Hubbard v. Taylor , 399 F.3d 150 ( 2005 )


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  •                                                                                                                            Opinions of the United
    2005 Decisions                                                                                                             States Court of Appeals
    for the Third Circuit
    2-23-2005
    Hubbard v. Taylor
    Precedential or Non-Precedential: Precedential
    Docket No. 03-2372
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    PRECEDENTIAL
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE THIRD CIRCUIT
    No: 03-2372
    GREGORY HUBBARD; ALVIN PHILLIPS;
    JULIAN PAYNE; CURTIS GIBBS;
    GREGORY J. BOLLING; LEONARD GARNER;
    GREGORIO TOM AS; DESMOND BROWN;
    THELLIE CHAM BLEE; SPUD M. BURNS, JR.;
    ROBERT WARD; CHRISTOPHER VAVALA;
    KRISTOFER JACKSON; TIMOTHY THOM AS;
    PAUL C. WOODWARD; JOSEPH MICHAEL CREEGAN,
    JR.; JAVARI WILLIAMS; FLOYD HUNT; BRYANT
    CHARLES; CLAUDE JONES; EDDIE A. CARTER;
    THEODORE JACKSON; ANDRE MURRAY; ATIF
    MOHAM MAD; PEDRO RIVERA, JR.;
    ANDREW P. BLAKE; LINWOOD WILSON;
    WILLIAM T. DAVIS; WILL T. GRAHAM;
    KEVIN M. AGNEW; NOEL SANTIAGO;
    WALTER KRAUSE, III; BARRY J. GREEN;
    WEDUS MADDOX, a/k/a Wedus Moddo;
    RAYM OND STEVENS; JAM ES A. WILSON;
    MATTHEW MAJOR, JR.; PERCY OSBORNE;
    KEVIN KETCHUM,
    Appellants
    v.
    STANLEY TAYLOR, Commissioner;
    RAPHAEL W ILLIAMS, Warden;
    M. JANE BRADY, Attorney General
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Delaware
    (Civ. No. 00-cv-00531)
    District Judge: Hon. Sue L. Robinson
    Argued: February 12, 2004
    Before: SCIRICA, Chief Judge, ROTH and
    McKEE, Circuit Judges
    (Opinion filed: February 23, 2005 )
    PAUL E. CRAWFORD, ESQ. (Argued)
    HELENA RYCHLICKI, ESQ.
    Connolly Bove Lodge & Hutz
    P.O. Box 2207
    Wilmington, DE 19899
    Attorneys for Appellants
    RICHARD W. HUBBARD, ESQ. (Argued)
    GREGORY E. SMITH, ESQ.
    Deputy Attorneys General
    State of Delaware
    Department of Justice
    820 North French Street, 6th Floor
    Wilmington, DE 19801
    2
    Attorneys for Appellees
    OPINION
    McKEE, Circuit Judge.
    Pre-trial detainees housed at a correctional facility in
    Delaware ask us to review the district court’s grant of summary
    judgment in favor of prison officials and the state’s Attorney
    General. The detainees claim that certain conditions of their
    confinement deprive them of liberty without due process of law
    in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. Inasmuch as we
    conclude that the district court improperly analyzed their claim
    under the Eighth Amendment, rather than the Due Process
    Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, we will reverse and
    remand for an appropriate due process analysis.
    I. FACTS
    The Multi-Purpose Criminal Justice Facility commonly
    known as “Gander Hill,” is located in Wilmington, Delaware.
    It was constructed in 1982 and enlarged when a new wing was
    added in 1992. Stanley Taylor has been the Commissioner of
    the Delaware Department of Corrections (the “DOC”) since the
    fall of 1995, Raphael Williams is the warden at Gander Hill,
    and M. Jane Brady is the Attorney-General of Delaware.
    On May 30, 2000, a number of pre-trial detainees at
    Gander Hill filed a handwritten pro se complaint against Taylor,
    Williams, and Brady. The suit was brought under 42 U.S.C. §
    1983 and alleged that various conditions of the detainees’
    confinement violated the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
    3
    Amendment.1 An amended complaint was filed following
    appointment of counsel. The amended complaint sought
    declaratory and injunctive relief, damages, attorneys’ fees and
    costs; and it added Kevin Ketchum and Percy Osbourne as
    plaintiffs. Like the original plaintiffs, Ketchum and Osbourne
    alleged a due process violation based upon conditions of their
    confinement, but they added a claim under the Americans with
    Disabilities Act.2
    Pre-trial detainees are housed in the West Wing of
    Gander Hill, and convicted inmates are generally housed in the
    East Wing.3 The typical West wing modular unit or “pod”
    1
    The complaint also named the Delaware Department of
    Corrections as a defendant.        The Department moved for
    judgment on the pleadings pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(c)
    arguing that it was immune from suit under the Eleventh
    Amendment. The district court granted that motion and the
    plaintiffs have not appealed that ruling.
    2
    For clarity, we will refer to the pre-trial detainees
    collectively as “plaintiffs” and refer to Osbourne and Ketchum
    individually. It is not clear whether Ketchum and Osbourne are
    pre-trial detainees or convicted inmates; however the amended
    complaint prays for relief based upon plaintiffs’ status as pre-
    trial detainees. We therefore must analyze their claims on that
    basis.
    3
    In their brief, the defendants suggest that at least some of
    the plaintiffs may actually be convicted inmates and not pre-trial
    4
    contains two housing units connected by a control room from
    which correctional officers can observe the two units. Each unit
    contains a large dayroom of approximately 3,900 square feet,
    containing a sink, tables, chairs and a television. Twenty cells
    surround the dayroom. With some minor variation, they are all
    approximately the same size.
    A. The Conditions of Confinement Claim.
    Plaintiffs’ conditions of confinement claim rests upon
    detainees. As we will explain, that classification determines the
    analysis that applies to the conditions of confinement claim.
    Defendants state: “[d]ue to the extensive criminal history of the
    Plaintiffs and their lack of memory, it is difficult to ascertain
    whether any of them was a detainee or a sentenced inmate
    during any particular period of incarceration at Gander Hill.
    Many of them were jailed for new crimes and violations of
    probation or parole for a previous crime.” Appellees’ Br. at 2.,
    n.3.
    However, it is difficult to determine if defendants are
    sincerely challenging plaintiffs’ classification as pre-trial
    detainees or merely attempting to undermine the merits of their
    claims by disparaging plaintiffs’ character. The defendants
    concede that pre-trial detainees are housed in the West wing,
    where the challenged conditions exist. The defendants state:
    “[t]he Amended Complaint is focused specifically on the West
    wing. . . and the gymnasium. Generally, detainees are housed in
    the West wing and sentenced inmates are housed in the East
    wing.” See Appellees’ Br. at 6.
    5
    their challenge to the practice of housing three detainees in cells
    intended and designed for one person (“triple-celling”). 4
    Plaintiffs claim that triple-celling requires someone to sleep on
    a mattress that must be placed on the cell floor adjacent to a
    toilet. Plaintiffs allege that this violates the Fourteenth
    Amendment by depriving them of their liberty without due
    process of law.5
    The defendants concede that an inmate must sleep on a
    floor mattress when three are housed in a given cell. When that
    happens, the newest arrival is required to sleep on a mattress on
    the floor until one of his cellmates is released or moved. That
    frees a bunk for the inmate who had been on the floor mattress,
    and any new arrival in that cell would then take his place on the
    4
    In their amended complaint, plaintiffs allege a number of
    other unconstitutional conditions of confinement including:
    being housed in the gym and fitness center because of
    overcrowding; cold food; lack of access to the law library;
    frequent lockdowns resulting in confinement in cells for 8 to 16
    hours a day; inadequate access to medical care; and deliberate
    indifference to prisoners’ conditions by failing to provide basic
    necessities of life, including health care, exercise, personal
    safety, food and habitable space. Hubbard v. Taylor, 
    2003 WL 1697537
    at *1 (D.Del. March 28, 2003). However, in the
    district court, the plaintiffs limited their claim to being required
    to sleep on mattresses on the floor. 
    Id. at *4.
       5
    Prison officials began triple celling in 1999.
    6
    floor mattress.6
    The cells range in size from 69 to 76 square feet, and the
    net unencumbered space in the cell (gross footage of 69-76
    square feet less space required for a bed, mattress, desk and
    toilet) is less than 50 square feet or 16 square feet per occupant
    of each tripled cell. Plaintiffs claim that the bunk bed and floor
    mattress leave extremely limited space for three adult men to
    move about in the cell. They claim that these cramped
    conditions have caused injuries including some as serious as a
    broken leg. For example, Darrin Moon was a detainee at Gander
    Hill in June 2000. He claims that his leg was broken when a
    cellmate jumped off the bunkbed in the middle of the night and
    landed on Moon’s leg. Another detainee, Gregory Bolling
    alleges a similar mishap. Bollling claims he sustained numerous
    injuries including an infected shin as a result of attempting to
    navigate the one foot clearance between the bunkbed and his
    cellmate’s mattress,
    Plaintiffs claim that the deprivations are exacerbated
    because sleeping on the floor forces detainees to sleep very near
    the open toilet. This has purportedly resulted in urine and feces
    regularly splashing on whomever is relegated to the floor
    mattress. For example, detainee Gregory Hubbard stated, “one
    of the primary things that I felt was degrading was the sleeping
    on the floor and having to sleep on the floor next to a urinal or
    toilet as long as I did when other arrangements could have been
    6
    The mattress can be placed under the lower bunk during the
    day.
    7
    made to provide me with a bunk like the other two individuals
    in my room.”
    Plaintiffs claim that pre-trial detainees typically spend a
    minimum of 2 months, and most spend 3 to 7 months, sleeping
    on a floor mattress before a cellmate leaves and a bunk becomes
    available. They also argue that they have to deal with the
    extreme discomfort and disease associated with sleeping on a
    concrete floor. According to them, a Prison Facilities Audit
    supports their claim that the foam mattresses provided by the
    prison officials are thin, worn-out and filthy.        The Prison
    Facilities Audit described the conditions in pertinent part as
    follows:
    In most housing units – many mattresses are used
    on the floor without protective covers. Since the
    institution does not have mattress sanitizing
    facilities, some sort of protective cover should be
    used. If covers are not feasible, then perhaps a
    sheet of plastic or a cloth sheet should be placed
    on the floor to help keep the mattress clean.
    Plaintiffs insist that conditions were no better five months later
    when a report noted that “[t]here are no facilities available for
    cleaning of those mattresses.” Still later, in May 2001, the
    unsanitary conditions were purportedly still being noted in the
    official internal reports. According to plaintiffs, these floor
    mattresses were not only unsanitary, they were also so thin,
    worn and uncomfortable that sleeping on them was tantamount
    to actually sleeping on the bare floor.
    8
    Plaintiffs insist that prison officials could have prevented
    “triple bunking”7 and its associated problems. They claim that
    these problems would have been avoided had Commissioner
    Taylor added the additional 2500 beds that had been envisioned
    as part of a “Master Plan”that was devised in response to
    litigation that has been ongoing for 20 years. The earliest suit
    was filed in March 1980 and was resolved in a 1988 Settlement
    Agreement. There, prison officials agreed to stop “double
    bunking” and return to placing a single inmate in cells at state
    prisons. Dickerson v. Castle, Civ. Act. No. 10256, Delaware
    Court of Chancery. However, plaintiffs claim that the
    additional beds were never occupied because prison officials
    failed to train enough correctional officers to properly respond
    to an increase in the prison population. Thus, in plaintiffs’
    view, the prison officials are responsible for the overcrowded
    conditions at Gander Hill.
    B. The Americans With Disabilities Act Claim.
    As noted above, the amended complaint added the ADA
    claims of Kevin Ketchum and Perry Osbourne. However,
    Osbourne has since died of cancer and the plaintiffs concede
    7
    This term is misleading. “Triple bunking” actually refers to
    confining three people in a cell with each being provided with
    a permanent bunk-type bed. See Union County Jail Inmates v.
    BiBuono, 
    713 F.2d 984
    , 994 n.12 (3d Cir. 1983). As we have
    explained, in Gander Hill, two detainees have bunk beds and the
    third has to sleep on a mattress on the floor. Accordingly, we
    refer to the practice as “triple-celling.” 
    Id. 9 that
    his death moots his claim. Ketchum has end-stage renal
    failure and loss of kidney function. He has been on dialysis
    since 1994 and allegedly requires a kidney transplant that
    officials purportedly refuse to facilitate.8 However, he can not
    receive a kidney transplant unless he is first placed on the
    transplant waiting list maintained by the United Network for
    Organ Transplants (“UNOS”).
    According to plaintiffs, Ketchum has been petitioning
    prison officials to start the process for getting a kidney
    transplant since 1977 when he first asked them to release
    documents so that he could be placed on the transplant list as
    his physician recommended. According to plaintiffs, Ketchum
    has a compelling need to get on the transplant list quickly
    because he is reaching the outer limits of the time he can
    tolerate dialysis.9
    C. The Defendants’ Response.
    Gander Hill receives approximately 18,000 admissions
    8
    The plaintiffs claim that Delaware law requires that inmates
    be afforded medical care without regard to cost. See 11
    Delaware Code § 6536(b) (“an inmate shall not be refused
    medical treatment for financial reasons. . . .”).
    9
    Ketchum has apparently been confined at Gander Hill since
    1997. We therefore assume that he is a convicted prisoner, and
    not a pre-trial detainee. However, as we have noted above, the
    amended complaint seeks redress for conditions of confinement
    of plaintiffs as pre-trial detainees. See note 
    2, supra
    .
    10
    per year, and the defendants maintain that neither Taylor nor the
    warden have any control over that number. The officials
    concede that triple-celling is used at Gander Hill, and that this
    forces some detainees to sleep on a floor mattress. However,
    they deny that the mattresses are adjacent to toilets. Officials
    claim that there is ample room to arrange a mattress so that the
    toilet is at the resident’s foot and several feet away. Thus, say
    the defendants, there is no reason for anyone to worry about
    unsanitary and unhealthy conditions as a result of sleeping on
    the floor. They draw support for their position from the
    deposition testimony of detainees Moon and Wilson.
    Moon testified in relevant part as follows:
    I chose to sleep with my head towards the
    window and my feet towards the toilet. Let’s say,
    from my waist down where their beds are.
    Because if I slept the other way, and somebody
    used the bathroom, I would have to worry about
    him standing over top of me and water and urine
    splashing over me.
    The officials note that Moon did not say that urine and feces
    splashed on him as plaintiffs’ claim suggests. Rather, he only
    said that he worried about that happening. Moon also stated
    that he could address that concern by simply sleeping with his
    head away from the toilet.
    Defendants also cite the exchange during detainee
    Wilson’s deposition that defendants claim further demonstrates
    that plaintiffs’ claims are exaggerated:
    11
    Q: So it is your contention that you’re not being
    treated like a human being?
    A: On that west side? Yes, sir. If you got to
    sleep down beside the toilet and feces and you
    got to use the bathroom when the C.O. not come
    in and there’s a couple other inmates in there with
    you; yes. Yes. Food cold. Whew. Yes.
    Officials point out that Wilson did not say that urine and feces
    splashed on him either. Rather, he said that he had to “sleep
    down beside the toilet and feces.” The defendants argue that it
    can be assumed that any feces remained inside the toilet and
    they note that Wilson’s testimony is not to the contrary. The
    defendants also point out that even if one assumes Wilson was
    sleeping with his head next to the toilet, the record does not
    explain why he chose to sleep in that position when he
    apparently did not have to.
    Moreover, according to the defendants, the detainees
    who must sleep on floor mattresses are not near the toilets in
    any event. In his affidavit, Acting Deputy Warden Phelps
    claims that most mattresses in cells in the West Wing of Gander
    Hill are two and one-half feet from the toilet. Although
    plaintiffs estimate that distance, Phelps actually measured it and
    Moon’s testimony is not inconsistent with Phelps’ testimony
    because Moon did not specify a distance. Moreover, defendants
    point out that the record further undermines plaintiffs’ claims of
    disease because Moon’s deposition is the only record of disease
    and he only testified that he caught a cold.
    12
    As noted earlier, the plaintiffs allude to official records
    that purportedly documented allegations regarding old and dirty
    mattresses. The defendants claim that this is a distortion.
    According to defendants, plaintiffs fail to mention that those
    mattresses were replaced after prison officials realized the
    condition the old mattresses were in.
    The defendants refute Ketchum’s ADA claim by noting
    that Ketchum never suffered any injury while in the care of the
    DOC and that Ketchum’s own physician disapproved his
    placement on the kidney transplant list. According to the
    defendants, the plaintiffs admitted in the district court that
    Ketchum’s own physician and the prison health care provider
    told Ketchum that he was not eligible for the National
    Transplant List. Furthermore, defendants claim that Ketchum
    admitted that the Chief of the Bureau of Prisons told him that
    the DOC would pay for a transplant if the doctors said it was
    medically necessary.
    II. DISTRICT COURT PROCEEDINGS
    The district court issued a Memorandum Order granting
    summary judgment to the prison officials on both claims. The
    court also denied a motion for class certification that plaintiffs
    had filed in an attempt to represent a class of over 3,000 pre-
    trial detainees. See Hubbard v. Taylor, 
    2003 WL 1697537
    (D.Del. March 28, 2003).10 This appeal followed.11
    10
    The district court’s opinion contains a discussion of the
    conditions of confinement claim. However, it does not contain
    13
    III. DISCUSSION12
    A. Applicable Legal Principles.
    The Supreme Court first discussed the application of the
    Due Process Clause to pre-trial detainees in Bell v. Wolfish, 
    441 U.S. 520
    (1979). There, federal pre-trial detainees claimed that
    a number of the conditions of their confinement violated various
    provisions of the Constitution. The challenged conditions
    included the practice of confining two inmates in a cell intended
    and designed for one. That practice was the only condition that
    implicated their due process rights. 
    441 U.S. 530
    .13           In
    any discussion of the ADA claim.
    11
    Plaintiffs have not appealed the district court’s refusal to
    certify the putative class. That issue is, therefore, not before us.
    12
    We exercise plenary review over the district court’s grant
    of summary judgment. Caprio v. Bell Atlantic Sickness and
    Accident Plan, 
    374 F.3d 217
    , 220 (3d Cir. 2004). In reviewing
    the grant of summary judgment, we must view the facts in the
    light most favorable to appellant and affirm only if there was no
    genuine issue as to any material fact and appellees are entitled
    to judgment as a matter of law. Anderson v. Consol. Rail Corp.,
    
    297 F.3d 242
    , 247 (3d Cir. 2002).
    13
    The Fifth Amendment Due Process Clause was implicated
    in Bell because the plaintiffs were federal pre-trial detainees.
    Inasmuch as we are here concerned with state pre-trial
    detainees, any applicable constraints must arise from the Due
    14
    resolving the issue, the Court stated:
    [i]n evaluating the constitutionality of conditions
    or restrictions of pretrial detention that implicate
    only the protection against deprivation of liberty
    without due process, we think that the proper
    inquiry is whether those conditions amount to
    punishment prior to an adjudication of guilt in
    accordance with law. For under the Due Process
    Clause, a detainee may not be punished prior to an
    adjudication of guilt in accordance with due
    process of law.
    
    Id. at 535
    (citations omitted). Of course, the government “may
    . . . incarcerate a person charged with a crime but not yet
    convicted to ensure his presence at trial[.]” 
    Id. at 531.
    “Traditionally, this has meant confinement in a facility which,
    no matter how modern or how antiquated, results in restricting
    the movement of a detainee in a manner in which he would not
    be restricted if he simply were free to walk the streets pending
    trial[.]” 
    Id. at 537.
    There nevertheless remains “a distinction
    between punitive measures that may not be constitutionally
    imposed prior to a determination of guilt and regulatory
    Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. See Fuentes v.
    Wagner, 
    206 F.3d 335
    , 344 (3d Cir. 2000). However, the
    Court’s due process analysis under the Fifth Amendment in Bell
    nevertheless controls that inquiry. See, e.g., Union County Jail
    Inmates v. DiBuono, 
    713 F.2d 984
    , 991-92 (3d Cir. 1983).
    15
    restraints that may.” 14 
    Id. (citations omitted).
    In order to determine whether the challenged conditions
    of pre-trial confinement amount to punishment,
    [a] court must decide whether the disability is
    imposed for the purpose of punishment or
    whether it is but an incident of some other
    legitimate governmental purpose. Absent a
    showing of an expressed intent to punish on the
    part of the detention facility officials, that
    determination generally will turn on whether [it
    has] an alternative purpose . . . and whether it
    appears excessive in relation to [that] purpose . .
    . . Thus, if a particular condition or restriction of
    pretrial detention is reasonably related to a
    legitimate governmental objective, it does not,
    without more, amount to “punishm ent.”
    Conversely, if a restriction or condition is not
    14
    For example, in Kennedy v. Mendoza-Martinez, 
    372 U.S. 144
    (1963), the Court examined the automatic forfeiture-of-
    citizenship provisions of the immigration laws to determine
    whether that sanction was punishment or a regulatory restraint.
    It held that because forfeiture of citizenship traditionally had
    been regarded as punishment and because the legislative history
    of the provisions conclusively showed that forfeiture was
    intended to be punitive, automatic forfeiture was punishment
    that could not constitutionally be imposed without due process
    of law. 
    Id. at 167-170.
    16
    reasonably related to a legitimate goal – if it is
    arbitrary or purposeless – a court may permissibly
    infer that the purpose of the governmental action
    is punishment that may not constitutionally be
    inflicted upon detainees qua detainees.
    
    Id. at 538-39
    (citations, brackets and internal quotations
    omitted). However, the Court did not “detail the precise extent
    of the legitimate governmental interests that may justify
    conditions or restrictions of pretrial detention[.]” In Bell, the
    Court reasoned that it need only
    recognize that in addition to ensuring the
    detainees’ presence at trial, the effective
    management of the detention facility once the
    individual is confined is a valid objective that may
    justify imposition of conditions and restrictions of
    pretrial confinement and dispel any inference that
    such restrictions are intended as punishment.
    
    Id. at 540.
    In determining whether conditions or restrictions are
    reasonably related to the Government’s interest in
    maintaining security and order and operating the
    institution in a manageable fashion, courts must
    heed our warning that such considerations are
    peculiarly within the province and professional
    expertise of corrections officials, and, in the
    absence of substantial evidence in the record to
    indicate that the officials have exaggerated their
    response to these considerations, courts should
    17
    ordinarily defer to their expert judgment in such
    matters.
    
    Id. at 540
    n.23 (citations and internal quotations omitted).
    The Court held that double-bunking under the
    circumstances there did not constitute punishment. Accordingly,
    it did not violate the pre-trial detainees’ due process rights. 
    Id. at 541-543.
    More precisely, the Court found no due process
    violation where pre-trial detainees who were detained for
    generally less than sixty days were housed in 75 square feet of
    space containing a double bunk for six to seven hours a day,
    primarily for sleeping purposes. However, the Court offered a
    significant caveat. It cautioned that “confining a given number
    of people in a given amount of space in such a manner as to
    cause them to endure genuine privations and hardship over an
    extended period of time might raise serious questions under the
    Due Process Clause as to whether those conditions amounted to
    punishment.” 
    Id. at 542.
    It did not, however, elaborate upon the
    duration of confinement that could constitute “an extended
    period of time,” nor did it elaborate upon the kind of “privations
    and hardship” that could constitute punishment in violation of
    the Due Process Clause.
    Those issues were, however, present four years later
    when we decided Union County Jail Inmates v. DiBuono, 
    713 F.3d 984
    (3d Cir. 1983). There, pre-trial detainees alleged that
    admittedly serious overcrowding in the county jail resulted in
    conditions of confinement that constituted punishment in
    violation of the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
    18
    Amendment. 15 After discussing Bell v. Wolfish at some length,
    we distilled its teachings into the following two-step test:
    we must ask, first, whether any legitimate
    purposes are served by these conditions, and
    second, whether these conditions are rationally
    related to these purposes. In assessing whether
    the conditions are reasonably related to the
    assigned purposes, we must further inquire as to
    whether these conditions “cause [inmates] to
    endure [such] genuine privations and hardship
    over an extended period of time, that the adverse
    conditions become excessive in relation to the
    purposes assigned to 
    them. 713 F.3d at 992
    (citing 
    Bell, 441 U.S. at 542
    ) (internal quotation
    marks omitted). Our inquiry into whether given conditions
    constitute “punishment” must therefore consider the totality of
    circumstances within an institution. 
    Id. at 996;
    see also Jones
    v. Diamond, 
    636 F.2d 1364
    , 1368 (5th Cir. 1981) (“In
    determining whether conditions of confinement are
    unconstitutional under . . . the fourteenth amendment, we do not
    assay separately each of the institutional practices, but look to
    the totality of the conditions.”), overruled in part on other
    grounds, Int’l Woodworkers of America, AFL-CIO v. Champion
    15
    In Union County, sentenced inmates also challenged the
    conditions of their confinement. However, the discussion of
    sentenced inmates’ claims is not relevant here because those
    claims were analyzed under the Eighth 
    Amendment. 713 F.2d at 997
    .
    19
    Int’l Corp., 
    790 F.2d 1174
    (5th Cir. 1986) (en banc).
    B. Effect of Union County Jail Inmates v. DiBuono on
    the Plaintiffs’ Condition of Confinement Claim.
    Plaintiffs argue that Union County Jail Inmates controls
    our analysis and requires that we conclude that requiring pre-
    trial detainees to sleep on floor mattresses constitutes a due
    process violation. The district court rejected that argument based
    upon its conclusion that the relevant discussion there was
    dictum. 
    2003 WL 1697537
    at *4. Plaintiffs’ strongly disagree
    and forcefully argue that our inquiry is controlled by the
    precedent of Union County. The defendants just as forcefully
    disagree. Since Union County could potentially determine the
    outcome here, we will examine that decision in some detail.
    As noted earlier, in Union County, pre-trial detainees
    brought a class action under § 1983 against various county
    officials alleging that certain of the conditions of their
    confinement violated the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth
    Amendment. The county admitted that pre-trial detainees were
    being held in the overcrowded conditions specified in the
    complaint. However, the county filed a third party complaint
    against the Commissioner of the Department of Corrections
    alleging that the overcrowding resulted from the
    Commissioner’s refusal to house prisoners who had been
    sentenced to state prison, as required by statute. According to
    the county, that refusal caused the overcrowding by requiring
    the county to house inmates who would otherwise have been
    housed in state facilities
    20
    Thereafter, the Governor issued an executive order
    declaring that overcrowding in state prisons and county jails
    constituted a state of emergency. The Governor’s order also
    suspended operation of the statute requiring him to accept
    county prisoners who had been sentenced to state prison.
    Instead, it gave the Commissioner the authority to designate the
    place of confinement for both county and state inmates whether
    they were pre-trial detainees or convicted prisoners. Union
    County Jail was designated as the place of confinement for state
    prisoners sentenced in Union County because the Commissioner
    had determined that certain modifications would allow it to
    exceed its rated capacity of inmates.
    In time, the county inmates entered into a consent decree
    with the county specifying that prison capacity would not
    exceed one inmate per cell.16 The district court approved the
    agreement and entered a consent decree based upon it even
    though the Commissioner of Corrections was not a party to it.
    Nevertheless, the court directed the Commissioner to show
    cause why he should not be compelled to accept custody of all
    state prisoners in the county jail, and the court subsequently
    appointed a Special Master to investigate jail conditions and
    monitor compliance with the consent decree.
    16
    The agreement also established a procedure whereby the
    county could request an immediate hearing before the district
    court if the jail population approached or reached the maximum
    capacity of 238. The court could then order the release or
    transfer of enough inmates to reduce the population to below
    the specified maximum.
    21
    Thereafter, the Special Master found six specific
    violations that he believed constituted violations of the pre-trial
    detainees’ constitutional rights. These included: (1) housing
    several inmates in detention cells for more than a few days
    without adequate sleeping arrangements; (2) requiring detainees
    to sleep on floor mattresses adjacent to toilets, for more than a
    few days; (3) requiring detainees to sleep on floor mattresses in
    other parts of the jail, for more than a few days; (4) requiring
    detainees to wear the same clothing for several weeks, [in
    violation of a state statute]; (5) failing to screen for
    communicable diseases; and (6) depriving detainees of any
    meaningful opportunity for recreation.
    The Master concluded that overcrowding resulted from
    housing two inmates in cells designed for one, and requiring the
    second inmate to sleep on “mattresses placed on the floors of
    these 5' x 7' cells next to the 
    toilet.” 713 F.2d at 988
    . The
    Commissioner objected to the Master’s report.               The
    Commissioner claimed that since housing more than one inmate
    in a cell had not been declared unconstitutional, the
    overcrowding could be solved by using bunk beds instead of
    floor mattresses. According to the Commissioner, this would
    satisfy the mandate of Bell v. Wolfish.
    The district court adopted the Special Master’s findings
    without modification. The court held “that the totality of the
    circumstances resulting from overcrowding at the Jail, and most
    notably forcing pre-trial detainees to sleep on mattresses placed
    on the floor, constituted a violation of the detainees’ due
    process 
    rights.” 713 F.2d at 989
    . The district court rejected the
    Commissioner’s suggestion for bunk beds. The court reasoned
    22
    that, given space limitations, double-celling amounted to
    punishment in violation of the pretrial detainees’ due process
    rights. Since bunk beds would only perpetuate housing two
    inmates in cells designed for one, the district court invalidated
    the governor’s executive order. The court also voided the
    Commissioner’s designation of Union County jail as the place
    of confinement for state prisoners sentenced in Union County.
    Accordingly, the Commissioner had to transfer all state
    prisoners to state prisons.
    On appeal, the Commissioner objected to the following
    provisions of the consent decree: ¶ (f) (establishing a maximum
    capacity at the jail [at] one inmate per general population cell);
    ¶ (g) (giving the defendants until July 1, 1982 to reduce the
    inmate population to 238); and ¶ (h) (authorizing the county to
    notify the department of corrections to remove any state
    prisoners who remained at the county jail beyond the statutorily
    allowed period of time).17 The gist of the Commissioner’s
    objection to the consent decree was that state law gave him the
    authority to determine inmate population levels in the Union
    County Jail.
    In reviewing the district court’s decision, we noted that
    the district court’s conclusion that the jail overcrowding was
    rationally connected to the objective of detaining inmates who
    17
    
    See 713 F.2d at 990
    n.8, (“[o]ther than the provisions of
    (f), (g) and (h) noted herein, we do not understand the
    Commissioner to object to any provision of the consent
    judgment.”).
    23
    could not make bail. The fact that the policy served both state
    and county governmental interests was not contested on 
    appeal. 713 F.2d at 993
    . Therefore, “[t]he only question . . . remaining
    [under Bell was] whether the conditions and restrictions
    resulting from inmate overcrowding [could] be considered
    excessive in relation to the purposes assigned to them.” 
    Id. In conducting
    that analysis, we noted that two conclusions
    emerged from the proceedings in the district court:
    First, from the positions taken by the County and
    the Commissioner, we do not understand either of
    them seriously to contest the unconstitutionality,
    in the context of overcrowded conditions, of
    forcing pre-trial detainees to sleep for more than
    a few days on mattresses placed on the floor of a
    5' x 7' cell adjacent to an open toilet which both
    cellmates must use.          Indeed, the County
    conceded, at oral argument . . . that conditions as
    found by [the Special Master] were
    unconstitutional. Thus, the district court’s
    implicit holding that conditions as found by the
    Special Master are “excessive in relation to the
    purposes assigned to them,” is not questioned on
    this appeal.
    Our second conclusion is that, of all the various
    conditions challenged as being unconstitutional,
    the most significant, and indeed the only
    condition not meeting constitutional standards,
    was the practice of placing a mattress on the
    floor for the second occupant of a cell designed
    24
    for but one inmate. It is not surprising, therefore,
    that the Commissioner focused on an alleviation
    of this latter condition by recommending double-
    bunking in such cells. The Commissioner
    contended that if, by providing double bunks, . .
    . constitutional objections to overcrowding could
    be overcome, then the Commissioner’s discretion
    in determining where state prisoners should be
    placed, should not be overridden. We therefore
    turn to a consideration of the two-in-a-cell or
    double-bunking practice.
    
    Id. at 994
    (emphasis added).
    The district court had concluded that double-bunking of
    pre-trial detainees was a constitutional violation because it
    imposed hardships tantamount to punishment. Accordingly, the
    court had ruled that practice an unconstitutional denial of the
    detainees’ right to due process. However, we rejected the
    district court’s spatial analysis and found that the
    Commissioner’s recommended double-bunking would not only
    alleviate the problem resulting from floor mattresses, but would
    also free recreational space where detainees had previously had
    to sleep. We acknowledged that, even with double-bunking, the
    cells at issue would remain “cramped and overcrowded” and
    “very far from ideal[.]” However, we also noted that pre-trial
    detainees would have adequate room for sleeping and
    recreation. 
    Id. at 996.
    We therefore “reject[ed] the district
    court’s holding of unconstitutional conditions based solely on
    considerations of space.” 
    Id. at 996
    (citation and internal
    quotations omitted). We explained:
    25
    First, and most importantly, providing double
    bunks will avoid the unsanitary and humiliating
    practice of forcing detainees to sleep on
    mattresses placed either on the floor adjacent to
    the toilet and at the feet of their cellmates, or
    elsewhere in the Jail. Second, double-bunking
    will avoid the practice of having more than two
    detainees without adequate sleeping arrangements
    in the detention cells. Third, double-bunking will
    make it possible for recreational areas at the Jail
    to be cleared and dedicated to their original
    function. Thus, the remedial scheme put forth by
    the Commissioner, combining double-bunking
    with discharge of the County’s obligations under
    the consent judgment, would effectively cure all
    of the conditions that were of particular concern
    to the Special Master. . . .
    Thus, although the question is not without
    difficulty, we are satisfied that, if the
    Commissioner’s proposals. . . were fully
    implemented, conditions at the Jail would pass
    constitutional muster.
    
    Id. at 996
    (emphasis added). We also noted that pre-trial
    detainees were confined at the jail “for generally a maximum
    period of 60 days.” 
    Id. at 997
    (citation omitted). We held that
    the district court had abused its discretion in rejecting the
    Commissioner’s proposed remedies and ordered the district
    court to vacate portions of the consent decree that had rejected
    the Commissioner’s proposed remedy. 
    Id. at 1003.
    We
    26
    therefore concluded       that the Commissioner’s plan would
    alleviate the constitutional violations.
    Plaintiffs’ condition of confinement claim here is largely
    based upon the following language in Union City: “ [O]f all the
    various conditions challenged as being unconstitutional, the
    most significant, and indeed the only condition not meeting
    constitutional standards, was the practice of placing a mattress
    on the floor for the second occupant of a cell designed for but
    one 
    inmate. 713 F.2d at 994
    .18 However, the district court here
    properly recognized that statement was dictum because the
    Commissioner (the appellant in Union County) had conceded
    the unconstitutionality of the practice. In Union County, we
    specifically noted that “[t]he State does not assert that it is
    proper for the County to require inmates to sleep on mattresses
    on the floor . . . . So the Special Master properly recommended
    that the floor mattresses practice should be eliminated.” 
    Id. at 994
    . Thus, we did not have to consider the constitutionality of
    the practice because both parties agreed that it was
    unconstitutional. Accordingly, the issue of the constitutionality
    of placing floor mattresses adjacent to a toilet was simply not
    before us and we did not decide it. Therefore, it was dictum. See
    Cerro Metal Products v. Marshall, 
    620 F.2d 964
    , 978 (3d Cir.
    1980) (statements pertaining to issues not decided are dictum
    18
    The plaintiffs then note that the “various conditions” we
    were referring to were the six overcrowding conditions that we
    have set forth above. 
    Id. at 993-94
    n.11.
    27
    because “the precise issue [is not] before the court.”). 19
    Therefore, the district court here did not err in
    concluding that it was not bound by our holding in Union City.
    That does not, however, end our inquiry because the district
    court did not then proceed to conduct a proper analysis of these
    plaintiffs’ due process claim given their status of pre-trial
    detainees.
    19
    The nature of this statement in Union County became even
    more evident three years after Union County when we decided
    Anela v. City of Wildwood, 
    790 F.2d 1063
    (3d Cir. 1986).
    There, we referred to this portion of our opinion in Union
    County as a “comment[]” rather than a “holding.” 
    Id. at 1069
    (citation omitted). Although that reference does not, by itself,
    conclusively establish that our “comment” was dictum, it is
    certainly consistent with our conclusion that it was dictum. We
    also note that one judge in responding to the municipality’s
    petition for rehearing in Anela, referred to this language in
    Union County as dictum.
    The judge wrote: “while Union County did state in
    dictum that requiring detainees to sleep on mattresses on cell
    floors could constitute unconstitutional punishment under the
    fourteenth amendment, its observations were expressly limited
    to the situation in which detainees were subjected to such
    conditions ‘for more than a few days.’” Anela v. City of
    Wildwood, 
    793 F.2d 514
    , 515 (3d Cir. 1986) (emphasis added).
    28
    C. The district court’s analysis of the conditions of
    confinement claim.
    In resolving the plaintiffs’ conditions of confinement
    claim, the district court wrote: “In order to prevail on their
    claim that they are being punished, [the pre-trial detainees] must
    show that sleeping on mattresses on the floor deprived them of
    the ‘minimal civilized measures of life’s necessities.’” 
    2003 WL 1697537
    at *5 (quoting Rhodes v. Chapman, 
    452 U.S. 337
    ,
    347 (1981)). The court then explained that, in reviewing the
    claim, it must examine the “totality of the circumstances . . . in
    order to discover whether the overall conditions at Gander Hill
    deprived [the pre-trial detainees] of ‘an identifiable human
    need, such as food, warmth, or exercise.’” 
    Id. (quoting Dickinson
    v. Taylor, 
    2000 WL 1728363
    (D. Del. May 19,
    2000). The court cited Wilson v. Seiter, 
    501 U.S. 294
    , 304-05
    (1991)).20 The court then rejected plaintiffs’ claim relying upon
    its own prior decisions. It reasoned:
    Under an Eighth Amendment analysis, this court
    has previously held that having to sleep on a
    mattress on the floor does not rise to the level of
    a constitutional violation. For example, in
    
    20 Wilson v
    . Seiter did not address pre-trial detainee’s due
    process rights. Indeed, the Court in Seiter, could not logically
    determine whether a condition of confinement constitutes
    punishment by applying a test that assumes the propriety of
    punishment but prohibits punishment only when it becomes
    cruel and unusual.
    29
    [another case], the court held that in light of the
    prison overcrowding problem and the need for
    prison authorities to take interim measures to
    house inmates within a limited space, the fact that
    an inmate had to sleep on the floor in crowded or
    dirty conditions is insufficient to state a claim
    under Section 1983.
    
    2003 WL 1687537
    at *5 (citations and internal quotations
    omitted). The district court observed that “sleeping on the floor
    is not ideal,” as we did in Union County. However, the court
    reasoned that, since “prison overcrowding in now a fact of life,”
    sleeping on the floor “is not a violation of the Eight
    Amendment” “[a]s long as plaintiff is receiving adequate food,
    shelter, and clothing[.]” 
    Id. at *5
    n.2. The district court then
    reasoned that, since there was no constitutional violation, “the
    issue of whether [the prison officials] acted with deliberate
    indifference need not be reached.” 
    Id. at *6.
    Given our discussion of Bell v. 
    Wolfish, supra
    , it is clear
    that the district court’s analysis of the pre-trial detainees’ claim
    is fatally flawed. The Eighth Amendment “was designed to
    protect those convicted of crimes and consequently the Clause
    applies only after the State has complied with constitutional
    guarantees traditionally associated with criminal prosecutions.”
    Whitley v. Albers, 
    475 U.S. 312
    , 318 (1986) (citation and
    internal quotations omitted). Thus, the Eighth Amendment’s
    Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause does not apply until
    30
    “after sentence and conviction.”21 Graham v. Connor, 
    490 U.S. 392
    n.6 (1989).
    In Wilson v. Seiter, 
    501 U.S. 294
    (1991), the Supreme
    Court set forth the standard for alleged violations of the Eighth
    Amendment while addressing non-medical conditions of
    confinement. The Court held that the prisoner must prove that
    prison officials acted with deliberate indifference that deprived
    him/her of “‘the minimal civilized measure of life’s
    necessities.’” 
    Id. at 298-99,
    301-05 (quoting Rhodes v.
    Chapman, 
    452 U.S. 337
    , 347 (1981)). Here, the district court
    correctly cited the standard that governs plaintiffs’ claims as
    follows:
    The U.S. Supreme Court set the standard for
    determining whether a condition of confinement
    of pretrial detainees violated their constitutional
    rights in Bell v. Wolfish. Whether there is a
    constitutional violation turns on whether the
    disability is imposed for the purpose of
    punishment or wether it is but an incident of
    some other legitimate governmental purpose.
    The government may detain an individual; the
    necessary inquiry is whether the conditions and
    restrictions of the detention amount to
    21
    The Cruel and Unusual Punishments Clause, and indeed the
    entire Eighth Amendment, is made applicable to the states
    through the Fourteenth Amendment. Robinson v. California,
    
    370 U.S. 660
    (1962).
    31
    punishment.
    2003 WL at *3 (citation omitted, emphasis added). However,
    the court then relied upon our decision in Kost v. Kozakiewicz,
    
    1 F.3d 176
    (3d Cir. 1993) in concluding that, “[n]evertheless,
    in Bell v. Wolfish and later cases, it is clear that when a court is
    considering general, non-medical conditions of confinement,
    the standard is the same for both pretrial detainees and
    sentenced inmates.” Hubbard v. Taylor, 
    2003 WL 1697537
    , *3
    (D. Del. 2003). More specifically, the district court cited our
    statement that “Pretrial detainees . . . are entitled to at least as
    much protection as convicted prisoners, so the protections of the
    Eighth Amendment would seem to establish a floor of sorts.”
    
    Kost, 1 F.3d at 188
    n. 10. (emphasis added).
    In Kost, we relied upon Wilson v. Seiter to conclude that
    “the standard for violations of the Eighth Amendment based on
    nonmedical conditions of confinement . . . would also apply to
    appellants as pretrial detainees through the . . . Due Process
    Clause.” 
    Kost, 1 F.3d at 188
    . Our analysis then became
    somewhat misleading as we proceeded to adopt a “deliberate
    indifference” inquiry to conclude that “[p]laintiffs have
    therefore stated a claim sufficient to withstand dismissal under
    the Seiter standard. . . .” 
    Id. The district
    court was clearly mislead by our Kost
    analysis. The court concluded that Kost was consistent with its
    own prior holdings in similar cases where the district court had
    applied an Eighth Amendment analysis to conditions of
    confinement claims of pre-trial detainees. The court reasoned:
    “[t]his court likewise has found that pre-trial detainees are
    32
    afforded essentially the same protection as convicted prisoners
    and that the Eighth Amendment analysis is appropriate for
    determining if the conditions of confinement rise to the level of
    a constitutional violation.” 2003 WL at * 3 (citing Ellegood v.
    Taylor, No. 01-213 , 
    2002 WL 449758
    (D. Del March 18,
    2002).
    The court also relied upon City of Revere v. Mass. Gen.
    Hosp., 
    436 U.S. 239
    (1983), stating: “Case law has established,
    however, that pretrial detainees are afforded essentially the same
    level of protection under the Fourteenth Amendment; therefore,
    an Eighth Amendment analysis is still appropriate.” 2003 WL at
    *3, n.1. However, that is an overstatement of the holding in City
    of Revere.      There, the Court stated that “[t]he Eighth
    Amendment’s proscriptions of cruel and unusual punishments
    is violated by ‘deliberate indifference to serious medical needs
    of prisoners.’” 
    463 U.S. 239
    , 244. The issue there involved a
    municipality’s liability for medical costs of treating a suspect
    police had wounded as he was attempting to flee. The Court
    reiterated that “Eighth Amendment scrutiny is appropriate only
    after . . . [conviction].” 
    Id. It therefore
    viewed the Eighth
    Amendment as relevant to conditions of pre-trial detainees only
    because it established a floor. The Court explained: “the due
    process rights of a [pre-trial detainee] are at least as great as the
    Eighth Amendment protections available to a convicted
    prisoner.” 
    Id. (citing Bell
    v. Wolfish).
    Thus, although the district court correctly stated the
    appropriate test here, it overlooked the context and limitations
    of the relevant statements in City of Revere and Kost. The
    district court then erred in concluding that “pretrial detainees are
    33
    afforded essentially the same protection as convicted prisoners
    and that an Eighth Amendment analysis is appropriate for
    determining if the conditions of confinement rise to the level of
    a constitutional violation.”
    The district court’s error is understandable given our
    discussion in Kost. There, we were discussing medical and
    nonmedical conditions of confinement. Although we specifically
    stated that the Eighth Amendment provided a floor for our due
    process inquiry into the medical and nonmedical issues, much of
    our discussion focused on whether the plaintiffs had established
    the “deliberate indifference” that is the hallmark of cruel and
    unusual punishment under the Eighth Amendment. See Estelle
    v. Gamble, 
    429 U.S. 97
    (1976). Moreover, we failed to cite Bell
    v.Wolfish which, as we have explained, distinguishes between
    pretrial detainees’ protection from “punishment” under the
    Fourteenth Amendment, and convicted inmates’ protection from
    punishment that is “cruel and unusual” under the Eighth
    Amendment. 22
    22
    Even before Kost, we had analyzed a pre-trial detainee’s
    claim of inadequate medical treatment under the Eighth
    Amendment standards articulated in Estelle v. Gamble. For
    example, in Inmates of Allegheny County Jail v. Pierce, 
    612 F.2d 754
    , 762 (3d Cir. 1979), we held that “at a minimum, the
    ‘deliberate indifference’ standard of Estelle v. Gamble, must be
    met” at an institution housing pre-trial detainees, and in Boring
    v. Kozakiewicz, 
    833 F.2d 468
    , 472 (3d Cir. 1987), we noted that
    even though the constitutional protections afforded prisoners
    and pre-trial detainees against inadequate medical care arise
    34
    Nevertheless, it is clear that plaintiffs here “are not
    within the ambit of the Eighth Amendment[‘s],” prohibition
    against cruel and unusual punishment. Boring v. Kozakiewicz,
    
    833 F.2d 468
    , 471 (3d Cir. 1987). They are not yet at a stage of
    the criminal process where they can be punished because they
    from different textual sources, the standards governing the
    provision of medical care to each class are similar. We have
    continued this practice after Kost. See, e.g., Natale v. Camden
    County Correctional Facility, 
    318 F.3d 575
    , 581-82 (3d Cir.
    2003) (“In previous cases, we have found no reason to apply a
    different standard than that set forth in Estelle . . . We therefore
    evaluate Natales’ Fourteenth Amendment claim for inadequate
    medical care under the standard used to evaluate similar claims
    brought under the Eighth Amendment.”).
    The analysis is further confused because Kost suggests
    a separate and distinct analysis governs nonmedical and medical
    claims under the Eighth Amendment. However, in Seiter, the
    Court stated:
    Whether one characterizes the treatment received
    by [the prisoner] as inhumane conditions of
    confinement, failure to attend to his
    medicalneeds, or a combination of both, it is
    appropriate to apply the deliberate indifference
    standard articulated in 
    Estelle. 501 U.S. at 304
    (brackets in original) (internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    35
    have not as yet been convicted of anything. As the Supreme
    Court explained in Bell, pre-trial detainees cannot be punished
    at all under the Due Process Clause.
    As we have already explained, Bell v. Wolfish
    established that standard. The district court therefore relied
    upon seemingly applicable language in Kost without
    considering its context, or the controlling authority of Bell v.
    Wolfish.23 Accordingly, we must reverse the district court’s
    23
    In Kost, we evaluated claims by pretrial detainees that the
    conditions of their confinement were unconstitutional.
    Although we focused on whether the plaintiffs had established
    the “deliberate indifference” that characterizes cruel and
    unusual punishment in violation of the Eighth Amendment, see
    Estelle v. Gamble, 
    429 U.S. 97
    (1976), we specifically
    distinguished between the protections of the Due Process
    Clause and those of the Eighth Amendment. 
    Kost, 1 F.3d at 188
    (“Pretrial detainees are not within the ambit of the Eighth
    Amendment but are entitled to the protections of the Due
    Process clause.”) (quoting Boring v. Kozakiewicz, 
    833 F.2d 468
    , 471 (1987)). Moreover, we recognized that pretrial
    detainees are entitled to greater constitutional protection than
    that provided by the Eighth Amendment. 
    Id. at 188
    n.10.
    Although we did not specifically cite Bell v. Wollfish, our
    analysis in Kost is consistent with Bell’s distinction between
    pretrial detainees’ protection from “punishment” under the
    Fourteenth Amendment, on the one hand, and convicted
    inmates’ protection from punishment that is “cruel and unusual”
    under the Eighth Amendment, on the other.
    36
    grant of summary judgment to the prison officials on the pre-
    trial detainees’ conditions of confinement claim and remand for
    a proper analysis of that claim under the standard announced in
    Bell v. Wolfish.24
    24
    The prison officials claim that this action is barred by the
    Prisoner Litigation Reform Act (“PLRA”). That Act provides
    in part:
    No Federal civil action may be brought by a
    prisoner confined in a jail, prison, or other
    correctional facility, for mental or emotional
    injury suffered while in custody without a prior
    showing of physical injury.
    42 U.S.C. § 1997e(e). However, the plaintiffs do allege
    physical injury. Accordingly, there is a factual dispute for the
    district court to resolve on remand.
    Moreover, § 1997e(e) does not bar all such claims absent
    physical injury as claims for declaratory relief as well as
    nominal and punitive damages for violations of constitutional
    rights are not barred by § 1997e(e). See Doe v. Delie, 
    257 F.3d 309
    , 314 n.13 (3d Cir. 2001) (“However, § 1997e(e) does not
    bar claims seeking nominal damages to vindicate constitutional
    rights, nor claims seeking punitive damages.”); Allah v. Al-
    Hafeez, 
    226 F.3d 247
    , 251-52 (3d Cir. 2000) (Holding that §
    1997e(e) does not bar nominal and punitive damages for
    37
    In their motion for summary judgment, the prison
    officials also argued that they were entitled to qualified
    immunity from the conditions of confinement claim. Abdul-
    Akbar v. Watson, 
    4 F.3d 195
    , 210-02 (3d Cir. 1993). The prison
    officials argued they acted reasonably and are therefore immune
    from suit because every district court judge in the District of
    Delaware has ruled that having pre-trial detainees sleep on
    mattresses on the floor at Gander Hill is constitutionally
    permissible.25 The district court addressed the merits of the
    plaintiffs’ claim without reaching defendants’ entitlement to
    qualified immunity.
    If, on remand, the prison officials again assert qualified
    immunity, we remind the district court that the immunity claim
    must be resolved first. Since qualified immunity is “an
    immunity from suit, rather than a mere defense to liability, it is
    imperative to resolv[e] immunity questions at the earliest
    violations of constitutional rights even in the absence of
    physical injury).
    25
    The prison officials cite to the following cases: Renn v.
    Taylor, 
    2001 WL 657591
    (D.Del. March 2, 2001) (Robinson,
    J.); Bagwell v. Brewington-Carr, 
    2000 WL 1728148
    (D.Del.
    April 27, 2000) (Sleet, J.); Jackson v. Brewington-Carr, 
    1999 WL 27124
    (D.Del. Jan. 14, 1999) (Farnan, J.); Bartley v. Taylor,
    Civ. A. No. 98-503 (D.Del. Sept. 10, 1999) (McKelvie, J.);
    Torres v. Brewington-Carr, Civ. A. No. 98-159 (D.Del. Nov.
    29, 1999) (Longobardi, J.).
    38
    possible stage in litigation.” Saucier v. Katz, 
    533 U.S. 194
    ,
    200-01 (2001) (citations omitted) (emphasis in original).
    D. The ADA claim.
    The district court also failed to address Ketchum’s ADA
    claim. Rather, the court simply granted summary judgment to
    the prison officials on that claim with no analysis. The district
    court’s failure to explain why it granted summary judgment to
    the prison officials on the ADA claim is contrary to the
    requirements set forth in Valdino v. A. Valey Engineers, 
    903 F.2d 253
    , 259 (3d Cir. 1990). There, we explained that “we
    will exercise our supervisory power to require the district courts
    in this circuit to accompany grants of summary judgment
    hereafter with an explanation sufficient to permit the parties and
    this court to understand the legal premise for the court’s order.”
    We will also remand the ADA claim to the district court for
    compliance with the directive of Valdino.26
    E. Class certification.
    Although the district court did not explain why it denied
    the motion for class certification “as moot,” 
    2003 WL 1697537
    at *6, we assume that the motion was denied because the court
    dismissed the underlying conditions of confinement claim and
    26
    The prison officials claim that Ketchum is no longer
    incarcerated at Gander Hill. If that is true, we assume that the
    prison officials will properly inform the district court on
    remand.
    39
    therefore saw no need to entertain the motion for class
    certification. Since we are reversing the grant of summary
    judgment and remanding for analysis under Bell v. Wolfish, we
    will also reverse the district court’s denial of the class
    certification motion. The district court can address that motion
    as it deems appropriate if the motion is renewed on remand.
    IV. CONCLUSION
    For the above reasons, we will vacate the grant of
    summary judgment to the defendants and remand the conditions
    of confinement claim for consideration under Bell v. Wolfish.27
    We will also remand the ADA claim and, the denial of the class
    certification motion for compliance with Valdino v. A. Valey
    Engineers.
    27
    The defendants claim that no named plaintiff is still housed
    at Gander Hill as a pre-trial detainee. Therefore, they contend
    that any request for injunctive relief is moot. However, even if
    no named plaintiff remains at Gander Hill as a pre-trial detainee,
    because of the “temporary nature of confinement” at Gander
    Hill, “the issues presented are . . . ‘capable of repetition, yet
    evading review.’” 
    Bell, 441 U.S. at 527
    n.5 (citations omitted).
    Therefore, we do not believe that the request for injunctive relief
    is moot.
    40
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 03-2372

Citation Numbers: 399 F.3d 150

Filed Date: 2/23/2005

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/12/2023

Authorities (25)

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luis-fuentes-v-wagner-warden-konemann-correctional-officer-kleeman , 206 F.3d 335 ( 2000 )

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Louis Vadino v. A. Valey Engineers , 903 F.2d 253 ( 1990 )

8 O.S.H. Cas.(bna) 1196, 1980 O.S.H.D. (Cch) P 24,411 , 620 F.2d 964 ( 1980 )

antoinette-connie-anela-v-city-of-wildwood-maureen-mcdonnell-cole-v-city , 790 F.2d 1063 ( 1986 )

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wayne-s-anderson-william-r-bellamy-linda-a-bonner-robert-r-carter , 297 F.3d 242 ( 2002 )

inmates-of-the-allegheny-county-jail-thomas-price-bey-arthur-goslee , 612 F.2d 754 ( 1979 )

Bell v. Wolfish , 99 S. Ct. 1861 ( 1979 )

Marvin Jones, on His Own Behalf and on Behalf of Those ... , 636 F.2d 1364 ( 1981 )

International Woodworkers of America, Afl-Cio and Its Local ... , 790 F.2d 1174 ( 1986 )

union-county-jail-inmates-timmie-lee-barlow-elbert-evans-jr-raymond , 713 F.2d 984 ( 1983 )

Whitley v. Albers , 106 S. Ct. 1078 ( 1986 )

Rhodes v. Chapman , 101 S. Ct. 2392 ( 1981 )

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