William Irving, an inmate in the Missouri penal system, filed suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against several employees of the Jefferson City Correctional Center, alleging multiple violations of his constitutional rights of due process, access to the courts, and freedom from cruel and unusual punishment. The district court granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment on the due process and access to courts claims, but denied the defendants’ request for qualified immunity on the Eighth Amendment claim. Correctional officers Thomas Brigance, Warren Cres *445 sey, Ronetta Hyer, and Leonard Neff remain as defendants, and they appeal the denial of their motion for summary judgment based upon qualified immunity on that claim. We affirm in part, reverse in part, and remand for further proceedings.
I.
Irving alleges that he suffered cruel and unusual punishment at the hands of the defendants over several months in 2004-2005. He alleges that these incidents were in retaliation for his bringing an earlier version of this lawsuit and constituted an effort to intimidate him from proceeding further with it. Specifically, Irving alleges that on November 4, 2004, inmate Ephriam Prewitt requested that Hyer and Neff “pop” open the cell doors so that he could assault Irving. In response to that request, Hyer and Neff opened the doors, whereupon Prewitt rushed out of his cell and into Irving’s, where he struck Irving in the face, injuring his jaw and nose. Although Irving received medical treatment only once for the injury, he alleges that he was unable to breathe properly for two months. On December 1, Brigance gave inmate Eric Hessler a razor so that Hessler could use it to make a weapon with which to assault (in Hessler’s words) “the nigger next door.” Irving overheard this exchange and was able to bring it to the attention of Brigance’s supervisor, which caused Brigance to retrieve the razor before Hessler could convert it to a weapon for use against Irving. On March 3, 2005, Brigance offered inmate James Spann fifty dollars and cigarettes if Spann would assault Irving, an offer that Spann did not accept. On April 6, Cressey said that he would have Irving killed if Irving did not drop the lawsuit against him. On April 11 and April 17, Brigance threatened to kill Irving or to have him killed. On April 25, Brigance offered to give inmate Brian Vehlewald cash and cigarettes to attack Irving, an offer that Vehlewald did not accept. A month later, Brigance said that he would find someone to “beat [Irving’s] ass.” In mid-August, Brigance, Cressey, and Hyer promised Irving that they would get a chance to “off’ him soon. On August 23, Brigance, Cressey, and Neff told Irving, “sooner or later we will get you,” and waved a can of mace threateningly at him either at that time or shortly thereafter. On August 30, Brigance offered to pay inmate Jerome Powell to assault Irvin. Instead, Powell warned Irving of Brigance’s offer. In September, Hyer told Irving that she wanted him dead, and Brigance told him that he would get what was coming to him. During the time period encompassing these events, Brigance repeatedly told other inmates that Irving was a snitch in an effort to incite them to assault Irving. In October, the district court entered a preliminary injunction moving Irving out of Housing Unit No. 7 of the Jefferson City Correctional Center.
Irving seeks nominal and punitive damages from Brigance, Cressey, and Hyer for their threats and conduct. He seeks compensatory and punitive damages from Hyer and Neff for physical and emotional injuries stemming from the Prewitt incident. Irving also seeks an injunction transferring him to a correctional institution at which none of the defendants are employed.
II.
A denial of a state official’s assertion of qualified immunity is immediately appealable.
Bearden v. Lemon,
A state official is protected from suit by qualified immunity so long as the official’s “conduct does not violate clearly established statutory or constitutional rights of which a reasonable person would have known.”
Reece v. Groose,
To prove an Eighth Amendment violation, a prisoner must satisfy two requirements, one objective and one subjective. The first requirement tests whether, viewed objectively, the deprivation of rights was sufficiently serious.
Farmer v. Brennan,
Irving’s allegations satisfy the second, subjective requirement. Viewing these allegations in the light most favorable to Irving, no legitimate penological purpose could have been served by defendants’ conduct, and their actions toward Irving demonstrated a state of mind that was not merely deliberately indifferent, but also sadistic and malicious. Thus, the defendants’ subjective intent is sufficiently culpable regardless of what type of Eighth Amendment claim is raised.
Determining what satisfies the sufficiently serious injury requirement is also claim-dependent.
Hudson v. McMillian,
The allegations in this case do not fit neatly into either category because the defendants’ malicious and sadistic schemes to use other prisoners to harm Irving resulted in little physical harm to him. See
Arnold,
Irving alleges that he suffered sufficiently serious injury in three ways. First, he suffered harm because Hyer and Neff opened the cell doors to enable Prewitt to attack him. Second, he suffered prolonged fear for his life as a result of the defendants’ death threats and their conduct that made those threats credible. Third, he suffered the substantial risk of serious harm from other inmates as a result of being publicly and repeatedly labeled by Brigance as a snitch.
A. Prewitt Incident
Irving charges that Hyer and Neff failed to protect him by opening the cell doors so that Prewitt could attack him. To prove a sufficiently serious deprivation in failure to protect claims, an inmate must prove that prison officials caused him to be “incarcerated under conditions posing a substantial risk of serious harm.”
Young v. Selk,
The allegation that Hyer and Neff opened the cell doors so as to enable Prewitt to attack Irving portrays unjustifiable, actionable inmate-endangering conduct. We have previously declared it “appalling” that prison officials would punish prisoners for filing lawsuits, as is alleged here.
See Martin,
Despite this concession, Hyer and Neff assert that Irving’s claimed injuries do not support a § 1983 claim. Because a § 1983 action is a type of tort claim, general principles of tort law require that a plaintiff suffer some actual injury before he can receive compensation.
Carey v. Piphus,
Accordingly, because the alleged deprivation of Irving’s right to be free from assault by fellow inmates was sufficiently serious to support a failure to protect claim, the district court properly denied qualified immunity to Hyer and Neff with respect to this incident.
B. Death Threats
The defendants argue that verbal threats are normally insufficient to violate the Constitution.
Hopson v. Fredericksen,
Other circuits have also held that death threats are actionable.
See Chandler v. D.C. Dept. of Corr.,
We conclude that, when viewed in the light of their retaliatory nature, their objectively credible basis, and their fear-inducing result, the death threats allegedly made by Briganee form the basis of an injury sufficiently serious to implicate the Eighth Amendment.
1. Briganee
Regarding the allegations concerning Brigance’s conduct, the present case is more like
Burton
than
Hopson.
Again accepting Irving’s allegations as true, Brigance made several threats to kill Irving, to have him killed, or to have him beaten. Briganee made three unsuccessful offers of payment to inmates to assault Irving. Briganee labeled Irving a snitch in an effort to induce inmates to attack him, and even armed Hessler with a razor blade for use in such an attempt. These are not instances of mere verbal abuse resulting only in hurt feelings, but rather are more properly analogized to a case in which “a prison guard, without provocation, and for the apparent purpose of retaliating against the prisoner’s exercise of his rights in petitioning a federal court for redress, terrorized [the prisoner] with threats of death.”
Burton,
Defendants are properly denied qualified immunity only if the constitutional right violated was clearly established at the time of the offense.
Reece,
2. Cressey, Hyer, and Neff
The alleged death threats made by the other defendants are less objectively credible. Cressey is alleged to have made one death threat in April and later to have been in two groups of guards (first with Brigance and Hyer, then with Brigance and Neff) in which someone made threats against Irving (to “off’ and to “get” him) in August. Although such behavior, if it occurred, may properly be the subject of disciplinary measures or other remedies, it did not constitute cruel and unusual punishment. There is no indication from Cressey’s conduct at the time of the threats or at any other time that they were credible. These alleged threats should have no place in our prisons, but neither did they violate the Constitution.
Neffs only alleged verbal threat was made as part of one of the above-mentioned groups, and he also allegedly threatened Irving with a can of mace. Hyer’s first alleged threat is virtually identical to Neffs — both were made with Brigance and Cressey. Hyer is also alleged to have made an additional statement in September 2005 that she wanted Irving dead, which she gave as her reason for denying his request for an ink pen. Hyer and Neff were both involved in the Prewitt incident more than nine months earlier. The Prewitt incident might have been sufficient to render their later threats credible had those threats occurred closer in time. We assume that Hyer’s additional statement was a threat, but it is insufficiently credible as a matter of law. Accordingly, Neffs and Hyer’s death threats, however reprehensible and unjustified, did not rise to the level of being objectively credible.
C. Labeled a Snitch
Irving argues that Brigance was deliberately indifferent to his safety when he falsely labeled Irving a “snitch” or a “rat.” Prison officials are bound by the Eighth Amendment to take “reasonable measures to guarantee the safety of the inmates.”
Farmer,
Although we have previously recognized that an inmate who is considered to be a snitch is in danger of being assaulted or killed by other inmates, we have not specifically dealt with the issue presented by this case.
See Reece v. Groose,
Brigance points out that the Seventh Circuit has not looked with favor upon Eighth Amendment claims involving the protection to which a snitch is entitled.
See Doe v. Welborn,
It is true that we have on occasion afforded the protection of qualified immunity in situations in which a split of authority exists on the constitutional question at issue,
see, e.g., Mo. Prot. & Advocacy Serv. v. Mo. Dep’t of Mental Health,
III.
We affirm that portion of the district court’s order which denied qualified immunity to Brigance with respect to the death threats and to the labeling of Irving as a snitch, as well as that portion which denied qualified immunity to Hyer and Neff regarding the Prewitt incident. We reverse that portion of the order which denied qualified immunity to Cressey, Hyer, and Neff with respect to the death threats they made.
The case is remanded to the district court for the entry of an amended order *452 and for further proceedings on the remaining claims.
