Plaintiffs consist of offenders who were employed by the Indiana Department of Corrections at the Indiana Youth Center in Plainfield, Indiana. They were assigned to work in the kitchen there. During the two-year period prior to the filing of the complaint, plaintiffs were exposed to asbestos while working in the kitchen. They do not assert physical injuries but claim mental and emotional injuries as a result of the exposure.
Defendant correction officials moved for judgment on the pleadings because plaintiffs did not allege a “physical injury” as required by Section 803(d) of the Prison Litigation Reform Act (“PLRA”), codified as 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(e).
Section 1997e(e) is entitled “Limitation on Recovery” and provides,
No Federal civil action may be brought by a prisoner confined in a jail, prison or other correctional facility, for mental or emotional injury suffered while in custody without a prior showing of physical injury.
The district court dismissed the action without prejudice because no plaintiff developed a physical illness caused by the exposure to asbestos and therefore their recovery was barred by § 1997e(e).
I. Retroactivity of Prison Litigation Reform Act
Plaintiffs contend that the new Section 1997e(e) should not apply to their case, because it was already pending when the PLRA became effective. Although they inexplicably fail to mention it, this Court’s deci
*461
sion in
Abdul-Wadood v. Nathan,
II. Plaintiffs Have Not Shown the Requisite Physical Injury
Section 1997e(e) does not permit recovery for custodial mental or emotional damages “without a prior showing of physical injury.” However, plaintiffs are not claiming damages for physical injury, as the district judge pointed out (
III. Constitutionality of the PLRA
Before addressing the constitutionality of the PLRA, it should be noted that plaintiffs did not give this Court the requisite notice that they were drawing into question the constitutionality of an Act of Congress, so that our Clerk could certify that fact to the Attorney General of the United States, as required by Rule 44 of the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure. However, at oral argument the Indiana Deputy Attorney General advised us that he had discussed the case with a representative of the federal Department of Justice. Therefore, we will consider the constitutional question despite this omission. Before proceeding to do so, it should be noted that Indiana’s brief consists of passages copied verbatim from the district court’s admirable opinion. Such parroting is hardly admirable brief writing.
A, CONGRESS’ POWER TO RESTRICT REMEDIES FOR CONSTITUTIONAL VIOLATIONS
The Supreme Court has held that mental and emotional distress can constitute a compensable injury in suits for damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 based upon violations of constitutional rights. See
Carey v. Piphus,
The court begins from the premise that “Congress may not effectively nullify the rights guaranteed by the Constitution by prohibiting all remedies for the violation of those rights.”
The district court also mentions Eleventh Amendment immunity as an example showing that not every constitutional violation is compensable by damages. See id. This example is inappropriate, however, because the fact that a separate constitutional provision (the Eleventh Amendment) may render damages unavailable to remedy constitutional violations is not determinative of the question whether Congress may make such damages unavailable by statute.
The district court correctly notes that Congress itself created the § 1983 damages
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remedy at issue here. The Supreme Court has never held that this remedy is constitutionally required, and it would be odd to conclude that Congress may not take away by statute what it has given by statute. See
The plaintiffs rely heavily on
Owen v. City of Independence,
In
Owen,
the City of Independence sought to invoke qualified immunity against § 1983 damages based on the fact that its agents allegedly were acting in good faith when they violated the plaintiffs constitutional rights. See
id.
at 624-625,
The district court notes near the conclusion of its discussion on the issue of Congress’ power that “[t]here is a point beyond which Congress may not restrict the availability of judicial remedies for the violations of constitutional rights without in essence taking away the rights themselves.”
But the legal point remains: the Constitution does not demand an individually effective remedy for every constitutional violation. See id. at 1329. If it did, then the immunity of government officials to § 1983 liability would frequently be unconstitutional. If other prisoners are currently being exposed to asbestos within the Indiana prison system, they may seek injunctive relief for the violation. If the plaintiffs in this case develop asbestos-related illnesses, they them *463 selves will be able to sue for damages. Because these remedies remain, Congress’ decision to restrict the availability of damages is constitutional as applied in this case.
B. EQUAL PROTECTION
The plaintiffs also challenge § 1997e(e) on the ground that it classifies people in ways that violate the equal protection component of the Fifth Amendment. They reach this conclusion primarily by contending that the statute should be subject to strict scrutiny, rather than the far less demanding rational basis scrutiny accorded to most statutory classifications. A classification receives strict scrutiny if it divides people based upon a suspect criterion, such as race, or if it burdens a fundamental right, such as free speech. See, e.g.,
Romer v. Evans,
The plaintiffs argue that the statute impinges upon their fundamental right of access to the courts by effectively denying them a judicial forum for their claims of emotional injury. As the district court points out, however, § 1997e(e) only limits the relief to which the plaintiffs are entitled; it does not restrict their access to the courts to press claims for which the substantive law provides an underpinning. See
Once strict scrutiny is ruled out, the equal protection challenge fails rather quickly. Most of the plaintiffs’ arguments criticize the statute for being either overinelusive or underinclusive; under rational basis review, however, the classification need not be the most narrowly tailored means available to achieve the desired end. All that is required to uphold the statute is that Congress rationally perceived a propensity among prisoners to file frivolous lawsuits and reacted to that perception in a reasonable way. The statute need not be the best possible reaction to the perception, nor does the perception itself need to be heavily buttressed by evidentiary support. It is enough that the perceived problem is not obviously implausible and the solution is rationally suited to address that problem. Both propositions are true here, and the statute is therefore constitutional. The district court opinion adequately states the rather apparent connection between a ban on suits based solely on emotional or mental injuries and a concern to constrain frivolous actions.
The Supreme Court recently held that the Federal Employers’ Liability Act (“FELA”) did not allow a railroad employee to recover for emotional damages from exposure to asbestos in the absence of symptoms of asbestos-related disease.
Metro-North Commuter R.R. v. Buckley,
— U.S. -,
Plaintiffs attempt to compare § 1997e(e) with the Colorado constitutional provision struck down after a rational basis review in
Romer v. Evans,
C. SEPARATION OF POWERS
Beginning on page 31 of their Brief, plaintiffs argue that § 1997e(e) violates separation of powers requirements by directing the outcome of constitutional cases in a way forbidden by
United States v. Klein,
If the argument were accepted, countless federal statutes would be called into question on constitutional grounds. Drawing upon language in Klein, the plaintiffs condemn § 1997e(e) because it meant that “the district court ... was called upon to dismiss Zeh-ner’s case upon determining the existence of certain facts — the absence of physical injury.” Appellants’ Brief at 32-33. This argument sweeps far too broadly. Every statute establishing a cause of action requires courts, upon a motion to dismiss, to determine whether certain facts (the prima facie elements of the cause of action) exist; if the elements are not present, the court must dismiss the case. Yet nobody seriously contends that such statutes unconstitutionally prescribe rules of decision.
CONCLUSION
Section 1997e(e) is constitutional as applied in this case. It does not nullify the Eighth Amendment by leaving violations of it without remedy. Neither does it violate equal protection principles; it is rationally related to legitimate governmental ends. Finally, the statute does not transgress separation of powers limitations by impermissibly prescribing a rule of decision for constitutional cases.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
. See also
Thomas v. Hill,
