Plaintiffs-appellants George Parrish and Charles Giles appeal from a district court’s decision finding that Parrish’s and Giles’ conditions of confinement were unconstitutional and that defendant-appellee Clarence Turner subjected Parrish to cruel and unusual punishment and violated Parrish’s First Amendment rights. 1 On appeal, Parrish contends that the district court erred in awarding only nominal damages for the punishment he endured and Giles argues that Turner violated his First, Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendment rights. We reverse.
Since the facts of this case are critical to the resolution of the issues raised before this Court, we set out the district court’s factual findings in detail. 2 Both Parrish and Giles were paraplegics incarcerated at the State Prison for Southern Michigan. As a result of their condition, both men exhibited a diminished control over their bladder and bowel functions and, consequently, would frequently soil themselves. While Giles was able to clean himself, Parrish, who suffered from a fused hip joint, needed assistance to change. Assistance, however, due to both staff shortages and intentional neglect on the part of prison personnel, was often slow in arriving forcing Parrish, on a regular basis, to sit in his own feces for several hours. Besides being extremely unpleasant, this situation was medically dangerous because Parrish risked infecting his decubitis ulcers. Although Giles could clean himself, mismanagement and neglect rendered this ability nugatory; Giles was either not supplied with anything with which to clean himself or was given one small rag which quickly became soiled and unusable. Thus, like Parrish, Giles would routinely sit in his *603 own waste for significant periods of time. These deplorable hygenic conditions were exacerbated by verbal degradations, sporadic assaults, and acts of malfeasance and nonfeasance committed by Turner, a prison guard, against Parrish and Giles.
Turner aggravated the unsanitary conditions of Parrish’s confinement by habitually refusing to relay or procrastinating in transmitting Parrish’s requests for aid to the nurses. Turner also committed several assaults upon Parrish. On one occasion, Turner brandished a knife in order to extort cigarettes from Parrish and, on another, in what at best could be described as a bizarre episode, Turner while standing on top of a table shouting obscenities waved a knife at Parrish. Turner further enhanced Parrish’s suffering by placing Parrish’s food tray in positions in which Parrish was unable to retreive it and by serving the food accompanied with taunts that he had contaminated the food with venereal disease (a disease which Turner, in fact, had). Finally, Turner also interfered with Parrish’s private phone conversations and personal mail: he would interrupt Parrish’s phone calls by loudly speaking obscenities into the receiver and capriciously refuse to distribute and open and read Parrish’s legal and personal mail. Giles received similar treatment.
Turner was equally remiss in relaying Giles’ requests for care and twice accosted Giles with a knife. The first assault occurred on an elevator when Turner, for no apparent reason, pulled a knife and waved it in front of Giles’ face. Turner repeated this action approximately one month later in order to extort potato chips and cookies from Giles. “Quite frequently” Turner ridiculed and tormented Giles by calling him, among other things, a “crippled bastard” who should be dead and telling Giles that he had defiled his food with venereal disease. Finally, Turner randomly opened and read Giles’ personal mail.
Based upon the foregoing factual findings, the district court concluded that Parrish’s and Giles’ conditions of confinement were unconstitutional and that Turner’s conduct had violated Parrish’s First, Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendment rights. However, the district court judge refused to find that Turner had violated Giles’ constitutional rights because Giles had not been subjected to the full panoply of Turner’s misbehavior and had failed to demonstrate a special animus. Turning to the appropriate remedy for the constitutional violations, the district court judge reasoned that since injunctive relief was more appropriate than damages and since Parrish’s injuries were not “lasting or severe,” Parrish was only entitled to an award of nominal damages. This appeal ensued. Before proceeding to the damage questions presented by this case, we first consider whether the district court erred in holding that Turner’s conduct did not violate Giles’ First and Eighth Amendment rights.
I. Giles’ First and Eighth Amendment Claims
A. First Amendment
Giles testified that Turner would randomly open and read his personal mail and that Turner would also taunt him by waving the open mail in front of him. Giles contends that this conduct violated his First Amendment rights.
While prisoners have some First Amendment rights in receiving mail,
see Pell v. Procunier,
In this case, we are not confronted with a regularly applied regulation requiring the opening of all prisoners’ incoming mail,
see Meadows,
B. Eighth Amendment 5
The Eighth Amendment protects prisoners against the imposition of “cruel and unusual punishment.” U.S. Const, amend. VIII. By definition, therefore, not every intrusion upon a prisoner’s bodily integrity will rise to the level of an Eighth Amendment violation.
See Johnson v. Glick,
The district court held that Giles had failed to establish an Eighth Amendment claim because he was not subjected to the full panoply of Turner’s misbehavior and because he failed to demonstrate that Turner’s actions were the result of a special animus. While we do not take issue with these factual findings, we do not believe that in order to establish an Eighth Amendment violation Giles had to show that he was subjected to all of Turner’s aberrant conduct. The question before the district court was not whether Giles suffered as much as Parrish, but rather was whether Turner inflicted unnecessary and wanton pain upon Giles. Similarly, although demonstrating a particularly malicious intent may be important in determining whether a constitutional violation has occurred, we do not believe that this degree of intent is an indispensable element of an Eighth Amendment claim.
See Whitley,
Initially, the actions of Turner towards Giles are devoid of logic or reason. No legitimate penological or institutional objective was furthered by Turner’s unexplained waving of a knife in Giles’ face, knife-point extortion of potato chips and cookies, incessant taunting, or failure to relay Giles’ requests for medical care to the nurses. Next, Turner’s conduct was extreme. Assaults with a knife, theft, and the deliberate failure to provide needed medical care are serious occurrences in any setting. Another important factor is that Turner’s behavior, specifically, the paraplegic slurs, acted to strip Giles of his dignity and reinforce the fact that Giles was dependent upon Turner for his continued well-being. Any reasonable person would suffer significant mental anguish knowing that his health was in the hands of a person performing the type of deviant acts which Turner did. Finally, all of the foregoing is to an extent exacerbated by Giles’ paraplegic condition; Giles’ condition placed him at the mercy of Turner and prevented him from attempting to avoid or mitigate his contact with or reliance upon Turner.
Considering Turner’s behavior towards Giles in its totality, we conclude that Turner’s actions inflicted unnecessary and wanton pain upon Giles. Causing a prisoner to sit in his own feces, assaulting a prisoner with a knife, extorting food from a prisoner, and verbally abusing a prisoner are all unnecessary acts which result in pain being inflicted. Further, simply the type, number, and seriousness of the acts committed demonstrate that they were performed wantonly. The assaults, verbal abuse, and failure to relay Giles’ requests for care were all done intentionally. We hold, therefore, that the district court erred in determining that Turner had not violated Giles’ Eighth Amendment rights and remand this issue for further consideration. 6 We now consider the damages issues presented by this appeal.
II. Damages 7
The district court held that Parrish was only entitled to nominal damages because *606 injunctive relief was more efficacious than damages and because his injuries were not “lasting and severe.” We first consider whether the presence of injunctive relief may vitiate a claim for damages.
The starting point for analyzing damages for violations of constitutional rights is the common law.
Memphis Community School District v. Stachura,
— U.S.-,
A. First Amendment. 9
This Court has recently held that general damages
10
are presumed to occur when First Amendment rights are
*607
violated.
Walje v. City of Winchester, Kentucky,
B. Eighth Amendment. 11
We begin our analysis of damages for Eighth Amendment violations recognizing that language exists in some of this Court’s prior decisions which indicates that general damages may be presumed for the violation of any substantive constitutional right.
See Walje,
First, the Supreme Court recently re-affirmed its holding in
Carey v. Piphus,
Last, although a cursory glance at the case law would indicate that the circuits are split on whether Carey’s actual injury requirement applies to violations of substantive constitutional rights,
see Ganey,
Our analysis must start with the nature and type of interests protected by the Eighth Amendment.
See Carey,
Initially, we decline to hold that general damages may be presumed from an Eighth Amendment violation. General damages are presumed to flow from some tortious conduct because “the existence of the harm may be assumed and its extent is inferred as a matter of common knowledge.” Restatement (Second) of Torts § 904(1) comment a (1979); C. McCormick, Handbook on the Law of Damages §§ 8, 14, at 33-35, 53 (1935). Due to the numerous interests protected and types of conduct prohibited by the Eighth Amendment, rarely will the existence and extent of harm be apparent from the simple allegation that an Eighth Amendment violation has occurred. Next, unlike suits under the First and Fourth Amendments, Eighth Amendment claims cannot be classified under a single traditional tort doctrine; no one tort doctrine is sufficiently expansive to cover the array of conduct prohibited by the Eighth Amendment. Further, unlike injuries emanating from a First Amendment violation, injuries occurring in an Eighth Amendment context are not likely to be of an evanescent nature. The establishing of cruel and unusual punishment will often require the showing of physical abuse from which injuries and concomitant damages will normally be easy to prove.
See Lancaster,
At first blush, it would seem appropriate to simply follow
Carey
and hold that an “actual injury” is needed to obtain damages under the Eighth Amendment.
See Lancaster,
Instead, we believe that each tortious act comprising or composing the Eighth Amendment violation should be considered on its own merits.
Accord Doe,
Turner’s waving of a knife in front of Parrish obviously constituted a common-law assault.
See
Restatement (Second) of Torts § 21 (1979). As previously discussed, at common law general damages were presumed to flow from an assault.
See Brandon,
Turner’s deprecation of Parrish presents a less clear case. At common law, verbal abuse alone generally did not rise to the level of tortious conduct in the absence of physical injury resulting from the abuse. 2 F. Harper, F. James & O. Gray, The Law of Torts §§ 9.1, 9.2 (1985). The law, however, has been changing in this area to allow recovery in the absence of a physical injury if the conduct by the tortfeasor is both extreme and outrageous and causes severe emotional distress. Restatement (Second) of Torts § 46 (1979);
see, e.g., Ross v. Burns,
Finally, we consider the appropriate measure of damages for Turner’s deliberate failure to provide Parrish with medical care.
16
This Court previously has dealt with the appropriate standard for damages for a denial of medical care, albeit in the context of pre-trial detainees.
Shannon v. Lester,
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is reversed and remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion. 17
Notes
. These holdings have not been challenged on appeal.
. In considering Turner's conduct toward Giles, the district court judge detailed Giles’ testimony and assumed that it was true for purposes of his decision. In resolving the issues presented on appeal, we likewise take Giles' testimony as true.
. The Second Circuit has recently indicated that in light of intervening Supreme Court decisions this aspect of
Sostre
may no longer be good law.
Heimerle v. Attorney General,
. On remand, the district court should make formal factual findings on this claim in accordance with Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a), see supra note 2, and consider whether Turner would be entitled to good faith immunity for his actions.
. Giles also asserts that Turner's conduct contravened substantive due process under the Fourteenth Amendment.
See Lewis v. Downs,
. See supra note 4.
. The district court, although finding that Parrish’s and Giles’ conditions of confinement were unconstitutional, held that the defendants committed these violations while acting in their official capacities. Although not considered by the district court or either party on appeal, we note
*606
that absent waiver the Eleventh Amendment bars the imposition of damages in an official capacity suit against state officials.
Kentucky v. Graham,
— U.S.-,
. Two cases have made statements indicating that the availability of injunctive relief may obviate the need to grant damages for a constitutional violation.
Hunter v. Auger,
In
Jacobson,
the district court judge indicated that damages might not be an appropriate remedy when injunctive and declaratory relief would be adequate.
Jacobson,
. The district court also held that Turner’s interference with Parrish’s mail violated substantive due process under the Fourteenth Amendment. We do not believe that, in a suit concerning a prison official’s interference with a prisoner’s mail, substantive due process provides the prisoner with any greater protection or right to damages than the specific guarantees of the First Amendment.
Cf. Whitley,
. Throughout this opinion we use the term “general damages” in accordance with the common-law definition, i.e., ‘"[gjeneral damages’ are compensatory damages for a harm so frequently resulting from the tort that is the basis of the action that the existence of the damages is normally to be anticipated____" Restatement (Second) of Torts § 904(1) (1979).
. Although the district court also found that Parrish’s Fourteenth Amendment rights were violated by Turner’s actions, we do not believe that in a suit by a prisoner alleging the imposition of cruel and unusual punishment that the Fourteenth Amendment provides any greater rights to damages than the Eighth Amendment.
See Whitley,
. The current vitality of
Kincaid’s
literal application of
Carey
in the Seventh Circuit is in question. While
Kincaid
has been followed on its facts,
see Crawford v. Garnier,
. The Fifth Circuit is apparently following its decision in
Familias Unidas
and applying
Carey'
s actual injury requirement mechanically to the violation of all constitutional rights without analysis.
See Farrar v. Cain,
. For example, in a case in which a person has been unconstitutionally incarcerated for a “status offense,”
see Robinson v. California,
. The district court cited no authority for its holding that a “lasting and severe" injury is needed to establish a claim for damages. Besides lacking any support either in the case law or in the common law, requiring a lasting and severe injury as a prerequisite to the obtaining of damages for an Eighth Amendment violation is inconsistent with the principle of providing “fair compensation for injuries caused by the deprivation of a constitutional right.”
Carey,
. We include in this category Turner’s placing of Parrish’s food tray out of his reach.
. The district court made no findings concerning the appropriateness of assessing the punitive damages against Turner requested by the plaintiffs.
See Smith v. Wade,
