This interlocutory appeal, by permission under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b), presents a single question: Whether a prisoner’s neglect to take a timely administrative appeal within the state system means that he has failed to exhaust state remedies for purposes of 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a). The district court, acting through a magistrate judge following consent under 28 U.S.C. § 636(c), answered “no.” The magistrate judge reasoned that a prisoner exhausts his state remedies by taking all steps that the state requires, whether or not the prisoner complies with the state’s rules for form and timeliness of action. We reach the opposite conclusion: unless the prisoner completes the administrative process by following the rules the state has established for that process, exhaustion has not occurred. Any other approach would allow a prisoner to “exhaust” state remedies by spurning them, which would defeat the
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statutory objective of requiring the prisoner to give the prison administration an opportunity to fix the problem — or to reduce the damages and perhaps to shed light on factual disputes that may arise in litigation even if the prison’s solution does not fully satisfy the prisoner. See
Porter v. Nussle,
McCoy v. Gilbert,
When we accepted the appeal in this case, we directed the parties to brief the question whether the approach of Boerckel applies to exhaustion under § 1997e(a). Sensibly, the parties have agreed that it does. Exhaustion under § 1997e(a) is administrative only; a prisoner who uses all administrative options that the state offers need not also pursue judicial review in state court; but a prisoner who does not properly take each step within the administrative process has failed to exhaust state remedies, and thus is foreclosed by § 1997e(a) from litigating. Failure to do what the state requires bars, and does not just postpone, suit under § 1983.
Nonetheless, Pozo submits, his failure to file a timely administrative appeal is not conclusive. Pozo filed a proper administrative complaint. He had 10 days to appeal within the state system. Instead he waited a year, and after receiving his appeal the agency dismissed it as untimely. According to Pozo, his eventual appeal “exhausted” administrative remedies because the state
could have
accepted it and addressed the merits under Wis. Admin. Code § DOC 310.13(3). This rule says that the Corrections Complaint Examiner “may” accept and decide a belated appeal unless the passage of time has made it “difficult or impossible to investigate the complaint.” In Pozo’s case the Examiner did
not
adjudicate the untimely appeal, but the
power
to do so is enough for exhaustion, Pozo insists. He acknowledges that
Coleman v. Thompson,
As we said at the outset, this position would leave § 1997e(a) without any oomph. Wisconsin cannot be unusual in allowing prison officials some authority to entertain untimely complaints and appeals. If the existence of this power means that prisoners need not file timely complaints and appeals, then the incentive that § 1997e(a) provides for prisoners to use the state process will disappear. Prisons are unlikely to entertain many appeals filed a year late, or by prisoners who otherwise thumb their noses at the specified procedures.
To exhaust administrative remedies, a person must follow the rules governing filing and prosecution of a claim. As
Artuz v. Bennett,
To exhaust remedies, a prisoner must file complaints and appeals in the place, and at the time, the prison’s administrative rules require. Pozo filed a timely and sufficient complaint but did not file a timely appeal. He therefore failed to exhaust his administrative remedies, and his federal suit must be dismissed.
REVERSED.
