Inmates of the Suffolk County Jail v. Kearney

573 F.2d 98
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedMarch 17, 1978
DocketNos. 77-1361—77-1363
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 573 F.2d 98 (Inmates of the Suffolk County Jail v. Kearney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Inmates of the Suffolk County Jail v. Kearney, 573 F.2d 98 (1st Cir. 1978).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiffs in this class action are almost wholly pretrial detainees incarcerated in the Suffolk County Jail in Boston (hereafter Charles St. Jail) who claim that their constitutional rights are violated by the conditions of confinement imposed on them. The district court in an opinion issued June 20, 1973 found that plaintiffs’ claims were fully justified. Inmates of Suffolk County Jail v. Eisenstadt, 360 F.Supp. 676 (D.Mass. 1973). It ordered immediate correction of several unacceptable conditions at the jail and prohibited the housing of any pretrial detainees at Charles St. Jail after June 30, 1976. The decision of the district court was not appealed. It is the law of this case. Inmates of Suffolk County Jail v. Eisenstadt, 494 F.2d 1196 (1st Cir. 1974).

Because the responsible civic authorities were not able to arrange a new replacement facility for pretrial detainees, the district court postponed its order prohibiting the incarceration of detainees at Charles St. Jail until July 1, 1977. Similar difficulties forced another postponement to November 1, 1977. However, along with the second postponement the district court also ordered the renovation of the City Prison facility as an interim place of incarceration to replace Charles St. Jail. This order was appealed [99]*99and we granted a stay of the renovation of the City Prison in September, 1977. At that time we noted our extreme reluctance to continue to postpone effective relief for the plaintiff class, but did so to give every possible opportunity to the local authorities to meet their responsibilities to the general public and the constitution without requiring direct orders from this court. We did not stay the November 1 deadline regarding the closing of the Charles St. Jail.

On November 2, 1977, the district court, finding that little progress had been achieved towards an agreement to construct a constitutionally adequate pretrial detention center, ordered the City Council to appropriate funds to establish the Middlesex County Courthouse as such a center. The date for the closing of the Charles St. Jail was postponed until five weeks after the Council had complied with the appropriations order. The Council requested that we stay that order until the appeal could be heard and because of the short time period involved we agreed to another stay.

Oral argument was heard in December. During argument it appeared from the remarks of counsel of the various parties that an agreement might still be reached. Therefore, we extended the stay of the district court’s orders until March 3 to permit the parties a final opportunity to take necessary action. We pointed out that such action should include a commitment to adequate funding for the detention center, a plan or design including interim and long range goals as to the conditions of confinement in the new facilities, agreement as to an appropriate site, and target dates for beginning and completing construction.

No agreement was reached. All of the parties to the suit except the Boston City Council filed a joint report in which they indicated (1) that except for the City Council they all agreed that a new jail should be constructed; (2) that except for the City Council all but the Mayor1 agreed on the conditions of confinement to be imposed on detainees in the new facility; and (3) that the defendants, except for the Boston City Council, had established a process for designing a new facility which would regularly report to and receive comments from plaintiffs.

The Boston City Council passed a resolution on February 15, 1978 indicating that a majority of the Council favored the construction of a new jail facility for between 20 and 30 million dollars, if a site satisfactory to the-City Council could be found. On the same day the Council defeated a loan order submitted by the Mayor for $26,700,-000 which did not specify a site for the construction of the new facility. On March 1 the Council appropriated $10 million dollars for the purpose of correcting constitutional deficiencies at Charles St. Jail.

It is now just short of five years since the district court’s opinion was issued. For all of that time the plaintiff class has been confined under the conditions repugnant to the constitution. For all of that time defendants have been aware of that fact.

The district court’s opinion was not ambiguous. It stated in unmistakable terms its conclusions as to the adequacy of the Charles St. Jail even if renovated. “Both the testimony and our own personal observations lead us to conclude that constitutional requirements cannot be satisfied without construction of a new jail . For years, the consensus in this community, from commissions and experts making in-depth studies of the facility to passing citizens struck by its archaic and forbidding exterior, has been to condemn the use of the jail. ... No one in the entire course of this proceeding has stated a contrary view. In our opinion, no one could. The failure to date to replace the jail is reflective of political inertia. It does not reflect a debate in the community over the need for a replacement facility.” Inmates of the Suffolk County Jail v. Eisenstadt, supra, 360 F.Supp. at 687.

[100]*100We have not been presented with any basis for concluding that the district court’s conclusions are not as true today as they were five years ago. Indeed, the opposite is the case. The Mayor of Boston represents that the plan to renovate the Charles St. Jail is the “worst possible” solution and that funds appropriated by the Council must be increased by at least 50 percent if the jail is to meet acceptable standards. All the other parties to this suit, plaintiffs and defendants, except the Boston City Council, agree that a new jail is necessary and are prepared to work together for its construction. Even the City Council itself, on February 15, 1978, resolved that the city was in need of a “modern correction detention facility” that would meet constitutional standards and that a majority of the Council was in favor of appropriating 20 to 30 million dollars to construct such a facility.

It stretches credulity to assume that in the period between February 15 and March 1, the date of the Council’s unexplained vote to appropriate 10 million dollars for the renovation of the Charles St. Jail, superseding information or events convinced the Council that its March 1 action would meet constitutional requirements. We have great difficulty in seeing this vote as anything more than an ostrich-like wish that the necessity to settle on a site and make available adequate funds would disappear.

Given the present state of the record and the unconscionable delay that plaintiffs have already endured in securing their constitutional rights, we have no alternative but to affirm the district court’s order to prohibit the incarceration of pretrial detainees at the Charles St. Jail. However, we modify the district court’s order as to timing. Unless the defendants meet the terms and conditions set forth herein, the Charles St. Jail will be closed on October 2, 1978 to any inmate awaiting trial.

Were the jail to close without interim arrangements being made available pending a long range solution, the public safety would obviously be threatened. The community would have been badly served by those leaders who, though long ago notified as to what must be done, resolutely refused to take appropriate action.

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573 F.2d 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inmates-of-the-suffolk-county-jail-v-kearney-ca1-1978.