Steven W. Parkus, a Missouri prison inmate, brought this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action against several correctional officers contending he was beaten in retaliation after he attacked, choked, sexually assaulted, and injured prison psychologist Betty Webber during a consultation in her office. In addition to Parkus’s Eighth Amendment claims, Par-kus asserted procedural due process claims against the correctional officers. The district court granted judgment as a matter of law on the procedural due process claims, and the jury returned verdicts against Parkus on his Eighth Amendment claims.
Initially, Parkus contends the district court misinstructed the jury. In instructing the jury on the elements Parkus must prove to prevail on his excessive force claims, the district court essentially told the jurors they must decide whether the challenged force was applied in a legitimate effort to subdue Parkus or was applied maliciously and sadistically to cause harm in violation of the Eighth Amendment. Parkus did not object to the verdict-directing instructions. To assist the jury in deciding whether the correctional officers acted with a sufficiently culpable state of mind, the district court defined the words “maliciously” and “sadistically” in another instruction. Although the district
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court’s definitions track the ordinary meaning of the words that we used in deciding
Howard v. Barnett,
Despite putting the correctional officers’ subjective motivations in issue under the malicious and sadistic factors,
see Graham v. Connor,
Although district courts are not required to define words that are in the vocabularies of lay persons, the meaning of “maliciously” and “sadistically” is critical to a jury’s deliberations in this type of case. We cannot say the district court abused its discretion when it used the definition of “sadistically” we mentioned in
Howard,
Parkus also asserts the district court improperly gave the jury an instruction based on substantive due process principles. In the district court, Parkus objected to the instruction because it “add[ed] an extra element” to his excessive force claims. On appeal, however, Parkus contends the instruction bolstered “the improperly high standard” for the culpable state of mind that Parkus reads into the district court’s definition of the sadistic factor. Parkus may not state oné ground when objecting to the instruction in the district court and then rely on a different ground on appeal.
See Commercial Property Invs., Inc. v. Quality Inns Int% Inc.,
Next, Parkus contends the district court improperly ruled that Parkus could not assert an alternate claim for violation of procedural due process independently of the Eighth Amendment. We disagree. Like the Seventh Circuit, we hold that “due process
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does not require that a hearing be held before applying necessary and justifiable force in a prison disturbance situation,”
Lunsford v. Bennett,
Next, Parkus argues the district court improperly refused to apply the doctrine of collateral estoppel to the findings of a state administrative board that reviews the employment decisions of Missouri’s Department of Corrections. After a hearing, this board made findings about the force correctional officer Billy R. Davis used on Parkus and decided Davis was properly dismissed. The district court rejected Parkus’s argument that Davis was collaterally estopped from giving contradictory testimony at the federal trial.
Parkus correctly states that Missouri courts give preclusive effect to administrative findings if the criteria for applying collateral estoppel are satisfied.
See Bresnahan v. May Dept. Stores Co.,
Parkus’s preclusion argument flounders, however, because the issues in this case were not unambiguously decided in the earlier administrative proceeding.
See Davis v. Stewart Title Guar. Co.,
Finally, Parkus’s remaining claims require little discussion. We find no abuse of discretion in the district court’s evidentiary rulings. Likewise, the district court did not abuse its discretion when the court denied Parkus’s motion for new trial based on Parkus’s claim that the jury verdict was against the weight of the evidence.
See Keenan v. Computer Assoc. Int'l, Inc.,
We affirm the district court’s judgment.
