Aрpellants are inmates at Hocking Correctional Facility (HCF), a medium security prison located in Nelsonville, Ohio. On August 28, 1986, appellants filed a complaint in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio, claiming violations of the cruel and unusual punishments clause of the eighth amendment of the United States Constitution. The claimed violations arоse from allegedly unfit confinement conditions; specifically overcrowding, excessive noise, inadequate storage, inadequate heating and cooling, unclean lavatories, improper classification of prisoners, and unsanitary eating conditions.
On cross-motions for summary judgment, appellants and appellees filed аffidavits in support of their respective positions. Appellants’ affidavits, and those of five additional inmates, essentially recite the alleged conditions of confinement as depriving them of their eighth amendment rights. Moreover, the affidavits of inmates Bock, Wilson, and Hunt contend that they contacted prison officials regarding the pertinеnt conditions, but that the officials took no action in response thereto.
Appellees’ affidavits, filed both in response to appellants’ summary judgment motion and in support of their own summary judgment motion, basically disclose efforts taken by prison personnel regarding physical and medical conditions within HCF, and partially refute the appellants’ specific claims concerning conditions at the prison. Additionally, appellees filed the affidavit of the staff counsel for the Ohio Judicial Conference, containing an article recounting his observations following a *863 tour of the facility, respecting conditions at HCF.
In granting appellees’ motion, the district court initially found that the eighth amendment requires states to furnish inmates with rеasonably adequate food, clothing, shelter, sanitation, medical care and personal safety. Next, the district court noted that appellants, in order to prove an eighth amendment violation arising from conditions of confinement, must demonstrate “obduracy and wantonness, not inadvertence or error in good faith” on the pаrt of the prison officials.
Whitley v. Albers,
Reviewing all of the affidavits in light of these standards, the district court concluded that appellants failed to establish a genuine issue of material fact, and that judgment should properly enter in appellees’ favor as a matter of law. Briefly, the trial court concluded that the complained-of conditions еxhibited no obduracy or wantonness on the appellees’ parts. Furthermore, the district court examined each complained-of condition discretely, and in several instances found appellants’ claims merit-less given appellees’ affidavits. Particularly, the district court dismissed averments in appellants’ supporting affidavits cоncerning confinement with physieally-ill inmates, cleanliness of lavatories, noise levels, heating and cooling, ventilation, eating conditions, and general sanitation on the strength of contrary information contained in appellees’ affidavits.
Appellants now contend that the district court improperly granted the appellees’ summary judgment motion, in that genuine issues of material fact exist concerning confinement conditions, and that therefore the district court could not, as a matter of law, enter judgment.
I.
District courts may enter summary judgment in a movant’s favor upon a showing that “there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c). “[A] party seeking summary judgment always bears the initial responsibility of informing the district court of the basis for its motion, and identifying those portions of ‘the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any,’ which it believes demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of material faсt.”
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
“As to materiality, the substantive law will identify which facts are material.”
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc.,
II.
Appellants argue that genuine issues of material fact remain regarding confinement conditions at HFC, urging that the district court improperly weighed the affidavits of appellees against those of appellants in concluding that the confinement conditions did not violate appellants’ eighth
*864
amendment rights. Clearly, confinement conditions are material given the substantive law surrounding eighth amendment prisoner claims.
See Rhodes v. Chapman,
III.
Nevertheless, the appellants’ affidavits, even if unopposed, may be insufficient to support a claimed eighth amendment violation. We are able to identify eight specific conditions that appеllants assert amount to infliction of cruel and unusual punishment: (1) unsanitary eating conditions; (2) inadequate heating and cooling; (3) housing with mentally ill inmates; (4) housing with physically ill inmates; (5) inadequate ventilation; (6) excessive noise; (7) insect infestation; and (8) overcrowding. Since appel-lees’ affidavits refute, to some degree, appellants’ claims cоncerning these conditions, genuine issues of fact exist regarding same. Our task, then, is to determine whether these issues are material, requiring an examination of the substantive law regarding eighth amendment confinement conditions claims.
Rhodes, supra,
sets forth a flexible standard for ascertaining whether prison conditions amount to cruel and unusual punishment. In evaluating prisоn conditions, we recognize that the eighth amendment “draw[s] its meaning from the evolving standards of decency that mark the progress of a maturing society.”
Id.
Subsequent to
Rhodes,
this circuit has interpreted its language as requiring an examination оf “all the prison’s conditions and circumstances, rather than isolated conditions and events, when addressing eighth amendment claims.”
Walker v. Mintzes,
Application of this precedent to the appellants’ allegations leads us to conclude that some, but not all, of the complained-of conditions suggest the type of “seriously inadequate and indecent surroundings” necessary to establish an eighth amendment violation.
See Birrell v. Brown,
First, appellants suggest that their exposure during summer months to temperatures as high as 95 degrees represents cruel and unusual punishment. Undeniably, excessive exposure to heat may in some instances constitute cruel and unusual punishment, yet we are unaware of any precedent holding that occasional exposure to 95 degree heat presents such an instance. We therefore reject this specific condition as a basis for appellants’ claim.
Second, appellants contend that appellees’ practice of housing mentally ill inmates in their dorm places them in fear for their safety. Appellants do not, though, cite any particular episodes of violence supporting this fear. In Shrader, supra, the court accepted a magistrate’s finding that
[o]ne key to understanding when the risk of violence reaches constitutional dimensions is its effect on the inmate population_ In this context, it is not necessary that an inmate establish that he has been the subject of an actual attack, but he must establish that he lives in reasonable fear of assaults from other inmates ... and that the fear results in signifiсant mental pain....
Finally, on the issue of overcrowding, аppellants cite to the fact that inmates are double-bunked, and that each receives approximately 50 square feet of living space within the dorm. While overcrowding is generally acknowledged as a potential basis for an eighth amendment violation, courts examining this problem review all of the circumstances surrounding cоnfinement to ascertain whether prison population density inflicts cruel and unusual punishment.
See Rhodes,
Having found that appellants’ claims cannot arise from specific conditions of inadequate cooling, housing with mentally ill inmates, and overcrowding, we now examine whether the remaining conditions alleged are adequate to sustain the appellants’ claim.
IV.
Appellees argue that even if appellants allege conditions аdequate to support an eighth amendment claim, their affidavits fail to refute the evidence contained in ap-pellees’ affidavits of conscious efforts taken by prison officials concerning the rele
*866
vant conditions. Since the Supreme Court, in
Whitley v. Albers, supra,
has directed that “[i]t is obduracy and wantonness, not inadvertence or error in good faith, that characterize the cоnduct prohibited by the Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause,”
Initially, it is noteworthy that we have applied Whitley’s “obduracy and wantonnеss” standard to eighth amendment challenges to confinement conditions. In
Birrell v. Brown,
Having concluded that a showing of obduracy and wantonness is material to appellants’ claims, the critical, and determinative, question becomes whether apрellants’ affidavits place this fact in issue. Resolution of this question necessitates an examination of whether such affidavits, although not placing appellants’ state of mind squarely in issue, nevertheless imply the conduct required under
Whitley.
That is, could “a fair-minded jury ... return a verdict for [appellants] on the evidence presented.”
Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477
U.S. at 252,
We are aware that state of mind is typically not a proper issue for resolution on summary judgment.
See
10A Wright, Miller & Kane,
Federal Practice and Procedure:
Civil 2d § 2730 (1983);
Archer v. Dutcher,
Appellees’ argument, although logically attractive, ignores the well-established principle that upon a motion for summary judgment, all reasonable inferences from underlying facts must be drawn in the nonmovant’s favor.
United States v. Diebold, Inc.,
Importantly, the appellants do not contend that the appellees have taken no efforts to provide them with minimally decent confinement conditions. Rather, appellants’ complaints are aimed at the results of those efforts. The undisputed record indicates that the HCF unit manager has adopted specific affirmative measures to reduce noise levels, has had heaters serviced, provides inmates with an extra blanket during winter months, has installed exhaust fans for improved ventilation, requires the cleaning of lavatories and kitchen on a daily basis, and has contracted with an exterminator to treat HCF for pests on a twice-monthly basis. The appellants’ position, apparently, is that despite these аctions, prison conditions remain unacceptable.
*867
Rhodes
and its progeny make clear that confinement conditions may constitute cruel and unusual punishment only if such conditions “compose the punishment at issue.”
V.
In conclusion, we find that appellants’ allegations regarding inadequate cooling, housing with mentally ill inmates, and overcrowding are insufficient to provide a specific basis for an eighth amendment violation. Additionally, we find that appellants’ affidavits, in that they fail to raise a reasonable inference of obduracy and wantonness on the appellees’ behalf, present no genuine issue as to that material fact. Thus, we hold that the district court properly entered summary judgment in appel-lees’ favor, and therefore AFFIRM.
