In 1970 pretrial detainees commenced a civil rights class action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 challenging the constitutionality of conditions at the Manhattan House of Detention, commonly called the “Tombs.” After a lengthy trial in the Southern District of New York before Judge Morris E. Lasker, sitting without a jury, the district court on January 7, 1974, ruled that various conditions and practices at the institution violated the demands of due process and equal protection. Rhem v. Malcolm,
In March 1974, the district court ordered the city defendants
The city thereupon decided to close the Tombs and to transfer its detainees to the House of Detention for Men on Rikers Island (HDM). Accordingly, the remaining members of Rhem’s plaintiff class requested that the relief previously granted them while incarcerated in the Tombs similarly should apply to their detention at HDM. Rejecting the city’s contention that the change in institution should necessitate full discovery and a trial de novo, the court on February 20, 1975, ordered that appropriate steps be taken to comply with its previous rulings. See
Shortly thereafter the inmates at HDM who were not transferees from the
DISCUSSION
We find no merit in appellants’ initial contention that the court erred in ordering HDM to provide contact visits for all detainees without first holding a full hearing on the physical and financial difficulties posed by such an order. The argument ignores the fact that Judge Lasker held just such a series of hearings in January 1975 following this court’s first remand. The city had the opportunity to air its financial and administrative concerns during those deliberations. Moreover, in granting the relief on February 20, 1975, the district court was not writing on a clean slate. Judge Lasker’s order requiring the abolition of noncontact booth visits at HDM, subject to the legitimate dictates of institutional security, merely reflected the fact that such visits previously had been held to be an unconstitutional practice,
Similarly, the appropriateness of the experimental optional lock-in program, which is challenged by appellants’ second argument, is no longer open to question. From the first, the court made clear that an optional lock-in program is constitutionally mandated, see
We are not unaware of the financial difficulties presently confronting the city defendants.
Notes
. The defendants actually include representatives of both the city and state governments: Benjamin J. Malcolm, Commissioner of Correction for New York City; -Arthur Rubin, Warden, Manhattan House of Detention for Men; Abraham Beame, Mayor, New York City; Peter Preiser, Commissioner of Correction of the State of New York; Hugh Carey, Governor of the State of New York; and Owen McGivem, Presiding Justice, New York State Supreme Court, Appellate Division, First Department. Only the city officials are serving as appellants, however.
. The requirement that the defendants apply to the court for permission to deny contact visits was later stricken by the district court’s Memorandum Decision and Amended Judgment dated April 23, 1975. At the same time the district court modified the optional lock-in provisions to give the warden the option of implementing the optional lock-in program throughout the entire facility.
. For example, it was established at the initial trial, see
. It perhaps should be mentioned that it is not at all clear from the record that instituting these contested reforms will be an unduly expensive proposition. For example, the New York City Board of Estimate and City Council apparently have already approved a capital expenditure of $200,000 in order to construct the necessary contact visit facilities at HDM. And the administrative problems associated with the optional lock-in program seem more a matter of inconvenience than sizeable expense, see
. This court noted during the first appeal: “One does not get the impression from the record of defendants straining in every way to comply with the district court’s directions,” and proceeded to label the city’s conduct as “foot dragging.”
