On May 12, 1968, Theodore Smith was arrested and charged with the rape of Shirley Johnson. Ms. Johnson had reported a rape to the Chicago Police Department on April 25, 1968. Chicago police officers escorted her to Billings Hospital at the University of Chicago where a doctor examined her. The doctor took a vaginal smear which failed to show the presence of sperm. According to a police report introduced at Smith’s trial, Officer Daniel Chil-la, picked up a second swab from a hospital clerk, R. Brown, and took it to the police crime laboratory where tests uncovered evidence of sperm. Subsequently, Smith was arrested and convicted for rape. The Illinois Appellate Court upheld Smith’s conviction and the Illinois Supreme Court denied Smith leave to appeal. Smith served three years and five months at the state penitentiary before his release on July 30, 1976.
Upon release from prison, Smith began to investigate the factual circumstances leading up to his conviction. Smith went to Billings Hospital and spoke to an administrator who informed him that the hospital had never employed a clerk named “R. Brown.” On the basis of this disclosure, Smith filed this 42 U.S.C. § 1983 lawsuit alleging that the defendants, three Chicago police officers, fabricated evidence against him to secure his conviction. 1 Two years later, during discovery in this action, Smith learned that Billings Hospital had in fact employed a clerk named R. Brown. When Smith finally located and spoke with Brown, however, Brown denied that he ever gave police any lab samples relating to Smith’s rape prosecution. Smith then withdrew his claim that Brown did not exist and argued instead that Brown never furnished lab samples to the defendants.
This new allegation did not alter Smith’s claim that the defendants fabricated evidence which led to his conviction. Smith also alleged that the defendants Springer, and O’Connell chose to pursue Smith because he refused to bribe them. Smith claimed that earlier in 1968 he paid these two officers $220.00 to avoid battery charges and that when he refused to bribe them again to avoid the rape charge, he was arrested on the next day.
The district court granted the motion for summary judgment of the three remaining defendants on the grounds that Smith’s lawsuit was a collateral attack on a state court conviction in federal court and was therefore barred. The district court concluded that
the plaintiff already has received the only remedy which a prisoner attacking a State court conviction can attain — his freedom. Providing a free person with a damages remedy unavailable to one in prison when the claims involved are essentially the same would mean creating a distinction without a difference in the law.
Because we find that Smith’s claim is not a collateral attack on his wrongful state court conviction, we reverse.
I.
The district court rested its decision on two Seventh Circuit cases which held that section 1983 does not create a cause of action in federal courts for plaintiffs who attack the validity of their state court crim inal convictions.
See Waste Management of Wisconsin, Inc. v. Fokakis,
We reaffirmed this holding in
Waste Management,
where a corporation filed a suit under section 1983 to seek “a declaration of the constitutional invalidity of the state court conviction” as well as other equitable relief.
Waste Management,
These two cases, however, bear little resemblance to the facts before us. Unlike the section 1983 plaintiffs in Hanson and Waste Management, Smith does not seek a declaration from a federal court that his conviction was invalid; nor does Smith seek any other form of equitable relief. Smith does not directly challenge the validity of his conviction. He does not attack the fact nor the length of his confinement — nor could he, since he has already served his time. Smith filed his section 1983 action after he was already released from custody. Rather, Smith’s lawsuit seeks monetary damages from the police officers who allegedly fabricated evidence which led to his conviction. His section 1983 claim challenges the legality of the conduct of the officers and does not impugn the integrity of the state judicial system. Although the correctness of Smith’s conviction may be seriously undermined if he succeeds on his claim, he does not seek this result directly. His lawsuit challenges the conduct of the police officers and not the actions or procedures of the Illinois courts. 2 Thus, Smith’s section 1983 claim is not a collateral attack on his state court conviction and Waste Management and Hanson are therefore inapposite.
This characterization of Smith’s claim is consistent with the Supreme Court’s decision in
Preiser,
If a state prisoner is seeking damages, he is attacking something other than the fact or length of his confinement, and he is seeking something other than immediate or more speedy release — the traditional purpose of habeas corpus. In the *34 case of a damages claim, habeas corpus is not an appropriate or available federal remedy.
Id.
at 494,
The Supreme Court’s subsequent decision in
Haring v. Prosise,
Smith’s section 1983 claim challenging the legality of the police conduct is distinct from the issue whether Smith committed a rape. Whether the defendants fabricated evidence against Smith does not directly determine Smith’s guilt or innocence. The defendants, relying primarily on Smith’s pro se complaint, go to some lengths to characterize his claim as a collateral attack on his conviction. They note that his complaint alleges that
[T]he above described conduct of the defendants] ... deprived plaintiff, Theodore Smith, of his liberty for 3 years and 6 months. And deprived him of his rights under the United States Constitution.... Furthermore, as a result of these actions, plaintiff, Theodore Smith, served 3 years and 6 months in the Illinois State Penitentiary.
The defendants apparently read this complaint as stating that Smith can only prevail on his section 1983 claim if his conviction is invalid. This is not necessarily so. Smith need not legally attack the validity of his conviction to prevail on his section 1983 claim if he can prove that the defendants’ misconduct injured him. The causation element of section 1983 requires only that the plaintiff prove that the defendant, acting “under color of” law, caused the deprivation of his constitutional rights. 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Smith, therefore, can prevail if he shows that the defendants fabricated evidence leading to his false arrest and subsequent unreasonable seizure,
see, e.g., Olson v. Tyler,
In
Wooley v. Maynard,
“designed to annul the results of a state trial” since the relief sought is wholly prospective, to preclude further prosecution under a statute alleged to violate [plaintiffs’] constitutional rights. [One plaintiff] has already sustained convictions and has served a sentence of imprisonment for his prior offenses. He does not seek to have his record expunged, or to annul any collateral effects those convictions may have, e.g., upon his driving privileges.
Id.
at 711,
Smith’s claim closely resembles the section 1983 action described in
Wooley.
Smith does not seek to “annul” the results of his state conviction, nor does he seek expungement or any other relief related to his conviction. Rather, Smith seeks only monetary damages. In this sense, the case for federal jurisdiction is even stronger here than in
Wooley
where plaintiffs sought declaratory and injunctive relief.
See Preiser,
We have previously recognized, however, that under
Preiser
prisoners should not be allowed to pursue section 1983 claims merely because they seek damages.
Hanson v. Heckel,
Smith’s claim is unique in that he is no longer a prisoner. On its face, it is absurd to suggest that Smith, free from custody, now attacks the length or conditions of his confinement or that his claim seeks “immediate or more speedy release.” Unlike a prisoner, Smith had no reason to challenge the length or condition of his confinement because he has already been released. Although Smith’s complaint refers to his loss of freedom, it clearly seeks damages for the wrongful conduct of the defendant officers and does not seek a reversal or ex-pungement of his conviction.
The defendants would place Smith in an anomalous position, leaving him with no remedy for their allegedly illegal conduct. The relief provided under the writ of habe-as corpus is unavailing to Smith because he is no longer in custody.
Hanson,
II.
Finally, the defendants argue that jurisdiction is improper because Smith failed to exhaust his state remedies. In particular, the defendants maintain that Smith can seek a pardon on grounds of innocence from the Governor of the State of Illinois pursuant to Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 38, ¶ 1003-3-13 (1985), and receive damages from the Illinois Court of Claims for “time unjustly served,” Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 37, 11439.8(c) (1985).
This exhaustion argument, however, ignores the teachings of
Preiser
and
Haring.
The exhaustion requirement relates only to habeas corpus petitions and not to section 1983 claims. “[A] damages action by a state prisoner could be brought under the Civil Rights Act in federal court without any requirement of prior exhaustion of state remedies.”
Preiser,
For the foregoing reasons, the order of the district court is reversed and remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Smith's original pro se complaint also named the Superintendent of the Chicago Police Department and the City of Chicago as defendants. The district court dismissed these defendants as well as other individual police officers. This appeal does not concern these dismissals.
. Theoretically, Smith’s conviction may remain valid even if he prevails in his section 1983 claim because clear and convincing testimony of a rape victim is sufficient under Illinois law to support a rape conviction.
People v. Anderson,
. We also have grave doubts as to the availability and adequacy of the purported state remedies. Even putting to one side the availability of this rare executive clemency, the potential relief is far from adequate. In the first place, were Smith to convince the Governor of his innocence, the statute would limit the total amount of damages to no more than $ 15,000. Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 37, ¶ 439.8(c) (1985). Second, this remedy only applies to damages against the State; it provides no relief for the injury caused by the defendants in this case. Smith’s remedy against the State through a pardon and the Court of Claims and his section 1983 lawsuit are not mutually exclusive. If the defendants deprived him of his constitutional rights, section 1983 entitles him to relief; if the State is also liable, Smith is not entitled to damages because of the eleventh amendment, but the State of Illinois has agreed to provide limited compensation. Smith's claim against the defendants and potential claim against the State are separate and distinct. The remedy suggested by the defendants is not only inadequate (if even "available”), but does not preclude Smith’s section 1983 claim.
Finally, the defendants refer obliquely to another "available remedy,” Ill.Rev.Stat. ch. 110, ¶ 2-1401 (1985), which allows prisoners to attack criminal convictions within two years of the entry of judgment. The only exceptions to this two-year requirement, legal disability, duress, and fraudulent concealment, do not apply to the facts of this case.
