The district judge dismissed this prisoner’s civil rights suit (42 U.S.C. § 1983) for failure to state a claim. Except with respect to the following rulings, we agree with the district judge’s reasoning and conclusions.
Concerning the plaintiffs claim that he was “forc[ed] to work in inhumane condition[s] by [being forced] to have hepatitis shots; knowing and exposing the plaintiff to conditions where [the warden] knows hepatitis exists,” the district judge said only that “the plaintiffs allegations do not rise to a constitutional violation.” The problem with the plaintiffs claim is not that knowingly exposing a prisoner to hepatitis or other serious diseases could not amount to cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the federal Constitution; it could.
Barnes v. Briley,
More problematic is the judge’s disposition of the plaintiffs claim that he has bone degeneration and arthritis in one of his hips as a result of a serious injury yet the defendants refuse to allow him a walking cane (while forcing him to work at a job that requires walking and lifting) or a lower berth in a bunk bed. The judge said that this was simply a “disagreement with a doctor’s treatment decisions,” which “cannot be the basis for an Eighth Amendment challenge.” But as all that was before the judge when he ruled was the plaintiffs complaint plus the plaintiffs correspondence with his doctors, the ruling is defensible only if these documents establish that the plaintiff was merely disagreeing with a doctor’s treatment decisions.
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The correspondence shows disagreement, all right, but the judge was mistaken to think that by attaching this correspondence the plaintiff was acknowledging a mere disagreement. A plaintiff does not, simply by attaching documents to his complaint, make them a part of the complaint and therefore a basis for finding that he has pleaded himself out of court.
Simpson v. Nickel,
With respect to the plaintiffs claim that at one prison he “was housed in a unit with 48 Smoke Cell[s] and 2 Non-Smoke and a day room full of smoke, [and] that [he] could not escape the tobacco smoke” and that the wardens of three other prisons where he was confined refused to create nonsmoking units or otherwise limit his exposure to smoke, the district court said — nothing. Now it is by no means certain that the plaintiff has a meritorious claim. A prison is not required to provide a completely smoke-free environment, except for prisoners who have asthma or some other serious respiratory condition that even a low level of ambient smoke would aggravate.
Alvarado v. Litscher,
But although a prisoner who complains that cigarette smoking amounts to punishment because it is endangering his health must therefore show that his health is indeed endangered,
Henderson v. Sheahan,
Also unclear from the complaint is whether the plaintiff is charging the defendants with deliberate indifference to his welfare in their failing to respond to his concerns about tobacco smoke. For if not — if they were merely careless in failing to correct the problem — then they cannot be thought to have been punishing him, and so his claim, founded of course on the Eighth Amendment, would fail.
Farmer v. Brennan,
In a separate part of the complaint, the plaintiff alleges that the warden restricted visits from the plaintiffs wife and friend “out of abuse of power which stems from an incident in 1995 between the plaintiff and [the warden].” The incident is not specified. The allegation is unclear, to say the least, but since the plaintiff has no lawyer, the judge should have directed the plaintiff to explain the claim. Or if the judge was entitled to dismiss it — for it is even vaguer than the smoking claim- — he should have done so with leave to replead, rather than dismissing it, as he did, along with the rest of the complaint, with prejudice (and adding that the suit would count as a “strike,” limiting the plaintiffs right to bring subsequent suits). The plaintiff explains in his brief in this court that the claim is retaliation — the incident that precipitated the restriction of visits to him was his filing grievances against the prison. Such retaliation violates a prisoner’s right, founded on the First Amendment, to petition government for the redress of grievances.
Simpson v. Nickel, supra,
The judgment is vacated and the matter remanded to the district court with respect to the arthritis, smoking, and retaliation claims, but is otherwise affirmed.
AFFIRMED IN PART, VACATED IN PART, AND Remanded.
