This аppeal presents several challenges arising out of the sixteen-day restricted confinement of a prisoner, Jim Eric Chandler. In his pro se complaint Chandler asserted the following illegal actions: a violation of procedural due process in his being confined without advance notice of charges against him and opportunity to rebut them; violation of unspecified rules and regulations; violation of the Eighth Amendment in the conditions of his confinement; and deprivation of his constitutional right to legal materials and access to courts. The district court granted summary judgment on all counts for defendants, officials of a Florida county jail, the Indian River Detention Facility. We affirm its action in all respects save plaintiffs challenge to the conditions of his confinement. As to this, we cannot say, on this record and at this stage of the proceedings, that defendants should prevail as a matter of law. We therefore remand for further proceedings.
For a combination of reasons, plaintiff was lodged in the Indian River county jail for some two-and-one-half years awaiting resentencing for a capital оffense. Until the time of the events relevant to this appeal, he resided in cell block “B” with eleven other inmates. On August 17,1986, however, an inmate informed an officer that eight other inmates, with plaintiff as their ringleader, were planning an escape that might involve many others. The plan was to assault an officer, obtain his keys, and then remove cell bars by twisting a sheet, using a book as a lever. Later that day an officer was indeed attacked by an inmate wielding a sack stuffed with dominoes.
Although the escape attempt aborted, Captain Baird, administrator оf the jail, feared further attempts. In light of the identification of plaintiff as ringleader, and knowing that Chandler had recently drawn down his commissary account from an average level of $50 to ten cents and sent his years’ accumulation of legal materials to his father, Baird ordered plaintiff committed to administrative confinement pending a criminal investigation. Plaintiff was taken on August 20 to a strip cell in “F” Block. On August 21, he was moved to “S” Block and placed in a solitary confinement cell, where he remained until September 5, 1986, when he was transferred to another facility closer to his resentencing hearing.
The complaint set forth six causes of action. On appeal, plaintiff asserts that the district court erred in resolving issues of fact in granting summary judgment on four of these causes. Specifically, he argues that summary judgment was inappropriate on his claims that he was denied procedural due process in the imposition of his confinement (count three), that he was deprived of meaningful access to the courts (counts four and five), and that he was subjected to unconstitutional conditions in his confinement (count one). 1 As to each issue, defendants both defend on the merits and invoke qualified immunity.
Procedural Due Process
Plaintiff alleged that he was deprived of procedural due process when he was not notified of the charges that were the basis for his placement in administrative confinement, and was given no opportunity to defend and no hearing, contrary to the rules and regulations of the Florida Department of Corrections. The district court held that
Parker v. Cook,
Leaving aside the arguable reading that the court was making findings of fact as to defendants’ understanding—which would be inconsistent with a ruling on a motion for summary judgment—we observe that the court somehow found itself basing qualified immunity upon the subjective state of mind of defendants. This, of course, is contrary to the teaching of
Harlow v. Fitzgerald,
We, however, choose not to decide the issue on the basis of defendants’ entitlement to qualified immunity because we find that Chandler was not deprived of a liberty interest. The Supreme Court has made it clear that the Due Process Clause does not direсtly protect an inmate from changes in the conditions of his confinement,
see Meachum v. Fano,
The Court has articulated two components of such substantive limitations: “specific substantive predicates” to guide state decisionmakers and “repeated use of mandatory language.”
Hewitt,
We are dealing with that section of the Florida Administrative Code governing county and municipal detention facilities, Rule 33-8.013. After prescribing disciplinary procedures to be followed when an infraction of rules occurs, including а report, an investigation, a 24-hour advance notice of charges to inmates accused of infractions, and a hearing with the possibility of witnesses and assistance for the inmate, subparagraph (13) states in relevant part:
Inmates may be placed in administrative confinement for the purpose of ensuring immediate control and supervision when it is determined they constitute a threat to themselves, to others, or to the safety and security of the detention facility. Each such action shall be followed by an incident or disciplinary report and fоrmal disciplinary proceedings, if applicable, as outlined in the above section.
(Emphasis supplied.) We note that the
Parker
case,
Under the procedural language at issue in Hewitt, once the basic determination is made to place an inmate in administrative custody,
The inmate shall be notified in writing as soon as possible that he is under investigation and that he will receive a hearing if any disciplinary action is being considered after the investigation is completed. An investigation shall begin immеdiately.... If no behavior violation has occurred, the inmate must be released as soon as the reason for the security concern has abated but in all cases within ten days.
Id.
We therefore conclude that there was no liberty interest created by the rule at issue in this case. We affirm, although on a different analysis, the grant of summary judgment for defendants.
Access to Courts
Plaintiff next claims that he was denied access to his lawyer, library and other materials, and the courts during his time in administrative confinement. Specifically, he allegеs the following deprivations: on August 20, 1986, he was refused permission to call his attorney (Complaint, Para. 11); on the following day he was again denied permission to call his attorney and was denied his request for pens, paper, cases, stamps, envelopes, correspondence with his attorney, and civil rights forms (Para. 13); on August 25 he was refused his unidentified “legal materials” (Para. 17); on August 30 he was refused paper, pen, envelope, and stamp “to write a letter to the courts” (Para. 19); and during the entire period he was denied access to a law library and correspondence from his attorney (Para. 24).
As background for consideration of these claims, we note that during the nearly two- and-one-half years of incarceration in the Indian River jail, plaintiff at all times had the services of at least one of two attorneys who was working on his capital case and its resentencing. Plaintiff also had brought two civil actions against the county and jail officials. Neither was a live issue at the time of the events which concern us, one and possibly both having been dismissed. Moreover, nowhere in plaintiff’s extensive deposition is there any suggestion that he wished to do research for or draft or file a complaint concerning the conditions of his confinement. In fact, the complaint in this case was not filed until
The district court deemed some of plaintiff’s allegations conclusory, raising no factual issues, and the remaining allegations adequately countered by the fact that plaintiff has had the assistance of a lawyer in the instant case. As our summary of the pleadings and evidence indicates, at least some of the claims appear factual, and plaintiff was not represented by counsel in this case until three years after his confinement. We therefore proceed with our own analysis.
In
Bounds v. Smith,
[W]e do feel it appropriate to require appellant to articulate, to some degree, the basis for his claim that his access to the courts was significantly (i.e. — in a constitutional sense) impaired. Such facts are presumably best known to appellant and, consequently, asking him to include them in his complaint, so as to survive a motion for summary judgment, is not too onerous a burden to require him to bear. 3
Other circuits also have required a showing of injury or prejudice in cases involving minor or indirect restrictions on access to materials and assistance.
Magee v. Waters,
Consistent with this body of caselaw, we see no denial on this record. We have been able to discern no relation between the alleged refusals of materials, depositions, telephone calls, mail, and even pen and paper for a proposed “letter to the courts” and any legal proceeding which could have been affected by the refusals. Plaintiffs two civil actions were moribund, if not extinct, and he has made no argument that he was hampered in these actions. Although plaintiff could not read depositions relevant to his resentencing hearing during the confinement period, he had access to them for a week earlier, had full access during the trial, was able to suggest questions to his attorney at trial, and could pinpoint no prejudice in the proceedings, asserting only
We resist making any sweeping declaration concerning the need for a prison inmate to establish prejudice arising out of alleged restrictions of his access to courts. In some cases, the prejudice inheres in the specific facts.
See Wright v. Newsome,
We conclude that the allegations and evidence before the court pointed to such minor and short-lived impediments to access that the absence of any indications of ultimate prejudice or disadvantage dictates our affirmance of summary judgment for defendants on this claim.
Eighth Amendment
In his complaint and deposition, plaintiff averred that the following conditions violated the Eighth Amendment proscription of cruel and unusual punishment: confinement in a cold cell with no clothes except undershorts and with a plastic-covered mattress without bedding; filth on the cell’s floor and walls; deprivation of toilet paper for three days; deprivation of running water for two days; lack of soap, toothbrush, toothpaste, and linen; and the earlier occupancy of the cell by an inmate afflicted with an HIV virus. The averments of a cold cell were supplemented by specifics: that the temperature was as low as 60 degrees, that it was “ice cold”, that plaintiff slept on the floor and on occasion huddled with a roommate, sleeping between twо mattresses.
There was, of course, evidence to the contrary. Captain Baird deposed that the temperature in plaintiff’s cell was governed by the same thermostat that controlled areas occupied by nurses and dispatchers and that no one had complained of the temperature. He admitted, however, that people in these areas were clothed, except for inmates having physical examinations who would temporarily be unclad. Baird also deposed that plaintiff had soap, toothpaste, аnd toothbrush, and that a water cut-off, caused by another inmate, lasted only several hours. He justified keeping plaintiff without clothes and bedding by the fact that Chandler had once observed an escape where prisoners had used sheets, twisting and jumping on them. Baird also explained that the inmate with HIV virus had occupied the cell five months earlier and that it had been cleaned since then.
The district court, citing
Sheley v. Dugger,
We suspect that the district court was beguiled by a simplistic trilogy of conditions that, while convenient as illustrative shorthand, cannot preclude a fact-intensive inquiry under constitutional standards. Those standards are set forth in
Rhodes v. Chapman,
The two cases cited by the district court, Sheley and Newman, lend no support to the summary judgment below, for each specified the basic requirement to supply clothing to a prisoner. And undershorts is a flimsy surrogate for clothing. Moreover, as the district court noted, both required the provision of basic sanitation.
Nor can we find other cases in this or our antecedent circuit that support the judgment. In
McMahon v. Beard,
Two decades ago, in
Novak v. Beto,
Other circuits have for some time recognized the temperature factor in assessing conditions of confinement. As far back as 1967, the Second Circuit reversed dismissal of a prisoner’s complaint of exposure to extreme cold.
Wright v. McMann,
Similarly, the Fourth Circuit, sitting in banc, found two sets of conditions of confinement involving the same prison inmate to violate the Eighth Amendment.
McCray v. Burrell,
The Eighth Circuit has faced a situation similar to that now before us.
See Maxwell v. Mason,
Finally, the Seventh Circuit has addressed two similar situations. In the first case, it reversed dismissal of a prisoner’s complaint which alleged being placed in solitary confinement for three days without mattress, bedding, or blankets and without articles of personal hygiene.
Kimbrough v. O’Neil,
An allegation of inadequate heating may state an eighth amendment violation. See, e.g., Ramos v. Lamm,639 F.2d 559 , 568 (10th Cir.1980) (“a state must provide ... reasonably adequate ventilation, sanitation, bedding, hygienic materials, and utilities (i.e., hot and cold water, light, heat, plumbing)”)....
Id. at 1171 (footnote omitted).
We conclude from this body of caselaw that plaintiff is entitled to have the trier of fact determine whether the conditions of his administrative confinement, principally with regard to the cell temperature and the provision of hygiene items, violated the minimal standards required by the Eighth Amendment. We also conclude, аlthough the district court did not reach the issue, that the right of a prisoner not to be con
A final issue, which was briefly alluded to, was whether plaintiff suffered any harm from his allegedly chill incarceration. Defendants attempt to exploit plaintiffs deposition answers in cross examination that he did not suffer injury to his back or head or pneumоnia or a cold and that he had not sought counselling to argue that in effect this was a case of
damnum absque injuria.
But plaintiffs description of sleeping on the floor with only underclothes and a mattress with a plastic cover in 60-degree “real cold” temperature was graphic, and his question, “What kind of effect would that have on you?” were sufficient to preserve the issue of harm. Moreover, he later unambiguously stated: “As far as being in solitary confinement or administrative confinement ... I’m sure I was depressed from it.” This clearly poses the factual question whether plaintiff “suffered any pain, misery, anguish or similar harm, whether capable of estimation or not.”
Cowans v. Wyrick,
We therefore conclude that summary judgment was inappropriate on the issue of whether the conditions of Chandler’s confinement violated the Eighth Amendment.
AFFIRMED in part, REVERSED in part and REMANDED to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. We observe that Chandler has not disputed on appeal the district court’s grant of summary judgment on count two, alleging violation of unspecified rules and regulations. In addition, Chandler has made no argument concerning the allegations contained in count six, which alleged both Eighth Amendment and due process violations arising out of the specific conduct of defendant Altic. We therefore do not address these claims on appeal.
. Subparagraph (19) of that section provided in part:
The following procedures must be performed prior to placing an inmate in administrative confinement:
(a) The Correctional Shift Supervisor must cause a Report of Administrative Confinement to be completed and the inmate must be informed of the reasons for his placement in administrative confinement. If the inmate wishes to make a statement, such statement shall be recorded on the form. Written, complete details and reason(s) as to why the inmate was placed in this status must also be given.
.
See also Bruscino v. Carlson,
. In addition, plaintiff was represented by counsel at his resentencing trial, meeting the requirement set by
Bounds
for meaningful access.
Bounds,
