Phelps v. Kapnolas

308 F.3d 180, 2002 WL 31318963
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedOctober 17, 2002
DocketDocket No. 01-0015
StatusPublished
Cited by316 cases

This text of 308 F.3d 180 (Phelps v. Kapnolas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phelps v. Kapnolas, 308 F.3d 180, 2002 WL 31318963 (2d Cir. 2002).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

Plaintiff-appellant Darryl A. Phelps appeals from the December 6, 2000 Decision and Order of the United States District Court for the Western District of New York (Charles J. Siragusa, Judge), dismissing Phelps’s complaint for failure to state a claim. Phelps, a New York state prisoner, brought this action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging Defendants violated the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition against inflicting cruel and unusual punishment by placing him on a restricted diet for fourteen days and thereby causing him to lose 30 pounds, suffer severe abdominal pains, and experience severe emotional distress that exacerbated his mental illness.

Because the district court improperly applied a more stringent pleading standard to Phelps’s complaint than that set out in Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 8(a)(2), we reverse its decision dismissing the case for failure to state a claim and remand with instructions to commence discovery.

I. BACKGROUND

The following allegations are taken from Phelps’s November 19, 1997 Amended Complaint.

Phelps, who at all relevant times was incarcerated at Southport Correctional Facility in Pine City, New York, complained on July 1, 1994 to Defendant N. Kapnolas that he believed Kapnolas had improperly searched his cell. Following his complaint to Kapnolas, Phelps went to the prison yard for about an hour, and, upon returning to his cell, he found that his things “had been ransacked and his legal papers and photographs had been damaged or destroyed.” Am. Compl. ¶ 8. According to Phelps, Kapnolas then wrongly charged him with throwing a styrofoam bowl of cereal and placed him in solitary confinement.

For the first seven days Phelps was in solitary confinement, the Defendants provided him with a diet consisting “solely of raw cabbage and a bread-like loaf that appeared to contain ground vegetables” (the “restricted diet”). Am. Compl. ¶ 10. Phelps then received a disciplinary hearing, where he was found guilty of misconduct for throwing the cereal bowl and sentenced to sixty days in solitary confinement and seven additional days on the restricted diet.

According to Phelps, the restricted diet “did not contain sufficient calories, vitamins, or nutrients to maintain [his] physical or mental health.” Am. Compl. ¶ 14. He claims that as a result of being placed on the diet for two weeks, he “lost over thirty pounds, suffered severe abdominal pain, and suffered severe emotional distress, which caused or exacerbated mental illness from which [he] continues to suffer today.” Am. Compl. ¶ 15. Contending that the Defendants “knew or recklessly disregarded that the [restricted [d]iet served to [him] was nutritionally inadequate” and that the Defendants knew or should have known that placing him on the diet was “likely to inflict pain and suffering and extreme emotional distress,” Phelps sued Defendants for violating his Eighth and Fourteenth Amendment rights. Am. Compl. ¶¶ 18-19.

[183]*183Phelps’s original complaint was filed pro se in July 1994 alleging various constitutional violations arising from the search of his cell, the disciplinary hearing, and the restricted diet. The district court dismissed the case on the grounds that Phelps failed to plead the essential elements of a § 1983 action and failed to state claims based on deprivation of due process at the disciplinary hearing or unreasonable search and seizure of the things in his prison cell.

By opinion dated August 19, 1997, this' Court affirmed in part, vacated in part, and remanded with instructions. Phelps v. Kapnolas, 123 F.3d 91 (2d Cir.1997). Although we affirmed dismissal of all of Phelps’s other claims, we found that the district court had failed to address Phelps’s allegation that imposition of the restricted diet was unconstitutional. We further held that it was impossible to say that there were no facts under which the imposition of a seven-day bread diet might constitute cruel and unusual punishment. 123 F.3d at 93. Vacating dismissal of Phelps’s complaint with respect to this issue, we remanded for the court to consider whether the imposition of the restricted diet deprived Phelps of his Eighth Amendment rights.

Phelps filed an Amended Complaint on November 19, 1997, and Defendants moved on December 12, 1997 to dismiss pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure (“FRCP”) 12(b)(6).1 Defendants T. Cleveland, M. McGuinness, J. Delaney,2 and R. McClellan filed an Answer on February 20, 1998.3

Magistrate Judge Leslie G. Foschio issued a Report and Recommendation on December 8, 1998, concluding that the Amended Complaint should be dismissed. The Magistrate Judge first rejected Kap-nolas’s argument in support of his motion to dismiss that Phelps never asserted that Kapnolas was personally involved in violating Phelps’s rights. According to the Magistrate Judge, the Amended Complaint sufficiently alleged Kapnolas’s personal involvement in imposing the first seven days of the restricted diet immediately after Phelps threw the cereal, bowl at him and before Phelps received a disciplinary hearing. JA 65.4

The Magistrate Judge did, however, recommend dismissing the complaint sua [184]*184sponte as to all Defendants for failing to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. He concluded that Phelps had “failed to allege that any Defendant, including Kapnolas, acted with the requisite scienter, i.e., deliberate indifference, that their actions exposed Phelps to a substantial risk of serious harm, a necessary element to a finding of liability on § 1983 claim predicated on the Eighth Amendment.” JA at 66. He reasoned that “there [was] no allegation that any defendant, through the imposition of the restricted diet for fourteen days, acting with deliberate indifference, placed Phelps at substantial risk of serious harm or that Phelps’s weight loss or abdominal pains constituted serious harm arising to the level of an Eighth Amendment violation.” JA 66-67.

By a Decision and Order dated December 6, 2000, the district court accepted the Magistrate Judge’s Report and Recommendation in part. The district court first stated (confusingly, in light of the Report and Recommendation’s ultimate conclusion on the issue) that the court agreed with the Magistrate Judge that Phelps “did not sufficiently plead personal involvement by Kapnolas in order to state a claim under 42 U.S.Code § 1983.” JA at 101.

The district court, however, went on to address Phelps’s objections to the Magistrate Judge’s finding that his Amended Complaint failed to state an Eighth Amendment claim against any of the Defendants because he insufficiently alleged the requisite scienter. The district ■ court explained that under the “deliberate indifference” standard defined in Farmer v. Brennan, 511 U.S. 825, 114 S.Ct. 1970, 128 L.Ed.2d 811 (1994), one of Phelps’s burdens in proving an Eighth Amendment violation was to demonstrate that the Defendants knew of and disregarded an excessive risk to his health or safety.

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Bluebook (online)
308 F.3d 180, 2002 WL 31318963, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phelps-v-kapnolas-ca2-2002.