which would be infringed upon if the
department transfers them to
an out-of-state institution. We reject this argument.
¶17. As the department points out, prison inmates have no
constitutionally
protected liberty interest in not being transferred from one
prison to another, even if the
transfer results in greater restrictions on the prisoner's
freedom. See Wagner v.
Hanks, 128 F.3d 1173, 1175 (7th Cir. 1997) (citing
Meachum v.
Fano, 427 U.S. 215 (1976)). Moreover, the Supreme Court
determined in
Sandin v. Conner, 515 U.S. 472, 484 (1995), that state
laws do not create
liberty interests or rights in prisoners unless the imposition of
an "atypical and
significant hardship ... in relation to the ordinary incidents of
prison life" is at stake.
¶18. Thus, unless the inmates can establish that the
general conditions in an
out-of-state facility to which they are to be transferred are
more restrictive than those existing
in any Wisconsin state prison, there would be no basis for a
claim that state law has created
in them a liberty interest in remaining in the Wisconsin prisons
for the remainder of their
sentences. Cf. Wagner v. Hanks, 128
F.3d 1173 (7th Cir. 1997). Even if such a showing could be made,
however, Wisconsin law
does not create a legitimate expectation that an inmate will not
be transferred to an
out-of-state institution during his or her sentence. As we have
discussed, Wisconsin's
sentencing statutes direct only that a prisoner be initially
incarcerated in either the state
prisons or a county jail, depending on the length of sentence
imposed, and the legislature has
authorized the department, under Wis. Stat. §301.21, to
transfer inmates in its custody
for confinement in out-of-state facilities. The inmates
therefore possess no state-created
liberty interest which might be infringed by their transfers out
of state.
¶19. Thus, the inmates have stated neither a statutory
nor a constitutional claim
upon which their action can continue. Accordingly, we reverse
the appealed judgment and
direct that on remand, judgment be entered dismissing the
inmates' petition.
¶20. During the proceedings in the trial court, the
department moved to
dismiss inmate Evers from the action, claiming that Evers had
been reclassified and was no
longer being considered for transfer to an out-of-state facility.
Thus, argued the department,
the present litigation would have no impact on him, and he lacked
standing to further pursue
it. The trial court denied the department's motion, in part
because it concluded that nothing
precluded the department from considering Evers for transfer
again in the future. The
department argues that the trial court erred in so ruling.
However, because we are reversing
the appealed judgment and directing the dismissal of all of the
inmates' claims, we find it
unnecessary to determine whether there might be an additional
reason for dismissing Evers's
individual claim for relief.
¶21. A dispute also arose during the proceedings in the
trial court regarding the
possession of certain department documents by Evers, and the
department's confiscation of
those documents from his cell.12
The department argued that the documents were not intended for
public distribution, that
their possession by an inmate "could seriously threaten the
security of the Wisconsin
prison system," and that they constituted
"contraband" under department
rules, which therefore authorized their confiscation. The trial
court disagreed and returned
the documents to Evers. Evers, in turn, in conjunction with a
motion for summary
affirmance of the trial court's judgment, submitted the documents
to this court, claiming that
his relinquishment of the documents rendered the issue of his
right to their possession
moot.13
¶22. Nonetheless, the department asks us to declare that
the trial court
improperly ruled that Evers had a right to possession of the
documents and erred in returning
them to him. We decline to take up the issue, inasmuch as we
conclude that to do so would
constitute little more than the rendering of an advisory opinion.
Whatever threat to
institutional security may have been presented by Evers's
possession of the documents has
already occurred, given that he, and apparently other inmates,
are now apprised of their
contents.14 Nothing
contained in
the documents appears to have any bearing on our disposition of
this appeal, and whether
they constitute contraband under prison rules is no longer of
consequence in this litigation,
inasmuch as it is to be dismissed. Our declination to address
the issue should not be
interpreted as a decision on the merits of the dispute.
¶23. Finally, we note that inmates Evers and Ferguson
cite as errors the trial
court's determination that its declaratory judgment and
injunction apply only to the
petitioning inmates, and its refusal to certify the litigation as
a class action on behalf of all
inmates similarly situated. As we have noted (see footnote 2),
Evers and Ferguson
voluntarily dismissed their cross-appeal, and this claim is thus
not properly before us.
Furthermore, because we are directing that the action be
dismissed, the issue of whether the
trial court erred in these regards, like the interlocutory issues
raised by the department, is no
longer of consequence to the parties.
CONCLUSION
¶24. For the reasons discussed above, we reverse the
appealed judgment and
direct that on remand, judgment be entered dismissing the
inmates' action. Because we
decline to address the issues of Evers's standing to continue
this litigation and the
department's confiscation of certain documents from him, nothing
in this opinion should be
interpreted as expressing any view as to the merits of those
issues.
By the Court.-Judgment reversed and cause remanded with
directions.
Recommended for publication in the official reports.
1 We will refer to the appellants, collectively, as "the
department," and to the
respondents as "the inmates."
2 The appellants are officials and employees of the Department of
Corrections who were
named as respondents in a petition for a writ of certiorari filed
by four inmates of Wisconsin
state prisons. The trial court concluded that the inmates had
provided insufficient
information regarding the specific decisions they wanted reviewed
to permit review on
certiorari. But because they had also included a request for a
declaratory judgment, the
court ruled that the action could proceed as one seeking
declaratory relief under Wis. Stat.
§806.04 (1997-98).
We also note that all four of the inmates initially filed
notices of cross-appeal, and that
one of them remains identified as a cross-appellant in the
caption. However, no cross-appeal
is presently before us. Inmates Evers and Ferguson voluntarily
dismissed their
cross-appeals; we previously ordered inmate Smalley's
cross-appeal dismissed for failure to
comply with Wis. Stat. §814.29(1m) (1997-98); and inmate
Vander Logt failed to
timely submit a cross-appellant's brief. We now order Vander
Logt's cross-appeal
summarily dismissed as well.
3 The department does not challenge in this appeal the trial
court's ruling that the inmates
had not failed to exhaust administrative remedies.
4 All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 1997-98
version unless otherwise
noted.
5 On the department's motion, this court stayed the portion of
the trial court's judgment
requiring the return of the two inmates to Wisconsin pending
resolution of the appeal.
6 The appeal of a final judgment or order "brings before the
court all prior nonfinal
judgments, orders and rulings adverse to the appellant and
favorable to the respondent made
in the action or proceeding not previously appealed and ruled
upon." Wis. Stat.
Rule809.10(4).
7 Wisconsin Stat. §302.26 provides that "[i]f a
contract under s. 301.21 ...
involves the transfer of more than 10 prisoners in any fiscal
year to any one state or to any
one political subdivision of another state, the contract may be
entered into only if it is
approved by the legislature by law or by the joint committee on
finance."
8 See footnote 7, above.
9 Although our interpretation of Wis. Stat. §301.21 rests on
a reading of its plain
language, we note that since enactment of the statute, the
department has transferred
hundreds of Wisconsin inmates for incarceration at facilities
located in several other states,
under contracts which have been approved and funded by the
legislature or its joint finance
committee. We agree with the department that the legislature's
acquiescence in its actions
provides a strong indication that the legislature intended to not
only authorize it to execute
contracts under §301.21, but to implement them as well.
See Department of
Revenue v. Exxon Corp., 90 Wis.2d 700, 733, 281 N.W.2d 94
(1979)
(explaining that "[l]ong-standing administrative
construction of a statute is accorded
great weight in the determination of legislative intent because
the legislature is presumed to
have acquiesced in that construction if it has not amended the
statute"); also
see State v. Sample, 215 Wis.2d 487, 508-09, 573
N.W.2d 187
(1998) (Abrahamson, C.J., concurring) ("`When aid to
construction of the meaning of
words, as used in the statute, is available, there certainly can
be no "rule of law"
which forbids its use, however clean the words may appear on
`superficial
examination.'") (citation omitted).
10 See, e.g., Wis. Stat. §§973.013(1)(a), 973.02
and
973.15(1).
11 See Wis. Stat. §301.048(4) ("A participant
[in the intensive
sanctions program] is in the custody and under the control of the
department....").
12 The documents consist of an internal staff memorandum
regarding "Tennessee
Placement Criteria," a "Screening Form," and a
"Draft Out of State
Population Key and Tracking" form.
13 Evers asserted in his motion that he was surrendering the
original documents forwarded to
him by the trial court, and that he had not copied the documents
while they were in his
possession.
14 Evers asserts that he had originally obtained the documents
from another inmate, and that
copies of these documents had been circulating among prison
inmates.