David Lewis Adams, a Texas prisoner, brought this § 1983 action against a prison guard. After a Spears hearing, the trial court made findings and dismissed the suit as frivolous. Adams appeals.
Adams’s complaint is that the defendant guard, in an act of gratuitous brutality, grabbed and twisted his right arm in an attempt to break it. Next, he asserts, the guard then put the “lid” on plaintiff’s fingers and placed all his weight on the “lid.” (The “lid” is apparently the door of a small opening in the cell door.) Two of plaintiff’s fingers were seriously lacerated, requiring stitches. At a Spears hearing, 1 Adams repeated his allegations without significant change.
The district court determined that there were no “severe injuries,” noting as well that “[tjhere is no evidence of malice other than Plaintiff’s conclusory allegation.”
Analysis
The district court’s equating failure to state claim with frivolousness was error.
Neitzke v. Williams,
— U.S. -,
This case is one of many which were held for disposition pending a decision in
Huguet v. Barnett,
After Huguet, then, and in order for a plaintiff to prevail on an Eighth Amendment excessive-force claim, he must prove:
1. a significant injury, which
2. resulted directly and only from the use of force that was clearly excessive to the need, the excessiveness of which was
3. objectively unreasonable, and
4. the action constituted an unnecessary and wanton infliction of pain.
Id.
The “significant injury” factor is taken directly from
Johnson v. Morel,
At the time that this case was decided, the district court did not have
Huguet
for guidance. The court applied the standards of
Shillingford v. Holmes,
In
Salcedo v. McCotter,
No. 89-6015, slip op. at 3-4 (5th Cir. May 16, 1990) [
The district court’s rejection of Adams’s allegation that the defendant acted maliciously transcends the proper scope of a
Spears
hearing. “[T]he most important consideration in a § 1915(d) credibility assessment is the inherent plausibility of a prisoner's allegations based on objective factors_”
Cay v. Estelle,
Adams’s allegations advance a significant injury resulting from the defendant's use of excessive force that was objectively unreasonable and done for the sole purpose of inflicting unnecessary pain. The allegations are thus not frivolous, and the district court erred in so finding.
REVERSED.
Notes
. The
Spears
hearing, developed by innovative trial judges, is designed to winnow the flood of state prisoner civil rights litigation and is designed to produce a concrete statement of the claimed wrong.
Spears v. McCotter,
. In addition, Johnson, a free citizen, also was "disabled” from his employment for about two weeks as a result of this injury.
