Jоhnnie Lee Savory was arrested in January 1977 for the rape and murder of Connie Cooper and the murder of James Robinson, and was convicted later that year. Doc. 1 at ¶¶ 1, 77. After the Appellate Court of Illinois reversed the convictions due tо a Miranda violation, see People v. Savory ,
Just shy of two years later, on January 11, 2017, Savory filed this
The only ground that need be addressed is the statute of limitations. True еnough, "[w]hen a defendant charges noncompliance with the statute of limitations, dismissal under Rule 12(b)(6) is irregular, for the statute of limitations is an affirmative defense." Chi. Bldg. Design, P.C. v. Mongolian House, Inc. ,
Savory concedes that his state law сlaims do not comply with 745 ILCS 10/8-101(a), which establishes a one-year limitations period for suits brought against local governments and their employees, Doc. 79 at 33, so those claims are dismissed. The limitations period for Savory's § 1983 claims is two years. See Dominguez v. Hendley ,
The Heck doctrine provides that "a § 1983 suit for damages that would necessarily imply the invalidity of the fact of an inmate's conviction ... is not cognizable under § 1983 unless and until the inmate obtains favorable termination of a ... challenge to his conviction." Nelson v. Campbell ,
As Savory sees it, the Heck bar was in place until January 12, 2015, when he received a favorable (in his view) termination of his conviction in the form of a gubernatorial pardon. Doc. 79 at 14. If that is correct, then the § 1983 claims accrued on January 12, 2015 and thus are timely. As Defendants see it, the Heck bar lifted on December 6, 2011, when Savory's parole was terminated. Doc. 71 at 17. If that is correct, then § 1983 claims accrued on December 6, 2011, the limitations period on those claims expired on December 6, 2013, and the claims are untimely. Defendants are correct, and understanding why requires some explanation.
Heck as a general rule prevents convicted criminals from challenging their intact convictions via § 1983 instead of via the habeas statute, which is the exclusivе remedy for persons "who challenge the fact or duration of their confinement." DeWalt v. Carter ,
The question then becomes when Savory's custody ended. The answer under Seventh Circuit precedent is when his parole terminated. See Burd v. Sessler ,
Savory responds that DeWalt and Simpson do not hold that the Heck bar lifts once custody ends; rather, according to Savory, those decisions hold only that Heck does not apply to claims that never could have been brought in a habeas petition. In both DeWalt and Simpson , the plaintiffs challenged prison disciplinary actions that affected the conditions of their confinеment, such as being fired from a prison job. See Simpson ,
Savory's reading of DeWalt and Simpson may be faithful to their facts, but it cannot be reconciled with their reasoning. The legal principle underlying both *865decisions is much broader than Savory acknowledges: When habeas is not available, § 1983 is; and, more specifically, when habeas was available but no longer is, § 1983becomes available. Both decisions recognize the implications of the principlе they articulated. Simpson explicitly contemplated a case like Savory's: "[A]fter the custody is over[,] the prisoner [may] use § 1983 to seek damages against persons who may have been responsible."
Savory's interpretation of DeWalt and Simpson is also inconsistent with the Seventh Circuit's recent Whitfield decision, which held that a plaintiff who had recently been released from custody could bring a claim through § 1983 that he could have brought (and did bring) through habeas while he was in custody.
Seventh Circuit precedent recognizes, as an exception to DeWalt and Simpson , one circumstance in which the Heck bar stays in place even аfter a plaintiff is no longer in custody: where the plaintiff "has a constitutional claim, yet (perhaps for strategic reasons) sits it out while in custody and waits to bring her claim until habeas corpus is jurisdictionally barred because the 'custody' requirement is no lоnger met."
Finally, Savory argues that the Heck opinion itself suggests that the favorable termination of a challenge to the plaintiff's conviction is a necessary prerequisite to bringing a § 1983 claim, even if the plaintiff is no longer in custody. See *866Heck ,
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It is possible that Defendants, or at least one or some of them, inflicted a grave injustice on Savory. But absent circumstances not present here-such as equitable tolling, see Shropshear v. Corp. Counsel of City of Chicago ,
