Invoking 42 U.S.C. § 1983, John D. Dean sued Sheriff Mel Bailey of Jefferson County, Alabama, the Jefferson County Sher *1212 iff s Department and Jefferson County District Attorney David Barber. Dean claimed his constitutional rights were violated by defendants’ policies which led to a violent attack upon Dean by a fellow inmate of the Jefferson County Jail. Dean argues on appeal that the district court erred by (a) granting summary judgment in favor of defendant Sheriff Mel Bailey, (b) dismissing Dean’s claim against the Jefferson County Sheriffs Department, (c) denying Dean’s motion to join additional defendants, and (d) denying Dean’s request for court-appointed counsel. We vacate the grant of summary judgment against Dean and remand for further consideration; we vacate as well the district court’s denial of Dean’s motion to add as a defendant the Chief Correctional Officer of the Jefferson County Jail. We affirm all other points on appeal.
I. BACKGROUND
In January 1988, Dean was a pretrial detainee in the Jefferson County Jail in Birmingham, Alabama. He had been arrested on two counts of robbery. Because of the underlying robbery charges, Dean was classified as “violent” and held in the F Block of the Jail. F Block was one of seven cellblock houses on the Jail’s eighth floor, each of which contained up to twelve prisoners classified as “violent.”
Carnell Jackson was also an F Block inmate. Jackson had originally been imprisoned after being convicted and sentenced to death for murder and rape; but, in 1988, he was being held at the Jefferson County Jail awaiting a new trial following a successful appeal based upon purposeful discrimination during jury selection at Jackson’s original trial. Jackson had already served six years on death row.
Dean and Jackson were apparently watching television, or perhaps standing by the television, in an area of F Block called the “dayroom.” Jackson turned down the volume on the television and asked Dean if he could hear the television. Dean said he could not and reached to turn up the volume. For reasons unexplained in the record, Jackson then punched Dean in the face. Dean backed away from the assault, and Jackson reached into his shirt pocket and pulled out a knife-like weapon made from a toothbrush and a razor blade. Jackson wrestled Dean to the ground, where he slashed at Dean’s neck with the knife and repeatedly pounded Dean’s head on a concrete step. While other inmates dragged Jackson off Dean, one inmate alerted Deputy Sheriff James Bums, who had not seen Jackson attack Dean but who was the sole guard on duty at the time of the attack. The other two deputies assigned to duty on the eighth floor of the Jail were out to lunch.
Deputy Sheriff Burns, upon seeing the bleeding Dean, immediately called for help from the Jail’s central control and also called for a medic. Three deputies responded to the incident, and Dean was removed from F Block to receive medical care within minutes.
As a result of the assault, Dean sustained head injuries and a four-inch gash on his neck that required fourteen stitches. Dean asserts that he has undergone brain surgery to remove damaged blood vessels near his brain caused by the injuries inflicted by Jackson.
Dean filed his pro se section 1983 claim against defendant-appellees in 1989. He claimed that, due to lack of inmate classification and inadequate security at the Jefferson County Jail, Dean’s Eighth Amendment right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment and his Fourteenth Amendment substantive due process rights were violated.
The district court judge referred Dean’s claim to a magistrate judge, who recommended (1) granting Dean’s motion to proceed in forma pauperis, (2) dismissing Dean’s complaint against District Attorney Barber because Dean had no judicially cognizable constitutional interest in the prosecution of another, 1 (3) dismissing Dean’s complaint against the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Department because the Department was not a proper party subject to suit *1213 under section 1983, and (4) allowing the suit against Sheriff Bailey to proceed and requiring Bailey to submit a special report that responded to Dean’s allegations. Dean never objected to this first report and recommendation of the magistrate judge.
Dean filed interrogatories and production requests on June 8, 1989. On June 28, the magistrate judge ordered that Sheriff Bailey’s special report would be treated as a Motion for Summary Judgment and that Dean would have twenty days to object to the report. Dean also filed a motion to join as defendants various Jefferson County Commissioners and a fictitious defendant who allegedly was responsible for the supervision of the Jail.
Sheriff Bailey answered Dean’s interrogatories; but Dean, who was dissatisfied with Bailey’s responses, filed a motion to compel discovery and complete answers to Dean’s interrogatories, listing specifically what he felt were deficient answers. At the same time Dean, who had been given three time extensions on this final response to Bailey’s summary judgment motion, filed his second response to Bailey’s special report.
The magistrate judge’s second and final report recommended denying Dean’s motion to add defendants and granting Bailey’s summary judgment motion against Dean. The district court adopted the magistrate judge’s reports and recommendations over Dean’s objection. Neither the magistrate judge nor the district court judge mentioned Dean’s motion to compel, which was never ruled upon. This appeal followed.
II. DISCUSSION
We note before addressing the merits of Dean’s appeal that Dean proceeded as a pro se complainant in the district court. This circuit and the Supreme Court have stated that pro se complaints are given more leeway than complaints submitted by litigants represented by lawyers.
See, e.g., Haines v. Kerner,
A. Summary Judgment
The district court erred by granting summary judgment without ruling on Dean’s motion to compel discovery. Because discovery matters are “committed to the sound discretion of the district court, ... we review [this question] under an abuse of discretion standard.”
Patterson v. United States Postal Service,
“[S]ummary judgment should not be granted until the party opposing the motion has had an adequate opportunity for discovery.”
Snook v. Trust Co. of Ga.,
Because the district court abused its discretion by ignoring Dean’s motion to compel, the grant of summary judgment on a potentially inadequate record was improper and must be vacated.
3
“On remand the district court should consider [Dean’s] motion to compel in light of the rules governing discovery and should order the requested documents [and information] produced as appropriate. Once there is an adequate record, the district court may again consider [Sheriff Bailey’s] motion for summary judgment.”
Snook,
B. Jefferson County Sheriffs Department
The district court correctly dismissed Dean’s claim against the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Department. We agree with the magistrate judge’s conclusion, which was adopted by the district court, that the Jefferson County Sheriff’s Department is not a legal entity and, therefore, is not subject to suit or liability under section 1983. In so concluding, we reject Dean’s reliance on
Monell v. Department of Social Services,
Sheriff’s departments and police departments are not usually considered legal entities subject to suit,
see, e.g., Martinez v. Winner,
C. Motion to Join Additional Defendants
The district court correctly denied Dean’s motion to join the Jefferson County Commissioners as additional defendants. The decision to join additional parties is left to the discretion of the district court and will not be disturbed unless that court has abused its discretion.
Cf. Fritz v. American Home Shield Corp.,
Dean alleges in his joinder motion that, because the Jefferson County Commission has control of all county-owned property, the Commissioners knew or should have known of the conditions at the county-owned Jefferson County Jail. He further alleges that this presumed knowledge shows deliberate indifference to alleged constitutional violations. These allegations, even under a liberal construction, support no cause of action under section 1983 because Dean attempts to hold the Commissioners liable in their supervisory capacity. While a supervisor may be held liable under section 1983 if the supervisor had personal involvement in the constitutional deprivation or if a sufficient causal connection exists between the supervisor’s conduct and the constitutional violation,
Hansen v. Black,
The district court erred, however, by denying Dean’s motion to join the “John Doe” defendant. The district court said that the Doe defendant was an inadequately identified fictitious party. We stated at the outset that pleadings of pro se complainants are treated with special care. Here, Dean attempted to add as a defendant the “Chief Deputy of the Jefferson County Jail” — what Alabama calls the Chief Correctional Officer. See Record at Tab 7 (Affidavit of S.W. Latta, Chief Correctional Officer). Dean expressly stated in his joinder motion that he had yet to receive Sheriff Bailey’s special report. Had Dean received this report before moving the court to join additional defendants, he would have been able to name Latta as the Chief Correctional Officer of the Jefferson County Jail.
“It is important to distinguish suing fictitious parties from real parties sued under a fictitious name. There may be times when, for one reason or another, the plaintiff is unwilling or unable to use a party’s real nameJ
6
] Also, one may be able to describe
*1216
an individual (e.g., the driver of an automobile) without stating his name precisely or correctly.”
Bryant v. Ford Motor Co.,
Under the circumstances in this case, Dean should have been allowed to add “Chief Deputy of the Jefferson County Jail John Doe” as a defendant.
See, e.g., Gillespie v. Civiletti,
While we hold that the district court erred in relying on fictitious-party practice to deny Dean’s motion to add the “Chief” as a defendant, we do not hold that Chief Latta is a proper defendant in this case. We leave that to the district court to reconsider. For example, Dean’s joinder motion alleges Latta’s personal and direct involvement; should further development of facts show that, in truth, Dean seeks to hold Latta liable only in his supervisory capacity, Latta would not be a proper defendant.
See Monell,
D. Court-Appointed Counsel
The district court correctly denied Dean's request for court-appointed counsel. Section 1915(d) of title 28 leaves the decision to appoint counsel to the discretion of the district court. 28 U.S.C. § 1915(d). Here, the district court did not abuse its discretion in denying Dean’s request for counsel.
“A civil litigant, including a prisoner pursuing a section 1983 action, has no absolute constitutional right to the appointment of counsel. The appointment of counsel is instead a privilege that is justified only by exceptional circumstances, such as where the facts and legal issues are so novel or complex as to require the assistance of a trained practitioner.”
Poole v. Lambert,
III. CONCLUSION
The summary judgment granted in favor of Sheriff Bailey is VACATED and the case is REMANDED for further consideration not inconsistent with this opinion. The district court’s denial of Dean’s motion to join as a defendant the Chief Correctional Officer of the Jefferson County Jail is also VACATED. The remaining portions of the district court’s judgment are AFFIRMED.
VACATED and REMANDED in part, AFFIRMED in part.
Notes
. Dean does not appeal the dismissal of his claim against Barber.
. Our list of potentially inadequate responses is nonexclusive.
. Even though Dean did not literally invoke Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(f) (permitting district court to continue decision on summary judgment motion upon proper showing by plaintiff), Dean complied with the Rule’s requirements by expressly bringing to the district court’s attention in Dean’s motion to compel that discovery was outstanding and expressly requesting the district court to "continue any summary judgment ruling that might prejudice the plaintiff until the defendants comply with said order [to compel].” Record at Tab 20. This request was enough, especially given Dean’s pro se status.
. This state-law determination of capacity to be sued is subject to the exception "that a partnership or other unincorporated association, which has no such capacity by the law of such state, may sue or be sued in its common name for the purpose of enforcing for or against it a substantive right existing under the Constitution or the laws of the United States.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 17(b)(1). Nothing in the language of Rule 17(b) or in the early case law that led to the adoption of Rule 17,
see United Mine Workers v. Coronado Co.,
. We also recognize that Dean’s suit, to the extent that it attempts to hold Sheriff Bailey or other members of the Jefferson County Sheriffs Department liable in their official capacity under section 1983, is barred because the sheriffs are employees of the State of Alabama. Dean’s suit against the sheriffs in their official capacity, therefore, is prohibited by the Eleventh Amendment because the State of Alabama is the real party in interest.
Cf. Free v. Granger,
. The district court presumably relied on Dean’s use of the name "John Doe” to deny Dean’s joinder motion. We find Dean’s use of the name to be, at the very worst, surplusage. Dean specified the person in charge of the Jefferson County Jail. If no similar post existed, we might be influenced to find that Dean had cho *1216 sen a fictitious defendant. Here, though, the proposed defendant existed; and Dean adequately described the person to be sued so that the person could be identified for service. The analogue would be a case in which the governor of a state had been sued: a pleading, especially a pro se pleading, specifying only the “Governor of Alabama” as a defendant would — we suppose — satisfy Fed.R.Civ.P. 10(a) even if the plaintiff did not use the governor’s given name.
