HomeMy WebLinkAbout95-6733 CivilMICHAEL CONWAY, a/k/a
AMIN ALI BEY,
Petitioner
Ve
PENNSYLVANIA DEPARTMENT OF
CORRECTIONS, MARTIN HORN,
Commissioner,
Respondents
IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS OF
CUMBERLAND COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
CIVIL ACTION - LAW
NO. 95-6733 CIVIL TERM
IN RE: OPINION PURSUANT TO PA. R.A.P. 1925
Oler, J., May 21, 1996.
In this action in the nature of a mandamus proceeding~ an
inmate of a state correctional institution has appealed pro se from
an order of this court sustaining Respondents' preliminary
objections and dismissing the action. This opinion in support of
the court's order is written pursuant to Pennsylvania Rule of
Appellate Procedure 1925(a).
PROCEDURAL HISTORY; STATEMENT OF FACTS
Petitioner is Michael Conway, also known as Amin Ali Bey. At
the time of the initiation of this action he was an inmate at the
State Correctional Institution at Camp Hill in Cumberland County,
Pennsylvania; he is presently an inmate at the State Correctional
Institution at Smithfield in Huntingdon County. Respondents are
the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections, and Commissioner Martin
Horn.
On November 22, 1995, Petitioner filed with the Cumberland
County Prothonotary a document entitled "Motion for Production of
Urine, for Mass Spectrometry Testing." The gist of the motion was
~ The document filed by Petitioner to institute the action
was entitled "Motion for Production of Urine, for Mass Spectrometry
Testing." The relief requested is discussed in the text infra.
NO. 95-6733 CIVIL TERM
that Petitioner had been in a prerelease program at a halfway house
in Harrisburg, that a random test of his urine produced a positive
result for opiates, that as a result of the test he was removed
from the halfway house and returned to a state correctional
institution, that a parole release which he had anticipated was not
at this time being recommended, and that the test result must have
been caused by his consumption of "a steady quantity" of salad
dressing containing poppy seeds.
In support of the latter proposition, Petitioner attached an
excerpt from a newspaper or magazine article, reading as follows:
WaSh those poppy seeds
As drug screening is becoming more common
in the workplace, it's amazing what can skew
the results. In fact, you might want to skip
that poppy seed bagel if a drug test is on
your agenda.
Dr. Paul Orsulak, professor of psychiatry
at the University of Texas Southwestern
Medical Center in Dallas, says that even the
small amount of opium in one bagel topped with
poppy seeds might not alter your mood, but it
can cause a positive result in some routine
drug-screening tests.
The motion contended that the Department's actions constituted
a violation of Petitioner's due process rights. It asserted that
he "ha[d] been deprived of his liberty based on the misleading
results of a scientific procedure."
The motion included an offer by Petitioner to bear the expense
of a more sophisticated test of his urine. Relief requested by the
NO. 95-6733 CIVIL TERM
Petitioner was an order directing the Department to retest the
urine and to return him to his previous status.
The motion of Petitioner also included a request that he be
permitted to proceed in forma pauperis. The court granted this
request.2
A number of preliminary objections to Petitioner's motion were
filed by Respondents on December 18, 1995. These included an
objection based upon the absence of a proper method of commencing
the action3 and a demurrer.
In response to an additional request by Petitioner for free
legal representation, the court appointed counsel to represent
him.4 Argument on Respondents' preliminary objections was heard by
this court on March 22, 1996. At the argument, Petitioner's
counsel indicated that his client was no longer representing that
he would bear the cost of a new test.s
Following the argument, the court issued the order presently
on appeal:
AND NOW, this 25th day of March, 1996,
upon consideration of Respondents' Preliminary
Objection in the nature of a demurrer to
Petitioner's Motion for Production of Urine,
2 Order of Court, November 22, 1995.
3 See Pa. R.C.P. 1007 (civil action to be commenced by filing
of praecipe for writ of summons or complaint).
4 Order of Court, February 21, 1996.
s See Order of Court, March 25, 1996 (note 1).
3
NO. 95-6733 CIVIL TERM
for Mass Spectrometry Testing, and following
oral argument, the preliminary objection is
SUSTAINED and the motion is DISMISSED. See
Wilder v. Department of Corrections, Pa.
Commw. , [673] A.2d [30] (No. 304 M.D.
1995) (March 13, 1996) (dismissing inmate's
mandamus action where prerelease status was
revoked due to allegedly misleading drug test
result).6
DISCUSSION
In Wilder v. Department of Corrections, Pa. Commw. ,
673 A.2d 30 (1996), the Commonwealth Court addressed a petition of
an inmate at a state correctional institution which "essentially
[sought] a writ of mandamus to require the Department [of
Corrections] to reinstate him to his pre-release status [at a half-
way house]."? In Wilder, a revocation of the petitioner's
prerelease status, and his return to a state prison where parole
was no longer being recommended, had been prompted by a false
positive urine test for cocaine - a result of his use of
medication.
In sustaining a demurrer filed by the Department of
Corrections to the inmate's petition, the Wilder Court first noted
that "[m]andamus is an extraordinary remedy through which a court
6 Order of Court, March 25, 1996 (footnotes omitted).
A copy of the Commonwealth Court's opinion in Wilder was
attached to the order.
7 Wilder v. Department of Corrections,
673 A.2d 30, 31 (1996).
Pa. Commw.
4
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of competent jurisdiction compels a public official, board or
municipality to perform a mandatory duty 'or ministerial act where
(1) the petitioner has a legal right to enforce the performance of
that act, (2) the defendant has a corresponding duty to perform the
act, and (3) there is no other adequate or appropriate remedy."8
Petitioner contends that he had a liberty
interest in his pre-release status, including
the [halfway house] placement, and that the
Department's revocation of his pre-release
status violated his due process rights.
In order to determine whether a
constitutional violation has occurred, a
determination must initially be made that a
protected liberty interest exists and, if so,
what process is due. Protected liberty
interests may be created by either the Due
Process Clause itself or by state law.9
After analyzing a number of cases in this area, the
Commonwealth Court in Wilder held that "the Due Process Clause does
not create a liberty interest in a prisoner's participation in a
pre-release program.''~° The Court further held that "[t]here is
also no state-created liberty interest in the pre-release status
that is protected by the Due Process Clause because the revocation
is not the type of deprivation of the freedom from restraint
required .... "~
Id. at
Id. at
Id.
Id.
673 A.2d at 31-32.
, '673 A.2d at 32 (citations omitted).
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"Because [the p]etitioner failed to establish a liberty
interest with due process protection," the Commonwealth Court
concluded in Wilder, "he ha[d] no clear legal right to relief and
mandamus [was] unavailable.''~2 Accordingly, "the [Department of
Corrections'] preliminary objection [was] sustained ....
The alleged facts of the present case, and the relief sought
by Petitioner, are so similar to those addressed by the
Commonwealth Court in Commonwealth v. Wilder,TM that a ruling in
favor of Petitioner would, in this court's view, have represented
an unwarranted disregard of applicable authority. For these
reasons, the order dismissing Petitioner's motion was entered.
Id. at
673 A.2d at 33.
Id.
Pa. Commw. , 673 A.2d 30 (1996); see also Lawson v.
Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, Department of Corrections, 114 Pa.
Commw. 573, 539 A.2d 69 (1988); Lott v. Arroyo, 785 F. Supp. 508
(E.D. Pa. 1991).
This court has not attempted to construe Petitioner's
motion as a habeas corpus petition. He has not alleged that
Cumberland County was the source of his sentence, as would be
necessary for a challenge in this court to the legality of his
continued incarceration, under Pennsylvania Rule of Criminal
Procedure 1701(a). Nor has he challenqed the conditions of his
confinement as that term is commonly understood under Rule 1701(b).
Because of the court's disposition of this case, it is
unnecessary to discuss other preliminary objections raised by
Respondents. This court has also not undertaken sua sponte a
review of whether Petitioner's action might more appropriately have
been filed as a petition for review or other request for relief in
the Commonwealth Court.
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Michael Conway a/k/a Amin Ali Bey
BS-8919
SCI-Smithfield
1120 Pike Street
P.O. Box 999
Huntingdon, PA 16652
Petitioner, Pro Se
Shawn P. Kenny, Esq.
Assistant Counsel
Department of Corrections
P.O. Box 598
Camp Hill, PA 17001-0598
Attorney for Respondents
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