ANTONIO LACY v. JOHN COUGHLIN & another.

100 Mass. App. Ct. 321
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedOctober 6, 2021
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 100 Mass. App. Ct. 321 (ANTONIO LACY v. JOHN COUGHLIN & another.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
ANTONIO LACY v. JOHN COUGHLIN & another., 100 Mass. App. Ct. 321 (Mass. Ct. App. 2021).

Opinion

LACY vs. COUGHLIN, 100 Mass. App. Ct. 321

ANTONIO LACY vs. JOHN COUGHLIN & another. [Note 1]

100 Mass. App. Ct. 321

February 10, 2021 - October 6, 2021

Court Below: Superior Court, Suffolk County

Present: Green, C.J., Vuono, Sullivan, Massing, & Englander, JJ. [Note 2]

Further appellate review granted, 489 Mass. 1104 (2022)

Constitutional Law, Imprisonment, Cruel and unusual punishment. Imprisonment, Safe environment. Practice, Civil, Directed verdict, Judgment notwithstanding verdict.

This court reversed the judgment in favor of the plaintiff in a civil action he brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that the defendant prison guards subjected him to cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution by providing inmates with access to an unsecured hot pot in a jail in which he was being held as a pretrial detainee and suffered severe injuries when another prisoner emptied a hot pot of boiling water onto him in the middle of the night, where the facts presented did not amount to an Eighth Amendment violation as a matter of law, in that the plaintiff failed to show that under the circumstances the unsecured hot pot posed a sufficiently substantial risk to be a cruel and unusual condition of his confinement. [325-330] Massing, J., dissenting, with whom Sullivan, J., joined. Sullivan, J. dissenting, with whom Massing, J., joined.


CIVIL ACTION commenced in the Superior Court Department on April 10, 2014.

The case was tried before Douglas H. Wilkins, J., and motions for judgment notwithstanding the verdict or for a new trial were considered by him.

Erica Morin, Assistant Attorney General, for Thomas Gannon.

Stephen C. Pfaff for John Coughlin.

Gordon W. Spencer for the plaintiff.


ENGLANDER, J. In 2012, the plaintiff, Antonio Lacy, was a prisoner in the now-defunct Cambridge jail. He was assaulted by

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another prisoner, Stephen Cullity, who emptied a hot pot of boiling water onto him in the middle of the night, causing severe injuries. Lacy sued several of the prison guards under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, asserting that they had subjected him to "cruel and unusual punishment," in violation of the Eighth Amendment to the United States Constitution, by providing the inmates with access to an unsecured hot pot in the jail.

The case proceeded to trial, and a jury found in favor of Lacy and awarded $1.5 million in damages against two of the guards. We now reverse the judgment. At bottom, the claim at issue results from the all too common occurrence of one prison inmate attacking another prison inmate. Such an occurrence can be the basis for an Eighth Amendment claim, if it is shown to be caused by an unconstitutional "condition of confinement," see Farmer v. Brennan, 511 U.S. 825 (1994). Such claims must be scrutinized carefully, however, lest the words "cruel and unusual punishment" be reduced to little more than ordinary negligence. The words of the clause are important, and they must be heeded when defining the right at issue. Experience teaches that it is inevitable that prisoners will fashion weapons from otherwise benign objects found in a prison and use them, but the Eighth Amendment is not addressed to the management of common prison risks.

To ensure consistency in the application of Eighth Amendment standards, the cases hold that the question whether a challenged prison condition poses a sufficiently substantial risk of serious harm is a question of law for the court. Here, the actions of the defendants in making the hot pot available to inmates did not amount to the "inflict[ion]" of "cruel and unusual punishment."

Background. The Cambridge jail in 2012 occupied the top four floors of a State court house and office building. Lacy was housed on the eighteenth floor, which had four separate areas, referred to as "tiers" A, B, C, and D, configured in the shape of the letter "H." The jail was badly overcrowded at the time, and each of the four floors housed over one hundred prisoners. Because there were only fifty-eight cells on each floor, some prisoners slept in bunk beds set up in the corridors of each tier. Lacy and his attacker, Cullity, were both assigned to the B tier, Cullity to a locked cell, and Lacy to one of the bunks in the corridor.

The defendants, John Coughlin and Thomas Gannon, were working the midnight to 8 a.m. shift on the night of the incident. Coughlin was a line correctional officer responsible for supervision

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of the prisoners on the eighteenth floor, and Gannon, his supervisor, was a captain responsible for supervising all four floors of the jail.

Each of the tiers on the eighteenth floor had its own general use, fifty-five cup hot pot, which prisoners used to boil water for tea, coffee, ramen noodles, and similar items they could purchase at the commissary. The large hot pots had been installed about two and one-half years prior to the attack on Lacy. Before that, smaller, personal use hot pots had been available at the jail, and used for the same purpose. Those smaller hot pots had been used by inmates as weapons in two prior attacks [Note 3] -- eight and eighteen years earlier -- and they were no longer available once the larger hot pots were installed. The larger hot pots were installed because of the risks from the smaller hot pots.

Initially the larger hot pots were kept inside locked metal cages that were bolted to the wall in each tier, with just the nozzle sticking out. The cage doors were secured with padlocks, and the keys to the padlocks were kept in the officers' station. Coughlin and Gannon, who were both aware of the prior scalding attacks, each testified that if an inmate notified an officer that a hot pot had run out of water, the unwritten policy of the jail required the officer on duty to unlock the hot pot cage, to monitor the inmate while the inmate filled the hot pot with water and placed the hot pot back in the cage, and then to secure the padlock once again.

For about one year after the installation of the hot pots, Coughlin kept the cage doors locked, as required. At some point, however, the hot pots in tiers A, C, and D could no longer be locked because the hasps securing the cage doors were broken. Although the hot pot on the B tier could still be locked, it became the practice to keep the B tier cage unlocked as well. Coughlin testified that he did so out of concern that the prisoners housed in B tier should have the same access to a hot pot as the prisoners in the other tiers.

At around 3 a.m. on the night of the attack, Cullity complained to Coughlin that he was having trouble breathing. Coughlin thereafter

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released Cullity from his cell and gave him permission to heat up some water in the B tier hot pot. Coughlin, who was in the officers' station monitoring six inmates on suicide watch, did not supervise Cullity as he filled the hot pot, waited for it to boil, and then carried it down the hall and dumped it on the sleeping Lacy. Lacy's resulting injuries were severe, and remain to this day.

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