MEMORANDUM OPINION
This action is brought pro se and in forma pauperis by David West, a former inmate of Stateville Correctional Center, Joliet, Illinois, alleging violations of his civil rights pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 by several employees of the Illinois Correctional System and the Stateville prison. 1 Jurisdiction is invoked pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1343. Two of the defendants, Charles Rowe, Director of the Illinois Department of Corrections, and Captain Shiefflet, a guard at Stateville, have moved for dismissal of plaintiff’s complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted. For the reasons herein stated, we grant in part and deny in part these motions to dismiss.
I. ISSUES AND FACTS
The United States Supreme Court in
Haines v. Kerner,
Plaintiff’s second set of allegations are less clearly defined but appear to involve his dissatisfaction with administrative responses to his inter and intra institutional *60 transfers. After plaintiff’s release from the hospital, Captain Shiefflet ordered him to return to his assignment which was in the same area in which the assault occurred. When plaintiff refused this order, he was placed in segregation. Inquiries made by plaintiff to Assistant Warden Rapture regarding a transfer for plaintiff’s protection to the Joliet Correctional Center (J.C.C.) were never answered. On July 8, 1977, Captain Shiefflet visited plaintiff in segregation and told him that his prior approved transfer to the J.C.C. was an error but that he, Captain Shiefflet, would approve plaintiff’s transfer to the J.C.C. provided plaintiff would return to the cell house where he was stabbed. The justification Captain Shiefflet gave was that plaintiff could not be transferred to the J.C.C. directly from segregation. Plaintiff was taken to the cell house in safekeeping that provided 24-hour lock-up. On August 5, 1977, almost one month later, plaintiff was transferred to the J.C.C. where he is presently incarcerated. Accordingly, we construe plaintiff’s complaint to allege a violation of his civil rights because (1) his inquiries regarding his transfer to the J.C.C. were never answered by Assistant Warden Rapture and (2) after his release from the hospital, Captain Shiefflet twice ordered his return to the area of the assault.
II. CRUEL AND UNUSUAL PUNISHMENT CLAIM
Allegations charging prison officials with failure to respond to a inmate’s letters are not per se cognizable under § 1983. Similarly, allegations of supervisory negligence without personal involvement,
McDonald v. Illinois,
In the landmark case of
Holt v. Sarver,
“It has been both a settled and first principle of the Eighth Amendment . that penal measures are constitutionally repugnant if they ‘are incompatible with “the evolving standards of decency that mark the progress of a maturing society,” or [if they] “involve the unnecessary and unwanton infliction of pain.” ’ Estelle v. Gamble,429 U.S. 97 , [97 S.Ct. 285 ,50 L.Ed.2d 251 ] (1976) [citations omitted] Violent attacks ... by inmates upon the plaintiff while in protective segregation are manifestly ‘inconsistent with contemporary standards of decency.’ Id. ‘Deliberate indifference’ to these happenings ‘constitutes the “unnecessary and wanton infliction of pain” proscribed by the Eighth Amendment.’ ”
Little v. Walker, supra at 197.
Accordingly, we hold that when an inmate’s repeated requests for help place the appropriate officials on notice of a life endangering situation, a constitutional duty of care arises, binding such officials to take reasonable measures to ensure that inmate’s safety. Whether the evidence will establish that the officials, thus notified, failed to take such measures and grievous *61 bodily harm resulted to the inmate, the allegations of the complaint are adequate under § 1983. See also, Kish, supra.
We reject defendant Rowe’s argument that the doctrine of
respondeat superior
immunizes him in this situation. Certainly, absent a showing of good faith, “it is clear that, unlike judges or members of the legislature, state executive officials do not enjoy an absolute immunity from personal liability as to all acts performed within the scope of their official duties [citations omitted].”
Knell v. Bensinger,
III. TRANSFER CLAIMS
Plaintiff’s complaint states that Assistant Warden Rapture failed to respond to his inquiries regarding his transfer to the J.C.C. and that he was twice ordered by Captain Shiefflet to return to the area where the assault occurred as a condition precedent to his transfer to the J.C.C. Since we find in these facts no constitutional violations, we must defer to the prison administration’s determination as to the appropriate placement of its inmates. We, therefore, grant defendant Shiefflet’s motion to dismiss the complaint as to him.
In conclusion, we deny defendant Rowe’s motion to dismiss. We grant defendant Shiefflet’s motion to dismiss as to the transfer claims. Because summons to them were returned unexecuted, we order that service again be attempted on defendants Brierton and Rapture.
An appropriate order will enter.
Notes
. Service was not successfully executed on three other defendants. Although we will reorder service as to two of them, former Warden David Brierton and former Assistant Warden Kapture, we recognize that the instant ruling is not binding on them. Plaintiff has also joined as a defendant a Major Cartwright, whom he alleges was in charge of security at Stateville. Summons was never successfully served on Cartwright and we will not. reorder its service because plaintiffs complaint fails to allege any facts against Cartwright upon which relief could be granted. Plaintiffs mere allegation that as security supervisor Cartwright was responsible for his safety would be inadequate to withstand a respondeat superior defense.
