Officials of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, responsible for the Commonwealth’s prison system (the “Commonwealth”), appeal two orders that the district court entered in July and August 1988 in a “prison conditions” case, a case which began about 10 years ago and which has involved findings of unconstitutionally poor prison conditions, agreed stipulations about a time table for improvement and the building of considerable new prison capacity. The district court has appointed monitors; it has imposed sanctions designed to produce compliance with the time tables; and, in July and August 1988 it (1) ordered the Ponce District Jail closed and (2) increased the fines imposed as sanctions for failure to meet certain parts of the time table. Initially the Commonwealth appealed from both these orders. By the time of oral argument, it had closed the Ponce District Jail, and it therefore abandoned that portion of the appeal. It continues, however, to press its appeal of the district court’s August 1988 order significantly increasing the fines it must pay for each month that it keeps prisoners confined in less than 35 square feet of space per prisoner. Having reviewed the record in this case, we conclude that the district court’s order is lawful.
I.
Background
To understand the issues the reader should keep in mind the following key events in this lengthy litigation:
a.February 1979. The plaintiffs began their class action complaining of unconstitutional prison conditions.
b. September 1980. The district court found that conditions in Puerto Rico's prisons violated the Eighth Amendment's prohibition against cruel and unusual punishment. Among other unlawful features of the system, it found serious overcrowding, with less than 20 square feet of space available for inmates in some prisons. The court entered an order requiring the Commonwealth, amоng other things, to provide enough additional capacity so that, as a temporary, initial matter, every inmate had at least 35 square feet of space. It also required the Commonwealth to submit plans for providing at least 55 square feet in dormitories and 70 square feet in individual cells on a permanent basis. See Morales-Feliciano v. Romero-Barcelo,497 F.Supp. 14 , 41 (D.P.R.1979).
c. March 1986. The district court found that the Commonwealth’s prisons still did not comply with the Constitution. Citing “lengthy noncompliance [with the court’s 1980 order] by defendants,” Morales-Feliciano v. Romero-Barcelo,672 F.Supp. 591 , 622 (D.P.R.1986), the court appointed monitors, who looked into prison conditions and met with the parties.
d. September 1986 — January 1987. In September the parties entered into a “stipulation” that the Commonwealth would meet the “35 square foot” standard by the end of 1986 and the “55 square foot” standard by thе end of 1987. The court approved the stipulation in January 1987 and ordered the Commonwealth to comply with its terms.
e. July 1987. Although the Commonwealth built additional capacity in 1986 and 1987, prison inmate population rose from 5400 to 7000 (between August 1985 and July 1987). In July 1987, the district court found that the Commonwealth had not met the “35 square foot” standard. It held the Commonwealth in contempt of its September 1980 and January 1987 orders. It assessed a fine of $50,000 for the past failure, and a prospective fine of $10 per day per inmate for each inmateheld in excess of a facility’s “35 square foot” capacity. (For example, if the Commonwealth held 200 inmates in a facility that could hold 150 giving each prisoner 35 square feet, the fine would be $10 timеs 50 or $500 per day.) See Morales-Feliciano v. Hernandez-Colon, 697 F.Supp. 26 (D.P.R.1987).
f. July — September 1987. The Commonwealth, pointing to the still increasing prison population, asked the court to extend the “35 square foot” deadline until November 1987, by which time, the Commonwealth said, it would meet the “35 square foot” standard. In mid-September 1987 the court denied the request. See Morales-Feliciano v. Hernandez-Colon,672 F.Supp. 627 (D.P.R.1987). In late September the court, in another order, increased certain fines (not directly relevant here) and warned the Commonwealth that it was considering “additional sanctions.”
g. April 1988. The court, after hearing from the monitors and the parties, and taking account of weather-related construction delays, postponed the “55 square foot” deadline from the end of 1987 to the end of 1988.
h. July 1988. The district court ordered the Commonwealth to close the Ponce District Jail (where conditions were particularly poor) by the end of 1988. See Morales-Feliciano v. Hernandez-Colon,697 F.Supp. 37 (D.P.R.1988). The Commonwealth initially opposed the order, for it feared its new facilities would not be ready in time. But, by the time of oral argument on this appeal, the new facilities were ready and the Commonwealth has closed the Jail.
i. August 1988. The district court, noting that the Commonwealth’s prisons still did not meet the “35 square foot” standard, increаsed its “noncompliance” fine from $10 per excess inmate per day to $50 per excess inmate per day. It also provided that the fine rate would increase by $10 per month beginning in September, so that by April 1989 it would amount to $130 per excess inmate per day. If the Commonwealth’s counsel’s estimate of 800 to 900 “excess” inmates in April 1989 is correct, thе fine for April would have amounted to $3900 per excess inmate or $3,510,000. The Commonwealth appeals from this August order.
II.
Appealability
The plaintiffs, pointing to authority holding that civil contempt orders are ordinarily “interlocutory,” that is, not “final,”
see
28 U.S.C. § 1291, “injunctive,”
see
28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1), or “collateral,”
see Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp.,
As one court has noted, however, “[exceptions to the rule [that civil contempt orders arе not final] are plentiful.”
Drummond Co. v. District 20, UMW,
In this case, to allow appeal threatens neither the “inconvenience” nor the “costs”
At the same time, to force the Commonwealth to wait for a “final judgment” to appeal the civil contempt order risks “denying justice by delay.”
Eisen,
Thus, we think the civil contempt order in this case resembles those appealable orders where the district court has entered the contempt order after a final judgment and a party has appealed sеeking review, not of the legal merits of the basic case, but only of the legal validity of the order of contempt itself.
See Cabrera v. Municipality of Bayamon,
III.
The Legal Merits
1. The Commonwealth makes two arguments to baсk its claim that the district court could not lawfully find it in contempt of the January 1987 order—an order that embodied the Commonwealth’s own agreed-upon time schedule for relieving severe prison overcrowding. First, it says that it “substantially complied” with the order, at least in respect to providing each prisoner with at least 35 square feet of space.
See Fortin v. Commissioner of Mass. Dep’t of Pub. Welfare,
Sеcond, the Commonwealth argues that it has made good faith efforts to comply with the remedial order and the court cannot expect it to do better. The Commonwealth points out that, in recent years, it has dramatically increased spending on prisons. (It spent $115 million in 1977-80; $179 million in 1981-84; and $306 million in 1985-88). It has also built far more prison capacity. But, it adds, the growth of prison population from 5400 in August 1985 to 8300 by September 1988 (and to 9200 by April 1989), along with certain weather-related construction delays (which led the district court to postpone the “55 square foot” compliance date), means that overcrowding still exists.
“Good faith” efforts, however, do not automatically constitute a sufficient legal excuse for failing to сarry out the district court’s order.
Fortin,
The Commonwealth points to
Nelson v. Collins,
In sum, we believe the district court could find that it was within the Common
2. The Commonwealth also argues that the amount of the sanction assessed (initially $50 per excess prisoner per day, with a rate increase of $10 per month) is unreasonably, and hence unlawfully, high; Since the purpose of the sanction in this case is to induce compliаnce with the court order, its reasonableness depends upon “the character and magnitude of the harm threatened by continued contumacy, and the probable effectiveness of any suggested sanction in bringing about the result desired.”
United States v. UMW,
First, the threatened harm (providing less than 35 square feet per inmate) is serious, particularly in the context of the prison conditions that originally led to this lawsuit,
see Morales-Feliciano v. Romero-Barcelo,
3. The Commonwealth argues that the court issued its August order without the prior hearing that the law requires.
See Washington Metro. Area Transit Auth. v. Amalgamated Transit Union, Nat. Capital Local Div. 689,
(We add that if the recent hurricane has created new, serious problems, the Commonwealth is free to call those problems to the attention of the district court.)
For these reasons the August 1988 order of the district court is
Affirmed.
