Gates v. Shinn

98 F.3d 463, 1996 WL 591116
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedOctober 16, 1996
DocketNo. 94-17146
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 98 F.3d 463 (Gates v. Shinn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gates v. Shinn, 98 F.3d 463, 1996 WL 591116 (9th Cir. 1996).

Opinion

KLEINFELD, Circuit Judge:

Prison officials were held in contempt of court for failing to obey a consent decree. The issue in the ease is whether a consent decree requiring “appropriate” psychiatric care is specific enough to empower a court to hold prison officials in contempt for failure to do so. We conclude that it is not.

FACTS

Prisoners brought a class action challenging the constitutional adequacy of medical care at the California Medical Facility. The Facility is part of the California state prison system. It provides medical and psychiatric services for inmates from throughout the California state prison system. All members of the plaintiff class have been convicted of crimes, are being imprisoned for them, and have been sent to the Facility because of mental illness. The parties agreed to a consent decree. The provision of the decree at issue here required the facility to develop an outpatient psychiatric program which would provide “appropriate psychiatric evaluation and treatment” for prisoners. An interim program was to be in effect by June 30,1990 and to be fully operational by October 31, 1990.1

[465]*465This appeal2 arises from disagreements about whether the facility’s “outpatient” program is consistent with the terms of the consent decree. The prisoners are of course not “outpatients” in the usual sense of the word. They do not get out. Generally, an outpatient is someone who gets treatment at a hospital but does not occupy a bed there. An ordinary outpatient goes home to bed. The “outpatients” in California Medical Facility’s outpatient psychiatric program do not occupy a bed at the prison hospital, but they do stay in the Facility. Unlike most non-prisoner outpatients, they do not live in the outside community.

The consent decree has involved years of detailed supervision by the district court of the Facility. The warden filed a declaration that “more than 10 million dollars has been expended on construction, equipment, contract costs, compliance team costs, and the expenses directly related to Gates,” but compliance has been found by the court to be so inadequate as to amount to contempt of court. The court has concluded that the consent decree requires much more extensive changes in staffing and methods of treatment than the Facility has been willing to adopt.

The prisoners moved to hold the officials of the Facility in contempt for failing to provide adequate care and for failure to meet deadlines set by the mediator. Pursuant to the consent decree, the court had appointed a mediator nominated by the defendants to develop institutional reforms in consultation with the prison officials, lawyers for the plaintiff class, prison psychiatry experts, and others. The district judge referred the motion to a magistrate judge, who directed the defendants to present a revised plan for an outpatient psychiatric program to the mediator.

The mediator and his experts reviewed the plan, and suggested thirteen modifications. The mediator recommended that the prison officials be found in contempt if they rejected the thirteen modifications. They declined, and the magistrate judge recommended to the district court that they be found in contempt.

The district court held the prison officials in contempt of court. The finding of contempt was based on the consent decree provision that the facility “provide appropriate psychiatric screening for each incoming inmate at CMF and ... provide appropriate psychiatric evaluation and treatment for all inmates at CMF as medically indicated.” We are impressed with the difficulty of the problem faced by the district judge in trying to assure that the Facility provided adequate and appropriate treatment to avoid inhumane and dangerous conditions. We are also impressed by the daunting challenge the prison officials faced in dealing with mentally ill criminals in a way which would prevent them from hurting themselves or others, while trying to comply with the orders of a district court mediator. We conclude that the prison officials should not have been held in contempt of court, because the term “appropriate” had no specific meaning in this decree.

The mediator had construed “appropriate” to mean the “community standard of care” for outpatients. He thought his thirteen proposed modifications were in accord with a “community standard,” the decree required that standard, and the prison had willfully refused to meet it. The prison officials had hired as the Facility’s chief psychiatrist for program development a physician who had been the mediator’s expert earlier in the litigation. That physician said there was no [466]*466such thing as a “community standard” of psychiatric care for prisoners with mental diseases. He said treatment in the community varied, what the mediator wanted was more than any community programs provided, and treating the prisoners as though they were in the non-criminal, non-institutionalized community would be inappropriate.

The district judge agreed with the prison officials that the decree did not adopt a “community standard” of outpatient psychiatric care. He found that the mediator’s “community standard” was “not to be found within the four comers of the Consent Decree,” and “has no recognizable criteria in psychiatric literature or practice,” so “is too speculative to be enforced.” The district judge nevertheless found the prison officials to be in contempt of court. The district court construed “appropriate psychiatric screening” and “appropriate psychiatric evaluation and treatment ... as medically indicated” to mean what he called a “clinical standard of care,” referring to what was “medically indicated” under accepted “professional standards”:

For these reasons, the standard applicable to adequate Psychiatric care in this ease is to be determined by the language of the decree. Section Y.F.l. provides that defendants shall provide “appropriate” Psychiatric evaluation and treatment “as medically indicated” (emphasis added). This language clearly establishes a clinical standard for appropriate mental health care generally and for the adequacy of particular [outpatient Psychiatric program] elements, which are specified components of such care.
The phrase “as medically indicated” as commonly understood, denotes care and treatment according to professional standards responsive to diagnostic criteria. The Decree by its terms affirmatively obligates defendants to provide treatment according to clinical psychiatric norms, rather than merely refraining from the deliberate indifference forbidden by the Eighth Amendment.
All future determinations of compliance with the general “appropriate evaluation and treatment” provisions of section V.F., including the “appropriateness” of the various mandatory [outpatient Psychiatric program] elements specified in sections V.F.2 & 3, shall be made according to general clinical standards for the treatment of the psychiatric conditions at issue. This standard governs both the adequacy of the [outpatient Psychiatric program] plan and the adequacy of actual care and treatment to be provided under a fully implemented [outpatient Psychiatric program].

(citations omitted). Holding the prison officials in contempt of court, the court required them to comply with the mediators’thirteen proposed modifications, as an exercise of its remedial powers to cure the contempt.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
98 F.3d 463, 1996 WL 591116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gates-v-shinn-ca9-1996.