Plaintiff-appellant Steven M. DesRosiers is an inmate at the Adult Correctional Institutions (ACI), Cranston, Rhode Island (a state prison). Invoking 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1988), DesRosiers sued eight state actors in the United States District Court for the District of Rhode Island. 1 His principal contention was that the defendants failed to furnish him adequate medical care during his incarceration, thereby violating the Eighth Amendment (applicable to state actors by means of the Fourteenth Amendment). After a bench trial at which DesRo-siers represented himself, the district court entered judgment for the defendants. Des-Rosiers appeals. We affirm,
I
The trial testimony revealed that, in 1987, DesRosiers was a maximum-security inmate at the ACI. In April, he underwent surgery at Rhode Island Hospital (RIH) to remove a pilonidal cyst from his lower back and buttocks. Following the operation, DesRosiers was transferred to the ACI and placed in a high-security infirmary ward. The parties agree that DesRosiers’ stay at RIH and the prison infirmary was unremarkable. They likewise agree that he was doing reasonably well when he returned to the ACI’s maximum-security facility on May 12, 1987 (after a check-up at RIH). At that time, RIH physicians recommended to the ACI’s medical staff that DesRosiers — who, once back in maximum security, was immediately shunted to the punitive segregation unit (PSU) in order to fulfill a previous disciplinary sanction— should shower thrice daily and have the dressing on his wound changed at like intervals.
DesRosiers asserted that this prescribed regimen was thwarted because the defendants either denied, or interfered with, the recommended course of treatment. He testified to a pattern of callousness and neglect. Specifically, he criticized members of the ACI’s nursing staff for refusing to assist him in changing his bandages. He also accused the guards of preventing him from taking the suggested number of showers. In a contrary vein, the defendants contended that literal compliance with the RIH recommendations was not constitutionally mandated; that DesRosiers was allowed to perform sufficient ablutions; and that the medical staff effectively fulfilled the rest of the regimen by helping DesRosiers on some occasions and, on other occasions, giving him supplies with which to change his own dressings. Specifically, ACI nurses testified that the plaintiff’s condition was closely monitored by *18 doctors and nurses alike, both before and during his confinement in the PSU; that DesRosiers had been given an ample supply of sterile dressings and cleansing solution to conduct self-care during the nurses’ busiest shift (3:00-11:00 p.m.); and that the plaintiffs dressings were regularly checked and changed by medical personnel on less frenetic shifts. Nurse Stephenson testified that there was nothing in the plaintiffs treatment protocol that contradicted the use of self-care to change dressings. Moreover, she said that the plaintiff was entirely capable of assisting himself in this regard. Nurse Wilburn testified along the same lines. In her testimony, the plaintiffs surgeon confirmed that, with some initial tutelage, post-surgical patients should normally be able to change their own dressings. The plaintiffs contention that he was denied the specified number of showers was undermined by testimony from correctional officer Ricci.
The plaintiff was released from segregation after eighteen days. It is uncontra-dicted that, while at the PSU, he developed a nasty infection in his surgical wound. Medical evidence about the cause of the infection was inconclusive. Documentary proof was scant; in point of fact, the evidence was scattershot as to whether, and if so, to what extent, the prison’s medical staff was required to document the delivery of routine services. Lack of adequate prophylactic care could, of course, have brought about such a condition. There were, however, several other possibilities. For example, DesRosiers’ surgeon admitted that surgical wounds of this type are highly susceptible to infection even if good hygienic practices are assiduously followed.
On this pleochroic record, the district court found that the defendants made an honest, good-faith effort to provide DesRo-siers with the best care possible in light of prison conditions characterized by limited staffing and precarious safety. The court determined that, while DesRosiers did not always receive three daily showers, he was invariably afforded the opportunity to shower at least once a day. The court found that DesRosiers was provided with a satisfactory supply of bandages and kindred materials and that he was capable of changing his dressings without assistance. The court also found, in substance, that the level of care which DesRosiers received was adequate, if not ideal. Based on these findings, the court concluded that DesRosi-ers had failed to prove an Eighth Amendment violation. 2
II
Having reviewed the record with care, we believe that the district court’s findings and conclusions are supportable both legally and factually. We elaborate, albeit briefly.
A.
The Eighth Amendment, by its terms, prohibits the infliction of “cruel and unusual punishment.” When, as here, a convict claims that state prison officials violated the Eighth Amendment by withholding essential health care, he must prove that the defendants’ actions amounted to “deliberate indifference to a serious medical need.”
Estelle v. Gamble,
In evaluating the quality of medical care in an institutional setting, courts must fairly weigh the practical constraints facing prison officials.
See id.
Ill S.Ct. at 2326. Moreover, inadvertent failures to provide medical care, even if negligent, do not sink to the level of deliberate indifference.
Whitley v. Albers,
B.
Next, we consider the supportability of the district court’s factual findings. In performing this task, our standard of review is highly respectful. Under Fed. R.Civ.P. 52(a), we assay findings of fact in a bench trial only for clear error.
3
See, e.g., Jackson v. Harvard Univ.,
In the situation at hand, each of the findings of fact made below derives ample support from the record. Thus, applying the proper standard, there is no principled way in which we can disturb them. Although a different factfinder might conceivably have given the evidence a different construction and therefore reached a different set of conclusions, the lower court’s findings must be honored. It is firmly settled, after all, that, “[w]here there are two permissible views of the evidence, the factfinder’s choice between them cannot be clearly erroneous.”
Anderson,
C.
We now integrate the law with the facts as supportably found. Assuming, purely for the sake of argument, that Des-Rosiers’ surgery created a serious medical need, we cannot say that the court below erred in holding that the defendants’ failure to have a nurse change DesRosiers’ bandages three times a day, even if coupled with some curtailment of shower access, could not be equated with deliberate indifference to his medical needs. The prison staff did not ignore DesRosiers’ medical condition, deprive him of needed care in any constitutionally significant sense, or display an intention of punishing him by withholding treatment. The testimony demonstrated rather conclusively that Des-Rosiers had successfully changed his bandages on many occasions and that the defen
*20
dants were not fully aware either of any special difficulties he may have had in doing so or of any special hazards involved in that praxis. The nurses supplied DesRosi-ers with saline solution, gauze bandages, sterile bowls, and instructions for self-ministration. The testimony established that it was not uncommon for patients, having undergone comparable operations, to assume significant responsibility for their own care. Although it might have been preferable had DesRosiers’ dressings invariably been changed by third parties, the departure can scarcely be said to offend accepted standards of decency, indicate obduracy, constitute recklessness in the criminal-law sense, or amount to the wanton infliction of unnecessary pain.
See, e.g., Sires v. Berman,
Much the same can be said for any shortfall in the shower quotient. There is simply no basis to infer that the defendants knew that infection would result from the effect of lessened shower time, even when superimposed upon the incidence of self-administered dressing changes. 4 Given the lower court’s supportable finding that Des-Rosiers received at least daily access to the shower facilities, together with the lack of any competent evidence that (a) the denial of more frequent showers caused the plaintiff’s condition to worsen, or (b) the guards were motivated by any improper animus, the district court did not err in concluding that plaintiff’s constitutional rights were unaffected.
On the weight of the credible proof, it seems to us, as it did to the court below, that the defendants’ conduct amounted at worst to some specie of carelessness. Considerably more was required to make out a federal case.
See, e.g., Ortiz v. City of Imperial,
In sum, the proof falls far short of compelling a finding that DesRosiers’ treatment was so grossly inadequate as to constitute a knowing denial of proper medical care.
Compare Gill v. Mooney,
Ill
The plaintiff also complains that the district court failed to allow him to show a violation of certain regulations pertaining to the operation of the ACI (the Morris Rules). The Morris Rules were promulgated in consequence of a consent decree entered by the United States District Court for the District of Rhode Island. That
*21
decree, dated April 20, 1972, memorialized the settlement of a class action brought on behalf of all inmates then
in situ
at the ACI and all future inmates.
See Rodi v. Ventetuolo,
We view this as a non-issue. With respect to inmates confined in the PSU, the Morris Rules direct in broad generality that “access to medical facilities” be made available.
See Morris v. Travisono,
There is, of course, a more fundamental reason why the Morris Rules were inconsequential in this instance. Not every breach of prison regulations will give rise to an Eighth Amendment claim. What counts is whether the official conduct of which the plaintiff complains was in derogation of the constitutionally mandated “deliberate indifference” standard.
5
See McGill,
IV
The plaintiff complains that the lower court erred in not compelling production of certain documents. The record is murky as to the documents’ exact nature. As best we can piece it together, DesRosiers maintains that a management study (the Study) was done by Carter-Global Associates; that, in the course of the Study, Carter-Global prepared a series of treatment policies and procedures; and that, at some unspecified time in 1987, these policies and procedures were codified in a health care manual (the Manual) and put into effect at the ACI. 7 In order to place the ostensible error into perspective, we first trace the history of the discovery request. We then consider plaintiff’s asseverations.
A.
On August 12, 1989, the plaintiff served a demand for document production pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 34. That demand sought, inter alia, the production of “[a]ny and all policies that established] the duties and responsibilities of [the] defendants” as well as “[a]ny and all policies concerning the treatment and care of [sic] medically prescribed treatment to inmates by the medical staff at the ACI.” The defendants *22 objected, claiming overbreadth and burden-someness. Some four months later, on January 18, 1990, the plaintiff moved to compel. No objection appearing, the motion was granted under the local rules. See D.R.I.L.R. 12(a)(2) (unopposed motions may, in the district court’s discretion, be deemed granted).
On June 8, 1990, a pretrial hearing was held. Despite the twin facts that (1) the plaintiff knew the Study and the Manual existed, and (2) neither had been produced, the docket entry does not indicate that he called this situation to the court’s attention. On October 12, 1990, the case was reached for trial. Once again, the plaintiff said nothing about the missing documents. The first witness was Dr. William Chang, an ACI physician. The plaintiff began to question Dr. Chang about the Study. Defense counsel objected, claiming unfamiliarity with the Study and the Manual. Ultimately, the plaintiff demanded that the documents be produced for introduction into evidence. The judge questioned Des-Rosiers closely about how those items would be relevant to the constitutional claim. DesRosiers responded that the Manual would show that, notwithstanding his placement in the PSU, he should have been accorded access to medical facilities. After a lengthy colloquy, the district court postponed ruling on the plaintiff’s request “for the moment.” The trial continued that day and was resumed on November 1, 1990. The plaintiff never renewed his request for the Manual and the court never formally ruled on the request.
B.
DesRosiers argues, first, that the defendants were obliged to produce the documents during pretrial discovery and that their failure to do so necessitates retrial. Accepting the plaintiff’s premise— that the Study and the Manual fell within the scope of the pretrial production order— his conclusion nevertheless overlooks the realities of the record.
Ordinarily, if a failure to make timely discovery comes to light before or during trial, the remedy is to order the information produced and to take immediate steps to cure any prejudice. Depending on the nature of the breach, such curative steps might involve a continuance,
see, e.g., Jackson,
C.
The conclusion that the plaintiff cannot rewardingly assign error to the discovery violation does not end our inquiry. The fact remains that the plaintiff demanded production of the Manual at trial and did not receive it. The plaintiff says that this denial was itself reversible error.
We think this argument is doubly flawed. For one thing, the plaintiff’s mid-trial request was not denied; rather, the court deferred it. The plaintiff chose neither to resurrect the issue nor to ask the
*23
judge at a later time to make an up-or-down ruling. In our view, a party who seeks a ruling must persist in his quest to some reasonable extent. If the court postpones action, the proponent must ordinarily call the matter to the court’s attention at a later point in the trial if he is to preserve his rights.
See United States v. Benavente Gomez,
For another thing, we doubt the relevancy of the Manual. DesRosiers made it plain that he wanted the Manual during trial to show that, notwithstanding confinement in the PSU, his access to medical facilities should not have been curtailed. But, as we have already made clear,
see supra
Part III, DesRosiers failed to prove that he had a legitimate medical need for such access, beyond that received, during the period in question. Moreover, the record does not show that the treatment policies were actually in effect during the spring of 1987 (when the critical events transpired). Under all the circumstances, the plaintiff has failed to establish that the Manual was relevant to any genuine issue before the court.
See, e.g., Bemis v. Kelly,
y
Applicable law provides that, with respect to suitors who proceed in forma pau-peris, “[t]he court may request an attorney to represent any such person [who is otherwise] unable to employ counsel.” 28 U.S.C. § 1915(d) (1988). The plaintiff claims that the district court erred in not granting his serial requests for counsel under that statute. We review the lower court’s ruling under an abuse-of-diseretion standard.
We start with bedrock. There is no absolute constitutional right to a free lawyer in a civil case.
Bemis,
Although the record is scumbled, it seems probable that DesRosiers cannot vault even the first of these hurdles. When a litigant asserts his indigency, he must carry the devoir of persuasion. Here, DesRosiers twice applied for
forma pau-peris
status, but the district court appears never to have found him eligible. Indeed, the court ordered him to pay filing fees and the like, and he did so. The court also suggested that attorneys could be found to represent the appellant on a contingent fee basis. With the case in this posture, the district court’s refusal to appoint counsel cannot rewardingly be assigned as error.
See Sears, Roebuck & Co. v. Charles W. Sears Real Estate, Inc.,
Even if DesRosiers were financially eligible for the balm of 28 U.S.C. § 1915(d), the court would not have been compelled to invoke the statute. To determine whether there are exceptional circumstances sufficient to warrant the appointment of counsel, a court must examine the total situation, focusing,
inter alia,
on the merits of the case, the complexity of the legal issues, and the litigant’s ability to represent himself.
See, e.g., Cookish v. Cunningham,
We think that this case falls short of the mark. From the start, given the elevated Eighth Amendment threshold, DesRosiers’ chances of success appear to have been modest—a factor which militates against appointing counsel,
See Childs, 705
F.2d at 922. The legal issues were not especially complex: the facts were less than arcane and the applicable law, insofar as it impacted this case, was not beyond a layman’s comprehension. Such á combination—readily mastered facts and straightforward law—strongly suggests that appointed counsel should be denied in a civil case.
See, e.g., Cookish,
Then, too, we think it is significant that a jury was not empaneled. In a bench trial, the judge is better able to ensure that self-representation does not become an unendurable burden. This case exemplifies the point. Here, any potential unfairness was alleviated during trial by the judge’s frequent intervention and questioning to help DesRosiers articulate questions for his examination of the witnesses. Considering the totality of the circumstances, it is extremely unlikely that counsel would have materially aided DesRosiers in achieving a more satisfactory outcome. Thus, the trial judge did not misuse his discretion by denying the appellant’s serial motions for appointed counsel.
Compare In Re Lane,
VI
We need go no further. Although Des-Rosiers has advanced other arguments, none warrant extended comment. It suffices to say that we have considered all the contentions raised by the appellant and find them lacking in merit. The judgment of which DesRosiers complains was anchored in fact and rendered in accordance with appropriate legal standards after a trial unmarred by reversible error.
Affirmed.
Notes
. At the times material hereto, each defendant, in one way or another, was involved either with the operation of the ACI or with the provision of medical care to inmates. For the purposes at hand, we need not differentiate among the eight defendants.
. The district court expressed no opinion on, and DesRosiers' appeal does not raise questions anent, the merits of any state-law tort claims. And, although DesRosiers' brief on appeal does mention the Due Process Clause, the parameters of substantive due process are, for our purposes, coterminous with those of the Eighth Amendment.
See, e.g., Archie v. City of Racine,
. The rule provides in pertinent part:
Findings of fact, whether based on oral or documentary evidence, shall not be set aside unless clearly erroneous, and due regard shall be given to the opportunity of the trial court to judge the credibility of the witnesses.
Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a).
. For that matter, there was no solid evidence that either poor hygiene or bungled bandaging caused DesRosiers’ infection.
. We emphasize that the plaintiff has not claimed, either below or on appeal, that his transfer into punitive segregation was itself vio-lative of the Morris Rules — a distinction of considerable import.
See, e.g., Rodi,
. To be sure, in some cases the violation of a prison rule might be relevant to cast light upon an official’s intent.
See, e.g., Strachan,
.The Manual was apparently kept at the nurses’ station in the maximum-security wing. Neither the Study nor the Manual are part of the record below.
. We note, too, that the colloquy below makes it crystal clear that the plaintiff knew, well in advance of trial, that the Study and Manual existed. Yet, he failed to bring the matter of non-production to the court's attention at the pretrial hearing or in some other timely fashion. In similar circumstances, courts have often deemed discovery violations to have been waived.
See, e.g., Clinchfield R.R. v. Lynch,
