Samuel Williams v. Christopher Epps

797 F.3d 276, 2015 WL 4546858
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedJuly 28, 2015
Docket12-60933
StatusPublished
Cited by47 cases

This text of 797 F.3d 276 (Samuel Williams v. Christopher Epps) 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
Samuel Williams v. Christopher Epps, 797 F.3d 276, 2015 WL 4546858 (5th Cir. 2015).

Opinions

PRISCILLA R. OWEN, Circuit Judge,

joined by STEWART, Chief Judge, and JOLLY, DAVIS, JONES, SMITH, CLEMENT and' PRADO, Circuit Judges:

While confined at a Mississippi penitentiary, Donald Reed, Jr. was brutally attacked and murdered by other prisoners. Two other inmates, Samuel Williams and Kourtney Bynum, were also attacked but [279]*279recovered from their injuries. Reed’s survivors, Williams, and Bynum (collectively the plaintiffs) sued Sharon Hampton, a corrections officer, under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 asserting that she had violated the Eighth Amendment’s prohibition against cruel and unusual punishments. A jury found that Hampton was deliberately indifferent to the safety of the victims of the attacks. A divided panel of this court affirmed the district court’s denial of Hampton’s motion for judgment as a matter of law.1 After rehearing the case en banc, we now reverse the judgment of the district court because Hampton’s acts or omissions did not, as a matter of law, rise to the level of deliberate indifference.

I

Because we examine the evidence in some detail below in considering the legal sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict, we only briefly recount the operative facts here. The inmate-on-inmate attacks occurred on an outdoor exercise yard in Unit 32 of the State Penitentiary in Parchman, Mississippi. Each prisoner was confined in a single-person pen during his one-hour exercise period each day. Sharon Hampton had been guarding the exercise area and had been in possession of a block gun, which holds only one hard rubber slug, approximately five to six minutes before the events leading to the attacks began. It was past time for the prisoners on the yard to be taken back inside. One of the plaintiffs in this case, Samuel Williams, who testified at trial, told Hampton that he would not come out of his pen unless she went inside and obtained a money withdrawal slip for him. A supervisor, Anthony Taylor, relieved Hampton, and she handed the block gun and the keys to the individual exercise pens to Taylor before she went inside to obtain the withdrawal slip. Hampton had two rubber pellets for the block gun in her pocket and did not give them to Taylor when she left the yard area.

While Taylor was on guard, two inmates escaped from their respective exercise pens, and they ran toward Taylor. He pointed the block gun at them, the escaped inmates stopped momentarily, then Taylor turned and ran inside the prison without firing the block gun. Taylor dropped the keys to the individual exercise pens on the ground as he fled. One of the inmates who had escaped used the keys to release five other prisoners from their pens. The seven escaped inmates carried out the attacks on Reed, Bynum and Williams while Hampton was inside the prison. It was later determined that the block gun was unloaded and had been unloaded most, if not all, of the day.

The plaintiffs contend that Hampton was deliberately indifferent to the safety of the inmates who were attacked by failing to ascertain whether the block gun was loaded when she began her shift on the prison yard and by failing to give Taylor the two pellets for the block gun that were in her pocket when she entered the prison.

At the close of the evidence, the district court denied Hampton’s Rule 50(a) motion for judgment as a matter of law.2 The jury found that Hampton was deliberately indifferent to the safety of Reed, Bynum and Williams; and that Hampton was not entitled to the defense of qualified immunity. The jury awarded $25,000 to Williams, $25,000 to Bynum, and $100,000 to the survivors of Reed. Hampton has appealed, contending that her failures regarding the [280]*280block gun fall short of deliberate indifference as a matter of law, her acts and omissions were not the cause of the death and injuries because the attackers would not have had access to the three inmates in their individual 180-square-foot exercise pens but for Taylor’s dropping the keys, and that the jury’s verdict that Hampton was not entitled to qualified immunity cannot stand because it would not be clear to a reasonable officer that an act of negligence which violated prison protocols is “unlawful” and violates federal law.

Because we conclude that there is legally insufficient evidence to support the jury’s finding that Hampton was deliberately indifferent, we do not consider the two other issues that she has raised. We reverse the district court’s judgment against Hampton.

II

“[P]rison officials have a duty .... to protect prisoners from violence at the hands of other prisoners.’ ”3 This duty is derived from the prohibition of “cruel and unusual punishments”4 in the Eighth Amendment.5 The Supreme Court has explained that “[i]t is not, however, every injury suffered by one prisoner at the hands of another that translates into constitutional liability for prison officials responsible for the victim’s safety.”6 The Court has made clear “that a prison official violates the Eighth Amendment only when two requirements are met.”7 One is that “the deprivation alleged must be, objectively, ‘sufficiently serious.’ ”8 “For a claim ... based on a failure to prevent harm, the inmate must show that he is incarcerated under conditions posing a substantial risk of serious harm.”9 “The second requirement follows from the principle that ‘only the unnecessary and wanton infliction of pain implicates the Eighth Amendment.’ ”10 “To violate the Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause, a prison official must have a ‘sufficiently culpable state of mind.’ ”11 The Supreme Court has explained that “[i]n prison-conditions cases, that state of mind is one of ‘deliberate indifference’ to inmate health or safety.”12

The Supreme Court’s seminal decision as to what constitutes “deliberate indifference” is Farmer v. Brennan.13 Since at least 1976, the Court’s decisions had reflected that “deliberate indifference describes a state of mind more blameworthy [281]*281than negligence,”14 and “Eighth Amendment liability requires ‘more than ordinary lack of due care for the prisoner’s interests or safety.’ ”15 The Court’s decisions were “also clear that [deliberate indifference] is satisfied by something less than acts or omissions for the very purpose of causing harm or with knowledge that harm will result.”16 The Supreme Court noted in Farmer that Courts of Appeals had “routinely equated deliberate indifference with recklessness,”17 but that did not “fully answer the ... question about the level of culpability deliberate indifference entails, for the term recklessness is not self-defining.” 18 The Court explained that the civil law generally employs an objective standard in determining recklessness. “The civil law generally calls a person reckless who acts or (if the person has a duty to act) fails to act in the face of an unjustifiably high risk of harm that is either known or so obvious that it should be known.”19 By contrast, the criminal law employs a subjective standard.

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Bluebook (online)
797 F.3d 276, 2015 WL 4546858, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/samuel-williams-v-christopher-epps-ca5-2015.