Plаintiff Milton Eugene Cupit appeals an order by the district court granting defendants’ motion for summary judgment and dismissing Cupit’s section 1983 civil rights claim against Richland Parish prison officials with prejudice. In entering its order, the district court relied on the report and recommendation of the magistrate prepared after an evidentiary hearing was conducted on Cupit’s claim. On appeal, Cupit alleges that the district court’s decision was not warranted by the evidence, and that he was improperly denied appointment of counsel. Furthermore, Cupit alleges thаt the magistrate erred in denying his request that subpoenas be issued for several witnesses and that certain jail documents be produced. Having considered the record before us, we reject Cupit’s contentions and affirm.
I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
In April 1985, plaintiff Cupit was arrested and subsequently detained at thе Rich-land Parish Jail. Thereafter, on June 7, 1986, Cupit was convicted of second-degree murder and sentenced to life imprisonment without the benefit of parole, probation, or suspension and was transferred to the Louisiana Department of Corrections system.
*84 On October 9, 1985, Cupit filed the instant section 1983 claim against Richland Parish Jailer James “Sonny” Jones, Sheriff Laurell Graham, and the Richland Parish Police Jury. In his complaint, Cupit alleged that prior to his arrest, he had suffered a major heart attack on January 19, 1985, after which he had heart surgery at E.A. Conway Hosрital in Monroe, Louisiana, and at the L.S.U. Medical Center and V.A. Hospitals in Shreveport. Cupit further alleged that during the time he was a pretrial detainee at Richland Parish Jail, he was denied proper medical attention for his heart condition as he was not provided the rеquisite diet, exercise, medication and stress-free atmosphere recommended by his doctors. As damages for the alleged deprivations, Cupit requested $1,000 per day plus interest for the period he was confined at Richland Parish Jail and also requested that the defendаnt prison officials be placed under a court order to comply with his doctors’ instructions.
Thereafter, the defendants filed a motion for summary judgment asserting that they did not have any specific knowledge of the requirements for Cupit’s special diet or exercise, but when they were notified from medical personnel that such instructions did exist, they adhered to those instructions. Cupit then filed an opposition to the motion for summary judgment after which the magistrate determined that there was a genuine issue as to material facts; therefore, an evidentiary hearing to supplement the affidavits and exhibits of the parties was scheduled for April 10, 1986. Prior to the hearing, Cupit requested that the magistrate appoint counsel to assist him in the presentation of his claim. The magistrate denied Cupit’s motion for counsel on May 28, 1986. As a result, Cupit apрeared pro se at the evidentiary hearing. In addition to denying Cupit’s motion for appointment of counsel, the magistrate denied a request by Cupit that subpoenas be issued for several witnesses and that certain jail documents be produced.
Following the evidentiary hearing on April 10, the magistrate recommended dismissal with prejudice of Cupit’s complaint, determining that Cupit’s claims of denial of proper exercise, medication, diet and stress-free atmosphere were not supported by the evidence. Specifically, the magistrate found that Cupit did not show that Rich-land Parish prison officials acted with deliberate indifference to his medical needs. In making his conclusions, the magistrate relied on the standard of medical care due prisoners espoused by the Supreme Court in
Estelle v. Gamble,
II. DISCUSSION
A. Denial of Medical Care
Initially, Cupit argues that the magistrate erred in determining that рrison officials were not deliberately indifferent to his needs for special medical care, diet, exercise, and stress-free atmosphere. We note that the time frame for which plaintiff is seeking damages for the alleged deprivations is that period of time when hе was a
pretrial detainee
at Richland Parish Jail, not a convicted prisoner who had already been adjudicated guilty. Pretrial detainees, as opposed to convicted prisoners, are those individuals who have been charged with a crime but who have not yet been tried on the chаrge.
Bell v. Wolfish,
In
Bell v. Wolfish,
the Supreme Court determined that as to pretrial detainees, the proper inquiry under the due process clause is whether conditions accompanying pretrial detention are imposed upon detainees for the purpose of punishment, as the due process clause does not permit punishment prior to an adjudication оf guilt.
Bell,
Thus, if a particular condition or restriction of pretrial detention is reasonably related to a legitimate governmental objective, it does not, without more, amount to punishment. Conversely, if a restriction or condition is not reasonably related to a legitimate gоal — if it is arbitrary or purposeless — a court permissibly may infer that the purpose of the governmental action is punishment that may not constitutionally be inflicted upon detainees qua detainees.
Id.
at 539,
In a recent decision by this Court,
Partridge v. Two Unknown Police Officers of Houston,
In the instant case, the magistrate, in denying Cupit’s claim, applied the standard for medical care due convicted prisoners set forth in
Estelle v. Gamble,
and not the standard of medical care due pretrial detainees. Nevertheless, we conclude that despite the fact that the magistrate applied the wrong standard, the district court properly granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment and dismissed Cupit’s claim. Indulging all inferences from the evidence in favor of Cupit,
United States Steel Corp. v. Darby,
In fact, the evidence supports the conclusion that the Eichland Parish prison officials made every еffort to accomodate Cu-pit’s particular needs. As to Cupit’s medication, the nurse on call at the jail, Pauline Jones, testified that prescription medicine was dispensed to Cupit four times a day as prescribed. On those occasions when the medication was nоt actually dispensed four times per day, it was dispensed three times per day and on the third dose, Cupit was given an extra pill which he could hold and take later.
Furthermore, the evidence establishes that Cupit was provided with sufficient ex *86 ercise while he was incarceratеd at Rich-land Parish Jail. Specifically, upon notification from Cupit’s attorney on April 2,1986, that Cupit requested to be in an open area of the jail for one hour each day to exercise, the prison officials adhered to the attorney’s request. Prior to notificatiоn by Cupit’s attorney and his doctor in April 1986 that Cupit required special exercise, Cupit was provided more exercise than any other inmate at the prison facility. In fact, on different occasions, Cupit even refused to walk when he was offered the opportunity to do so.
Cupit also alleged that prison authorities had not provided him with the low sodium diet requested by his physicians for his heart condition. In support of his claim, Cupit presented two prescription forms allegedly prepared by his doctors directing the sheriff to provide Cupit with a low sodium diet, which Cupit maintained were in the possession of prison officials in April 1985. However, the forms are not dated, addressed, or corroborated by testimony of the physicians. When medical authorities did notify prison officials of plaintiff's low salt diet requirement in January 1986, prison officials immediately notified their food service of the special diet, after which Cu-pit admits that he began receiving meals marked “low salt.”
Finally, Cupit alleges that he was entitled to a stress-free atmosphere while he was incarcerated at Richland Parish Jail. We find this contention without merit. Because we believe that Cupit was not denied reasonable medical attention, nor was he subjected to any conditions, dietary or otherwise, which would amount to punishment within the context of the due process clause, we reject Cupit’s contentions оn appeal.
B. Request for Counsel and Issuance of Subpoenas
Cupit additionally argues that the magistrate erred in refusing to appoint counsel to assist him in the pursuance of his section 1983 claim. There is no automatic right to the appointment of counsel in a section 1983 case.
Jackson v. Dallas Police Department,
In the instant case, the magistrate, in denying Cupit’s motion for counsel, found that the type of case was not complex, that Cupit had done a credible job of presenting motions and filing papers, that Cupit had been adequately able to investigate his case, and that the evidence primarily would consist of medical records and other documentary evidence. Furthermore, the magistrate noted Cupit’s ability to interrogate witnesses at the evidentiary hearing; therefore, the magistrate denied Cupit’s motion for counsel. On this record, we do not perceive the magistrate’s decision denying Cupit counsel to be an abuse of discretion.
See Ulmer v. Chancellor,
Cupit also claims that the magistrate erred in refusing to grant his request that subpoenas be issued to approximatеly nine witnesses and in denying his request for production of certain jail documents. While we have found no authority in our Circuit on this specific point, the Eighth Circuit has held that the trial court “has discretionary power to refuse to subpoena witnesses and prevent abuse of procеss in both civil and criminal proceedings.”
Mos-by v. Mabry,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. In
Whisenant v. Yuam,
