Plaintiff Narvis Nonnette brought this civil rights action pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, alleging that officials of the Cali-patria State Prison in California violated his constitutional rights by: (1) miscalculating his prison sentence and (2) revoking 360 days of his good-time credits and imposing 100 days of administrative segregation in a disciplinary proceeding without supporting evidence. The district court dismissed the miscalculation claims and granted summary judgment for the defendants on the disciplinary claim. The district court based both rulings on the fact that Nonnette was a state prisoner and that his civil rights claims necessarily challenged the validity of the underlying decisions that caused his continued confinement. Because those determinations had not been set aside, the district court held that
Heck v. Humphrey,
Nonnette appeals the district court’s rulings. He points out that he has now completed serving the incarceration portion of his sentence (including the additional year that resulted from his disciplinary proceeding) and has been released to parole. He argues that, because any direct challenge to his disciplinary proceeding would be moot,
see Spencer v. Kemna,
Background
Nonnette’s disciplinary proceeding arose out of an inmate fight in July 1998. Non-nette was found to have stabbed another inmate, despite his contention that all of the evidence indicated that the inmate had been stabbed before Nonnette joined the fight. Nonnette was assessed 360 days loss of good-time credits, and was placed in administrative segregation for 100 days. 1
Nonnette filed a complaint in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of California alleging three due process violations pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983. 2 The first two claims asserted that Nonnette’s release date initially had been improperly calculated, and that he wrongfully had been denied work credits that would have led to an earlier release. The third cause of action asserted that his due process rights were violated by his disciplinary proceeding and the ensuing loss of good-time credits and administrative segregation. The complaint sought injunctive relief and damages.
The district court dismissed Nonnette’s first two causes of action for failure to state a claim.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6). The court held that, because the claims challenged the validity of the decisions underlying Nonnette’s confinement, Non-nette was required to proceed first in ha-beas corpus,
see Preiser v. Rodriguez,
Discussion
Both parties concentrate their arguments on the summary judgment ruling, indicating that those arguments will also apply to the dismissals of the first two claims. We follow the same course in our analysis. We review de novo both grants of summary judgment and dismissals for failure to state a claim.
Balint v. Carson City,
I
It has been clear for over thirty years that a state prisoner seeking injunctive relief against the denial or revocation of good-time credits must proceed in habeas corpus, and not under § 1983.
See Preiser,
The Supreme Court subsequently held that the
Heck
rule applied to a state prisoner who was seeking damages for unconstitutional deprivation of good-time credits, so long as the alleged constitutional violation would, if established, imply the invalidity of the deprivation of good-time credits.
3
Edwards v. Balisok,
Nonnette’s case in its present posture differs, however, from
Heck
and
Edwards
in one respect that we conclude to be critical. After the district court entered its decision, Nonnette was released from the incarceration of which he complains, and is now on parole. Were he to seek a writ of habeas corpus, his petition would present no case or controversy because establishing the invalidity of his disciplinary proceeding could have no effect on the 360 days of additional incarceration or the 100 days of administrative segregation that resulted from it. Nor could such relief have any effect on the term of his parole.
4
As a consequence, his petition for
*876
habeas corpus would have to be dismissed as moot.
See Spencer v. Kemna,
We see no relevant distinction between the collateral consequences attending parole revocation and those attending Non-nette’s deprivation of good-time credits. We are satisfied, therefore, that if he now filed a petition for habeas corpus attacking the revocation of his good-time credits and the imposition of administrative segregation (as well as the administrative calculation of his release date), his petition would have to be dismissed for lack of a case or controversy because he has fully served the period of incarceration that he is attacking.
That point brings us to the crucial question in this appeal: Does'the unavailability of a remedy in habeas corpus because of mootness permit Nonnette to maintain a § 1983 action for damages, even though success in that action would imply the invalidity of the disciplinary proceeding that caused revocation of his good-time credits? Although the answer is not entirely clear under Heck and its progeny, we join the Second and Seventh Circuits in concluding that, in these circumstances, a § 1983 claim may be maintained.
Admittedly, there is language in
Heck
suggesting that the prior overturning of an underlying conviction is invariably a prerequisite for a § 1983 action that implies the conviction’s invalidity.
Heck’s
analogy to malicious prosecution, which requires favorable termination of criminal proceedings as an element of the civil claim, is perhaps the strongest example.
See Heck,
Spencer,
on the other hand, dealt with a prisoner who had completed his term; indeed, that completion caused his habeas petition challenging revocation of parole to be dismissed as moot.
Spencer,
Heck did not hold that a released prisoner in Spencer’s circumstances is out of court on a § 1983 claim, and for reasons explained in my Heck concurrence, it *877 would be unsound to read either Heck or the habeas statute as requiring any such result. For all that appears here, then, Spencer is free to bring a § 1983 action, and his corresponding argument for continuing habeas standing falls accordingly-
Id.
at 19,
Given the Court’s holding that petitioner does not have a remedy under the habe-as statute, it is perfectly clear, as Justice SOUTER explains, that he may bring an action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.
Id.
at 25 n. 8,
Informed as we are by the opinions in
Spencer,
we conclude that
Heck
does not preclude Nonnette’s § 1983 action.
5
In so ruling, we are in accord with the decisions of at least two of our sister circuits.
See Huang v. Johnson,
II
At the time the district court entered its decision in this case, Nonnette was still incarcerated. The district court therefore committed no error in deciding as it did in light of that circumstance, because habeas corpus would have been available to test the validity of the disciplinary proceeding (and the administrative calculations of Nonnette’s sentence). The State argues that we must therefore affirm the district court’s judgment, even though it imposes a prerequisite that Nonnette, having been released on parole, can no longer fulfill. We do not consider ourselves so bound, however, to an affirmance that leaves Nonnette with no conceivable remedy even if his constitutional objections are meritorious. In that regard we can do no better than to quote the Supreme Court:
We have frequently held that in the exercise of our appellate jurisdiction we have power not only to correct error in the judgment under review but to make such disposition on the case as justice requires. And in determining what justice does require, the Court is bound to consider any change, either in fact or in *878 law, which has supervened since the judgment was entered.
Patterson v. Alabama,
III
As the parties recognize, the validity of the dismissals of Nonnette’s miscalculation claims depends upon the same Heck considerations that underlie our decision regarding the summary judgment on the disciplinary proceeding. We therefore vacate the dismissals of those claims as well, and include them in our remand for further proceedings.
IV
Nonnette attempts to raise one additional matter in this appeal. He contends that his challenge to the imposition of 100 days administrative segregation was not subject to
Heck
in any event, because it does not contest the term of confinement but only the conditions of confinement. He asks us to join in the rule adopted by the large majority of the circuits that
Heck
does not apply to claims challenging only the conditions, and not the term, of confinement.
See Figueroa v. Rivera,
The State contends that Nonnette waived this argument by not presenting it to the district court in opposition to the State’s motion for summary judgment. Because we hold that Heck does not bar any of Nonnette’s claims, we need not address the question whether Nonnette failed to establish an independent ground for precluding the application of Heck to the administrative segregation portion of his claim.
We agree with the State that Nonnette did not present a challenge to the
conditions
of his administrative segregation in the district court, either in his complaint or in any of his subsequent filings in the district court. He therefore made no attempt to establish that his administrative segregation “impose[d] atypical and significant hardship on[him] in relation to the ordinary incidents of prison life.”
Sandin v. Conner,
Conclusion
The judgment of the district court dismissing Nonnette’s first two claims and granting summary judgment against him on the third claim is vacated, and the matter is remanded to the district court for farther proceedings.
VACATED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. The disciplinary decision originally imposed a term of 15 months in a segregated housing unit. That term was later suspended, but Nonnette served 100 days of administrative segregation.
. Nonnette first exhausted his prison administrative remedies, thereby satisfying that requirement of the Prison Litigation Reform Act of 1996, 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a).
. A prisoner who seeks damages only for being subjected to unconstitutional procedures, without implying the invalidity of (or seeking damages for) the resulting loss of good-time credits, may proceed under § 19 83 without first invalidating his disciplinary proceeding.
See Heck,
. The State does not contend that the length of Nonnette's parole term would be affected
*876
by invalidation of his disciplinary proceeding or by administrative recalculation of his date of release from incarceration. It argues only that Nonnette is still "in custody” while on parole, and thus qualifies for habeas relief. The relevant bar to habeas relief, however, is not the "in custody” requirement, but the "case or controversy” requirement, which would render Nonnette’s claims moot if they were brought in a habeas corpus proceeding.
See Spencer,
. We recognize that, if
Heck
precluded Non-nette’s action, we would not be free to consider it undermined by the opinions in
Spencer.
The Supreme Court retains the sole prerogative of overruling its own decisions.
See, e.g., Rodriguez de Quijos v. Shearson/American Express, Inc.,
. The fact that Nonnette has been released from the incarceration that his civil suit, if successful, would impugn, and that a habeas petition would be moot for that reason, differentiates this case from our recent decision in
Cunningham v. Gates,
. We do not share the State’s concern that our holding will encourage prisoners to delay their challenges to loss of good-time credits until their release is imminent or accomplished. The possibility of release from incarceration is the strongest incentive for prisoners to act promptly to challenge such administrative action by habeas corpus after administrative remedies are exhausted. We also emphasize that our holding affects only former prisoners challenging loss of good-time credits, revocation of parole or similar matters; the status of prisoners challenging their underlying convictions or sentences does not change upon release, because they continue to be able to petition for a writ of habeas corpus.
See Spencer,
