ROBERT FURGESS v. THE PENNSYLVANIA DEPARTMENT OF CORRECTIONS
No. 18-1758
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
August 8, 2019
PRECEDENTIAL; Argued on January 24, 2019
Before: JORDAN, KRAUSE and ROTH, Circuit Judges
On Appeal from the United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania (D. C. Civil Action No. 1-17-cv-00326) District Judge: Honorable Susan Paradise Baxter
John F. Mizner, Esq. (ARGUED) Mizner Law Firm 311 West Sixth Street Erie, PA 16507
Counsel for Appellant
Kemal A. Mericli, Esq. (ARGUED) Daniel B. Mullen, Esq. Office of Attorney General of Pennsylvania 1251 Waterfront Place Pittsburgh, PA 15222
Counsel for Appellee
Erin H. Flynn, Esq. Christine A. Monta, Esq. United States Department of Justice Civil Rights Division, Appellate Section P.O. Box 14403 Ben Franklin Station Washington, DC 20044
Counsel for Amicus Appellant
OPINION
ROTH, Circuit Judge
Robert Furgess, an inmate in a Pennsylvania state prison, suffers from a disability and was unable to take a shower for three months because the prison staff did not provide him with a handicapped-accessible shower facility. He subsequently brought claims against the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections (PDOC) under Title II of the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act (RA). Both the ADA and the RA require public entities, including state prisons, to provide, in all of their programs, services, and activities, a reasonable accommodation to individuals with disabilities. The District Court dismissed Furgess‘s complaint with prejudice on the ground that, under case law from the United States District Court of the Western District of Pennsylvania, the provision of showers is not a program, service, or activity under the ADA or the RA. For the reasons that follow, we will vacate the District Court‘s dismissal of Furgess‘s complaint and remand the case for further proceedings.
I.1
Furgess has myasthenia gravis (MG), a neuromuscular disease that inhibits his
Furgess brought this action against the PDOC, alleging it violated his rights under Title II of the ADA and Section 504 of the RA by failing to provide him with an accessible shower. The PDOC moved to dismiss under Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6), arguing that Furgess had failed to state a claim because a shower is not a “service, program, or activity” under either statute. The District Court agreed and dismissed Furgess‘s complaint with prejudice.
II.
We have jurisdiction pursuant to
III.
We consider the Title II and Section 504 claims together because “the substantive standards for determining liability are the same.”5 To state a claim under either the ADA or the RA, Furgess must allege that he is a qualified individual with a disability, who was precluded from participating
Our analysis proceeds in two parts. First, we address whether the provision of showers is a program, service, or activity under Title II and Section 504. Next, we turn to the PDOC‘s central argument, that Furgess did not suffer the deprivation of a shower due to his disability.8
A. IS THE PROVISION OF A SHOWER A PROGRAM, SERVICE OR ACTIVITY?
The District Court dismissed Furgess‘s complaint on the ground that the PDOC‘s alleged failure to accommodate his disability did not preclude him from participating in a program, service, or activity because showers are not a program, service, or activity. The District Court‘s conclusion, and the cases supporting it, are contrary both to the statutory language of the RA and the ADA and to the weight of case law.
Looking first to the statutory language, Section 504 of the RA defines a “program or activity” quite broadly to include “all of the operations of” a state instrumentality.9 We have confirmed these terms’ broad meaning, calling them “all-encompassing.”10 The ADA does not define “services, programs, or activities,” but both Congress and this Court have recognized that Title II provides at least the same degree of protection as Section 504.11 Thus, the phrase “service, program, or activity” under Title II, like “program or activity” under Section 504, is “extremely broad in scope and includes anything a public entity does.”12 A prison‘s provision of showers to inmates fits within this expansive definition, as it undoubtedly is something “a public entity does” and is one “of the operations” of the prison.
Indeed, Department of Justice guidance on Title II regulations explicitly refers to a prison‘s provision of hygiene as being included
The weight of the case law also supports our conclusion that the provision of a shower is a service, program, or activity. First, in Jaros v. Illinois Department of Corrections, 684 F.3d 667 (7th Cir. 2012), the Seventh Circuit held that meals and showers made available to inmates are programs or activities under Section 504.15 Second, in providing examples of what constitutes a program or activity that prisons provide to inmates, the Ninth Circuit listed “toilet[s] and bathing facilities.”16 Third, the First Circuit reversed a district court‘s grant of summary judgment for a prison on the grounds that an issue of material fact remained as to whether prison officials prevented an inmate from using a showering chair, implying that the provision of showers is a program, service, or activity under Title II.17 Finally, in dictum, the Supreme Court has stated that a prison‘s refusal to accommodate inmates’ disabilities “in such fundamentals as mobility, hygiene, medical care, and virtually all other prison programs” constitutes a denial of the benefits of a prison‘s services, programs, or activities under Title II.18
The District Court, along with the three decisions from the Western District of Pennsylvania it relied on, failed to engage in any statutory or regulatory analysis in holding that showers are not programs, services, or activities. Rather, these decisions improperly relied on a Seventh Circuit case, Bryant v. Madigan, 84 F.3d 246 (7th Cir. 1996). In Bryant, an inmate claimed that a prison violated the ADA when it (1) failed to install guardrails on his bed, and as a result, he fell out of bed and broke his leg due to leg spasms caused by his paraplegia, and (2) denied him pain medication for his broken leg.19 The court characterized both allegations as ones of improper medical treatment of his paraplegia and held that the inmate‘s claims failed because “[t]he ADA does not create a remedy for medical malpractice” in prisons.20 The court went on to explain that “incarceration, which requires the provision of a place to sleep, is not a ‘program’ or ‘activity.’ Sleeping in one‘s cell is not a ‘program’ or ‘activity.‘”21 Similarly, the Western District of Pennsylvania cases characterize the failure to provide an accessible shower as medical treatment and conclude that showers are not programs, services, or activities.22
We conclude that provision of showers is a part of the programs, activities, or services referred to in the ADA and the RA.
B. DID FURGESS SUFFER DISCRIMINATION BECAUSE OF HIS DISABILITY?
Next, we address the PDOC‘s primary argument on appeal-that Furgess has not alleged he suffered discrimination “by reason of his disability.” The PDOC contends that Furgess was deprived of a shower because his own misconduct landed him in the RHU, which lacked accessible shower facilities, not because the PDOC intentionally discriminated against him on the basis of his disability. It is not clear whether the PDOC‘s argument goes to causation, intent, or both, but either way, its argument is unconvincing. Furgess‘s complaint alleges both causation and the requisite intent, deliberate indifference.
As to causation, the sole cause of Furgess‘s deprivation of a shower was his disability.23 The PDOC‘s argument to the contrary fails because it conflates the alleged discriminatory action-failure to accommodate by not making the RHU showers handicapped-accessible with the causation element of Furgess‘s claims. In other words, the PDOC‘s transfer of Furgess to the RHU cannot serve as a superseding or intervening “cause” of the lack of a shower that would defeat his claims.
The PDOC tries to convince us that Furgess was in the RHU because of a disciplinary infraction, and that but-for his alleged misconduct, he would not be in the RHU and thus deprived of a shower. But the reason why Furgess was housed in the RHU is irrelevant. A prisoner‘s misconduct does not strip him of his right to reasonable accommodations, and a prison‘s obligation to comply with the ADA and the RA does not disappear when inmates are placed in a segregated housing unit, regardless of the reason for which they are housed there. As the ADA‘s regulations make clear, the PDOC‘s failure to equip the RHU with accessible showers does not excuse the prison from its duty to reasonably accommodate prisoners with disabilities.24
As to the first prong, there are multiple allegations that the PDOC knew about Furgess‘s need for an accessible shower facility. First, at the time that Furgess was held in the general prison population, he requested and was granted an accessible shower stall. Second, after he was placed in the RHU, he requested an accessible shower multiple times. Third, the medical staff as well as the RHU Lieutenant and the Superintendent knew that Furgess had not been able to shower because the RHU showers were not handicapped-accessible. It is clear from the above that the PDOC knew that Furgess required a handicapped-accessible shower and that by failing to provide him with one, his right to a reasonable accommodation of his disability was likely to be violated. The second prong, failure to act, is also adequately pledged. For three months, the PDOC did not provide him with any accommodation that would allow him to shower; when they did bring him to a shower, it was not handicapped-accessible. We conclude that these allegations constitute deliberate indifference.
The PDOC cites Thomas v. Pennsylvania Department of Corrections, 615 F. Supp. 2d 411 (W.D. Pa. 2009), in which the plaintiff claimed that the prison violated the ADA by providing him with a replacement prosthetic leg that was inferior to his old one.27 The district court held that the replacement prosthetic was a reasonable accommodation of his disability, and even if the prosthetic was “inferior,” the prison‘s provision of the prosthetic was not “by reason of his disability” because the Department of Corrections provides only one type of prosthesis.28 Thus, Thomas was accommodated without discrimination, and we find it distinguishable.
For the above reasons, we hold that Furgess has adequately alleged that he was denied a shower “by reason of” his disability and that the PDOC was deliberately indifferent in failing to provide him with a handicapped-accessible shower.
IV.
We vacate the District Court‘s dismissal of Furgess‘s complaint and remand for
ROTH
CIRCUIT JUDGE
