Former Missouri Department of Corrections (MDOC) inmate Randell Brown filed a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 suit against a number of MDOC employees, including Keith Fortner and Eugene Scott. Brown alleged Fortner and Scott, both correction officers with the MDOC, acted with deliberate indifference by failing to provide safe transportation to Brown, thus violating Brown’s Eighth Amendment rights. The district court granted the defendants’ motion to dismiss, and this court reversed in part, concluding Brown stated a claim against Fortner, Scott, and the other correctional officers involved in his transportation.
Brown v. Mo. Dep’t of Corr.,
I. Background
For purposes of summary judgment, we view the evidence in the light most favorable to Brown, the non-moving party.
Ngo v. Storlie,
*556 Fortner and Scott were part of an MDOC transportation team transferring Brown and other inmates from one MDOC facility to another in a five-vehicle convoy. Fortner drove the second vehicle in the convoy, a van carrying Brown and nine other inmates. Scott drove the third vehicle, a van carrying one inmate.
Brown was fully shackled with belly chains, handcuffs, leg chains, and a black box covering the handcuffs as officers loaded him into the van. The other inmates were similarly restrained. These restraints prevented Brown and the other inmates from securing their seatbelts without assistance. The restraints also would prevent the inmates from bracing themselves in the event of a crash.
As correction officers loaded Brown into the van, Brown asked the officers to fasten his seatbelt. The officers refused to secure Brown’s seatbelt and instead replied with taunts. Other inmates also requested seatbelts and were rebuffed. Brown reports hearing transportation officers say, “Ah, hell, you all will be all right,” “You all don’t think we’re gonna wreck, do you?”, and “What, you all don’t trust our driving?” Brown is unable to identify personally the officers who made the taunting comments and has presented no evidence identifying either Fortner or Scott as one of the officers who taunted the inmates.
Fortner denies being present when Brown was loaded into the van and denies making any of the taunting comments recounted above. However, Fortner admits he failed to fasten Brown’s seatbelt. When seatbelts are available, transporting inmates without securing their seatbelts violates MDOC policy. Scott claims he was not present when Brown was loaded into the van, explaining he was fifty feet away, calling the names of the prisoners as they were loaded into the vans. Scott did not fasten the seatbelt of the prisoner riding in his van; there is no evidence as to whether the prisoner requested a seat-belt.
After the officers placed the inmates in the vans, the convoy departed. Both Fort-ner and Scott put on their own seatbelts. While driving in a convoy formation, the convoy drivers purposely followed closely to prevent other cars from getting between the convoy vehicles. The convoy passed other vehicles at inappropriate times. The convoy traveled in excess of the speed limit (55 miles per hour), going up to 75 miles per hour. Inmates in Fort-ner’s van repeatedly asked Fortner to slow down, but he did not respond nor adjust his driving. After one request, Fortner turned up the radio.
At one point, Fortner slammed on his brakes and swerved to avoid hitting the convoy’s lead vehicle, which had slowed suddenly due to the actions of another car. Scott, who was looking down at his speedometer, looked up and saw Fortner’s brake lights. Scott slammed on the brakes and swerved. Scott’s vehicle skidded and collided with the back of Fortner’s van while going approximately 30 miles per hour. Brown suffered injuries as a result of the collision.
The police investigation after the collision listed Scott’s inattentive driving as causing the accident. MDOC also investigated the incident and concluded there was insufficient spacing between the vehicles.
Brown filed suit against multiple MDOC defendants pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Brown alleged the acts described above constituted a violation of his Eighth Amendment right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment. The district court granted the defendants’ motions to dismiss, and Brown appealed. On appeal, this court upheld the dismissal of Brown’s claims against a number of defendants, but reversed the district court as to the corree
*557
tion officers involved in Brown’s transportation. This court concluded that “Brown stated a claim against the five [correction officers] involved in transporting the inmates, as he alleged he asked them all to fasten his seatbelt, but they refused.”
Brown,
On remand, all of the remaining defendants moved for summary judgment. The district court granted summary judgment in favor of all the defendants except Fort-ner and Scott. The district court found that Brown presented sufficient evidence for a reasonable jury to conclude that Fortner and Scott violated Brown’s Eighth Amendment rights. The court further held that the right Fortner and Scott allegedly violated was clearly established and therefore concluded that Fortner and Scott were not entitled to qualified immunity. Fortner and Scott appeal the denial of summary judgment and the district court’s conclusion that they are not entitled to qualified immunity. Brown argues that this court lacks interlocutory appellate jurisdiction to hear Fortner’s and Scott’s claims.
II. Analysis
A. Jurisdiction
We first address whether we have interlocutory appellate jurisdiction. “’While a denial of summary judgment is not generally reviewable on immediate appeal, we may review a denial of summary judgment based on qualified immunity on immediate appeal, ‘to the extent that it turns on an issue of law.’ ”
Powell v. Johnson,
In this appeal, Fortner and Scott question whether the uncontested evidence demonstrates that they violated a clearly established constitutional right, thereby foreclosing the protection of qualified immunity. We conclude this is a legal issue falling squarely within our limited interlocutory appellate jurisdiction. However, in making their argument, Fortner and Scott contest some facts Brown asserts. Such factual disputes are not properly before the court.
Craighead v. Lee,
B. Qualified Immunity
Fortner and Scott appeal the district court’s denial of their claims of qualified immunity. “Qualified immunity protects a government official from liability in a section 1983 action unless the official’s conduct violated a clearly established constitutional or statutory right of which a reasonable person would have known.”
Henderson,
Review of a denial of summary judgment based upon a rejection of a claim of qualified immunity is a two-step process. First, we consider whether the evidence demonstrates that the defendants’ conduct violated a constitutional right.
See Saucier v. Katz,
1. Did the Defendants’ Conduct Violate a Constitutional Right?
The Supreme Court has interpreted the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment to include a right to safe and humane conditions of confinement.
See Farmer v. Brennan,
a. Fortner
Fortner was driving the van transporting Brown. Fortner states in his brief, “There is no dispute that Fortner did not place plaintiff in a seatbelt despite Brown, and other inmates, requesting that he do so.” This admission acknowledges two facts: 1) Brown requested a seatbelt and 2) Fortner did not secure Brown with a seatbelt. Fortner asserts these are the only facts on which Brown’s § 1983 claim rests and argues that failing to secure a seatbelt is insufficient to constitute a constitutional violation. Fortner’s characterization of the evidence is incorrect. In addition to the failure to fasten Brown’s seatbelt, Brown presents evidence of Fort-ner’s reckless driving. Brown has offered evidence that Fortner was driving in excess of the speed limit, following too closely to the lead van, crossing over double-yellow lines, and passing non-convoy cars when the road markings clearly prohibited doing so. Further, Brown has presented evidence showing that the inmates riding in Fortner’s van asked him to slow down, and Fortner ignored their requests. 1
The evidence Brown presented makes the instant case quite similar to
Morgan,
The uncontested evidence indicates Fortner knew Brown was shackled and restrained in a manner that prevented him from securing his own seatbelt. Nonetheless, Fortner rejected Brown’s request for a seatbelt. Fortner drove recklessly and ignored requests by the inmate passengers in his van for him to slow down. From this evidence, a reasonable jury could conclude that there was a substantial risk of harm to Brown and that Fortner knew of and disregarded the substantial risk harm. As such, Brown has presented sufficient evidence that Fortner’s actions may have violated the Eighth Amendment prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment.
b. Scott
Scott was driving the van that crashed into Fortner’s van. Scott was looking down at his speedometer when the convoy vehicles in front of him suddenly slowed down. When he looked up and saw the brake lights, Scott responded by slamming on his brakes and swerved in an attempt to avoid the van in front of him. He was unsuccessful. Like Fortner, Scott was driving in excess of the speed limit, following too closely to the van in front of him, and passing at inappropriate times as part of the five-vehicle convoy. Scott’s driving proximately caused the accident that resulted in Brown’s physical injuries.
The critical difference between Fortner and Scott, however, is knowledge. “The question of what was known to a person who might be shielded by qualified immunity is reviewable.”
Henderson,
Considering the facts in the light most favorable to Brown, the evidence demon *561 strates that Scott may have driven in a manner that increased the risk of harm to the shackled inmates in the convoy, including Brown. Without more than reckless driving, however, we cannot conclude that Scott’s conduct amounted to deliberate indifference.
2. Was the Right Violated Clearly Established?
The second question in considering the denial of qualified immunity is whether the right violated was clearly established. Although we conclude there is insufficient evidence that Scott’s conduct violated the constitution, because we conclude there is sufficient evidence regarding Fortner’s conduct, this inquiry is necessary.
See Scott v. Harris,
— U.S. -,
A right is clearly established if “it would be clear to a reasonable officer that his conduct was unlawful in the situation he confronted.”
Saucier,
We conclude that Fortner had “fair warning” that driving recklessly while transporting a shackled inmate who had been denied the use of a seatbelt and ignoring requests to slow down violated the constitutional prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment. There is no question that it was clearly established that subjecting inmates to unreasonable and substantial risk of harm constituted a constitutional violation.
See Farmer,
III. Conclusion
Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s order denying qualified immunity to Fortner, and we reverse the denial of qualified immunity to Scott. We remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Brown has also alleged that five of the nine officers in the transportation convoy were gathered around his van as he was being loaded and that the officers made taunting comments about the inmates' requests for seatbelts. This court originally relied upon this assertion in concluding that Brown stated a claim against the transportation officers as a group.
See Brown,
. Brown cannot identify Scott as one of the officers who taunted him, and Scott denies making or hearing the taunts. As explained in analyzing the claim against Fortner, we cannot consider the taunts made by unidentified officers in determining whether a specific officer violated Brown's constitutional rights. See supra note 1.
