OPINION
Joseph T. Huey, a prisoner in the Michigan Department of Corrections, appeals from a district court judgment dismissing his 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claim as barred by the doctrine of
Heck v. Humphrey,
I
On February 18, 1998, Joseph T. Huey, an inmate at the Ionia Maximum Correctional Facility, received a major misconduct ticket. The ticket alleged that Huey had assaulted corrections officer Daniel Stine in an attempt to gain control of a handcuff key. The matter was set for an administrative hearing on March 6, 1998.
At the hearing, Huey claimed that officer Stine had in fact assaulted him. According to Huey, he and Stine got into an argument as Stine was escorting him from the shower to his cell. The matter escalated when Huey was caught between the cell door and the door frame as he attempted to enter the cell. Once inside the cell, Huey moved his hands to the door’s food slot so that Stine could remove his handcuffs. Stine allegedly grabbed Huey’s right hand, pulled it through the slot, and began twisting Huey’s arm, saying to an *228 other officer present at the scene, “I’ll bend his fingers back. Let’s see if he can take that.” When other officers approached the cell, Stine released him. Stine then filed a false misconduct report. Huey maintains that as a result of the incident he suffered abrasions that produced scarring, and restricted movement in his wrist for four to six days.
The hearing officer did not credit Huey’s account. The hearing officer noted that had Stine attempted to break Huey’s arm, as Huey claimed, Stine probably would have succeeded. The hearing officer further remarked that a medical report made after the incident was inconsistent with Huey’s story. The report showed that the minor abrasions on his arm were consistent with its having been pulled back and forth through the food slot; the hearing officer concluded that this was the likely outcome of Huey’s attempting to gain control of the handcuff key. Accordingly, the hearing officer found Huey guilty of assault and battery. Huey was sentenced to thirty days of detention and thirty days’ loss of privileges.
Huey unsuccessfully moved for rehearing on the matter. He also initiated a three-step grievance process disputing the factual basis of the major misconduct ticket. Huey’s grievance was denied at the final stage of the process on April 16,1998. On June 11, 1998, Huey filed in the district court a 42 U.S.C. § 1983 action alleging that, because he had not assaulted officer Stine, Stine’s actions were cruel and unusual punishment in violation of the Eighth Amendment. The complaint demanded $20,000 in compensatory damages, $12,000 in punitive damages, and expungement of the disciplinary infraction from his prison record. Huey subsequently amended the complaint to omit the demand for an order of expunction. Stine moved for summary judgment, and the district court dismissed Huey’s claim as barred by Heck v. Humphrey. Huey timely appeals pro se.
II
A decision by a district court to dismiss without prejudice will not be disturbed except for an abuse of discretion.
Craighead v. E.F. Hutton, Inc.,
A
In Heck v. Humphrey, the Supreme Court held that,
in order to recover damages for allegedly unconstitutional conviction or imprisonment, or for other harm caused by actions whose unlawfulness would render a conviction or sentence invalid, a § 1983 plaintiff must prove that the conviction or sentence has been reversed on direct appeal, expunged by executive order, declared invalid by a state tribunal authorized to make such determination, or called into question by a federal court’s issuance of a writ of habeas corpus, 28 U.S.C. § 2254.
Heck,
Huey contends that since he has long since served his thirty days’ detention,
Heck
should not be interposed to bar his claim. The thrust of this argument seems to be that application of the
Heck
doctrine would deprive Huey of a federal forum for his Eighth Amendment claim.
See Jourdan v. Jabe,
This argument is not entirely without force. In
Spencer v. Kemna,
The better view ... is that a former prisoner, no longer “in custody” may bring a § 1983 action establishing the unconstitutionality of a conviction or confinement without being bound to satisfy a favorable-termination requirement that it would be impossible as a matter of law for him to satisfy. Thus, the answer to Spencer’s argument that his habeas claim cannot be moot because Heck bars him from relief under § 1983 is that Heck has no such effect.
Id.
at 21,
Our own, unpublished, practice has not wavered in the wake of Spencer. In Riley v. Kurtz, as in this case, a state prisoner brought a § 1983 action alleging that a corrections officer had violated his Eighth amendment rights by filing a false misconduct report. We held the claim barred by the “favorable termination” requirement, saying of Spencer:
Riley wishes to extend this reasoning from situations where habeas corpus is procedurally barred to situations, as in the present case, where the § 1983 plaintiff met with an unsuccessful outcome in a prison disciplinary hearing but has served his full punishment for the infraction. He argues that the concurring [JJustices’ statements should be read broadly'to mean that there is never a “successful outcome” prerequisite to a prisoner bringing a § 1983 claim.
We decline to adopt Riley’s argument. Even if he has correctly inferred the direction that the Supreme Court will take in the years to come, the rule he advocates represents a major extension of what the five [JJustices have actually stated in their various concurring opinions. Unless and until the Supreme Court adopts the position Riley advocates, we will continue to follow Edwards and the reasoning of the unpublished Sixth Circuit cases cited above.
Riley,
No. 98-1077,
Today we reaffirm the holding of
Riley
as the law of this Circuit. In order to grant the plaintiff in this case the relief that he seeks, we would have to unwind the judgment of the state agency. “This is precisely the result that we have repeatedly held to be impermissible based on our interpretation of
Edwards.” Id.
at *6. Although
Spencer
may cast doubt upon the universality of the “favorable termination” requirement, we will continue to follow the Supreme Court’s directly applicable precedent and “leave to the Court ‘the prerogative of overruling its own decisions.’ ”
Figueroa,
B
Huey next argues that
Heck
should not bar his' suit because his claim sounds under the Eighth Amendment. In general, the federal courts hold that Eighth Amendment claims do not run afoul of
Heck
because'the question of the degree of force used by a police or corrections officer is analytically distinct from the question whether the plaintiff violated the law.
See, e.g., Nelson v. Jashurek,
We think the rule that can be taken from these cases is that Heck generally does not bar Eighth Amendment claims, but if the claim is founded solely on an allegation that a corrections officer falsified a misconduct report, then Heck applies. Such is the case here. Huey does not claim that Stine’s actions were an excessive response to his attempt to gain control of the handcuff key (in contrast to Nelson, where the basis of the plaintiffs claim is unclear). Rather, Huey claims that Stine’s arm-twisting was cruel and unusual punishment because Huey had done nothing wrong and he therefore should not have been punished at all. Granting relief on Huey’s complaint would require that we annul the judgment of the Michigan Department of Corrections. Heck forbids that result.
Ill
For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
