Willie Burton, Jr., an inmate at the Tucker Maximum Security Unit of the Arkansas Department of Correction, appeals from the dismissal of his 42 U.S.C. § 1983 complaint against Sgt. A. Livingston, a guard at the Cummins Unit of the Arkansas Department of Correction.
Mr. Burton alleged in his complaint that on 12 June 1984 he was in attendance at the federal courthouse in Pine Bluff, Arkansas, for a hearing on a complaint against guards at the Cummins Unit. He was accompanied to that hearing by Mr. Livingston and at least one other guard. Mr. Burton’s handwritten pro se complaint alleged that after his appearance in court *99 he was taken to the “holding tank” in the courthouse. Then:
Livington had continued harassing me pointing at his revolver pistol as threats; he then pull his revolver, thumb cocked it and stated, [“] nigger run so I can blow your Goddamn brains out, I want you to run so I'll be justified [”]; then another prison guard stepped between us, and move me to the opposite side of him from defendant Livington; then just out side the Court Building, as we were approaching the transporting van, def. Livington drew his pistol 357 Magnum and stated [“] nigger run, I want you to run [”], where he tried his best to scare me into running where he could shoot me in my back and say I tried to escape; I was then placed on the van and transported back to Cummins Prison Unit ... [sic]
Complaint at 3. Mr. Burton’s complaint asserted that the alleged conduct of Sgt. Livingston violated the Eighth Amendment prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment and the Fourteenth Amendment Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses. He requested damages and injunctive relief. The District Court dismissed Mr. Burton’s complaint
sua sponte
for failure to state a claim for which relief may be granted. The Court stated that “ ‘[m]ere threatening language and gestures of a custodial officer do not, even if true, amount to constitutional violations.’ ”
Burton v. Livingston,
No. PB-C-85-289, slip op. at 2 (E.D.Ark. July 19,1985),
quoting Coyle v. Hughs,
As a general rule, the federal civil-rights remedies available to a person under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 are not so broad as those available under state law, common or statutory. While a plaintiff may seek redress and win damages under state law for any unwanted touching under the common law of battery, the federal remedies under § 1983 are directed against more egregious conduct.
Johnson v. Glick,
The District Court correctly stated the general proposition that in the usual case mere words, without more, do not invade a federally protected right. See
Coyle v. Hughs,
Due process of law has been said to encompass a “guarantee of respect for those personal immunities which are ‘so rooted in the traditions and conscience of our people as to be ranked as fundamental,’ ”
Rochin v. California,
In determining whether the conduct of a prison guard has impermissibly infringed a protected right of the prisoner, we must consider (1) the need for the guard’s action; (2) the relationship between that necessity and the amount of force actually used; (3) the degree of injury to the prisoner’s retained rights; and (4) whether the conduct was a good-faith effort to maintain discipline or engaged in maliciously and sadistically for the sole purpose of causing harm. See
Johnson v. Glick,
In applying these principles to the present case, Mr. Burton’s allegations must be taken as true for the purpose of determining whether he stated a claim cognizable under § 1983. A
pro se
complaint must be liberally construed and can be dismissed only if it appears to a certainty that the complainant can prove no set of facts which would entitle him to relief.
Estelle v. Gamble,
The complaint states that Sgt. Livingston pointed a lethal weapon at the prisoner, cocked it, and threatened him with instant death. This incident occurred immediately after the prisoner had given testimony against another guard in a § 1983 action. The death threat was accompanied by racial epithets which strongly suggest that the prisoner would have been treated differently had he not been black. Apparently, another guard who was present took the threat seriously enough to step between the prisoner and Sgt. Livingston. In case the point had not been made, Sgt. Livingston repeated the performance moments later. According to the uncontro-verted words of the complaint, there was no provocation for the guard’s action other than the prisoner’s attempting to exercise his due-process and First Amendment right of access to the federal courts. The complaint describes in plain words a wanton act of cruelty which, if it occurred, was brutal despite the fact that it resulted in no measurable physical injury to the prisoner. The day has passed when an inmate must show a court the scars of torture in order to make out a complaint under § 1983. We hold that a prisoner retains at least the right to be free from the terror of instant and unexpected death at the whim of his allegedly bigoted custodians.
So far as we can tell at this early stage of the case, the guard’s conduct was not motivated by the necessity of correcting a rebellious inmate or by legitimate concerns for institutional security. See
Bolden v. Mandel,
Reversed and remanded.
Notes
. A simple allegation that an individual prison guard used racially offensive language in dealing with a prisoner might not, by itself, state a claim under the Equal Protection Clause. Compare
Black Spotted Horse v. Else,
. We do not reach plaintiffs Eighth Amendment theory. We have held that his complaint states a claim under the First Amendment as well as under the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment. All of the facts that would be relevant to an Eighth Amendment theory will be admissible on the various other theories that his complaint alleges sufficiently, and no relief that he could obtain by prevailing on an Eighth Amendment theory would be different from or additional to that obtainable under his other approaches. No purpose would therefore be served by discussing whether the complaint also states a claim under the Eighth Amendment.
