We remanded this case to the district court for additional fact-finding with respect to whether the exhaustion requirement of the Prison Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (PLRA)
1
precludes the appellants’ lawsuit. After reviewing the findings of the district court,
see Casanova v. Dubois,
No. Civ.A.98-11277-RGS,
Now that the plaintiffs have cleared (at least for now) the hurdle posed by the PLRA, in accordance with our earlier ruling, we focus our attention on the remaining issues presented by this litigation.
I.
Specifically, we shall consider the ground actually provided by the district court for its sua sponte dismissal: namely, that the bulk of the prisoners’ claims had been filed outside of the three-year statute of limitations. 4 Appellants acknowledge that their complaint was not formally docketed until July 1, 1998, approximately three months after the statute of limitations expired. Nevertheless, they argue that under the “mailbox rule,” their complaint should be considered “filed” at the time they handed the complaint over to the prison officials for mailing. Under this rule, their complaint would be deemed filed on March 18, 1998, and would therefore be timely. Part of the delay was caused, however, by the fact that the clerk’s office of the district court refused to file the complaint until the $150 filing-fee had been paid in full because the prisoners had not included an application to proceed in forma pauperis (IFP). Appellants maintain that the advance payment of a fee is not a prerequisite to filing for the purposes of tolling the statute of limitations.
In opposition to the appellants’ invocation of the mailbox rule, the appellees maintain that the Massachusetts Department of Corrections does not maintain a special system for recording legal mail. Consequently, the appellees insist that there would be no way to determine when a prisoner mailed his complaint, rendering a mailbox rule unworkable in the Massachusetts state system. Second, the appel-lees argue that the local rules give the district court clerk the authority to reject a complaint submitted for filing unless it is accompanied by the full filing fee or a proper IFP application. Accordingly, they insist, the district court correctly relied upon the docket sheet to determine when the complaint had been filed for the purposes of assessing whether the statute of limitations precluded the appellants from bringing the bulk of their claims. We turn first to the question of the mailbox rule.
A. Mailbox Rule
In
Houston v. Lack,
The only two circuit court cases cited by the appellees, which purportedly stand for the opposite conclusion, are inapposite.
See Jenkins v. Burtzloff,
Appellees attempt to distinguish this ease from
Morales-Rivera v. United States,
Therefore, we discern no basis for deviating from the rationale offered in
Morales-Rivera,
and hold that the mailbox rule shall govern the determination of when a prisoner’s § 1983 filing has been completed. So long as the prisoner complies with the prison’s procedures for sending legal mail, the filing date for purposes of assessing compliance with the statute of limitations will be the date on which the prisoner commits the mail to the custody of prison authorities. Although the appellants in this case did not file a declaration in conformance with Rule 4 or 25 of the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure, none of the parties dispute that, were the mailbox rule to apply (and setting aside for the moment the question of the filing fee), the appellants’ claims should be considered
B. Filing Fee
The appellants face an additional hurdle, however, in that they did not include the requisite filing fee with their complaint when they placed it in the prison mail system. Nor did they include an application to proceed IFP with their complaint. As we explained in our previous opinion, however, the appellants made noteworthy efforts, despite their incarceration, to get the filing fee to the court at the time they filed their complaint.
See Casanova v. Dubois,
The advance payment of a filing fee is generally not a jurisdictional prerequisite to a lawsuit. 7 Rather, the fee requirement derives from two sources: federal statutes and the local rules. Section (a) of 28 U.S.C. § 1914 provides that district courts shall require a filing fee, and section (c) states that “[ejach district court by rule or standing order may require advance payment of fees.” Local Rule 4.5 for the District of Massachusetts permits the clerk to refuse to perform any services “for which a fee is lawfully prescribed” unless the fee has been paid.
The only ease to which the appellees can cite in support of their argument that appellants’ failure to prepay the filing fee cannot be excused is
Keith v. Heckler,
We find it unnecessary to deal with anything other than the case presented to us today. On this record, we are satisfied that the appellants appear to have done everything within their power to comply with the filing fee provisions of the court, and it is hard to attribute any delay in the processing of that fee to them. Therefore, based on the foregoing, the appellants made out a sufficient case for timely filing to forestall a sua sponte dismissal of their complaint.
II.
For the reasons expressed in this and our previous opinion, we find that the ap
Notes
. Pub.L. No. 104-134, 110 Stat. 1321 (codified as amended in scattered sections of 18 U.S.C., 28 U.S.C., & 42 U.S.C.).
. In addition, it appears as though the appellants’ ability to exhaust whatever administrative remedies they may have had in connection with the events giving rise to this litigation likely expired before enactment of the statute (i.e., April 26, 1996). We reserve for future consideration whether we will join the other circuit courts that have held that prisoners are not bound by the PLRA’s exhaustion of remedies requirement where their ability to exhaust administrative remedies expired before enactment of the PLRA.
See Wyatt v. Leonard,
. Although we did not explicitly weigh in on this issue in our previous opinion, the district court properly noted in its response to our remand that the vast majority of circuit courts have characterized PLRA exhaustion as an affirmative defense.
See Ray v. Kertes,
. The parties agree that Massachusetts's three-year statute of limitations on personal injury actions, Mass. Gen. L. ch. 260 § 2A, governs the appellants’ § 1983 complaint.
See generally Wilson v. Garcia,
.
See Cooper v. Brookshire,
. In addition, we note that the record provides additional verification of the date that appellants placed the complaint into the prison mail system. On March 18, 1998, Casanova requested the release of $3.90 in order to send his complaint via certified mail, and written verification of this transaction is included as an exhibit in the joint appendix. This request was approved, with a slight modification, on March 20, 1995.
.
See, e.g., Wrenn v. Am. Cast Iron Pipe Co.,
