ORDER
On December 2, 2002, this court preliminarily found that the Julia Tutwiler Prison for Women in Wetumpka, Alabama was operated in an unconstitutionally overcrowded and unsafe manner. Laube v. Haley,
A.
The correctional officers seek to intervene as a matter of right and, alternatively, as a matter of discretion, based on Rule 24 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Under subsection (a)(2) to Rule 24, a party seeking to intervene as a matter of right must meet the following requirements: (1) the application must be timely; (2) the applicant must have an interest relating to the property or transaction which is the subject of the action; (3) the application must be so situated that disposition of the action, as a practical matter, may impede or impair his ability to protect that interest; and (4) the applicant must demonstrate that his interest is repre
An interest satisfying the other requirements of Rule 24(a)(2) must be a “direct, substantial, legаlly protectable interest in the proceeding____[The proposed intervenors] must be at least ... real partfies] in interest in the transaction which is the subject of the proceeding.” Chiles,
The correctional officers contend that they should be allowed intervention as a matter of right for two reasons. First, they maintain that the current conditions at Tutwiler prevent them from performing duties which are necessary to avoid civil liability and criminal penalties. They argue that they “bear the risk” of civil liability because conditions are so bad at Tutwiler that they may, at times, have to take drastic measures to maintain order and that these drastiс measures may cause an inmate to file a lawsuit against them. These measures, according to them, may be so drastic that a court might consider them outside the scope of their employment and, hence, beyond the protection of qualified immunity. The correctional officers cоuld, therefore, according them, be exposed to civil liability because of the current conditions at Tutwiler.
This stated interest does not satisfy the requirements of Rule 24(a)(2), for it is dependent on the occurrence of a long sequence of events before it could become colorable. Washington,
Furthermore, albeit in other contexts, interests similar to that articulated by the correctional officers here have been rеjected by other courts. For example, in Acceptance Indemnity Ins. Co. v. Southeastern Forge, Inc.,
Similarly, in Purcell v. BankAtlantic Financial Corp.,
These same reasons weigh in favor of rejecting the correctional officers’ second claimed interest, avoiding criminal liability. The correctional officers contend that they could be exposed to criminal penalties under Alabama state law for failing to discharge their duty to guard inmates in compliance with state law. They point to 1975 Alabama Code § 14-11-4, which allows criminal penalties for “[a]ny guard ... having the charge, management or control of any convict who fails to discharge any of the duties imposed upon him by law,” and 1975 Alabama Code § 14-3-16, which states that “[a]ny person who violates any provision of this chapter shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor” and refers to laws regulating the treatment of inmates. The correctional officers argue that, because they are unable to comply with the Eighth Amendment due to substandard conditions at Tutwiler, they could be criminally liable under Alabama state law.
Once again, the correctional оfficers’ stated interest is too attenuated to support intervention as a matter of right. At this point in time, the court has only preliminarily found that the conditions at Tutwiler are unconstitutionally unsafe. In order for the officers to be criminally liable for these conditions, however, a number of events must ocсur. This court must first find that the conditions at Tutwiler violate the Eighth Amendment (as it has done preliminarily), then the State would have to continue to operate the prison in violation of the Eighth Amendment, and, finally, the State would then have to take the additional step of criminally prosecuting its own correctionаl officers. ' This sequence of events is not only speculative, it is improbable. Because any criminal liability on the part of the correctional officers is highly speculative and contingent upon the occurrence of a series of events (one or more of which are improbаble), the court finds that this interest is insufficient to grant intervention as of right.
Finally, the correctional officers argue that they have an “interest relating to the property or transaction which is the subject of the action,” Chiles v. Thornburgh,
Howard v. McLucas,
Similarly, the court cannot credit the correсtional officers’ assertion that they might be discharged because current conditions at Tutwiler prevent them from upholding the United States Constitution and their oaths of office. The correctional officers are essential to the proper operation of Tutwiler, and the parties have indicated every desire to retain them. Therefore, because it is again “purely a matter of speculation” that the correctional officers’ employment is a subject matter of this litigation, the correctional officers have not stated an interest sufficient to intervene as a matter of right.
B.
Under Rule 24(b)(2) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, to permissively intervene, the correctional officers must show that: (1) their application to intervene is timely; and (2) their claim or defense and the main action have a question of law or fact in common. Fed.R.Civ.P. 24(b)(2); Chiles,
The correctional officers raise claims regarding “the same overcrowded conditions, staff shortages, unsafe conditions, and violence that were addressed factually by the plaintiffs.” Specifically, they claim that, because these conditions pose a serious danger to them as well as the inmate plaintiffs in this case, they should be allowed permissive intervention.
In requiring that a proposed intervenor state “a сlaim or defense” which shares a question of law or fact in common with the main action, “[t]he words ‘claim or defense’ manifestly refer to the kinds of claims or defenses that can be raised in courts of law as part of an actual or impending lawsuit.” Diamond v. Charles,
This is not to say that the correctional officers do not have some protection under state law; Alabama may or may not have laws that protect them from the harm they fear. But if the State does, the correctional officers must pursue those state-law claims in state court. Pennhurst State Sch. & Hosp. v. Halderman,
In their proposed complaint-in-intervention, the correctional officers also asked this court to declare the two Alabama state laws discussed previously, 1975 Alabama Code §§ 14-3-16 and 14-11-4, unconstitutional. They contend that these laws impose a duty upon them to follow the orders of the Department of Corrections, but that, because the court has preliminarily found that the department is operating Tutwiler in violation of the Eighth Amendment, these departmental orders would require that they violate the Eighth Amendment or be exposed to criminal penalties. Consequently, they challenge these provisions as unconstitutional, though they do not state which provision of the Constitution they believe has
Accordingly, it is ORDERED that the motion to intervene, filed by George Eldridge, et al., on February 18, 2003 (doc. no. 131), is denied without prejudice to the right of these correctional officers to bring a separate lawsuit of their own.
