Valentine v. Collier

140 S. Ct. 1598, 206 L. Ed. 2d 930
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 14, 2020
Docket19A1034
StatusRelating-to
Cited by17 cases

This text of 140 S. Ct. 1598 (Valentine v. Collier) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Valentine v. Collier, 140 S. Ct. 1598, 206 L. Ed. 2d 930 (U.S. 2020).

Opinion

The application to vacate stay presented to Justice ALITO and by him referred to the Court is denied.

Statement of Justice SOTOMAYOR, with whom Justice GINSBURG joins, respecting the denial of application to vacate stay.

In this lawsuit, inmates in a Texas geriatric prison allege that their facility failed to protect them from the dangers of Covid-19. The District Court heard unrebutted testimony about the imminent dangers faced by the inmates, some of whom have already died. It also heard testimony about the facility's lackluster efforts to keep the illness from spreading and held that the facility's inexplicable failures amounted to deliberate indifference for its elderly inmates in violation of the Eighth Amendment. On that basis, it issued an injunction requiring the prison to follow an extensive protocol, including frequent cleaning and increased education efforts. 2020 WL 1899274 (SD Tex., Apr. 16, 2020). The Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit stayed that injunction pending appeal, and the inmates now seek to vacate that stay in this Court. 956 F. 3d 797 (2020) ( per curiam ).

Notably, where the Court is asked to undo a stay issued below, the bar is high. Among other things, applicants must show that the lower court was " 'demonstrably wrong in its application of accepted standards in deciding to issue the stay.' " Western Airlines, Inc. v. Teamsters , 480 U.S. 1301 , 1305, 107 S.Ct. 1515 , 94 L.Ed.2d 744 (1987) (O'Connor, J., in chambers). The Fifth Circuit ruled, among other things, that the prison was substantially likely to succeed on its claim that the inmates failed to exhaust their remedies as required by the Prison Litigation and Reform Act of 1995 (PLRA), 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a). Under the circumstances of this case, where the inmates filed a lawsuit before filing any grievance with the prison itself, it is hard to conclude that the Fifth Circuit was demonstrably wrong on this preliminary procedural holding.

I write separately to highlight the disturbing allegations presented below. Further, where plaintiffs demonstrate that a prison grievance system cannot or will not respond to an inmate's complaint, they could well satisfy an exception to the PLRA's exhaustion requirement. Finally, *1599 while States and prisons retain discretion in how they respond to health emergencies, federal courts do have an obligation to ensure that prisons are not deliberately indifferent in the face of danger and death.

The facility at issue (the Pack Unit) houses about 1,200 inmates, more than 800 of whom are 65 or older. As the District Court found, the risk of Covid-19 spreading in the Pack Unit is particularly high. The facility is a dormitory-style prison, with each inmate separated only by a short, cubicle-style half-wall. When the District Court issued its ruling, Covid-19 had already begun to spread in the facility. On April 11, 2020, one inmate, Leonard Clerkly, was transferred to the hospital because of difficulty breathing, a symptom the hospital linked to Covid-19. He was pronounced dead mere hours later.

Before and after Clerkly's death, prison administrators began implementing policies to control the spread of Covid-19. For instance, the prison placed all inmates on a precautionary lockdown and began taking some inmates' temperatures twice a day. It also established a policy of providing inmates with cloth masks to be changed daily and instructed inmates to request additional soap at no cost. But the District Court found that the facility inexplicably failed to comply with some of its self-declared policies.

The District Court heard unrefuted testimony that, despite the prison's claim of enhanced cleaning measures, its cleaning protocol in practice remained virtually the same. The facility neither increased the number of inmate janitors nor ensured that the existing janitors did their jobs safely and effectively. One janitor testified that, just as before the pandemic, the cleaning solution provided to the cleaning crews was frequently depleted by midafternoon, only halfway through a shift. Each day he received only one pair of gloves to share with his co-janitor, an arrangement medical experts described as tantamount to no gloves at all. 2020 WL 1916883 , *5-*6, *10 (SD Tex., Apr. 20, 2020).

The facility's failures to comply with its own safety protocol became even clearer after Clerkly's death. Prison policies required that any inmate showing signs of Covid-19 be " 'triaged' " and " 'placed in medical isolation' " and that all areas used by the symptomatic inmate be thoroughly disinfected. Id. , at *11. Yet even though Clerkly had difficulty breathing and died only a few hours after being transported to the hospital, the prison "made no representations" to the District Court that "they identified Mr. Clerkly as symptomatic, evaluated him for potential COVID-19 infection, or isolated or treated him for COVID-19 at any point before his transport to the hospital on the day of his death." Ibid. In fact, the prison "did not implement further precautionary measures until three days after Mr. Clerkly's death." Ibid. In the meantime, while the prison waited for a positive Covid-19 test that seemed certain to come, "countless inmates were knowingly exposed to a serious substantial risk of harm." Ibid.

Having heard testimony from several witnesses from the Pack Unit and from prison experts who declared the Pack Unit practices "woefully inadequate," the District Court held that applicants were likely to succeed on their Eighth Amendment claim. Id., at *12. The court noted the "obvious" risk of Covid-19 to the older men in the Pack Unit and reasoned that the prison's failure to take basic steps, many of which were required by its own policies, evinced deliberate indifference. Id. , *10, *13. The District Court then ordered *1600 the prison to mitigate the harm to inmates, including through some measures recommended by an expert witness who had managed prisons himself. Id.,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
140 S. Ct. 1598, 206 L. Ed. 2d 930, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/valentine-v-collier-scotus-2020.