This is an appeal from a judgment enjoining the defendant, the sheriff of Middlesex County, from continuing certain practices instituted as a result of overcrowding at the Middlesex County jail Gail). The sheriff claims error in the judge’s conclusion that conditions of confinement at the jail violated the plaintiffs’ constitutional rights, and in the denial of his motion to compel joinder of additional defendants pursuant to Mass. R. Civ. P. 19,
The case was submitted on statements of agreed facts. On motion of the plaintiffs, thе judge also took a view of the conditions at the jail. The jail, a modern structure designed to hold 161 inmates, has for several years held many more prisoners than it was designed to accommodate. In Septem
During the day, inmates who were not occupying cells stayed in an area immediately outside the cells, sitting on picnic tables or on the floor. Here, also, there was no access to bathrooms. An inmate needing to use a toilet had to get permission — not always forthcoming — from an inmate in a cell to use his, or had to gain access to another area in the jail, such as a recreational area, to use the toilet.
The judge found that “[t]he facts, as stipulated, indicate clear violations of [Department of Correction and Department of Public Health] regulations.” The judge found violations of 103 Code Mass. Regs. § 972.03 (1986), which sets standards for multiple occupancy cells and dormitories;
3
103
After having taken a view of the conditions at the jail on the night of November 9, 1988, the judge found that “[a]reas that were designed for day rooms, libraries and other suсh facilities, including a sick bay, were being used to house the Jail inmates. In one particular section sixty (60) men were being housed with access to only two toilets and one shower. The crowding seemed to me to contain all the ingredients for a riot.”
The judge, while noting that the sheriff had made “conscientious efforts” to comply with his legal obligations, concluded that the conditions in the jail violated the due process rights of the detainees.
5
Accordingly, he ordered as follows: “Judgment should enter enjoining defendant!:] 1. From allowing inmates to sleep on the floor. Every inmate shall be furnished with a bed. 2. From allowing more than one inmate to be housed in a cell. 3. From allowing inmates to be
1.
Violation of State regulations.
In their brief, the plaintiffs argue that relief should be granted solely because the conditions at the jail violated State regulations. Nothing in the record before us indicates that the plaintiffs argued below that the regulatory violations, by themselves, were sufficient grounds for an injunction. The judge also did not base his decision solely on the fact thаt regulations had been violated. Indeed, at oral argument, the plaintiffs’ counsel conceded
The plaintiffs also appear not to seek literal compliance with the regulations. For example, they have not objected to the sections of the judge’s order that permit housing in multiple-occupancy areas, despite the fact that the regulations prohibit entirely the housing of pretrial detainees in multiple-occupancy areas. See 103 Code Mass. Regs. § 972.03. The plaintiffs’ counsel also said in oral argument that “literal compliance with the State regulations would probably require the closing down of this facility.” Nothing before us indicates that the plaintiffs have ever sought such a result. The plaintiffs give us no guidance on how to base our decision on the regulations when literal compliance is not, apparently, what they seek. Thus, as in
Michaud
v.
Sheriff of Essex County,
We do, however, accord the regulations some weight in our consideration of the constitutional issues because “State regulations governing conditions of confinement reflect current standards of decency against which we measure alleged [constitutional] violаtions.”
Id.
at 527. We note, however, that “the mere failure to conform to State minimum standards does not
per se
establish a constitutional violation. Certainly such standards may be designed to provide conditions of incarceration far better than those constitutionally mandated.”
Strachan
v.
Ashe,
Significantly, although it held that the conditions then before it in
Bell
v.
Wolfish
did not constitute punishment, the Supreme Court declared that, “confining . . . people ... in such a manner as to cause them to endure genuine privations and hardship over an extended period of time might raise serious questions under the Due Process Clause as to whether those conditions amounted to punishment.”
Id.
at 542. Thus, in order to conclude that overcrowded conditions of confinement at a jail constitute punishment, “[i]t must be shown that the overcrowding subjects a detainee over an extended period to genuine privations and hardship not reasonably related to a legitimate governmental objeсtive.”
Lareau
v.
Manson,
a. Conditions.
i.
Failure to provide beds.
The plaintiffs argue that the sheriff’s failure to provide beds for all inmates, so that some were required to sleep on floor mattresses, and some without any mattresses at all, constituted a genuine hardship. The sheriff concedes that this practice was improper. See dеfendant’s brief at 23. We agree. The use even of floor mattresses “constitute [s] punishment without regard to the number of days for which a prisoner is so confined.”
Lareau
v.
Manson, supra
at 105. Accord
Anela
v.
Wildwood,
ii.
Limited access to bathroom facilities.
The plaintiffs contend that their detention in certain areas of the jail that lacked bathrooms, and their detention in other areas in which there were not enough toilets and showers, constituted genuine privation and hardship.
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They are correct. Indeed, this court, as well as several others, has held that the failure to provide an inmate with a toilеt that can be flushed from within the inmate’s cell constitutes cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the Eighth Amendment. See, e.g.,
Michaud
v.
Sheriff of Essex County,
Moreover, plainly insufficient or inadequate toilet and shower facilities also constitute “punishment.” See
Fischer
v.
Winter,
iii.
Overcrowding of multiple-occupancy areas.
The plaintiffs contend that the judge’s findings on this issue support the conclusion that they were subjected to punitive conditions. We agree. Courts have held that the crowding of inmates into common areas designed for other purposes may constitute punishment, particularly when those common areas originally were designed and used as open or recreational space for inmates. See, e.g.,
Lareau
v.
Manson,
iv.
Double-bunking.
The plaintiffs contend that double-bunking resulted in genuine privation and hardship. The sheriff, however, points out that the United States Supreme Court has approved double-bunking in some situations, ruling that there is no “ ‘one man, one cell’ principle lurking in the Due Process Clause.”
Bell
v.
Wolfish, supra
at 542. Many courts considering the issue since
Bell
v.
Wolfish
have
In. this case, the cells in which the detainees were double-bunked were designed as temporary holding cells for inmates awaiting transportation. As a result, they contain large benches that effectively reduce the floor area, which also contains a toilet, to as little as approximately forty-two square feet. As in Lareau v. Manson, supra, the common areas of the jail also were overcrowded and provided no respite from the extremely cramped conditions in the double-bunked cells.
Indeed, some courts have held that conditions such as these not only are punishment, but are cruel and unusual punishment. In
French
v.
Owens, 777
F.2d 1250, 1253 (7th Cir. 1985), cert. denied,
b.
Governmental objectives.
Having established that the conditions of confinement amounted to genuine privation and hardship, we turn to the question whether the conditions
While we are not unmindful of the difficult situation that the Statewide overcrowding problem has caused for the sheriff, his proffered rationale for the conditions at the jail sweeps too broadly. Legitimate governmental interests include measures necessary to the security and effective maintenance of a facility, see
id.
and
Block
v.
Rutherford, supra,
not to its continued operation in an overcrowded state. As in
Lareau
v.
Manson, supra,
“[t]he only conceivable purpose overcrowding . . . serves is to further the state’s interest in housing more prisoners without creating more prison space. This basically economic motive cannot lawfully excuse the imposition on thе presumptively innocent [pretrial detainees] of genuine privations and hardship over any substantial period of time . . . .”
Id.
at 104. Accord
Morales-Feliciano
v.
Parole Bd. of P.R.,
Indeed, we rejected a similar argument in
Michaud
v.
Sheriff of Essex County,
3.
Propriety of remedial order.
The plaintiffs appeal the judge’s denial of their motion to amend judgment pending appeal.
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They ask that we supplement the trial judge’s order with further remedial measures, in particular, the institution of special trial and bail sessions, which, they argue, will result in more effective administration of the remedies already ordered. The sheriff asks that we vacate or raise the population cap, but he also appears to agree with the plaintiffs that some further remedial action is necessary. In his reply brief, the sheriff, while continuing to argue that conditions at the jail are not unconstitutional, stated that he “is committed to a long-range continuing effort to deal effectively with the overcrowding situation, and would welcome the institution of special criminal trial sessions and additional resources to solve this overcrowding emergency.” The trial judge also requested guidance from us concerning remedies. He wrote in his memorandum of decision and report that “[h]aving doubts about the propriety of my order, and of its enforce
As far as the propriety of the remedial measures already ordered is concerned, we conclude that the judge was well within his powers in ordering a population limit or “cap” at the jail. See
Perez
v.
Boston Hous. Auth.,
We also agree with the plaintiffs, however, that further remedial measures may be necessary. The judge evidently was reluctant to order further remedies because of uncertainty concerning the extent of his powers, and it is clear that he could not, by himsеlf, order special sessions. We note that he did order that the sheriff was to “[wjork with the courts . . . to establish a pretrial diversion program whereby prisoners will be conditionally released while awaiting trial. . . .” Accordingly, we remand the case to the trial judge for further consideration of other remedies. If he determines that the special sessions requested by the plaintiffs are the most appropriate remedial measures to bring, the jail within compliance with the other aspects of his order, he should request
4.
Joinder of additional parties.
Before trial, the sheriff filed a motion to compel joinder of additional defendants, including the Commissioner of Correction and the county commissioners of Middlesex County. See Mass. R. Civ. P. 19 (a),
Rule 19 (a) provides for joinder of a party if “in his absence complete relief cannot be accorded among those already parties . . . .” The sheriff contends that the Middlesex county commissioners are necessary parties because under G. L. c. 34, § 3, counties are to provide suitable jails, and because under G. L. c. 34, § 14, county commissioners “may provide for erecting and repairing jails.” We disagree that the county commissioners are necessary parties. The plaintiffs have not sought relief through expansion or renovation of the jail, nor did the trial judge grant any relief implicating the duties of the county commissioners. There was no error in refusing to join the county commissioners.
The sheriff also argues that the Commissioner of Correction is a necessary party, because under the terms of the current remedial order, the sheriff is ordered to “[tjransfer all inmates who may be transferred under the provision of M.G.L. c. 276, § 52A . . . ,”
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Moreover, the Commissioner
We conclude, therefore, that for purposes of administering the current order and any further remedies that the trial judge shall order on remand, the Commissioner of Correction should be joined. See
Stock
v.
Massachusetts Hosp. School,
The trial judge’s judgment concerning liability of the sheriff is affirmed, as is the judge’s order. The case is remanded for consideration of suсh further remedies as now are needed. The Commissioner of Correction is to be joined as a party defendant.
So ordered.
Notes
In an affidavit submitted to the court, one prisoner averred that he was forced to urinate into a plastic bag because no toilet was available.
Section 972.03 provides: “Multiple occupancy cells or dormtories shall be used only forf housing inmates engaged in work release or similar programs.
“(1) Multiple occupancy cells or dormitories shall have a maximum capacity of fifty (50) inmates.
“(2) Multiple occupancy cells or dormitories shall havе at least sixty (60) square feet of floor space for each inmate and where double bunks are used, a minimum ceiling height of nine (9) feet.
“(3) At least one toilet and washbowl shall be provided for each eight (8) inmates or fraction thereof housed in multiple occupancy cells or dormitories.
“(4) Multiple occupancy cells or dormitories shall be divided by partitions into single occupancy cubicles to provide adequate privacy. Each cu-
Section 972.07 provides: “(1) There shall be at least one toilet in every single or multiple occupancy cell or dormitory. In the dayroom and indoor exercise areas, there shall be wash basins available on a ratio of one wash basin for every eight (8) inmates or fraction thereof.
“(2) There shall be at least one (1) shower available for every fifteen (15) inmates or fraction thereof.”
The judge also concluded that these conditions violated the detainees’ rights under the Massachusetts Declaration of Rights and the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Because the judge’s conclusion that the detainees’ due process rights were violated is adequate to support the relief ordered, we need not address these conclusions. .
By this, the judge meant that the sheriff should transfer to the custody of the parole board any detainees who, if they made bail, would then be held for parole violations.
After judgment entered, the sheriff applied for and received from the Commissioner of Correction a waiver of some of the regulations that the
In
Lareau
v.
Manson, supra,
the court considered relevant the length of time during which inmates are exposed to conditions. The sheriff points to a statistic not in the record indicating that the
average
length of stay is
In his reply brief, the sheriff contradicts the position in his principal brief that the use of floor mattresses is improper. In the reply brief, he
The sheriff’s contention that the plaintiffs’ access to bathrooms was adequate is not supported by the record and is expressly contradicted by the judge’s findings.
Indeed, one court concluded that even single-bunked prisoners in extremely small cells were impermissibly punished when they were confined to those cells for twenty-two hours per day. See
Lock
v.
Jenkins,
In the motion to amend judgment pending appeal, the plaintiffs sought special criminal sessions and a special bail review session in order to reduce the number of detainees awaiting trial to meet the population cap in the judge’s order.
General Laws c. 276, § 52A, provides, in relevant part, “Persons held in jail for trial . . . shall, by order of a justice of the superior court, be removed by the commissioner of correction to a jail in another county . . . .” The sheriff has submitted to us a letter from the Acting Commissioner of Correction indicating that the Department of Correction will riot
