Garrett v. Lumpkin

96 F.4th 896
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 22, 2024
Docket22-40754
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 96 F.4th 896 (Garrett v. Lumpkin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garrett v. Lumpkin, 96 F.4th 896 (5th Cir. 2024).

Opinion

Case: 22-40754 Document: 64-1 Page: 1 Date Filed: 03/22/2024

United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit ____________ FILED March 22, 2024 No. 22-40754 Lyle W. Cayce ____________ Clerk

Michael Garrett,

Plaintiff—Appellant,

versus

Bobby Lumpkin, Director, Texas Department of Criminal Justice, Correctional Institutions Division,

Defendant—Appellee. ______________________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Texas USDC No. 2:13-CV-70 ______________________________

Before Clement, Engelhardt, and Oldham, Circuit Judges. Edith Brown Clement, Circuit Judge: Michael Garrett has been a prisoner in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice system for over thirty years. For the last ten years, his prison units have afforded him at most three and a half hours of total sleep—and at most two and a half hours of continuous sleep—per night. Garrett complained to prison officials on several occasions, explaining that sleep deprivation poses grave health risks. After the officials failed to take corrective action, Garrett sued, invoking the Eighth Amendment’s ban on cruel and unusual punishment. In deciding Garrett’s Eighth Amendment Case: 22-40754 Document: 64-1 Page: 2 Date Filed: 03/22/2024

No. 22-40754

claim, the district court applied the wrong legal standard. Accordingly, we VACATE and REMAND for the district court to apply the correct legal standard. I. A. Michael Garrett is a prisoner in the Texas Department of Criminal Justice (the “Department” or “TDCJ”) system, where he has been incarcerated for over thirty years. Garrett is currently housed in the Estelle Unit, in Huntsville, Texas, where he has been since February 2020. Before that, he resided in the McConnell Unit, in Beeville. The Department operates its prisons, including the Estelle Unit, on twenty-four-hour schedules. The schedules are chock-full of planned activities—including meals, work assignments, vocational classes, law- library time, recreation, showering, clinic appointments, commissary privileges, and religious services. In fact, the Estelle Unit schedule is so detailed that it contains nearly 100 daily activities. The result is that inmates are afforded three and a half hours of sleep per night. “Rack up” (i.e., bedtime) is at 10:30 p.m., and breakfast begins around 2:00 a.m. But even during this three-and-a-half-hour window, sleep is not continuous. Garrett and other inmates are required to be awake for a 1:00 a.m. bed-book count,1 meaning that the most continuous sleep that Garrett can theoretically receive is two and a half hours (assuming he falls asleep instantly at 10:30 and sleeps undisturbed until the bed-book count). And nighttime prison conditions— namely the hallway lighting, heavy doors slamming, and prisoners yelling—

_____________________ 1 During the bed-book count, prison officials ensure that each inmate is accounted for by requiring the inmates to verbally identify themselves and provide identification.

2 Case: 22-40754 Document: 64-1 Page: 3 Date Filed: 03/22/2024

further imperil inmates’ sleep prospects during this three-and-a-half-hour window. B. During his term of imprisonment, Garrett has filed multiple grievances to prison officials, including at the Estelle Unit, concerning sleep deprivation, all of which met rejection. Accordingly, Garrett sought relief in a different forum—the courts. In 2013, Garrett sued the Department under the Eighth Amendment, seeking an injunction that would mandate a prison schedule with six hours per night designated for sleep. Garrett consented to have the case tried by a magistrate judge, who dismissed Garrett’s complaint under the Prison Litigation Reform Act for failure to state a claim. Relying on Walker v. Nunn, 456 F. App’x 419 (5th Cir. 2011), the magistrate judge reasoned, in relevant part, that “[i]n light of the prison’s security function, [Garrett] has no constitutional right to a pre-determined number of hours of uninterrupted sleep each night,” and that, for Garrett “to prevail on his sleep deprivation claim, [he] would have to establish that he has suffered a physical injury caused by the alleged sleep deprivation.” On appeal, this court reversed the district court’s dismissal. We held that “the sleep deprivation [Garrett] has alleged could plausibly constitute a denial of the minimal civilized measure of life’s necessities sufficient to satisfy the objective component of the Eighth Amendment inquiry.” Garrett v. Thaler, 560 F. App’x 375, 379 (5th Cir. 2014) (quotation marks and citation omitted). In so holding, we distinguished Walker because that case “nowhere indicate[d] how many hours were devoted to sleep (presumably more than four) under the prison schedule at issue.” Id. at 379 n.3 (emphasis added). We also held that the district court had applied the wrong legal standard: to state an Eighth Amendment conditions-of-confinement claim, a prisoner must show “that his confinement resulted in a deprivation that was

3 Case: 22-40754 Document: 64-1 Page: 4 Date Filed: 03/22/2024

objectively, sufficiently serious” (the objective component) and that prison officials were “deliberately indifferent” to “an excessive risk” posed by those conditions (the subjective component). Id. at 378 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted). Additionally, the district court had “incorrectly held that, in order to prevail on his sleep deprivation claim, Garrett needed to establish a physical injury.” Id. at 379 n.3. That standard was wrong, we explained, because “in the Eighth Amendment context, the physical injury requirement of § 1997e(e) does not apply to requests for declaratory or injunctive relief.” Id. (internal quotation marks omitted and alterations adopted). Garrett’s allegations of a substantial risk of serious harm were enough to state a claim. See id. Similarly, we held, Garrett had adequately stated the subjective component—namely prison officials’ awareness of, and deliberate indifference to, Garrett’s risk of harm. Id. at 380. On remand, the suit went to a bench trial before a district judge. The two-day bench trial in 2018 centered on the impact of the daily schedule in the McConnell Unit—where Garrett then resided—on Garrett’s health. Garrett offered unrefuted testimony that the McConnell Unit schedule permitted only four hours of sleep per night and that sleeping less than four hours per night creates the risk of serious negative health consequences. The Department did not timely offer an expert rebutting Garrett’s. Instead, the Department presented testimony on the penological justifications for the McConnell Unit schedule, principally the alleged necessity of periodic bed- book counts during the sleep window and the Unit’s inability to schedule

4 Case: 22-40754 Document: 64-1 Page: 5 Date Filed: 03/22/2024

rack-up at an earlier time. The Department also argued that “[t]here is no causation” between Garrett’s sleep deprivation and his medical conditions.2 The district court denied Garrett relief, holding that Garrett had failed to satisfy his burden as to the objective element of the Eighth Amendment inquiry. Specifically, the court explained, Garrett “could not establish a cause-and-effect relationship between his sleep schedule and any medical complaint” because he “did not offer any expert testimony establishing that a lack of sufficient uninterrupted sleep has, within reasonable medical probability,” caused his health conditions. The court also held that Garrett had failed to satisfy the subjective element—deliberate indifference. In so holding, the district court acknowledged that the Department “was . . .

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
96 F.4th 896, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garrett-v-lumpkin-ca5-2024.