When these lawsuits began, Scott, Dawson and Smith were prisoners of the District of Columbia in the Lorton Correctional Complex in Virginia. Second-hand tobacco smoke at Lorton, they alleged in separate complaints, violated the cruel and unusual punishments clause of the Eighth Amendment to the Constitution. The district court agreed and issued a permanent injunction ordering the District to provide each of them with a smoke-free environment.
See Crow-der v. District of Columbia,
Events occurring after the district court’s final order present a problem of mootness. None of the three plaintiffs is still jailed at Lorton. Scott completed his sentence and was released more than a year ago. Dawson and Smith are now serving time at the Northeast Ohio Correctional Center, a private facility operated for the District. They were transferred to Ohio in September 1997 pursuant to § 11201(c) of the National Capital Revitalization and Self-Government Improvement Act of 1997, Pub.L. No. 105-33, 111 Stat. 712, 734.
Normally, a prisoner’s transfer or release from a prison moots any claim he might have for equitable relief arising out of the conditions of his confinement in that prison.
1
It does not matter that Smith and Dawson are still being held under the authority of the District of Columbia. The cases do not distinguish between intra- and inter-jurisdiction transfers of inmates.
See Cameron,
As to Scott, his release from confinement surely moots his case.
See Weinstein v. Bradford,
Smith and Dawson are still in prison, but they are now in Ohio. What is left of their complaints about second-hand tobacco smoke at Lorton? The District answered at oral argument that the cases are saved from mootness by the “capable-of-repetition-yet-evading-review” doctrine.
See Christian Knights of the Ku Klux Klan v. District of Columbia,
The extraordinary scope of the decree, a decree following these prisoners wherever the District incarcerates them, misapprehends the demands of the Eighth Amendment. The key decision is the Supreme Court’s in
Helling v. McKinney.
A prisoner “states a cause of action under the Eighth Amendment by alleging that [prison officials] have, with deliberate indifference, exposed him to levels of [tobacco smoke] that pose an unreasonable risk of
serious
damage to his future health.”
The district court quoted from
Helling
but then reformulated the standard into what it called a conclusion of law: “involuntary exposure to significant amounts of [second-hand smoke] is intolerable under contemporary societal standards.”
Crowder,
Helling
did not read the Eighth Amendment as mandating smoke-free prisons. It is impossible to read any such
per se
rule into Helling’s “objective” element. It is also impossible to find that these plaintiffs presented enough evidence to satisfy Helling’s standard, correctly understood. They did put on some evidence of their involuntary exposure to some second-hand smoke at Lorton. But the evidence consisted merely of anecdotal accounts, such as testimony that there “was smoking being done in the sleeping areas” and that Lorton’s Medium Security Facility was like “a nightclub.” J.A. 207, 251. Missing entirely from the plaintiffs’ affirmative case was any objective evidence of the level of second-hand smoke. There was no “scientific and statistical inquiry into the seriousness of the potential harm and the likelihood that ... injury to health will actually be caused by exposure.”
Helling,
Both plaintiffs say they are suffering “from a physical ailment that is aggravated by second-hand cigarette smoke.” Brief of Appellees at 4. Their expert witness, Dr. Albert Munzer, testified that exposure to second-hand smoke would aggravate the conditions of persons suffering from the plaintiffs’ alleged health problems and would have an adverse effect even on otherwise-healthy persons. The plaintiffs believe that, in light of this evidence, their involuntary exposure to tobacco smoke at almost any level was unreasonable.
The district court apparently agreed with this line of reasoning.
See Crowder,
Helling
also required Dawson and Smith to prove “deliberate indifference” on the part of prison authorities,
Besides, it is hard to see how imperfect enforcement of a nonsmoking policy can, alone, satisfy Helling’s subjective element. That the District even has such a policy militates against a finding of deliberate indifference. The Supreme Court said as much in
Helling,
Reversed.
Notes
.
See Cameron v. Thornburgh,
. The Supreme Court must have pondered the same mootness issue in
Helling v. McKinney.
At oral argument, counsel disclosed that prisoner McKinney, whose complaint dealt with his exposure to second-hand smoke at Nevada's Carson City State Prison, had been transferred to Nevada’s Ely State Prison. When one Justice asked why this did not moot the case, counsel replied that McKinney could be transferred back to Carson City.
See Helling v. McKinney,
. The court's order commands the District to provide Smith and Dawson with smoke-free quarters and common areas 'Tor the remainder of their incarceration.”
Crowder,
. The District's air quality measurements were taken after the district court had issued a preliminary injunction ordering the District to enforce Lorton's policy regarding nonsmoking areas. For this reason the court found the measurements "of little practical help,"
Crowder,
