Plаintiff-appellant Robert G. Rocky (Rocky) brought this suit against defendant-appellee John T. King, et al. (King), for alleged violations of the federally protected rights of Rocky and similarly situated inmates who worked in the fields at the Louisiana State Penitentiary in Angola, Louisiana (Angola). Rocky appeals the district court’s denial of class certification and grant of summary judgment in favor of King.
Facts and Proceedings Below
Rocky, pro se, filed his claim, pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, on November 8, 1983, in the form of a class action in which only injunctive and declaratory relief were requested. At that time, Rocky was an inmate at Angola and was assigned to work in the field lines there. Such inmates work in the fields two times per day for periods up to four hours in length. Angola provides drinking water but not toilet facilities for the field workers. Thus, the field workers typically urinate or defecate in the fields or attempt to refrain from doing so until they return from the fields. Moreover, Angola apparently does not provide toilet paper and hand-washing facilities for the inmates to cleanse themselves while in the fields, although the inmates are allowed to wash their hands before eating their meals indoors. Rocky claims that these practices cause a variety of medical problems to the field workers, such as the spread of certain diseases or parasites, and violate the inmates’ constitutional rights of privacy and of freedom from cruel and unusual punishment, as well as certain federal regulations. See OSHA Field Sanitation, 29 C.F.R. § 1928.110 (1988) (requiring agricultural еstablishments employing over ten hand laborers to provide, inter alia, toilet and hand-washing facilities).
On April 9, 1984, Angola officials removed Rocky from field work because of eye surgery and temporarily assigned him to light duty indoors. These officials continually renewed Rocky’s temporary status until that status became permanent primarily because of Rocky’s glaucoma. As a result, Rocky has not worked in the fields since April 9, 1984. On May 10, 1984, Rocky filed a motion for class certification, which the district court denied on May 15, 1984, because of Rocky’s status as a pro se inmate. Shortly thereafter, Rocky also filed a motion for appointment of counsel to represent the class aspects of his claims, which the magistrate to whom that motion was referred denied.
King subsequently filed a motion for summary judgment. On April 4, 1985, the district court denied that motion because of *866 the existence of material issues of fact in dispute. The district court, however, subsequently ordered both parties to file cross-motions for summary judgment. Prior to the filing of these cross-motions, the district court permitted the enrolling of an attorney of record for Rocky.
On April 22, 1988, the magistrate to whom the district court referred these motions recommended granting summary judgment in favor of King. King had moved for summary judgment, inter alia, because Rocky’s claim was moot. In response to this point, Rocky claimed that he could be returned to the fields because of either a disciplinary infraction or another physician’s reaching a different conclusion about Rocky’s medical condition. To support this claim, Rocky attached the affidavits of a number of inmates who alleged that they had been returned to the fields for one of those reasons. The magistrate found that Rocky had not worked in Angola’s fields since April 1984 primarily because of his glaucoma. The magistrate also found no indication in the record that Rocky’s glaucoma will change or that Angola officials will reassign Rocky to field work for any other reason. Granting King’s motion for summary judgment because Rocky’s allegations did not constitute a violation of any federally protected rights, however, the magistrate found the issue of mootness to be immaterial.
The district court subsequently approved the magistrate’s recommendation. This appeal followed, and we appointed counsel for Rocky for purposes of this appeal.
Discussion
The threshold question in this case is whether Rocky’s complaint presents a justiciable controversy under the constitutional case-or-controversy requirement.
See
U.S. Const. art. III, § 2, cl. 1. In support of King’s second motion for summary judgment, King asserted, albeit without explanation, that Rocky’s claim was moot. The mootness doctrine requires that the controversy posed by the plaintiff’s complaint be “live” not only at the time the plaintiff files the complaint but also throughout the litigation process.
See United States Parole Comm’n v. Geraghty,
In the present case, Rocky worked in the Angola fields at the time he filed his complaint pro se on November 8, 1983. Rocky filed his claim in the form оf a class action, purporting to represent similarly situated Angola inmate field workers and requesting injunctive and declaratory relief against the allegedly illegal conditions of these inmates’ field work. No other relief was requested. Angola officials, however, removed Rocky from the fields on April 9, 1984, because of eye surgery. Eventually, these officials permanently assigned Rocky to light duty indoors because of his glaucoma. Thus, although Rocky’s claim challenges the field conditions, Rocky has not been a field worker since April 9, 1984. Moreover, Rocky did not file his motion for class certification until May 10, 1984, and the district court denied that motion on May 15, 1984. Thus, Rocky was not a field worker at either the time this motion was filed or denied. The facts of this case raise the question whether this Court may review the district court’s denial of class certification and grant of summary judgment on the merits where the named plaintiffs individual claim has become moot prior to his filing of a motion for сlass certification and the district court’s denial of that motion.
*867 On appeal, Rocky asserts that his individual claim is not moot because, although he is no longer a field worker, the diseases and parasites spread among the field workers may be transferred to the other inmates through direct contact with the workers or through eating the food on which they have urinated or defecated. Nevertheless, even broadly interpreting Rocky’s original pro se complaint, Rocky clearly filed his complaint as a class action on behalf of those inmates similarly incarcerated who were working in the fields of Angola and challenged the legality of the conditions of confinement only with respect to those workers. Although Rocky’s complaint alleged that Angola’s failure to provide toilet and hand-washing facilities caused harm to field workers, it did not allege that these practices harmed in any manner those inmates not working in the fields. Thus, Rocky’s individual claim for injunctive and declaratory relief became moot when he was removed from the fields on April 9, 1984.
An action is moot where (1) the controversy is no longer live or (2) the parties lack a personal stake in its outcome.
See Geraghty,
On several occasions in recent years, the United States Supreme Court has addressed the application of the personal-stake requirement in the class action context. For example, in
Sosna v. Iowa,
In
United States Parole Comm’n v. Geraghty,
To support this holding, the Geraghty Court relied on the “relation back” doctrine. Under that doctrine, to determine whether the named plaintiff has a personal stake in challenging class certification denial, a court must examine the named plaintiff’s personal stake at the time the district court denied the motion for class certification. 1 Because the named plaintiff in Ger-aghty was not released from prison until shortly before appeal of the district court’s denial of class certification and grant of summary judgment in favor of the defendants, the Court found that the named plaintiff’s alleged
“injury continued up to and beyond the time the District Court denied class certification. We merely hold that when a District Court erroneously denies a procedural motion, which, if correctly decided, would have prevented the action from becoming moot, an appeal lies from the denial and the correсted ruling ‘relates back’ to the date of the original denial.
“... The ‘relation back’ principle, a traditional equitable doctrine applied to class certification claims ..., serves logically to distinguish this case from the one brought a day after the prisoner is released.... If the named plaintiff has no personal stake in the outcome at the time class certification is denied, relation back of appellate reversal of that denial would not prevent mootness of the action.” Id. at 1214 n. 11 (citations omitted) (emphasis added).
Thus,
Geraghty
also is distinguishable from the present case. In
Geraghty,
it was crucial that the named plaintiff’s individual claim became moot
after
the denial of class certification; therefore, the named plaintiff had a personal stake in the outcome of the action at the time of denial.
Accord Johnson v. City of Opelousas,
A number of other courts of appeals have held a complaint filed in the form of a class action to be moot where the named рlaintiff’s individual claim became moot before denial of class certification.
See, e.g., Ahmed v. University of Toledo,
This Court generally has concurred with the proposition that a purported class action is moot where the named plaintiffs individual claim became moot before class certification. For example, in
Sannon v. United States,
Applying the Supreme Court’s analysis in
Geraghty
in light of the preceding authority, we first must determine whether Rocky may challenge the district court’s denial of his motion for class certification. Because Rocky was no longer a field worker when the district court ruled on his motion for class certification, Rocky’s individual claim, which was only for injunctive and declaratory relief in respect to Angola field wоrk conditions, clearly had then already become moot. Because Rocky had no personal stake in the case when the district court denied class certification, it is also not appropriate for this Court to reach Rocky’s challenge to the district court’s grant of summary judgment for King on the merits.
See id.,
The Supreme Court has carved out a narrow exception to the general rule that a named plaintiff must have a personal stake in the outcome of the case at the time the district court rules on class certification.
See Zeidman,
This narrow exception as applied to the transitory claims in
Gerstein
is inapplicable in the present ease. Unlike the named plaintiffs in
Gerstein,
Rocky is challenging conditions of long-term, not short-term, confinement.
5
See Tucker,
Rocky also suggests that his claim is “capable of repetition, yet evading review” because he potentially could be returned to the fields due to a single disciplinary infraction or another physician’s reaching a different conclusion about Rocky’s glaucoma.
7
The magistrate found no indication in the record that Rocky’s glaucoma will change or that Angola officials will reassign Rocky to field work for any other reason. In light of the speculative nature of Rocky’s assertion that he may be returned to the fields in the future, we concur with the magistrate’s assessment of the record and find the narrow exceрtion for claims “capable of repetition, yet evading review” also to be inapplicable on this ground.
See Geraghty,
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is reversed and remanded with instructions to dismiss the case as moot.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. Prior to
Geraghty,
the Court had utilized the relation-back doctrine when the "capable of repetition, yet evading review” exception applied.
See Geraghty,
. The named plaintiff in
Tucker
arguably had even a stronger case for not mooting his claims because he also had a live individual claim for money damages based on the same allegedly illegal conditions of confinement challenged in his claims for class-wide injunctive and declaratory relief.
See Tucker,
.
See also Walker v. Haynes,
. Because Roсky was removed from field work before he ever moved for class certification, it is unnecessary to determine whether appellate reversal of the district court’s class certification denial relates back to the time of Rocky’s motion for class certification or the time of the district court’s denial of that motion. Regardless, it is clear that “a corrected ruling could not relate back into a void. That is, if the named plaintiff’s claim was already moot when thе district court made its erroneous decision, then a corrected ruling could be of no benefit to” the named plaintiff.
Tucker,
. In
Cruz v. Hauck,
This Court reversed, basing its holding on alternative grounds. The Court in
Cruz
found the named plaintiffs' claims to be "capable of repetition, yet evading review." In support of this finding, the Court noted that "confinement in jail is by its nature temporary,” citing in support of this proposition two Supreme Court opinions, including
Gerstein,
involving shortterm detention.
Id.
at 716 (citing
Bell v. Wolfish,
Angola, a statе penitentiary, obviously confines prisoners for typically longer periods of time than did the county jail involved in Cruz, The present case is clearly not a "capable of repetition yet evading review” situation. Further, unlike the situation in Cruz, here there was no unreasonable delay in ruling on the motion for class certification (it was denied five days after it was filed) and indeed Rocky's individual claims had become moot before the motion was filed. Cruz is hence inapplicable.
. If Angola officials did so, the field workеrs doubtless would file such claims in order to be removed from field work.
. In opposition to King’s second motion for summary judgment on the ground, inter alia, of mootness, Rocky attached the affidavits of a number of inmates who alleged that they had been returned to the fields because of either a disciplinary infraction or a differing medical evaluation. There is no indication that Rocky is or was, when he filed his class certification motion or thereafter while the case was pending in the district court, faced with any pending or threatened disciplinary action or investigation.
