This case is before us on remand from the' Supreme Court of the United States. On March 18, 1994, this court affirmed the jury verdict in favor of four prison guards sued in their individual capacities by an inmate, Floyd B. Gibbs, who alleged that the guards violated his Eighth Amendment rights when they witnessed Gibbs’s beating by other inmates but refused to intervene.
Gibbs v. Franklin,
At trial on Gibbs’s 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claim against the four prison guards, the trial judge instructed the jurors that they could find that the guards violated 'Gibbs’s Eighth Amendment rights if the guards failed to intervene in Gibbs’s beating “with actual iiir tent to inflict the injury on [Gibbs] or with deliberate indifference to [Gibbs’s] welfare.”
Gibbs,
On appeal, Gibbs argued that the instruction should have used the term “reasonably preventable” rather than “readily prer ventablé.” He contended that “a prison guard has a duty to take reásonable steps to protect a' prisoner even if the impending injury is n'ot ‘readily’ preventable.”
Id.
We disagreed, observing that proof of a prison guard’s subjective intent to cause harm is an essential element of an Eighth Amendment claim.
Id.
at 526 (quoting
Duane v. Lane,
On remand, Gibbs' seizes upon a single phrase in
Farmer
which refers to the failure of prison officials to “take reasonable measures to abate [the known risk].”
Farmer,
511 U.S. at -,
The narrow issue raised in Farmer concerned proof of the mental state requirement for an Eighth Amendment claim. In Farmer, the Supreme Court reaffirmed that “deliberate indifference,” a subjective measure, is the applicable standard by which to judge a prison guard’s intent.
We reject petitioner’s invitation to adopt an objective test for deliberate indifference. We hold instead that a prison official cannot be found hable under the Eighth Amendment for denying an inmate humane conditions of confinement unless the official knows of and disregards an excessive risk to inmate health or safety; the official must both be aware of facts from which the inference could be drawn that a substantial risk of serious harm exists, and he must also draw the inference.
Farmer,
511 U.S. at -,
Moreover, the “readily preventable” language in the jury instruction Gibbs challenged had nothing to do with the obligations of the prison guards — that language referred to one way in which the jury could infer intent on the part of the prison guards. In other words, the instruction given to the jury in Gibbs clearly allowed the jury to infer intent to cause injury if the prison guards knew of the impending injury and the injury would have been readily preventable had the guards intervened. The “readily preventable” language simply addressed the prison guards’ subjective intent; this language did not define the scope of a prison guard’s duties or obligations toward inmates.-
Upon reconsideration of the parties’ Joint Statement and supplemental briefs, we hold that the Supreme Court’s decision in Farmer does not affect our judgment or opinion in this case.
