MEMORANDUM AND FOURTH ORDER ON MOTION TO DISMISS (#33) (CONVERTED INTO MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT)
I.The Issue Presented
Simply put, the question which the Court must answer in this case is this: if there are disputed issues of fact as to whether a prisoner plaintiff has exhausted his administrative remedies before commencing suit as required by the Prison Litigation Reform Act of 1995 (“PLRA”), 42 U.S.C. § 1997e et seq., and one or more parties have demanded a jury trial, must the disputed issues of fact be put to the jury for resolution, or, alternatively, may the Court resolve them?
II.Background 1
This matter is before the Court on the defendants’ Motion to Dismiss (# 33) on lack of exhaustion grounds, which the Court converted into a motion for summаry judgment. Following an evidentiary hearing on February 21, 2007, which the Court convened in light of
Woodford v. Ngo,
— U.S. —,
III.Analysis
Shortly before the hearing, the Supreme Court decided
Jones v. Bock,
— U.S. —,
The Court acknowledges the case law cited in the defendants’ brief that determines that the question of exhaustion under the PLRA is one to be resolved by the court and not by a jury. (See # 48 at 2-6) Those cases pre-date Bock; some, at least, appear to rest on “perceived policy concerns,” such as the interest in limiting the number of frivolous prisoner law suits. In any event, the Court must rejeсt as contrary to Bock the defendants’ bare argument that “[i]t is appropriate to treat exhaustion in prisoner cases differently from other defenses.” (#48 at 6) Post- *95 Bock, the Court thinks the proper inquiry is whether the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure themselves permit thе Court to resolve an affirmative defense such as exhaustion of remedies where there are underlying disputes of fact, as here.
Ordinarily, where questions of fact are present, affirmative defenses are submitted to the jury:
The general principles of рractice under Rule 56 also apply to the assertion of defenses by a motion for summary judgment. The motion will be granted when it raises at least one legally suffb cient defense that would bar plaintiffs claim and that involves no triable issue of fact. On the other hand, if all of the moving party’s defenses either are legally inadequate or require the adjudication of fact issues, the request for summary judgment will be denied.
Charles Alan Wright et al., 10B
Federal Practice and Procedure,
§ 2734 .(3d ed.1998). Bock notes that, as with a statute of limitations defense,
2
a prisoner complaint may be subject to dismissal bаsed on the ordinary standards for dismissal, but “not on the nature of the ground in the abstract.”
Bock,
— U.S. at —,
Notably,
Meléndez-Arroyo
addressed, among other things, the question whether equitable tolling of the statute of limitations is a question for the judge or the jury in the face of a statute of limitations that had unquestionably run.
Id.
at 38. Noting that cases went in both directions on thе issue, the First Circuit determined in that case that the district court on remand could resolve any disputes of fact underlying the equitable tolling issue.
Id.
at 39.
Meléndez-Arroyo
reasoned first .that because the statute of limitations had indisputably run in the case, the case would have necessarily bеen dismissed “unless equitable relief is afforded by the court.”
Id.
at 38. Second, the First Circuit noted that the question whether equitable tolling applied on the basis of the plaintiffs mental disability had “relatively slender” connection to the merits of the case.
3
Id.
at 39. Finally, assessing the propriety of tolling the statute of limitations in the face of the plaintiffs claim of mental disability “call [ed] for assessments that a judge may be- fab better able to make than a jury [and] resemble [d] in some measure the
*96
question, left to the judge, whether a criminal defendant is capable of assisting in his own defense.”
Meléndez-Arroyo,
In this case, because the plaintiff essentially asserts that he filed grievances in the time and place required by Department of Corrections’ (“DOC”) requirements, and the defendants assert that institutional records show that he did not, the resolution of the exhaustion question depends, in the Court’s view, on credibility determinations — “archetypal jury issues fit for jury resolution.” Here, the defendants correctly maintain that the plaintiff has never argued that the prison grievance system was hot available 4 to him. Indeed, the plaintiff has' consistently maintained that he filed grievances after each instance of alleged abuse “all the way up.” At the hearing on the matter, -the plаintiff testified that he filed his grievances in the boxes designated for filing grievances, and that he “always made sure” that he filed his grievances within 10 days of the incident, as required. He complains, however, that he never received responses to any of his grievances, and that the Institutional Grievance Coordinator (“IGC”) never gave him receipts to his grievances. For example, the plaintiff testified that he filed a grievance concerning defendant Peckham, but that he waited for “a few weeks” but never received a rеsponse. In short, the plaintiff has testified that he filed his grievances within the time and at the place required, but that the grievances went unanswered.
At the hearing on the matter, the plaintiff also admitted that he could produce no documentation to suppоrt his assertion that he filed grievances. This fact, however, is not determinative. The plaintiffs statements under oath that he filed grievances at the time and place required by the regulations suffice here to create a
*97
dispute of fact. The defendants sought to suggest that the plaintiff should have filed grievances grieving his failure to receive responses to his grievances.
5
However, the DOC regulations are silent about what an inmate must do if the IGC does not respond to his grievances, as the plaintiff contends here, nоr do they require an inmate to file a grievance grieving prison personnel’s inaction.
Cf. Harvey v. City of Philadelphia,
In short, the Court declines to resolve the exhaustion question at this juncture, having determined that disputes of fact remain. This is simply not an instance in which the record conclusively establishes non-exhaustion.
See, e.g., Acosta v. United States Marshals Service,
Finally, the Court rejects the defendants’ argument that the plaintiff can be deemed to have waived a jury trial. (See # 48 at 1) The defendants demanded a jury trial in their Answer (# 27 at [3]), and “ ‘[a] plaintiff is entitled to rely on a defendant’s jury demand to preserve his own right to a jury triаl.’ ”
Concordia Co., Inc. v. Panek,
IV. Conclusion and Order
The Court determined at the hearing conducted on February 21, 2007, that disputes of fact remain on the issue of whether the plaintiff has exhausted his administrative remedies. It is the Court’s conclusion that those disputed issues of fact must be resolved by the jury and not *98 the Court. 6 Accordingly, it is ORDERED that the Defendants’ Motion to Dismiss (#33) be, and the same hereby is, DENIED.
Notes
. The Court presumes familiarity with the Court's previоus discussion of this issue set out in
Maraglia v. Maloney,
. Other courts have compared the exhaustion defense to the statute of limitations defense.
See Casanova v. Dubois,
. This appears to be the rationale underlying the Ninth Circuit's conclusion in
Wyatt v. Terhune,
. The Second Circuit, in
Snider
v.
Melindez,
Notably, district courts within the Second Circuit have regularly denied motions for summary judgment where disputes of fact remain.
See, e.g., Liner v. Goord,
. The plaintiff testified that he complained at “happy hour” about the inaction on his grievances. The plaintiff described “happy hour” as an informal setting at which inmates could air their grievances and complaints to the Superintendent and others.
. Of course, if all parties waive their right to a jury trial, the Court could decide disputes in а non-jury proceeding.
In
Parker v. Robinson,
