This is an appeal from the dismissal,, for failure to state a claim, of a suit by female inmates of the Cook County Jail in Chicago against the jail’s superintendent and the County: The plaintiffs are pretrial detainees who complain that the defendants, by gratuitously exposing them to dangerous and degrading conditions of confinement, are depriving them of their liberty, without, due process of law and thus violating thé Fourteenth 'Amendment. They seek an injunction and damages.
We begin with a difficult question of appellate jurisdiction. The plaintiffs .appealed within 30 days of the denial of their postjudgment motion’ under Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e) for reconsideration of the judgment dismissing their case. But whether the appeal brought up for review not only the denial of the motion but also — what is much more important given the limited scope of appellate review of, a denial of a Rule 59(e) motion — the dismissal of the suit depends on whether the motion was filed within 10 days after the entry of the judgment. Fed. R.App. P. 4(a)(4)(A)(iv). The judgment was entered on December 19, 2003. The Rule 59(b) motion was filed on January 7, which, because of the exclusion of Christmas and weekend days, was the eleventh day after the filing of the motion unless December 26 is also excluded from the computation — and it is excluded only if it was a “legal holiday” within the meaning of Fed.R.Civ.P. 6(a)
That rule provides that “when the period of time prescribed or allowed [by a Federal Rule of Civil Procedure] is less than 11 days, intermediate ... legal holidays shall be excluded in the computation,” “legal holiday” being defined in the rule to include not only Thanksgiving, Christmas, and other holidays enumerated in the rule but also “any other day appointed as a holiday by the President or the Congress of the United States, or by the state in which the district court is held.” The day after Christmas is not one of the enumerated holidays. But on December 9, 2003, President Bush had issued Executive Or
The defendants argue that because Executive Order 13320, on which the plaintiffs rely for the proposition that December 26 of 2003 was a legal holiday, does not
say
that the President has declared December 26 to be a holiday, the plaintiffs’ Rule 59(e) motion was untimely. In support they cite our decision in
Latham v. Dominick’s Finer Foods,
Our statement in
Latham
that the corresponding day in 1997 was not a legal holiday was a dictum — for whether that day was or was not a holiday, the appeal was timely by virtue of the chief judge’s closure order — and so does not bind us in this case. The dictum was rejected in
Mashpee Wampanoag Tribal Council, Inc. v. Norton,
Mashpee is supported by the natural understanding of what the President is doing when he closes the executive branch on the day after Christmas: he is extending the Christmas holiday. It would be positively Grinch-like for the President to say, “you can have December 26 off, but don’t think it’s a legal holiday.” It would mean, among other things, that federal employees who had to work that day (such as air controllers) would not receive the double pay that they are entitled to for working on a holiday. 5 U.S.C. § 5546(b). Realistically, moreover, when Christmas falls on a Thursday it is pretty hard to get employees to put in a serious day’s work on Friday. This is true for the private sector as well as for the public sector. So that’s a lost day, and with the time for preparing and filing a Rule 59(e) motion already compressed to only 10 days, it makes practical sense to" interpret the Presidential closure order as declaring a legal holiday.
The clincher is the superior simplicity of a rule that says that when the President closes the government for celebratory or commemorative reasons (see, e.g., Executive Order 13343, 69 Fed.Reg. 32,245 (June 6, 2004), closing the government for a day of commemoration of President Reagan), rather than because - of a budgetary crisis (see “Federal Workers Bear Brunt of Budget Shutdown,” Nov. 14, 1995 http://www.enn.com/US/9511/debt_ limii/ll-13/employees/index.html), or for a snow emergency, terrorist act, or some other force majeure, the presumption is that he-has declared a legal holiday. ■ The presumption has not been rebutted:
So we can turn to the merits of the appeal. Had the plaintiffs been convicted, their challenge to the conditions of their confinement would be governed by the “cruel and unusual punishments” clause of the Eighth Ajmendmeht, which has been interpreted to require proof that the convicts’ custodians were deliberately indifferent to a serious hazard created by those conditions.
Farmer v. Brennan,
In the ruling case of
Bell v. Wolfish,
“Punishment” in such a case is really just a name for unreasonably harsh treatment meted out to inmates who have not yet been convicted of any crime. As we said in
May v. Sheahan, supra,
Another way to interpret the cases, however, is that they understand the Eighth Amendment’s term cruel and unusual “punishments” to refer to the character of the act rather than to the intention in inflicting it. If the act involves the gratuitous infliction of pain or suffering it is deemed to be punishment, and as long as the act was intended it is a violation of the prisoner’s constitutional right even if the act was not intended as punishment.
On either understanding of the Eighth Amendment’s use of the word “punishments,” the standards applicable to complaints by convicts and by pretrial detainees about unsafe conditions of confinement merge. See, e.g.,
Zentmyer v. Kendall County,
We have now to apply the standard. Our only source of facts is the complaint. The following are its essential allegations. The jail, or at least the part where the women are held, is divided into a number of tiers. Each tier contains cells, each of which houses two inmates. Each tier also has a day room where the inmates can socialize and watch television, and adjacent to the day room are shower stalls. The tiers are separated by locked doors, at each of which a guard is stationed. From his station he can see what is going on in the day room but cannot see inside the cells. Once a month the jail is locked down, meaning that all the inmates are confined to their cells to enable the guards to search the entire facility for weapons and contraband. The lockdown lasts from Friday afternoon to Sunday afternoon — 48 to 50 hours — and during that entire time the inmates are confined to their cells. They are fed, but they are not under the observation, or even within hailing distance, of the guards, who are busy with the -searches. If during this protracted period of sequestration two inmates sharing a cell get into a fight, as they not infrequently do, or experience some other crisis, such as giving birth, they often can’t get the attention of a guard, and injuries, sometimes' serious, result. The custodian of the jail, Sheriff Sheahan, is well aware of all this. (We emphasize that at this stage in the litigation these are merely allegations and not proven facts.)
These consequences might not condemn the administration of the jail if there were no other way to conduct the lockdown. But given the allegation that the tiers are separated by a locked door, it is unclear why, when the guards have finished searching one tier, which apparently takes less than an hour, they cannot let the inmates of that tier out of their cells so that they can enter the day room and thus be in sight and hearing of a guard and therefore be able to summon him should trouble erupt. Of course while the tier is being searched all the inmates in that tier have to be locked in their cells. If they were roaming around, an inmate whose cell hadn’t been searched yet could slip a weapon or contraband to an inmate whose cell had been searched and was now in the day room with access to the grates in the doors of all the other cells. But unless inmates can go between tiers, once a tier has been searched there is no apparent reason why the inmates in that tier can’t be let out of their cells. There may well be a reason of which we’re unaware, but the case is in the pleading stage and we have no evidence that would enable us to identify and evaluate such a reason.
The defendants point us to a paragraph in the complaint which states that during a lockdown one of the plaintiffs was attacked by her cellmate and yelled for help but “it
The district judge misunderstood the plaintiffs’ claim, though forgivably since it is not well articulated. He thought they were arguing only “that the searches could be performed faster and that detainees could then be immediately released from them cells.” Were that their argument, it could well be found not to state a claim, as it would be ridiculous for judges to be placing time limits on the search of a jail cell. Cf.
Lunsford v. Bennett,
So the judgment must be reversed. We offer several observations for guidance on remand. First, the judge dismissed the suit without ruling on whether, as the plaintiffs requested, the case should be certified as a class action. That should be the first order of business on remand. Fed.R.Civ.P. 23(c)(1)(A); cf.
Nelson v. Murphy,
One loose end remains to be tied up. The defendants object to the plaintiffs’ having referred in their reply brief to the report of a grand jury investigation into abuses at the Cook County Jail. To present new evidence at the appeal stage is improper and in appropriate cases sanctionable.
Youker v. Schoenenberger,
But in objecting to what the plaintiffs have done, the defendants overlook the procedural posture. This is an appeal from the grant of a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, a grant that is proper only if there is no state of facts consistent with the complaint that would entitle the plaintiffs to relief. In submitting the report of the grand jury investigation, the plaintiffs were merely indicating that, yes, there may well be facts they could prove that would show they had a claim. There was no impropriety, e.g.,
Thomas v. Guardsmark, Inc.,
Revekseb AND Remanded.
