Norwood v. Vance

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 7, 2010
Docket07-17322
StatusPublished

This text of Norwood v. Vance (Norwood v. Vance) 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
Norwood v. Vance, (9th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

GREGORY LYNN NORWOOD,  Plaintiff-Appellee, v. STEVE J. VANCE; MIKE KNOWLES, No. 07-17322 Warden, CSP-Sacramento; THOMAS P. GOUGHNOUR; MICHAEL F.  D.C. No. CV-03-02554- MARTEL; DAVID I. WILLEY; CHERYL GEB/GGH PLILER, Former Warden at CSP; JAMES P. WALKER, Associate Warden, Defendants-Appellants. 

GREGORY LYNN NORWOOD,  Plaintiff-Appellee, v. STEVE J. VANCE; MIKE KNOWLES, No. 08-15778 Warden, CSP-Sacramento; THOMAS D.C. No. P. GOUGHNOUR; JAMES P. WALKER, 2:03-CV-02554- Associate Warden; DAVID I.  GEB-GGH WILLEY; CHERYL PLILER, Former ORDER AND Warden at CSP, AMENDED Defendants-Appellants, OPINION and MICHAEL F. MARTEL, Defendant. 

431 432 NORWOOD v. VANCE Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of California Garland E. Burrell, District Judge, Presiding

Argued and Submitted October 29, 2008—Sacramento, California

Filed July 9, 2009 Amended January 7, 2010

Before: Alex Kozinski, Chief Judge, Sidney R. Thomas and Consuelo M. Callahan, Circuit Judges.

Opinion by Chief Judge Kozinski; Dissent by Judge Thomas NORWOOD v. VANCE 435

COUNSEL

Carter White, Supervising Attorney, and Erin Haney, Certi- fied Law Student, U.C. Davis School of Law, King Hall Civil Rights Clinic, Davis, California, for the plaintiff-appellee.

Christopher J. Becker, Esquire, Jim Sobolewski, James Flynn, Deputy Attorneys General, Office of the California Attorney General, Sacramento, California, for the defendants- appellants.

ORDER

The opinion is amended as follows:

Page 629, column 1, line 26 Add a footnote after stating:

Page 632, column 2, lines 36-37 Replace with

Page 633, column 1, line 35 Replace with 436 NORWOOD v. VANCE Appellee’s Petition for Panel Rehearing and Rehearing en banc is otherwise denied. See Fed. R. App. P. 35, 40. Judge Thomas would grant the petition.

No further petitions for rehearing or rehearing en banc may be filed.

OPINION

KOZINSKI, Chief Judge:

We consider when prison officials may be held liable for depriving inmates of outdoor exercise.

Facts

Gregory Norwood was incarcerated at CSP-Sacramento, a maximum security prison, during a particularly violent period in the prison’s history. Norwood brought this section 1983 action alleging that prison officials violated the Eighth Amendment when they denied him outdoor exercise during four separate extended lockdowns over the course of two years.

The prison initiated these lockdowns after serious inmate assaults on staff. During the lockdowns, inmates were con- fined to their cells and normal programs were suspended while officials investigated the violence. Based on what they learned, officials gradually eased restrictions on specific gangs, ethnic and racial groups, restoring outdoor exercise sooner for inmates who they believed would pose less risk of further violence. Norwood was not a gang member, but gang members often pressured unaffiliated inmates of the same race or ethnicity to assist them. Prison officials therefore believed that limiting the scope of lockdowns to gang mem- bers would be inadequate to ensure safety. NORWOOD v. VANCE 437 During this two-year period, there were also numerous inmate-on-inmate attacks. Officials did not always initiate total lockdowns after such attacks. According to one defen- dant, the prison’s response to inmate-on-inmate violence “[d]epends on the circumstances of the assault. . . . [I]f it’s fisticuffs, and it’s a one-on-one situation, no, we wouldn’t lock down for that. If it’s a slashing assault, or a stomping, or multiple inmates involved in a melee, then yes, we would lock down . . . .”

Officials initiated the first lockdown in early 2002 after eleven Hispanic inmates attacked four correctional officers, nearly killing one of them. Prison officials didn’t know if the attack was planned or isolated. They also didn’t know, and were never able to ascertain, who provided the weapons. The weeks following the attack brought a series of inmate-on- inmate attacks, including a homicide, as well as another attempted murder of an officer. Officials eventually decided it was safe to begin restoring normal programs, beginning with “critical workers.” Norwood was in the second group of workers to resume outdoor exercise. His exercise had been suspended for about three months.

In early May, a black inmate stabbed an officer in a dining hall. Officials initiated a second lockdown but began restoring normal programs by the end of the month. By mid-July, pris- oners other than blacks had resumed outdoor exercise. Even so, attacks on officers occurred during this lockdown, includ- ing a battery and an attempted battery. Norwood, who is black, was denied exercise for three months.

In the waning days of 2002, black inmates attempted to murder a correctional officer, and a number of black Crips attacked staff members. Officials initiated a third lockdown, during the course of which inmates committed four batteries or attempted batteries of officers and five batteries or attempted murders of inmates. During this lockdown, Nor- 438 NORWOOD v. VANCE wood’s outdoor exercise was suspended for four and a half months.

In September of 2003, a black Crip attempted to murder an officer. Because of the seriousness of the incident and the fact that it was the fourth major assault on staff in a 19-month period, officers locked down all inmates and declared a state of emergency. Officers eventually determined that the attacker had acted alone and began restoring outdoor exercise. But the violence continued. Certain white inmates, and those celled with them, were locked down because of an attempted murder of an inmate in November, and certain Crips and their cellmates remained on lockdown from earlier violence. Nor- wood was denied outdoor exercise for two months.

A jury found that defendants violated Norwood’s Eighth Amendment right to outdoor exercise but concluded that Nor- wood suffered no harm and thus awarded no compensatory damages. The jury did award $11 in nominal damages and $39,000 in punitive damages. The district court awarded $23,875.55 in attorney’s fees. Defendants appeal.1

Analysis

I

Defendants claim the district court erred by refusing to give the following jury instruction:

In considering whether defendants were deliberately indifferent to the need for outdoor exercise, the jury should consider that defendants had a competing obligation under the Eighth Amendment to ensure the safety of prisoners, including protecting prison- 1 Only an Eighth Amendment outdoor exercise claim is before us on this appeal. We therefore express no view as to the race-based aspect of the lockdowns or any potential Equal Protection claim. NORWOOD v. VANCE 439 ers from each other. In considering these factors, you should give deference to prison officials in the adop- tion and execution of policies and practices that in their judgment are needed to preserve discipline and to maintain internal security in a prison.

The district court initially agreed to the language but, after plaintiff objected, declined to include it on the ground that “deference” was “undefined.” Because defendants challenge the resulting jury instruction as an incomplete, and therefore incorrect, statement of the law our review is de novo. Clem v. Lomeli, No. 07-16764, slip op. at 6572 (9th Cir.

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