Rimmer filed an action under 42 U.S.C.A. § 1983 seeking damages and injunctive relief for an alleged denial of constitutional rights during the course of a trial on criminal charges in a state court. At the time of filing he had not completed exhaustion of his state court remedies, but he did complete exhaustion of those remedies after the district court dismissed this complаint. The state court judgment of conviction, however, still stands unreversed and unvacated. We conclude that the doctrine of collateral estoppel 1 foreсloses assertion of Rimmer’s claims and that the district court properly dismissed the complaint.
Rimmer was involved in collisions with two other automobiles in which personal injuries and property damage were suffered. Rimmer fled the scene. A security guard, employed in a nearby establishment, gave chase, but Rimmer evaded him after striking the guard and cutting him with a knife.
Sеveral days later, Rimmer went to the police station to reclaim his automobile. The security guard was present and identi
On the same day Rimmer filed his petition for a writ of certiorari in the Supreme Court of North Carolina, he filed this action under § 1983 seeking damages and a mandatory injunction to require thе defendants to seek habeas corpus relief in Rimmer’s behalf. The sole basis of the claim was that he suffered a federal constitutional deprivation when the state court received the identification testimony of the security guard. Though it is clear that he claimed that the conviction was invalid, he did not seek release on a writ of habеas corpus.
I.
Since it was clear that Rimmer was claiming that his conviction was invalid, the district court might have treated the complaint as one for habeas relief as well as a complaint for damages under § 1983, but it did not. In any event, however, the district court is not to be faulted for what it did. At the time of filing and of the prompt dismissal, Rimmer had not exhausted his state remedies, and, on that account, appears to have studiously avoided requesting habeas relief. Moreover, even if the district court had treated the comрlaint as implicitly requesting such relief, it would have been subject to dismissal because the state court remedies had not then been exhausted.
II.
When an action under the Civil Rights Act сalls into question the validity of the state court conviction, it so closely resembles an action for a federal writ of habeas corpus that a requirement of exhаustion of available state remedies may seem reasonable. Some courts have imposed such a requirement where, as here, the judgment in the civil rights case will neсessarily determine the validity or invalidity of the state court conviction. 4
If there is a requirement of exhaustion of available state remedies in such cases, it runs counter to the general intention of the Congress in 1871 in enacting the Civil Rights Act. That Congress was distrustful of state courts in lending protection to civil rights and wished to provide alternative federal remedies.
5
Preiser v. Rodriguez,
On the other hand, a much later congress, whеn enacting what is now 28 U.S.C.A. § 2254, explicitly imposed an exhaustion of state remedies requirement before federal habeas corpus relief may be sought. If a
We need not answer the question of exhaustion of state remedies, however, for here, even if state remedies had been exhausted at the time of filing, the court would be required to hold, as it did, that the issue was precluded by the standing state court conviction.
III.
As noted above, Rimmer fully litigated the question he now tenders in the course of his criminаl trial and subsequent appellate review. He consistently lost under circumstances in which his very freedom turned upon the question of a violation of his constitutional rights.
Over eleven years ago in
Moore v. United States,
With one caveat to be mentioned, the fact that Rimmer’s subsequent civil aсtion was brought under the Civil Rights Act warrants no departure from the general rule. We readily adopt the reasoning of the First Circuit in
Mastracchio v. Ricci,
Judge Tjoflat wrote for himself and three others in dissent, while Judge Ainsworth, in a separate opinion, еxpressed agreement with him. The majority of the judges in the Fifth Circuit, however, did not address the question. It simply summarily affirmed a panel decision holding that exhaustion of state remedies wаs requisite. There is substantial unanimity among the cases holding the rules of issue preclusion to be applicable in civil rights cases. Indeed, the Supreme Court has implied that the “normal principles of res judicata would apply.” 6
Nor do we see any practical problem in the application of the rule in this context as long as the state prisoner-plaintiff has, оr has had, access to a federal forum for the determination of his federal constitutional claims. Most state court prisoners do have such a right of access thrоugh 28 U.S.C.A. § 2254, but there are exceptions. Under
Stone v. Powell,
When, after exhaustion of state court remedies, a prisoner succeeds in an aсtion under § 2254, he is the ultimate
We are not met with the problem in this case, however. As the others who have mentioned it, we are content to notice its presence in some future case and to confine our present holding to those cases in which the state prisoner-plaintiff has or, for a reasonable time, had a right of access to a federal forum for the adjudication of his federal claim.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. We use the term “collateral estoppel” to denote the doctrine described as “issue preclusion” in the Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 68, Comment b (Tent. Draft No. 1, 1973), and thus to also include the less common term of “direct estoppel.”
.
State v. Rimmer,
.
State v. Rimmer,
.
Guerro v. Mulhearn,
. See
Mitchum v. Foster,
.
Wolff v. McDonnell,
