Jason Billman, an inmate of an Indiana state prison, attempted to bring suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the prison system, prison officials, and guards, seeking damages for the infliction upon him of cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the Eighth Amendment, the principles of which have beеn held to bind the states by virtue of the due process clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. He asked for leave to file his complaint in forma pauperis. The district court denied leave, and dismissed the suit with prejudice, on the ground that the suit was frivolous. 28 U.S.C. § 1915(d). This ruling was, at the very least, a technical error. As the Supreme Court pointed out in
Denton v. Hernandez,
The judge’s error was substantial and not merely technical if the suit was not frivоlous; and although the Supreme Court has ruled that the standard of appellate review of a determination of frivolousness under 28 U.S.C. § 1915(d) is the deferential “abuse of discretion” standard,
Denton v. Hernandez, supra,
The complaint, drafted by inmate Billman without assistance of counsel, lists five defendants. One is the Indiana Department of Corrections. Three are named individuals; they are the head of that department, the warden of Billman’s prison, and a “unit team manager” in the prison. The fifth defendant is an “unknown correctional complex officer.” The complaint alleges that Billman was raped by his cellmate, Darrell Crabtree; that “prison officials and guards did not рroperly protect ... Billman even though they knew from prior conduct of Darrell Crabtree of his propensity to rape other inmates”; at no time did they tell Billman “about his roommates [i.e., about Crabtree’s] prior conduct [in] raping other inmates at other prisons”; they did nothing “to help Billman when [the rape] was going on inside the cell house”; having been told after the rape that “he had to take a[n] AIDS test because Crabtree had been diagnosed as having the AIDS virus and Billman may have contracted the virus from Crabtree, ... Billman has to live with [being] test[ed] every 90 days to see if the virus has been transmitted to the victim”; “Billman has had to go to a psychological group because of the rape and the fear of having AIDS virus”; and “the prison officials did a report on Crabtree and found he had did this to Billman [i.e., raped him] and they did nothing but transfer Crabtree to another prison.” The complaint seeks compensatory and punitive damages.
The complaint is the entire record of the case and we must therefоre assume that the facts alleged in it — which are in no wise fantastic or unbelievable — are true. Fairly construed, with proper allowance for the fact that Billman is not a lawyer, the complaint alleges that employees of the prison systеm, knowing that Crabtree had a history of raping his cellmates and was HIV-positive, nevertheless placed Billman in the same cell without warning him of the danger he faced, and that they did nothing to interrupt the rape while it was in progress. We take it that Billman did not contract HIV. He would know by now (in fact within no more than six months after the rape), since he was being continually tested. But the fear caused by the rape itself, and the additional fear of contracting HIV until that fear was finally dispelled, would be normal items of damаges, certainly in a case such as this of actual rather than merely feared exposure.
Marchica v. Long Island R.R.,
Prison employees who act with deliberate indifference to the inmates’ safety violate the Eighth Amendment. But to be guilty of “deliberate indifference” they must know they are creating a substantial risk of bodily harm. If they place a prisoner in a cell that has a cobra, but they do not know that there is a cobra there (or even that there is a high probability that there is a cobra there), they are not guilty of dеliberate indifference even if they should have known about the risk, that is, even if they were negligent — even grossly negligent or even reckless in the tort sense — in failing to know.
Bowers v. DeVito,
Ordinarily a tort victim who does not know who the tortfeasor is cannot sue. Tо know that one has been injured tortiously but not by whom is a ground for tolling the statute of limitations,
Singletary v. Continental Illinois National Bank & Trust Co.,
We- do not think that the children’s game of pin the tail on the donkey is a proper model for constitutional tort law. If a prisoner makes allegations that if true indicate a significant likelihood that someone employed by the prison system has inflicted cruel and unusual punishment on him, and if the circumstances are such as to make it infeasible for the prisoner to identify that someone before fifing his complaint, his suit should not be dismissеd as frivolous.
Duncan v. Duckworth,
Our point is not that Billman should be given a break because he lacks legal skills.
Houston v. Lack,
How might this duty be discharged? One possibility is for the judge to request a lawyer, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1915(d), to represent the prisoner for the limited purpose of determining whethеr the complaint can be amended to name as defendant anyone who there is reason to believe inflicted an actionable wrong on the plaintiff. The argument for this course is that it would be unrealistic to suppose that many prisoners сould, by dangling the lure-of a contingent fee or an award of damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1988, entice a lawyer to conduct the necessary investigation before the filing of a complaint (lawyers are, and with reason, terribly skeptical about the merits of prisoners’ civil rights suits, most of which are indeed hoked up and frivolous, and prisons generally are located far from cities having large numbers of lawyers). The lawyer can conduct the necessary inquiry before the original named defendants are put to the bоther of responding to the complaint.
Tabron v. Grace,
Alternatively, the judge may decide, before requesting a lawyer to assist the plaintiff, that the plaintiff make efforts on his own to obtain counsel.-
Jackson v. County of McLean,
We do not want to straitjaeket our district judges. But we do not think it an adequate discharge of judicial duties to turn away a prisoner because confinement has prevented him from preparing what may well be a meritorious complaint.
Our discussion to this point has mainly concerned Billman’s cell assignment. There is the further claim that guards failed to stop the rape. Exactly what is meant is unclear. Of course to be liable under the standard of
Farmer v. Brennan
the guards would have had to be more than negligent— would, for example, have had to watch the rape in progress yet have done nothing to stop it though in a position to do so. Since such a scenario would be consistent with, though it is not a necessary inference from, the complaint, we must decide the question whether the complaint states a claim as if the hypothetical facts had been explicitly alleged.
Sanjuan v. American Board of Psychiatry & Neurology, Inc.,
The judgment is affirmed insofar as it dismissed as a defendant the Department of Corrections, which as we said is immune. But it is reversed with instructions to reinstate Billman’s suit against the other defendants and to proceed in conformity with this opinion.
*791 AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND Remanded.
