Sеllers, an inmate in a Texas state prison, brought this suit seven years ago against officials of the federal prison at Marion, Illinois, where he was then imprisoned, claiming they had violated his constitutional rights.
Bivens v. Six Unknown, Named Agents,
Sellers’s second argument is better; it is that he did not receive the notice, required by
Lewis v. Faulkner,
Sellers claims that the conditions of his confinement at Marion constituted the infliction on him of cruel and unusual punishment, in violation of the Eighth Amendment. Several of the specific complaints — that his cell was too small for him to exercise in, that an hour a day of exercise outside the cell was too little, that he should have been given an extra mattress, and that the prison doctors used рoor medical judgment in taking him off a drug for reducing his cholesterol and in the way they administered his insulin (he is an insulin-dependent diabetic) — plainly have no merit in light of thе realities of prison administration and previous decisions. E.g.,
Whitley v. Albers,
Of course merely to establish that he has been denied appropriate medical treatment and diet would not prove that Sellers had been subjected to cruel and unusual punishment. Negligence is not actiоnable under the Eighth Amendment.
Duckworth v. Franzen,
It is vital to keep negligence and delibеrate indifference apart. It may be, as quite a large number of cases state, such as
French v. Owens,
It would be a great mistake, though, to infеr from cases like
French
and
Wellman
that a series of purely negligent acts can be equated to an act of deliberate
*1103
indifference. If act
A
committed by the
X
prison shows negligence but not delibеrate indifference, and
B
the same, and likewise
C,
the prison is not guilty of deliberate indifference. The only significance of multiple acts of negligence is that they may be evidence of the magnitude of the risk created by the defendants’ conduct and the knowledge of the risk by the defendants.
Farmer v. Brennan, supra,
— U.S. at ,—
Yet while Sellers is not permitted to bootstrap his way to a judgment by stringing together a bunch of separate acts of mere negligence, if he can prove that the defendants have deliberately withheld medical treatment and dietary accommodation that he needs — and that they know he needs — to avoid a diabetic crisis or another heart attack, he is entitled to a judgment.
He makes one more, unrelated claim, a claim almost literally unsavory. To bolster his complaint about the inadequacy of his diet, he put some “meat gravy soup” into a plastic bag and tendered it to а guard for shipment to the district court. En route the bag broke, and the soup was lost. He argues that the prison officials “intentionally mashed” the bag, destroying evidence that he needed, thus impeding the constitutionally guaranteed access to the courts that was recognized in
Bounds v. Smith,
Affirmed in Paet, VACATED in Paet, and REMANDED.
