Thomas Anthony Luciano, plaintiff-appellant, a prisoner in the Coffield Unit of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Institutional Division, proceeding
pro se
and
in forma pauperis,
filed this civil rights action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 complaining of an excessive use of force directed at him by Lieutenant J. Galindo and Corrections Officer N. Vernon. The district judge referred the complaint to a magistrate judge under 28 U.S.C. § 636(b)(1) and (3). The magistrate judge conducted an on-site evi-dentiary hearing pursuant to
Spears v. McCotter,
The incident in question began when Luciano, then in an administrative segregation cell, threw a cup of water on Lieutenant Galindo. At this point, Galindo handcuffed Luciano and led him from the cell with Officer Vernon following behind Luciano. When the three reached a stairway, Luciano testified that the officers shoved him down the stairs. Luciano also asserted that Lieutenant Galindo followed him to the foot of the stairs and attempted to break his arm, and when he could not, he jumped up and down on Luciano’s back. The report of an investigation conducted into the incident which was part of the *263 Spears record shows that Galindo and Vernon asserted that Luciano fell down the stairs after attempting to break away from their custody.
Following the incident, Lieutenant Galin-do brought Luciano to the medical department for a “major use of force” physical examination by Dr. Kerry Rasberry, a physician with the Texas Department of Criminal Justice. Luciano’s claim of a significant injury is more than a mere conclusory allegation; it is supported by physical evidence, medical records, and the corroborating testimony of credible witnesses. The uncontradicted medical records and Dr. Rasberry’s testimony at the Spears hearing describe Luciano’s injuries as: abrasions on both knees, a one-quarter inch cut behind the left ear with bruises over and behind the left ear, a one-inch laceration on his left forehead which was “oozing blood,” abrasions and bruises on his left upper chest and shoulder, bruises on his lower back, bruises at the base of his skull and back of the neck area, and bruises on both hands with abrasions on both wrists.
The magistrate judge concluded:
This Court has examined Luciano’s testimony regarding his injuries, as well as those medical records and other testimony which do not contradict Luciano’s statements, and has determined that no significant injury was suffered by the plaintiff in any of the incidents he complains of.
Luciano filed a timely notice of appeal.
The source of Luciano’s constitutional protection in the prison context is the eighth amendment. In order for a prisoner to prevail on a section 1983 civil rights complaint of excessive use of force, the plaintiff must prove four elements: 1) a significant injury, which 2) resulted directly and only from the use of force which was clearly excessive to the need, the excessiveness of which was 3) clearly and objectively unreasonable, and 4) the action constituted an unnecessary and wanton infliction of pain.
Huguet v. Barnett,
In
Graham v. Connor,
In
Huguet
we applied the fourth amendment excessive force standard established in
Johnson v. Morel
to a prisoner’s section 1983 eighth amendment excessive force claims.
See McCord v. Maggio,
Failure of a plaintiff to meet any one of the Huguet elements causes his entire claim to fail. Without examining any of the other elements, the magistrate judge dismissed Luciano’s claim on the basis that Luciano “suffered bruises, contusions, and minor cuts and scrapes, but there is no injury which can be considered a significant one.”
*264
A determination of whether force is excessive must take into account the significance of the injury and the force needed in the situation.
Huguet,
In
Adams v. Hansen,
Luciano’s injuries, while similar in character to those in
Wise
and
Hudson,
are considerably more extensive. Luciano was bruised over the base of his skull, the back of his neck, over and behind the left ear, on both hands, and over the left upper shoulder and upper chest. Luciano also suffered lacerations and cuts which left permanent, albeit small, scars. Although Luciano’s injuries were more substantial than those in
Wise
and
Hudson,
the injuries did not require hospitalization or result in permanent disablement. Under the standard enunciated in
Huguet,
however, permanent injury is not a prerequisite to a showing of significant injury necessary to support a section 1983 excessive force claim. Other circuits also have held that a permanent injury is not a prerequisite for a constitutional violation.
See Bennett v. Parker,
The failure to allege “lasting harm” is not fatal to an eighth amendment excessive force claim.
Foulds v. Corley,
A requirement that a prisoner show permanent injury causing disablement would clothe prison officials with arbitrary authority to inflict punishment on prisoners at will without due process. A lawful sentence of imprisonment does not comprehend or contemplate the use of unnecessary and excessive force in the treatment of the prisoner.
Hudson v. McMillian,
It is reasonable to expect that the physical result of a fall down a flight of stairs could be a significant injury. Experiencing such a fall while handcuffed increases the likelihood of this result. The record disclosed that numerous injuries did in fact occur, and allegedly were added to by unwarranted mistreatment at the end of the fall. The inquiry should have been whether Luciano accidentally fell or was deliberately pushed.
*265
The district court may dismiss an
in forma pauperis
proceeding under 28 U.S.C. § 1915(d) if the claim’s realistic chance of ultimate success is slight or the claim has no arguable basis in law or fact.
Pugh v. Parish of St. Tammany,
The order of dismissal is VACATED and the cause is REMANDED for further proceedings.
