The plaintiff, an inmate in an Illinois state prison, brought suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claiming that the prison’s medical staff had been deliberately indifferent to his need for medical care for a stroke, and by that deliberate indifference had inflicted cruel аnd unusual punishment on him, in violation of his federal constitutional rights. The district court granted summary judgment for the defendants on the grоund that the plaintiff had failed to exhaust his internal prison remedies, as required by the Prison Litigation Reform Act. See 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(а).
He had filed a grievance, but not until eight and a half months after his alleged
The two rulings have to be separated. The Illinois Administrative Code does not require a prisoner to attach evidence to a claim of good cause, any more than the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure require a plaintiff to attach evidence to his complaint. Nor did the prisоn authorities tell the plaintiff that he had to attach evidence to his claim of good cause. They just said “no justifiсation,” leaving him to guess what one has to do to justify good cause for an untimely filing, beyond explaining what the good cause consists of. It is true that an untimely filing can be considered only if the grievant “can demonstrate that a grievance was not timely filed for good cause,” 20 111. Admin. Code § 504.810(a) (emphasis added), but that is just to say, as far as we can tell, that if the prison insists on еvidence to substantiate the claim, the prisoner must supply evidence. The prison never gave the plaintiff an opportunity to do so.
Apparently Illinois prison authorities do not routinely insist on evidence when they instruct an inmаte to demonstrate good cause for having filed an untimely grievance, for in another case we have noted that an Illinois prison’s administrative review board would have found good cause for an untimely grievance had thе inmate provided, at the board’s request, merely an
explanation
for the delay.
Cannon v. Washington,
The Illinois code requires that the grievance contain “fаctual details regarding each aspect of’ it, 20 111. Admin. Code § 504.810(b), but doesn’t require that of a claim of good causе for an untimely filing; and even if it did, a requirement of detailed pleading (“fact pleading”) is not the same thing as a requiremеnt of attaching evidence to a pleading — an extremely unusual requirement. Imagine dismissing a complaint on the ground that although it stated a claim, the plaintiff had failed to submit with the complaint evidence establishing the accurаcy of the factual allegations in the complaint. Yet that was the prison’s ground for rejecting our plaintiffs claim of good cause to file an untimely grievance.
A prisoner is required to exhaust only “available” administrative remedies, 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a);
Woodford v. Ngo,
In its brief in this court the state refuses even to acknowledge that physical incapacitation is good сause for an untime
But when the plaintiff sued, and the defendants moved for summary judgment, it behooved him to present evidence to support his contention that he had indeed exhausted his available administrative remedies by filing a grievance as soon as it was reasonably possible for him to do so.
Obriecht v. Raemisch,
Affirmed.
