Nathan MILLER, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. Emery LEATHERS, Officer, Defendant-Appellee.
No. 88-7651.
United States Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit.
Argued June 8, 1989. Decided Sept. 12, 1989.
885 F.2d 151
Yet such an explanation is called for here. The spectre оf racial discrimination is clearly apparent. Six of the nine strikes employed by the government were used against blacks.4 The disparate nature of that fact is emphasized by the consideration, trumpeted by the prosecution, that two or three black jurors remained. Percentagewise blacks were still significantly underrepresented.
A predominant number of the government witnesses at the trial were white, including, in particular, the main identification witness. A lеtter written by Grandison, which was a prominent part, indeed a cornerstone, of the government‘s case, referred to one of the intended victims of a cruel and wanton murder as a “white bitch,” making race a matter of heightened importance by emphasizing a legal irrelevance more likely to repel white jurors than it would blacks.
The fifty-one possible jurors remaining after the parties excused a number by agreement amounted to 27.45% black. Peremptory challenges reduced black representation to 19%. The Maryland black population in the 1980 census was 22.7%. The main jury panel, after the government‘s peremptory challenges, consisted for Grandison et al of 3 blacks out of a total of 30, or 10%.
In light of those facts, the case of prima facie discrimination, not arduous to establish and correspondingly not difficult to dispel,5 should have to be rebutted. Since the prosecution was excused from even having to approach the issue, I respectfully dissent.
Philip Azar, Student Counsel (Steven H. Goldblatt, Director; Dori K. Bernstein, Maureen F. Del Duca, Supervising Attys., David L. Engelhardt, Student Counsel, Appellate Litigation Program, Georgetown University Law Center, on brief), for plaintiff-appellant.
Howard Edwin Hill, Associate Atty. Gen. (
Before HALL, WILKINSON and WILKINS, Circuit Judges.
Here we must determine if the district court erred in granting summary judgment to a defendant prison guard whom the plaintiff inmate alleged had used excessive force against him in violation of his constitutional rights. We find that the grant of summary judgment was propеr and affirm.
I.
Appellant Nathan Miller is incarcerated at Central Prison in Raleigh, North Carolina, for armed robbery. On January 3, 1987, Miller filed a grievance against Officer Emery Leathers to resolve various ongoing difficulties with him. On January 7, 1987, the prison superintendent, after reviewing the grievance, decided in Leathers’ favor, finding that Leathers had conducted himself “in a professional manner” when dealing with Miller and other inmates.
Later that day, Leathers was instructed to delivеr a grievance form to appellant, on which the superintendent had noted his decision. Appellant had demonstrated a proclivity for violence and assaultive behavior. Between March 1, 1978 and November 22, 1986, he had committed some twenty-seven disciplinary infractions, involving, among other things, possession of weapons, physical assaults, and threats of physical harm against numerous prison officials. Appellant was thus in close custody and administrative segregation when Leathers left the form with him and instructed him to sign it.
Miller claimed Leathers delivered the form “with a very nasty attitude.” Miller refused to sign the form, and a brief verbal confrontation ensued between the parties. During this time, Miller, who is white, referred to Leathers as a “slush-headed nigger” and threatened him with physical harm. Finally, Miller signed the form and returned it to Leathers. Leathers then left the cellblock and proceeded to the cellblock contrоl station where he obtained a pair of handcuffs. He then reentered appellant‘s cellblock and returned to appellant‘s cell.
Upon returning to appellant‘s cell, Leathers claimed he told Miller to get dressed because he was taking him to see the Sergeant or the Lieutenant. Leathers handcuffed Miller and directed the officer in the control booth to open his cell door. When the door opened, the pаrties moved toward one another so that they were face to face, virtually touching. At this point, Miller concedes he again threatened Leathers with physical harm and repeated his racial taunts. Leathers contends Miller also refused orders, kicked him in the ankle, and spit in his beard, but this is a matter of dispute. Leathers then instructed appellant to proceed toward the cellblock exit. After proceeding downstairs, Leathers directed Miller toward the exit. Appellant moved forward several steps and then re
At the infirmary, Miller was examined by Physicians’ Assistant Ray Drewry. X-rays revealed that appellant‘s right forearm had suffered a minor fracture approximately two centimeters long. A short arm cast was applied on January 12, 1987, and removed on March 16, 1987. X-rays showed satisfactory healing.
On February 9, 1987, appellant filed a complaint pursuant to
Miller argues that the question of whether Officer Leathers used excessive force against him presents an issue of triablе fact. We believe, however, that the applicable Supreme Court precedents reflect a recognition that confrontations between guards and inmates in the prison setting are legion, and that every altercation with two sides to it does not render judgment inappropriate as a matter of law.
It is clear that “the unjustified striking, beating, or infliction of bodily harm upon a prisoner by the police or a correctional officer givеs rise to liability under
Recognizing that a plethora of lawsuits against prison authorities might itself be inimical to prison discipline, the Supreme Court made the
Here, Leathers’ use of force did not transgress
Miller‘s contention that Leathers used force maliciously and wantonly because appellant had filed a grievance against him is without merit. The grievance proceeding was one in which Leathers had prevailed. Absent from the incidеnt also are the more obvious indicia of a retaliatory beating. Leathers did not strike Miller in the head, groin, or from behind, nor while he was prostrate. He struck a defiant and disobedient inmate who had previously threatened him and who had turned on him in a manner indicative of an intent to carry out those threats. He struck appellant in the obvious area of the body he would use in an attack upon Leathers, his handcuffed arms and fists. It is true Leathers struck Miller threе times. The three blows were necessary, however, because Miller caught and blocked the first blow between his handcuffs, and then laughed and taunted Leathers, telling him “his mama could hit harder than he was doing“—an indication that the first blow was not harmful and had not deterred appellant.
Miller contends in his brief that Leathers acted in violation of prison regulations by removing Miller from his cell outside the supervision of a higher authority. If such is the case, it is a matter betweеn Leathers and his supervisors. It is not dispositive, however, of the present action. Indeed, if violations of internal prison regulations were conclusive of
We do not adopt a rule that sufficient verbal provocation will permit a prison guard to avoid
Here the evidence did not.
The judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
K.K. HALL, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
I dissent from the majority‘s decision because I believe that the record below, when viewed in the light most favorablе to Miller, shows the existence of a genuine issue of material fact sufficient to withstand the motion for summary judgment. Miller‘s version of the events surrounding the infliction of his injuries differs in several significant respects from that recounted in the majority‘s opinion, and a comparison between the two serves to illuminate why this case should have been permitted to proceed further.
I.
We are not confronted with a judgment reached after a trial in which the credibility of the witnesses could be judged by the trier of fact. Instead, this appeal involves only the pleadings, deposition testimony and various exhibits. Our review is de novo and, therefore, we are constrained to review the record under the same standards employed by the lower court. Felty v. Graves-Humphreys Co., 818 F.2d 1126, 1127-28 (4th Cir.1987). The majority baldly asserts that Leathers “reasonably perceived” that he was being threatened with bodily harm and that his actions were justifiable.1 The selective assembly of facts and allegаtions supporting the majority‘s conclusion ignores the long-established standard for evaluating summary judgment motions: the facts and inferences to be drawn from the facts must be viewed in the light most favorable to Miller, and he is entitled “to have the credibility of his evidence as forecast assumed, his version of all that is in dispute accepted, [and] all
II.
On January 3, 1987, Miller filed a grievance with the prison administration complaining that Officer Leathers had told another inmatе that he (Miller) was a “snitch.” A correctional officer investigated the grievance by merely discussing it with Leathers and came to the conclusion that the “investigation reveals that there is no merit to inmate‘s complaint.” If the truth of Miller‘s grievance is assumed, and there is nothing in the record beyond the investigator‘s “finding” to rebut it, then there is an ample basis to support an inference that Leathers harbored a pre-existing hostility towards Miller. Although the majority characterizes the grievance as an attempt “to resolve ongoing difficulties with [Leathers],” it is impossible to minimize the possible consequences of being labelled a “snitch.” See Harmon v. Berry, 728 F.2d 1407, 1409 (11th Cir.1984) (
Upon receiving the form, Miller refused to sign it and a verbal confrontation ensued. Miller admits that he decided to verbally provoke Leathers in an attempt to get his grievances before higher authorities; however, he alleges that the threats and insults flowed both ways and that at one point, Leathers threatened to “kick [Miller‘s] white ass.” Miller eventually signed and returned the form, but Leathers nevertheless decided to bring him out of his cell “to see the sergeant or lieutenant.” Leathers then removed Miller from his cell, handcuffed him and began to escort him down the hall.2
According to Miller, the verbal sparring continued as Leathers escorted Miller off the cellblock and down a flight of stairs; this trip was punctuated by several blows from Leathers’ riot baton to Miller‘s back. Upon reaching a doorway which Miller claims was blocked by a food cart, he refused to move forward. Turning toward Leathers, Miller claims that Leathers insulted him and that he responded in kind. At this point, Leathers raised his baton and Miller raised his handcuffed hands to ward off the impending blow. He was struck, laughed at Leathers and was struck twice more. Miller also alleges that Leathers twice threatened to kill him during the incident. Miller sustained a fractured arm and a swollen elbow. Miller reacted by pushing the officer away and picking up a broom handle to protect himself. With the aid of some nearby officers, Miller was eventually subdued.
The district court, upon consideration of the materials submitted by both parties pursuant to Leathers’ motion for summary judgment, concluded that there was a need for the application of force, that the amount of force was not disproportionate to the need, that the injuries inflicted were de minimis, and that the force used was applied in a good faith effort to discipline Miller and was both reasonable and justified on the basis of the facts then known to Leathers. Thus, the district court concluded that Miller had no basis for recovery, and the majority agrees. I do not.
III.
The majority bases its finding that there was a need for force on the following: Miller‘s history of violence within the pris-
The majority‘s recitation of the facts do not capture the flavor of the incident conveyed by Miller‘s deposition testimony. According to Miller, the insults and coarse language flowed both ways from the outset, and Miller‘s fear of being harmed first arose when he was ordered to come out of his cell and be handcuffed. He characterized the jabs to his back as an attempt by Leathers to “start something.” Most critically, Miller alleges that he raised his shackled limbs only to defend himself from the impending blow from Leathers’ baton. Nothing in Miller‘s testimony evinces an intent to confront Leathers or to threaten him with physical harm at that juncture, and he raises at least a reasonable inference that his injuries were wantonly and unnecessarily inflicted. This is sufficient to create a genuine issue of material fact, i.e., whether Leathers had a reasonable basis to exert the force he did.
I am sympathetic to the policy concerns noted by the majority. Prisons are places of unrelenting tension between guards and the guarded. Correctional officers must contend with the most intractable members of society, and their compensation for performing this unenviable but essential task is often woefully inadequate. Neverthеless, I am compelled to dissent because I believe, under the established standard of review, that Miller‘s case should not have been disposed of by summary judgment on the existing record. The fact that the
James Kenneth GOODWIN; Eddie Earl Hallman, Plaintiffs-Appellees, v. James R. METTS, individually and in his official capacity as Sheriff of Lexington County, South Carolina; Vernon O. Maxwell, individually and in his official capacity as a Lexington County Deputy Sheriff, Defendants-Appellants, and Ralph Bishop, individually and d/b/a Bishop Salvage Company, Defendant.
No. 88-2135.
United States Court of Appeals, Fourth Circuit.
Argued April 13, 1989. Decided Sept. 12, 1989.
Rehearing and Rehearing In Banc Denied Nov. 28, 1989.
