DOUGLAS THOMAS, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. SHAWN WOOLUM, Defendant, RICHARD KEPLER; CHARLOTTE STARCHER; BILLIE WADDELL, SR., Defendants-Appellees.
No. 01-3227
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT
Decided and Filed: July 28, 2003
2003 FED App. 0252P (6th Cir.)
RECOMMENDED FOR FULL-TEXT PUBLICATION Pursuant to Sixth Circuit Rule 206. ELECTRONIC CITATION: 2003 FED App. 0252P (6th Cir.) File Name: 03a0252p.06. Argued: August 6, 2002. Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio at Columbus. No. 99-01120—James L. Graham, District Judge.
COUNSEL
ARGUED: Alphonse A. Gerhardstein, LAUFMAN & GERHARDSTEIN, Cincinnati, Ohio, for Appellant. Todd R. Marti, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL, CORRECTIONS LITIGATION SECTION, Columbus, Ohio, for Appellee. ON BRIEF: Alphonse A. Gerhardstein, Paul M. Laufman, LAUFMAN & GERHARDSTEIN, Cincinnati, Ohio, for Appellant. Todd R. Marti, OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL, CORRECTIONS LITIGATION SECTION, Columbus, Ohio, for Appellee.
MOORE, J., delivered the opinion of the court. GILMAN, J. (pp. 25-27), delivered a separate concurring opinion. ROSEN, D. J. (pp. 28-66), delivered a separate opinion dissenting in part and concurring in the judgment.
OPINION
KAREN NELSON MOORE, Circuit Judge. Congress’s passage of the Prison Litigation Reform Act (“PLRA”) was an attempt to curb rampant prison litigation in the federal courts, but its enactment did not erode the role of the federal courts as vindicators of federal rights. The PLRA explicitly requires an inmate seeking to challenge prison conditions in federal court to exhaust any available administrative remedies, but the statute’s text does not condition access to the federal courts on satisfying the procedures and timelines
I. BACKGROUND
When inmate Douglas Thomas told a supervising officer at the North Central Correctional Institution (“NCCI”) that he felt stressed out and needed “to lay it down for a few days,” the officer instructed Corrections Officer Shawn Woolum to take Thomas down to the segregation unit. J.A. at 84 (Springer Incident Rep.). Woolum, with whom Thomas had exchanged angry words earlier that day, took the opportunity to retaliate. While walking Thomas down to segregation, Woolum instructed another inmate who was present to leave and began to pummel the handcuffed Thomas. Woolum struck Thomas from behind, slammed him into a steel door, and banged his face against the steel door and cement walls. Upon their arrival at the holding cell, Woolum slammed Thomas into a steel doorframe, picked him up, and slammed his face and head again into a cement wall. Woolum then stomped on Thomas’s foot. Thomas was in handcuffs during the relevant time and did not resist. As a result of Woolum’s actions, Thomas suffered a broken clavicle, broken ribs, a
Various investigations followed. Officers Woolum, Kepler, and Waddell, along with the supervising officer who had suggested Thomas go to segregation and the nurse who treated Thomas’s injuries, filed “incident reports,” as prison regulations require when an employee struggles with an inmate or observes such a struggle.
In accord with regulations, prison officials then formed a Use of Force Committee to investigate the incident. Having heard additional statements, including another statement from Thomas describing Woolum’s actions, the Use of Force Committee issued a report concluding that Woolum had used an inappropriate amount of force; after disciplinary proceedings some time later, Woolum was fired. Under the administrative code, however, the inmate has no right to view the report or the evidence used to create it.
In addition to the prison’s internal administrative inquiry, Thomas invoked the formal grievance procedure. After being transferred to the Allen Correctional Institution (“ACI”), on May 1, 1998, Thomas requested a grievance form in order to report the November 5 incident. On or about May 4, 1998, Thomas filed a Notification of Grievance with NCCI’s institutional inspector. The Notification of Grievance form requires the prisoner to state “[t]he nature of the Grievance” in specific terms. Thomas stated, in part, as follows:
[O]n Nov. 5th while I was at NCCI I was assaulted by [Corrections Officer] Woolum while I was in handcuffs
and I had several bones broken and have since been transferred to A.C.I. administratively. Also as you know the state troopers & the FBI have conducted investigations. . . . The Prison[] Litigation Reform Act & Title 42 of the United States Code require[] that a prisoner must exhaust state remedies prior to litigation. Therefore I ask that [Corrections Officer] Woolum be removed and released from his employment with the Department of Corrections and that I am awarded 5 million dollars.
J.A. at 33. The institutional inspector denied relief, apparently because the grievance was not filed within the thirty-day period required by Department of Rehabilitation and Correction (“Department”) policy.
Thomas pursued his grievance. Following the initial denial, Thomas appealed to the Chief Inspector. Thomas argued that the ACI law library had been provided copies of Department policy manuals only in the last thirty to forty-five days, that the thirty-day time limit was a recent change in policy, and that prisoners had not been notified of the change in policy. On October 30, 1998, the Chief Inspector denied Thomas relief, determining that the grievance was filed too late and that information regarding the Department’s new time-limit policy was available in the law library. Accordingly, the decision of the Chief Inspector stated, “This Office will take no further action in regard to your complaint at this time.” J.A. at 35.
Thomas filed a complaint in state court on November 5, 1998, against Woolum and John Does and Jane Does, alleging that Woolum applied excessive force and that the John Does and Jane Does failed to protect Thomas and prevent the beating. Thomas claims that during discovery for the state-court action, he learned that Kepler, Starcher, and Waddell were present during the beating and failed to protect him. Indeed, statements that officers had filed with their incident reports and the Use of Force investigation —
The state court action against Woolum and the John Does and Jane Does was then dismissed without prejudice on October 20, 1999, and Thomas filed the original complaint in U.S. District Court on October 22, 1999. This time, Thomas sued not John Does and Jane Does, but armed with the information obtained in state court discovery, instead sued Woolum, Kepler, Starcher, and Waddell. After briefing, the district court ruled that Thomas had not exhausted his remedies with respect to Kepler, Starcher, and Waddell. Thomas’s grievance form, the District Court reasoned, was “against defendant Woolum,” not the other defendants, J.A. at 114, so although the court eventually awarded Thomas $70,000 on his claim against Woolum, it dismissed his claims against Kepler, Starcher, and Waddell for failure to exhaust.
Thomas appealed the dismissal of his claims against the other defendants. The defendants now offer two ways in which Thomas failed to exhaust his remedies against Kepler, Starcher, and Waddell: (1) that we may not look at Thomas’s state prison grievance at all, and (2) that his grievance was insufficient to exhaust his claims. First, the defendants argue that Thomas failed to exhaust his administrative remedies because he did not file his grievance regarding the November 5, 1997 beating until May of 1998, after the thirty-
II. COMPLIANCE WITH STATE PROCEDURAL REQUIREMENTS
The Prison Litigation Reform Act prohibits inmates from challenging prison conditions in federal courts until they have exhausted their available administrative remedies.
A. Exhaustion and the PLRA
By requiring prisoners who challenge the conditions of their confinement to exhaust first their state administrative remedies, the PLRA grants state prison systems the initial opportunity to address their internal problems. Whereas parts of the PLRA aim to ease the burden that meritless prisoner lawsuits impose on state law-enforcement officials and the federal docket, see, e.g.,
Because the purpose of the exhaustion requirement is to provide states the first opportunity to resolve problems themselves, an inmate who has not pursued available administrative remedies may not yet proceed in federal court. Thus, we have clearly held that an inmate does not exhaust available administrative remedies when the inmate entirely fails to invoke the prison’s grievance procedure, see Hartsfield v. Vidor, 199 F.3d 305, 308-09 (6th Cir. 1999); Brown v. Toombs, 139 F.3d 1102, 1104 (6th Cir.), cert. denied, 525 U.S. 833 (1998), or when the inmate filed such a grievance but “did not appeal the denial of that complaint to the highest possible administrative level,” Wright v. Morris, 111 F.3d 414, 417 n.3 (6th Cir.), cert. denied, 522 U.S. 906 (1997); see also Freeman v. Francis, 196 F.3d 641, 645 (6th Cir. 1999). However, we have not previously ruled in a published opinion1 that an inmate fails to exhaust his or her available administrative remedies when the inmate invokes the prison’s grievance system initially and appeals the denial of that grievance, but is time barred by the prison’s administrative procedures.
Here, however, Thomas filed a grievance in the prison’s formal grievance process, and once that grievance was denied, Thomas appealed as far as he could. He had quite literally exhausted his ability to go any further within the internal prison system. There were no more avenues to travel within the state prison system. If Thomas had failed to file, the state
B. Exhaustion and State Procedural Rules
In two similar statutory contexts requiring resort to state administrative procedures, the Supreme Court has specifically held that a plaintiff’s failure to comply with state statutes of limitations cannot prevent the plaintiff from proceeding to federal court.2 Both the Age Discrimination in Employment Act and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 require plaintiffs to present their grievances in the relevant state
For both of those frameworks, the Supreme Court relied on three primary arguments to conclude that failure to comply with state time limits could not prevent the plaintiff from coming to federal court. All three arguments are applicable in the present case. First, the Court found in both instances that the absence of any mention in the statutes’ text of any requirement of timeliness under state law indicated Congress’s intent that state time requirements could not bar the federal claims. In both cases, the Court insisted that such a requirement could be imposed only by explicit mention. See Oscar Mayer, 441 U.S. at 759 (“In particular, there is no requirement [in the ADEA] that, in order to commence state proceedings and thereby preserve federal rights, the grievant must file with the State within whatever time limits are specified by state law.”); Commercial Office Prods., 486 U.S. at 124 (“Title VII, like the ADEA, contains no express reference to timeliness under state law.”). Second, the Court emphasized that state statutes of limitations should not serve as a bar to federal court “‘in a statutory scheme in which laymen, unassisted by trained lawyers, initiate the process.’” Oscar Mayer, 441 U.S. at 761 (quoting Love v. Pullman Co., 404 U.S. 522, 527 (1972)); accord Commercial Office Prods., 486 U.S. at 124. Third, the Court reasoned that state
The latter two arguments unquestionably apply with equal force in the context of the PLRA. First, the prison grievant is generally the epitome of the layperson, unassisted by a trained lawyer, seeking to invoke the legal process. Further, if states may not use administrative time limits to defeat an ADEA or a Title VII claim, they should not be able to defeat a claim under the Civil Rights Act of 1871, Congress’s preeminent declaration that state officials may not undermine federal law. “A major factor motivating the expansion of federal jurisdiction through [the predecessor to
Thus the only question is whether the language of
In the case of an alleged unlawful employment practice occurring in a State, or political subdivision of a State, which has a State or local law prohibiting the unlawful employment practice alleged and establishing or authorizing a State or local authority to grant or seek relief from such practice or to institute criminal proceedings with respect thereto upon receiving notice thereof, no charge may be filed under subsection [(b)] of this section by the person aggrieved before the expiration of sixty days after proceedings have been commenced under the State or local law, unless such proceedings have been earlier terminated, provided that such sixty-day period shall be extended to one hundred and twenty days during the first year after the effective date of such State or local law. If any requirement for the commencement of such proceedings is imposed by a State or local authority other than a requirement of the filing of a written and signed statement of the facts upon which the proceeding is based, the proceeding shall be deemed to have been commenced for the purposes of this subsection at the time such statement is sent by registered mail to the appropriate State or local authority.
In a number of cases, the Supreme Court has suggested that exhaustion is the antonym of commencement. Whereas commencement requires the plaintiff to begin, exhaustion
With the PLRA, Congress could have required more than an exhaustion requirement, but it chose not to. Congress could have, for example, required in
To reach the contrary conclusion, we would have to impose a judicially created procedural default rule, going well beyond the exhaustion rule that Congress imposed with the PLRA and contravening the Supreme Court’s explicit instructions in the Oscar Mayer line of cases. This may be a tempting and common mistake, but it is a mistake nonetheless, as Coleman v. Thompson, 501 U.S. 722 (1991), shows. In discussing a habeas petitioner who filed an untimely notice of appeal in state court, the Court in Coleman reasons, “A habeas petitioner who has defaulted his federal claims in state court meets the technical requirements for exhaustion; there are no state remedies any longer ‘available’ to him.” Id. at 732. That is, by filing the notice of appeal, even though untimely, the petitioner had exhausted his state remedies. The petitioner failed not because he had failed to exhaust his remedies, but because he had procedurally defaulted them. See id. (“In the absence of the independent and adequate state ground doctrine in federal habeas, habeas petitioners would be able to avoid the exhaustion requirement by defaulting their federal claims in state court.”) (emphasis added). Procedural default is thus distinct from the exhaustion requirement, an additional requirement added on top of exhaustion.
Although there may be an “interplay” between the two doctrines, O’Sullivan v. Boerckel, 526 U.S. 838, 848 (1999),
Thus the only ground for barring a federal § 1983 suit due to an untimely prison grievance is that we would otherwise render prison grievance procedures irrelevant. If a prisoner knows that he or she may file a federal suit by filing an untimely grievance, the argument goes, prisoners will have an incentive to bypass the prison grievance process by waiting until its deadline has passed, filing an untimely grievance, and then proceeding to federal court. Indeed, the Seventh Circuit appears to have relied on this policy argument in holding that an untimely grievance will bar a § 1983 suit. See Pozo v. McCaughtry, 286 F.3d 1022, 1025 (7th Cir.), cert. denied, 537 U.S. 949 (2002). However, not only does this argument sweep aside the meaning of exhaustion, it is an
III. EXHAUSTION OF CLAIMS
Although a grievance that is untimely under prison rules still gives state prison officials an opportunity to address an inmate’s complaints, a grievance that does not give officials notice of the nature of the inmate’s grievance does not afford the officials the opportunity the PLRA requires. Thomas argues that between his official grievance form and his cooperation with the prison’s Use of Force investigation, in which he specifically mentioned the presence of other officers who failed to protect him, he gave prison officials sufficient notice for them to address his concerns in the grievance process. True though that may be, our cases require more. Because Thomas made no reference to the issues involved in his failure-to-protect claim in his grievance, we must find that he failed to exhaust his administrative remedies with respect to the claims against Kepler, Starcher, and Waddell.
Thomas’s grievance form does not offer the kind of information that our precedent requires for exhausting his claims against Kepler, Starcher, and Waddell. Thomas’s grievance mentions neither the defendants themselves nor any facts suggesting that officers other than Woolum knew anything of the incident. Thomas was indisputably aware of the other officers’ presence at the time, as he mentioned them in the incident report he filed the day after the beating, so this case falls under the rule of Curry v. Scott, 249 F.3d 493 (6th Cir. 2001), which requires that “a prisoner file a grievance against the person he ultimately seeks to sue,” id. at 505. Similarly, in Hartsfield v. Vidor, we ruled that a prisoner who named three officers in his grievance, and who could have but
Thomas suggests that his deficient grievance notwithstanding, he satisfied the exhaustion requirement by participating fully in the prison’s internal investigation. Indeed, the day after the attack, Thomas told prison officials that Officer Waddell and other officers had witnessed Officer Woolum’s actions, a notification that — when combined with Thomas’s subsequent filing of an official grievance regarding the incident — would seem to accomplish many purposes of the PLRA’s exhaustion requirement. However, it is no longer sufficient for an inmate simply to give prison officials notice of the complaint by cooperating with other investigations, as was sufficient in such pre-PLRA “substantial compliance” cases as Wolff v. Moore, 199 F.3d 324, 329 (6th Cir. 1999). In our post-PLRA cases we have emphasized that “the exhaustion requirement in
IV. CONCLUSION
Had Thomas’s grievance pointed prison officials to the alleged presence of other officers when Officer Woolum was beating him, it would have given the officials a sufficient opportunity to investigate the other officers’ actions. The prison may have declined that opportunity, as it prefers to address only those grievances filed within a particular time limit. But the prison would have been given the opportunity, which is all that
CONCURRENCE
RONALD LEE GILMAN, Circuit Judge, concurring. I fully concur in Judge Moore’s opinion. My purpose in writing separately is to acknowledge the difficulty of the issue before us and to explain why I believe that Judge Rosen’s opinion is less persuasive in interpreting what it means to exhaust “available administrative remedies” under the PLRA.
To begin with, I must confess that I find the question of whether a prisoner must comply with the prison’s administrative deadlines as a precondition to filing a § 1983 action in federal court to be extremely difficult. I have indeed flip-flopped on this issue during the course of extensive deliberations with my two erudite colleagues, no doubt to the frustration of them both. The assertiveness of Judge Rosen’s opinion is more than sufficient to give anyone pause, especially his accusations that we have issued an “invitation to chaos and delay” (Dissenting Op. at 30), “abandon[ed] all notions of judicial restraint” (id. at 31), provided “a classic example of judicial meddling” (id. at 31), and engaged in “thinly-veiled policymaking” (id. at 32). In the end, however, I find that these sweeping generalizations generate more heat than light, and that his position is actually the more “activist” in an expansive interpretation of the PLRA beyond Congress’s language and the Supreme Court’s precedents.
The heart of the problem is that the failure to apply the concept of procedural default to a prison’s administrative deadlines will, in cases such as the one before us, obligate the federal courts to deal with the § 1983 issues without the benefit of the state’s administrative consideration on the merits. This makes the issue difficult for me because, were I a legislator, I would think it sound policy to require prisoners to comply with reasonable administrative deadlines. On the other hand, as pointed out by Judge Moore, this legitimate
In deciding this issue, the two factors that ultimately persuade me are that (1) Congress could have, but did not, specify that a prisoner’s failure to comply with the prison’s reasonable time limitations would result in a procedural default (see Maj. Op. at 16-17), and (2) Supreme Court precedents continue to distinguish between the concepts of exhaustion of remedies and procedural default. Congress, if it desires a different outcome, is clearly able to make an appropriate amendment to the PLRA. Judge Rosen or I might have drafted the current statute differently, but we are not legislators. As a judge on the court of appeals, I do not feel that I should attempt to alter the PLRA as it presently stands.
Judge Rosen obviously subscribes to a different analysis. In his opinion, the concept of procedural default is built into the concept of exhaustion of remedies. But the Supreme Court cases that he relies on — Boerckel, Carpenter, and Coleman — do not, in my opinion, support his analysis.
Judge Rosen, for example, quotes the Supreme Court’s statement in O’Sullivan v. Boerckel, 526 U.S. 838 (1999), that “we ask not only whether a prisoner has exhausted his state remedies, but also whether he has properly exhausted those remedies.” Id. at 848 (emphasis in original). If procedural default were a necessary component of exhaustion in the habeas corpus context (rather than an independent, complementary doctrine), this sentence would make no sense. The Supreme Court would instead have simply stated: “We ask whether a prisoner has exhausted his state remedies.” What the Supreme Court actually said, however, is that “we
In the final analysis, my policymaker heart yearns for the result proposed by Judge Rosen, but my judicial head tells me that Judge Moore has reached the correct result. Our legal system requires us to heed the words of Congress as interpreted by applicable Supreme Court precedent. Until Congress changes the law or the Supreme Court corrects our interpretation of its language, I am unwilling to read the concept of procedural default into the PLRA.
CONCURRING IN PART, DISSENTING IN PART
ROSEN, District Judge, dissenting in part and concurring in the judgment.
With one bold stroke, the lead opinion stands much of this Circuit’s existing precedent on administrative exhaustion on its head, holding that administratively established filing deadlines mean nothing in a prisoner’s effort to exhaust his remedies before commencing a § 1983 suit. By permitting inmates to thumb their noses at such time limits, the lead opinion thoroughly disables prison grievance systems as meaningful tools for dispute resolution — a result deemed unacceptable by every other Circuit that has addressed the timeliness issue to date. More importantly, this result is wholly at odds with Congress’s intent in enacting the Prison Litigation Reform Act (“PLRA”) and amending
Still worse, however, is that this departure from precedent and congressional intent is utterly unnecessary to our ultimate judgment in this case. The District Court plainly must be affirmed here, on the obvious ground that Plaintiff/Appellant Douglas Thomas failed to exhaust his remedies against those Defendants/Appellees who were not even mentioned in his prison grievance. The lead opinion ultimately reaches precisely this conclusion, and I fully concur on this point. But first, the lead opinion goes out of its way to rewrite the law on a different issue, notwithstanding its lack of bearing upon the outcome of this case. Rather, the mischief is wholly prospective — and, I might note, crafted in such a way as to seemingly insulate it from further review.
The issue upon which I part company with my colleagues is easily stated — whether an inmate presumptively must
Yet, the lead opinion explains that this case is different, because it involves a late filing at the threshold of the administrative process, rather than a failure to proceed to the next level of this process. And, indeed, this is a distinction — an inmate who fails to pursue an administrative appeal has exhausted at least some available remedies, while a prisoner whose grievance is properly rejected as untimely (as happened here) has exhausted none. Nevertheless, in the Alice-in-Wonderland world conjured up in the lead opinion, the latter course now is favored over the former in this Circuit.
Or is it? In cases which formerly were controlled by our procedural default decisions, the lead opinion now provides an open-ended opportunity for inmates to cure any sort of procedural default that a court might identify. After all, dismissal in such cases is without prejudice, see Brown v. Toombs, 139 F.3d 1102, 1104 (6th Cir.), cert. denied, 525 U.S. 833 (1998), and, after today, inmates are no longer bound by administrative deadlines of any sort. Consequently, if a prisoner’s case is dismissed for failure to proceed through all steps of the administrative process, the inmate now can
Indeed, this invitation to chaos and delay must, of necessity, be a two-way street. If prisoners no longer are bound by deadlines, the same surely must be true for prison administrators. Although prison regulations often call for decisions to be reached within a specified time frame, administrators presumably may now withhold their rulings indefinitely, and then argue that any § 1983 suit is premature until a decision eventually is forthcoming. In the event that a court might conclude differently, prison administrators could simply rewrite their regulations to remove any time limits upon their decisionmaking process. We could hardly complain, given the lack of significance that the lead opinion places upon administrative deadlines, and given the nefarious motives it ascribes to prison administrators who seek to enforce such deadlines.
Here lies the root of my disagreement with the lead opinion — it seemingly views time limits as mere traps for the unwary, and utterly fails to acknowledge that procedural deadlines serve the legitimate interests of both sides to a dispute. This undoubtedly is why such limits are a standard feature of virtually every dispute resolution process of which I am aware. As a quid pro quo for their strict and uniform adherence to these deadlines, parties are assured that their dispute will be promptly resolved, and that justice will not be effectively denied through interminable delay. This interest is particularly compelling here, where the core purpose of § 1997e(a)’s exhaustion requirement is to ensure that prisoner grievances are resolved administratively to the greatest extent possible. See Porter v. Nussle, 534 U.S. 516, 525 (2002). While I do not question the sincerity of the lead opinion’s view that this purpose is served by
As a result, today’s decision is a classic example of judicial meddling, with this panel substituting its own policy judgment in place of the far different one made by Congress in enacting
To what end does the lead opinion abandon all notions of judicial restraint and overturn this settled understanding of administrative exhaustion? Presumably, the lead opinion means to ensure that future prisoner § 1983 suits do not fall victim to the cunning device of administrative filing deadlines. Never mind that there is no record before us of any large-scale, or even occasional, difficulty in complying with such deadlines — fully seven years after Congress amended § 1997e(a) in 1996, we publish a decision on this issue for the
In my view, it is precisely this sort of thinly-veiled policymaking that leads Congress to ever more curtail our judicial discretion. Indeed, Congress did just that in amending § 1997e(a) through the PLRA, enacting a mandatory provision which eliminated the courts’ prior “discretion to dispense with administrative exhaustion” and imposed “an obviously broader exhaustion requirement.” Booth v. Churner, 532 U.S. 731, 739, 741 (2001). Upon reviewing this legislation, the Supreme Court concluded that Congress “may well have thought we were shortsighted” in prior decisions which tended to downplay the value of administrative exhaustion. Booth, 532 U.S. at 737. If so, Congress surely will be chagrined by today’s result, which opens the courts to even more claims that have never been addressed on the merits in a prison’s administrative grievance system.1 Accordingly, I dissent from the Court’s ruling on the timeliness issue, and concur only in its judgment affirming the District Court.
I.
I begin with what seems to me an obvious point — that the decision upon which the lead opinion principally relies, the decades-old Oscar Mayer & Co. v. Evans, 441 U.S. 750 (1979), is not the first place one would look for guidance in construing the exhaustion requirement of
Any analysis of
No action shall be brought with respect to prison conditions under
section 1983 of this title, or any other Federal law, by a prisoner confined in any jail, prison, or other correctional facility until such administrative remedies as are available are exhausted.
Given the clear command of
While the modifier “available” requires the possibility of some relief for the action complained of . . . , the word “exhausted” has a decidedly procedural emphasis. It makes sense only in referring to the procedural means, not the particular relief ordered. It would, for example, be very strange usage to say that a prisoner must “exhaust” an administrative order reassigning an abusive guard before a prisoner could go to court and ask for something else; or to say (in States that award money damages administratively) that a prisoner must “exhaust” his damages award before going to court for more. How would he “exhaust” a transfer of personnel? Would he
have to spend the money to “exhaust” the monetary relief given him? It makes no sense to demand that someone exhaust “such administrative [redress]” as is available; one “exhausts” processes, not forms of relief, and the statute provides that one must.
This Circuit’s precedents reflect a similar understanding of the nature of
In Hartsfield, for example, the plaintiff prisoner, Napoleon Hartsfield, complained that he had been unlawfully placed in top-of-bed restraints for eighteen hours. Hartsfield contended that he had submitted an administrative grievance a day after the incident, but he produced no evidence of this filing. Instead, the record disclosed that Hartsfield had written to the grievance coordinator about two weeks later, stating that he had not been provided with a receipt for or response to his grievance. The grievance coordinator responded the next day that no grievance had been received, and that Hartsfield would have to refile. He chose instead to bring a § 1983 suit, and to pursue an administrative appeal only after a Magistrate Judge had instructed the parties to brief the issue of exhaustion. A prison official refused to allow this appeal, absent proof that Hartsfield had ever filed an initial administrative grievance.
Under this record, Hartsfield argued that his attempts at administrative exhaustion should be deemed to satisfy the
Even if plaintiff did file an initial grievance . . . , he was required to continue to the next step in the grievance process within the time frame set forth in the regulations if no response is received from prison officials or if the prisoner is not satisfied with the response. We have previously held that an inmate cannot simply fail to file a grievance or abandon the process before completion and claim that he has exhausted his remedies or that it is futile for him to do so because his grievance is now time-barred under the regulations. Wright v. Morris, 111 F.3d 414, 417 n.3 (6th Cir.), cert. denied, 522 U.S. 906 (1997). Plaintiff should have either refiled his grievance when he was informed . . . that the prison had no record of the grievance or provided [a] receipt[] . . . so he could have proceeded with an [administrative] appeal. We find, therefore, that plaintiff did not exhaust his administrative remedies . . . .
Hartsfield, 199 F.3d at 309 (emphasis added); see also Freeman, 196 F.3d at 645 (recognizing that the plaintiff prisoner “made some attempts to go through the prison’s grievance procedures,” but ordering dismissal because the plaintiff “filed his federal complaint before allowing the administrative process to be completed”).
As noted in Hartsfield, we first endorsed this rule of complete exhaustion in Wright, 111 F.3d at 417 n.3. One of the plaintiff prisoners in Wright had filed an administrative grievance, but had not appealed the denial of this grievance through the entire administrative process. The inmate contended that he had exhausted all “available” remedies within the meaning of
It is clear, however, that in the usual case in the future, where the alleged violations occurred after the PLRA’s enactment, and inmates have both notice that exhaustion is required and a reasonable opportunity to file complaints, it would be contrary to Congress’s intent in enacting the PLRA to allow inmates to bypass the exhaustion requirement by declining to file administrative complaints and then claiming that administrative remedies are time-barred and thus not then available.
Wright, 111 F.3d at 417 n.3 (emphasis added); see also Hrynczyn v. Mitchell, No. 00-4320, 2001 WL 1299027, at *1 (6th Cir. Aug. 9, 2001) (rejecting a prisoner’s argument that no administrative remedies were available because any grievance he filed would be dismissed as untimely).
Indeed, this Court has insisted that inmates be resourceful in their efforts to comply with prison grievance procedures. In Jones v. Smith, 266 F.3d 399, 400 (6th Cir. 2001), for instance, the plaintiff prisoner claimed that he had asked for a grievance form, but was told by a prison counselor to “get out of his office.” We affirmed the dismissal of the case for failure to exhaust administrative remedies, reasoning that the plaintiff did “not allege that there was no other source for obtaining a grievance form or that he made any other attempt to obtain a form or to file a grievance without a form.” Jones, 266 F.3d at 400. More generally, we have placed the burden upon prisoners to “allege and show that they have exhausted all available state administrative remedies,” and have instructed that “[d]istrict courts should enforce the exhaustion requirement sua sponte if not raised by the defendant.” Brown, supra, 139 F.3d at 1104.
Under these precedents, then, once a prison’s filing deadline has passed, an inmate cannot simply dispense with
As a matter of brute fact, Thomas’s untimely filing in this case produced absolutely no benefit over an outright failure to file. His grievance was rejected as submitted outside the prison’s 30-day limit, and there was no administrative review of his complaints on the merits. As a result, none of the aims of
This “opportunity-based” theory of exhaustion, however, improperly shifts the burden from inmates to prison officials, requiring that the latter seize upon any chance to address any complaint that a prisoner might raise at any time and through any means. As such, the lead opinion’s reasoning runs counter to our precedents, which have consistently construed
The present case perfectly illustrates the important distinction between internal use-of-force investigations and prisoner grievances. The Ohio prison officials themselves initiated an investigation of Thomas’s beating, and a use-of-force committee concluded that Defendant Shawn Woolum had acted contrary to prison regulations in his assault on Thomas. Following this investigation, the prison authorities addressed the problem as they perceived it by discharging Woolum. If Thomas desired a broader inquiry or additional relief, whether from Woolum or others, it behooved him to file an administrative grievance bringing these matters to the attention of prison officials. Yet, under the lead opinion’s broadest statement of its holding, Thomas need not have filed a grievance at all, so long as prison officials had the “opportunity” to discern what his complaints might be and address them. Such a rule is simply irreconcilable with this Court’s prior decisions, which require a good deal more from the inmate himself before he may commence a § 1983 suit.
Perhaps, however, the lead opinion means to endorse a more limited rule, under which a prison official’s “opportunity” to address an inmate’s complaint must be triggered by the inmate’s filing of a grievance, whether or not
This Court first considered this question in Qawi v. Stegall, No. 98-1402, 211 F.3d 1270, 2000 WL 571919 (6th Cir. May 3, 2000). In that case, the plaintiff prisoner’s administrative grievance was rejected as untimely, but he argued that this delay should be excused as a result of his good faith efforts to resolve the matter informally. We held that the plaintiff had failed to exhaust his administrative remedies, observing that his grievance was untimely even under the prison rules governing informal dispute resolution. Similarly, in Jacobs v. Wilkinson, No. 00-3212, 2001 WL 1298979 (6th Cir. Aug. 8, 2001), the plaintiff inmate complained of two incidents — his grievance as to the first had been dismissed as untimely, and he had submitted only an informal complaint as to the second. We found that the plaintiff had failed to exhaust his administrative remedies as to either of his two complaints, making no distinction between his untimely grievance and his outright failure to file a grievance.
As noted, three of our sister Circuits have reached the same conclusion. First, in Marsh, supra, the Fifth Circuit upheld the dismissal of a prisoner’s § 1983 suit for failure to exhaust administrative remedies under the pre-PLRA version of § 1997e(a), where the inmate’s administrative grievance had been dismissed as untimely filed more than 30 days after the incident of which she complained. Although the version of
III. EXHAUSTION OF CLAIMS
Although a grievance that is untimely under prison rules still gives state prison officials an opportunity to address an inmate’s complaints, a grievance that does not give officials notice of the nature of the inmate’s grievance does not afford the officials the opportunity the PLRA requires. Thomas argues that between his official grievance form and his cooperation with the prison’s Use of Force investigation, in which he specifically mentioned the presence of other officers who failed to protect him, he gave prison officials sufficient notice for them to address his concerns in the grievance process. True though that may be, our cases require more. Because Thomas made no reference to the issues involved in his failure-to-protect claim in his grievance, we must find that he failed to exhaust his administrative remedies with respect to the claims against Kepler, Starcher, and Waddell.
Thomas’s grievance form does not offer the kind of information that our precedent requires for exhausting his claims against Kepler, Starcher, and Waddell. Thomas’s grievance mentions neither the defendants themselves nor any facts suggesting that officers other than Woolum knew anything of the incident. Thomas was indisputably aware of the other officers’ presence at the time, as he mentioned them in the incident report he filed the day after the beating, so this case falls under the rule of Curry v. Scott, 249 F.3d 493 (6th Cir. 2001), which requires that “a prisoner file a grievance against the person he ultimately seeks to sue,” id. at 505. Similarly, in Hartsfield v. Vidor, we ruled that a prisoner who named three officers in his grievance, and who could have but
Thomas suggests that his deficient grievance notwithstanding, he satisfied the exhaustion requirement by participating fully in the prison’s internal investigation. Indeed, the day after the attack, Thomas told prison officials that Officer Waddell and other officers had witnessed Officer Woolum’s actions, a notification that — when combined with Thomas’s subsequent filing of an official grievance regarding the incident — would seem to accomplish many purposes of the PLRA’s exhaustion requirement. However, it is no longer sufficient for an inmate simply to give prison officials notice of the complaint by cooperating with other investigations, as was sufficient in such pre-PLRA “substantial compliance” cases as Wolff v. Moore, 199 F.3d 324, 329 (6th Cir. 1999). In our post-PLRA cases we have emphasized that “the exhaustion requirement in
IV. CONCLUSION
Had Thomas’s grievance pointed prison officials to the alleged presence of other officers when Officer Woolum was beating him, it would have given the officials a sufficient opportunity to investigate the other officers’ actions. The prison may have declined that opportunity, as it prefers to address only those grievances filed within a particular time limit. But the prison would have been given the opportunity, which is all that
Because the prison had already rejected [the plaintiff‘s] administrative grievance as untimely, her administrative remedies were foreclosed, and a continuance would have served no purpose. When a section 1997e continuance would serve no purpose, a district court still has the power to dismiss a prisoner‘s suit under section 1997e for failure to exhaust administrative remedies . . . . Without the prospect of a dismissal with prejudice, a prisoner could evade the exhaustion requirement by filing no administrative grievance or by intentionally filing an untimely one, thereby foreclosing administrative remedies and gaining access to a federal forum without exhausting administrative remedies. Thus, we hold that a district court has the power to dismiss a prisoner‘s section 1983 suit under section 1997e even when administrative relief is time-barred or otherwise precluded.
Marsh, 53 F.3d at 710 (citations and footnote omitted).2
The Eleventh Circuit also has held that an untimely grievance generally does not satisfy
Most recently, the Seventh Circuit has joined in this consensus, construing
[T]his 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.
Pozo, 286 F.3d at 1025. More generally, the Seventh Circuit reasoned that judicial disregard for prison grievance procedures
would allow a prisoner to “exhaust” state remedies by spurning them, which would defeat the 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.
286 F.3d at 1023-24 (citations omitted).3
Thus, prior to the lead opinion‘s ruling today, every court that has considered the matter has concluded that an untimely grievance which is rejected as such by prison officials does not satisfy the exhaustion requirement of
II.
Whether a state prisoner wishes to bring a
Specifically, in Coleman v. Thompson, 501 U.S. 722, 111 S. Ct. 2546 (1991), the Court considered the effect of a death row prisoner filing his state court notice of appeal a mere three days after the 30-day deadline imposed by the governing Virginia court rule. In light of this untimely submission, the Virginia Supreme Court dismissed the prisoner‘s appeal without reaching the merits. The U.S. Supreme Court recognized that the prisoner‘s delayed filing — a defect legally tantamount to an outright “failure to appeal at all” — was “no doubt” a result of “inadvertent error.” Coleman, 501 U.S. at 749, 750, 111 S. Ct. at 2564, 2565. Nonetheless, the Court held that federal habeas review was
The import of Coleman to the question presented here seems plain enough. In that case, a filing three days past a state court deadline led the Supreme Court to hold that a death row prisoner had forfeited his opportunity to obtain federal court review of the constitutionality of his continued detention and sentence. The only relevant statutory prerequisite to such habeas relief was that the prisoner must have exhausted the remedies available to him in the state courts. It readily follows, in my view, that a filing past an administrative deadline presumptively precludes an inmate from establishing the nearly identical statutory prerequisite for commencement of a
In addition, while the lead opinion relies heavily upon policy arguments gleaned from the Supreme Court‘s Oscar Mayer decision, it barely acknowledges (and largely misconstrues) the much more pertinent policy considerations set forth in Coleman. Having previously held, for example, that a state prisoner‘s federal habeas suit failed for lack of
eliminat[ing] inconsistency between the respect federal courts show for state procedural rules and the respect they show for their own. This Court has long understood the vital interest served by federal procedural rules, even when they serve to bar federal review of constitutional claims . . . . No less respect should be given to state rules of procedure.
Coleman, 501 U.S. at 751, 111 S. Ct. at 2565-66 (citations omitted). More generally, the Court explained that its strict insistence upon exhaustion in the habeas context was “grounded in principles of comity; in a federal system, the States should have the first opportunity to address and correct alleged violations of [a] state prisoner‘s federal rights.” Coleman, 501 U.S. at 731, 111 S. Ct. at 2555. All of this readily carries over to the present context, in light of the Supreme Court‘s admonition that “prison administrators . . . , and not the courts, [are] to make the difficult judgments concerning institutional operations.” Turner v. Safley, 482 U.S. 78, 89, 107 S. Ct. 2254, 2261 (1987) (internal quotations and citation omitted).5
In any event, the lead opinion arrives at the wrong answer by asking the wrong question. Section
Nevertheless, through adroit deconstruction, the lead opinion endeavors to show that Coleman supports its conclusion here. In particular, the lead opinion focuses on portions (though not the entirety) of the following passage from that decision:
Just as in those cases in which a state prisoner fails to exhaust state remedies, a habeas petitioner who has failed to meet the State‘s procedural requirements for presenting his federal claims has deprived the state courts of an opportunity to address those claims in the first instance. A habeas petitioner who has defaulted his federal claims in state court meets the technical requirements for exhaustion; there are no state remedies any longer “available” to him. In the absence of the independent and adequate state ground doctrine in federal habeas, habeas petitioners would be able to avoid the exhaustion requirement by defaulting their federal claims in state court. The independent and adequate state ground doctrine ensures that the States’ interest in correcting their own mistakes is respected in all federal habeas cases.
Coleman, 501 U.S. at 731-32, 111 S. Ct. at 2555 (citations omitted). From this language, the lead opinion surmises that untimely filing does not directly equate with lack of exhaustion, but that it bars habeas relief only by virtue of the distinct “independent and adequate state ground” or
I find this reasoning wholly unpersuasive, for two reasons. First, to whatever extent Coleman can be read as distinguishing between procedural default and exhaustion,6 this distinction has been obliterated in subsequent Supreme Court habeas decisions. In O‘Sullivan, supra, for example, the Court considered the question whether a state prisoner must petition for discretionary review by a state supreme
To avoid this result, and thus protect the integrity of the federal exhaustion rule, we ask not only whether a prisoner has exhausted his state remedies, but also whether he has properly exhausted those remedies, i.e., whether he has fairly presented his claims to the state courts. Our disagreement with [the dissent] in this case turns on our differing answers to this last question: Whether a prisoner who fails to present his claims in a petition for discretionary review to a state court of last resort has properly presented his claims to the state courts. Because we answer this question “no,” we conclude that [state prisoner] Boerckel has procedurally defaulted his claims.
526 U.S. at 848, 119 S. Ct. at 1734 (internal quotations and citations omitted).
Apart from this express statement that the procedural default doctrine is a necessary component of the exhaustion rule, the Court interchangeably referred to the prisoner‘s failure in that case as a lack of exhaustion and a procedural default.7 Because Illinois authorizes petitions for
But perhaps even more to the point, and closer to home, the Supreme Court recently rejected this Circuit‘s continued recognition of a distinction between exhaustion and procedural default in the habeas context. In Carpenter v. Mohr, 163 F.3d 938, 944 (6th Cir. 1998), we had held that the District Court had “erroneously conflated the exhaustion requirement with the procedural default or waiver rule,” thereby merging two inquiries which were “analytically distinct.” In language which bears a striking similarity to the lead opinion‘s reasoning in this case, we stated that “the exhaustion requirement is satisfied even if a claim was procedurally defaulted in state court, because in such cases there are no longer remedies available for the petitioner to exhaust.” Carpenter, 163 F.3d at 944 (citing Coleman and other cases).
We recognized the inseparability of the exhaustion rule and the procedural default doctrine in Coleman . . . . We again considered the interplay between exhaustion and procedural default last Term in O‘Sullivan . . . , concluding that the latter doctrine was necessary to “‘protect the integrity’ of the federal exhaustion rule.” The purposes of the exhaustion requirement, we said, would be utterly defeated if the prisoner were able to obtain federal habeas review simply by “‘letting the time run‘” so that state remedies were no longer available. Those purposes would be no less frustrated were we to allow federal review to a prisoner who had presented his claim to the state court, but in such a manner that the state court could not, consistent with its own procedural rules, have entertained it. In such circumstances, though the prisoner would have “concededly exhausted his state remedies,” it could hardly be said that, as comity and federalism require, the State had been given a “fair ‘opportunity to pass upon [his claims].‘”
529 U.S. at 452-53, 120 S. Ct. at 1592 (emphasis added) (citations omitted).
Under federal habeas law, then, all that remains of any distinction between the exhaustion and procedural default rules is different terminology and separate historical lineages. While it is true that the Supreme Court had to make a choice whether to merge these two doctrines, the Court has readily
The lead opinion and concurrence insist that this reading of
III.
In my view, the above-cited authorities point uniformly and unmistakably toward the conclusion that timely filing is a necessary component of exhaustion under
Throughout its entire discussion of the timeliness issue, the lead opinion acknowledges only a single argument in support of the rule that inmates presumptively must comply with administrative time limits. In particular, the lead opinion proclaims that “the only ground for barring a federal
The various policy-based considerations that lurk beneath the surface of this analysis thwart the considered judgment and expressed will of Congress when it enacted
Further, Congress made no secret of its principal concern in making exhaustion mandatory. This Court and others have amply recounted the legislative history leading up to the 1996 amendment of
“Congress was primarily concerned about the rising number of lawsuits filed by prisoners and the perception that most of these suits were frivolous.” Cruz v. Jordan, 80 F. Supp. 2d 109, 113 (S.D.N.Y. 1999). See, e.g., 141 Cong. Rec. S14408-01, *S14414 (daily ed. Sept. 27, 1995) (statement of Senator Dole) (noting that prisoner suits increased from 6,600 in 1975 to over 39,000 in 1994 and included claims for “insufficient storage locker space, a defective haircut by a prison barber, the failure of prison officials to invite a prisoner to a pizza party for a departing prison employee, and . . . being served chunky peanut butter instead of the creamy variety.“); 141 Cong. Rec. S7498-01, *S7526 (daily ed. May 25, 1995) (statement of Senator Kyl) (stating that in 1994, prisoners brought more than one-fourth of all civil suits filed in the United States District Courts); Bernard D. Reams, Jr & William H. Manz, A Legislative History of the Prison Litigation Reform Act of 1996, Pub. L. No. 104-134, 110 Stat. 1321, Doc. 33, at 61 (noting that the short title given to the House measure containing the PLRA was “Stopping Abusive Prisoner Lawsuits“).
Cox v. Mayer, 332 F.3d 422, 2003 WL 21340291, at *3 (6th Cir. June 11, 2003); see also Wyatt v. Leonard, 193 F.3d 876, 878 (6th Cir. 1999) (“The 1996 Act is designed to deter frivolous lawsuits . . . .“). Likewise, the Eleventh Circuit has explained:
Congress enacted this mandatory exhaustion requirement in section 1997e(a) as part of the PLRA‘s effort to curtail frivolous and abusive prisoner litigation . . . . Congress did not enact the PLRA in a vacuum. It held hearings and rendered findings, concluding that prisoners file more frivolous lawsuits than any other class of persons. Congress found that the number of prisoner lawsuits has grown astronomically . . . . Congress intended section 1997e(a) to curtail the ability of prisoners to bring frivolous and malicious lawsuits by forcing prisoners to exhaust all administrative remedies before bringing suit in Federal court.
This recognition is notably lacking in the lead opinion‘s wishful thinking on incentives. The inmates least likely to adhere to a prison‘s time limits and other procedural rules are precisely those prisoners who are pursuing frivolous or abusive claims. Such prisoners, after all, would have nothing to lose in flouting prison procedures, because they would have no legitimate expectation of obtaining any remedy through the prison‘s grievance process. For such prisoners, it matters only that they reach the finish line of this process and secure their ticket to federal court, and today‘s ruling provides a handy shortcut for doing so. Thus, by presuming that inmates will pursue their administrative remedies in good faith, even if this Court does not insist that they do so, the lead opinion disregards the finding of Congress that prisoners all too often were not acting in good faith, and the judgment of Congress that this problem could best be addressed through a requirement of mandatory exhaustion.
Yet, as much as the lead opinion is prepared to assume that prisoners act in good faith, it is quite unwilling to make the same assumption about prison officials. Tellingly, in assessing the potential costs of its ruling and identifying the “one ground” that might militate against it, the lead opinion utterly fails to even allow for the possibility that prison officials might have good reasons for establishing deadlines for the filing of grievances. Even a moment‘s thought, however, would reveal several such reasons, including: (i) the inherent benefit of prompt investigation, while memories are still fresh and all involved inmates and prison employees remain at the facility;9 (ii) the desire to bring the entire matter, including all available internal appeals, to a
All of these benefits are lost, however, when deadlines are reduced to mere suggestions. To be sure, there may be some cases in which both sides act in enlightened good faith, and voluntarily agree to move promptly through the stages of the administrative process. As we judges well know, however,
In contrast, the worst cases invited by the lead opinion‘s rule promise to be very bad indeed. A prisoner who wishes to avoid the exhaustion requirement now has every incentive to wait as long as possible before filing a grievance, in order to enhance the likelihood that his submission will be rejected as untimely. The outer bound for this delay presumably is the statute of limitations for
Then, after this prolonged but essentially worthless administrative process has finally reached its conclusion, the courts would be left to address claims which have gone stale, and which in most cases have never been addressed on the merits, but which nonetheless have been fully “exhausted” as the lead opinion construes that term. Alternatively, in cases which do not meet even this lenient notion of “exhaustion,” a court‘s dismissal without prejudice under
Or consider this very case, in which we hold that Thomas‘s grievance setting forth his claims against Defendant Shawn Woolum did not serve to exhaust his claims against the remaining Defendants. I see nothing to prevent Thomas from
IV.
Against the foregoing weight of authority and reason in favor of the judiciary‘s presumptive respect for administrative filing deadlines, the lead opinion offers up the Supreme Court‘s Oscar Mayer decision as singlehandedly compelling the opposite result. Indeed, it appears that the lead opinion must cast its lot with Oscar Mayer, because no other case of which I am aware supports its view of exhaustion as mere termination by any means. Yet, even the most cursory review reveals that Oscar Mayer has nothing whatsoever to say about administrative exhaustion or the proper construction of
In Oscar Mayer, the Supreme Court addressed a lengthy, detailed, and highly idiosyncratic provision of the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (“ADEA“), requiring that a person must “commence[]” state proceedings at least sixty days before bringing a federal age discrimination suit:
In the case of an alleged unlawful practice occurring in a State which has a law prohibiting discrimination in employment because of age and establishing or authorizing a State authority to grant or seek relief from such discriminatory practice, no suit may be brought under section 626 of this title before the expiration of sixty days after proceedings have been commenced under the State law, unless such proceedings have been earlier terminated . . . . If any requirement for the commencement of such proceedings is imposed by a State authority other than a requirement of the filing of a written and signed statement of the facts upon which the proceeding is based, the proceeding shall be deemed to have been commenced for the purposes of this subsection at the time such statement is sent by registered mail to the appropriate State authority.
Although the lead opinion recites various policy considerations noted by the Court in reaching this decision, the ruling in Oscar Mayer rests first and foremost on the language of the statute itself. Initially, the Court observed that the use of the word “commenced” does not necessarily demand compliance with state filing deadlines, “since, by way of analogy, under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure even a time-barred action may be ‘commenced’ by the filing
The lead opinion does not address, or even acknowledge, this principal basis for the decision in Oscar Mayer. The statute in that case defined “commencement,” and decreed that the states could not impose any requirements for “commencement” beyond the bare filing of a statement of facts.18 Section
More generally, Oscar Mayer‘s express disavowal of any consideration of exhaustion principles presumably explains why, so far as I can tell, that decision has never been cited outside of its peculiar ADEA/Title VII context as any sort of authority on the meaning of administrative exhaustion. Indeed, Oscar Mayer does not state a rule of general applicability to administrative exhaustion even in the narrow context of employment discrimination law. In particular, the courts do insist that grievants comply with administrative time limits in order to pursue their employment discrimination claims in federal court. See Zipes v. Trans World Airlines, Inc., 455 U.S. 385, 393, 102 S. Ct. 1127, 1132 (1982). In a decision affirming the dismissal of a case in which a pro se plaintiff missed a Title VII filing deadline, the Supreme Court emphasized that “[p]rocedural requirements established by Congress for gaining access to the federal courts are not to be disregarded by courts out of a vague sympathy for particular litigants.” Baldwin County Welcome Center v. Brown, 466 U.S. 147, 152, 104 S. Ct. 1723, 1726 (1984). Although doctrines such as equitable tolling might excuse an untimely filing in a particular case, we have cautioned that such relief is “sparingly bestow[ed],”
I fail to see why we should favor the civil rights claims of prisoners over those of law-abiding citizens. In fact, the lead opinion‘s rule creates precisely the dilemma the Supreme Court sought to avoid in Coleman — in this Circuit, we respect federal procedural rules in employment discrimination cases, but not state procedural rules in prisoner
V.
In the end, the lead opinion‘s ruling on the issue of timeliness rests upon a smattering of policy-based observations in Oscar Mayer, wholly unmoored from the specific statutory context in which the Supreme Court ruled in that case. This is a far cry from the lead opinion‘s initial promise to resolve this question “in light of Congress‘s purpose in passing the PLRA,” (Lead Op. at 3) — which purpose the lead opinion then proceeds to discount — and in light of the Supreme Court‘s exhaustion precedents — which, as noted, recognize timeliness as an essential element of exhaustion. It is a strange form of “[j]udicial restraint,” (Lead Op. at 19-20 n.4), in my judgment, which reaches out to decide an unnecessary issue in a way that invites prisoners to circumvent the congressional mandate of exhaustion.
Notes
Days, 322 F.3d at 867-68 (footnote omitted).We, of course, do not hold that an untimely grievance in and of itself would render the system unavailable, thus excusing the exhaustion requirement. Such a holding would allow inmates to file suit in federal court despite intentionally evading the
PLRA‘s exhaustion requirement by failing to comply with the prison grievance system. See Harper v. Jenkin, 179 F.3d 1311, 1312 (11th Cir. 1999); see also Marsh v. Jones, 53 F.3d 707, 710 (5th Cir. 1995) (previous version of § 1997e ). We emphasize that our holding is limited to the narrow facts of this case. More specifically, administrative remedies are deemed unavailable when (1) an inmate‘s untimely filing of a grievance is because of a physical injury and (2) the grievance system rejects the inmate‘s subsequent attempt to exhaust his remedies based on the untimely filing of the grievance.
That Congress has instructed us to borrow a state’s statute of limitations on personal injury actions in no way implies that we should borrow a state prison’s administrative deadlines. The two deadlines serve very different purposes; whereas a state legislature’s incentives in setting its personal injury statute of limitations will be well balanced, a state prison’s incentives in setting a time limit on inmate grievances — especially if the limit would insulate prison officials from § 1983 suits — would likely lead to shorter and shorter limitations periods. Compare, e.g., Kentucky Corrections Policy 14.6(VI)(J) (requiring aggrieved inmate to file grievance within five days, and appeal within three days), with Collard v. Kentucky Bd. of Nursing, 896 F.2d 179, 182 (6th Cir. 1990) (recognizing statute of limitations for § 1983 actions at one year for those in Kentucky’s general population). Although state officials may have legitimate reasons for imposing deadlines on inmate grievances, there is no reason that a prison’s legitimate interest in, for example, conserving investigative resources must prohibit federal court jurisdiction.
Still another Circuit, like this one, has addressed the issue of untimely filing only in an unpublished decision. In Collins v. Federal Bureau of Prisons, No. 02-1503, 2003 WL 21380545 (10th Cir. June 16, 2003), the Tenth Circuit held that an inmate‘s “failure to meet the appropriate filing deadlines for administrative remedies constitutes a failure to exhaust those remedies.”However, the perception that the absence of procedural default guidelines in this area will result in prisoners purposefully not filing grievances within the deadlines in order to bypass the internal prison system is counterbalanced by the equally real concern that in the presence of procedural default standards, prison administrators will impose shorter and shorter deadlines measured in hours and days, because prisoners will then have no recourse to the federal courts if they miss even one deadline. Following the dictates of Congress and refraining from judicially imposing a procedural default mechanism where none was legislated best balances these concerns and maintains the mutually advantageous internal grievance system.
Both prisoners and prison administrators gain little from prisoners jumping right to federal court as opposed to utilizing the prison grievance system first, because internal resolution of disputes gives prisoners more of an opportunity for quick resolution of their problems. Judicial restraint, exercised by the majority by not grafting a procedural default requirement onto the PLRA, serves both prisoners and prisons here because it maintains the potential for federal recourse. As a result, prison officials will not make grievance deadlines unduly short, as they will establish timelines that are lengthy enough to permit administrators to evaluate grievances internally so as to avoid a trip to the federal courthouse. Prisoners in turn will have more time to meet deadlines and prepare their grievances.
Coleman also undermines the lead opinion‘s appeal to the presumption that Congress legislates with full awareness of the relevant Supreme Court precedents. (See Lead Op. at 16.) While I fully accept this proposition, I would suggest that Congress much more likely had Coleman than Oscar Mayer in mind when it enactedRather, Coleman plainly evidences the Court‘s recognition of the complementary nature of the exhaustion requirement and the procedural default rule — both are “grounded in principles of comity,” and the former would be rendered a nullity without the latter. 501 U.S. at 731-32, 111 S. Ct. at 2554-55. Thus, the Court equated “cases in which a state prisoner fails to exhaust state remedies” and those in which a prisoner “fail[s] to meet the State‘s procedural requirements for presenting his federal claims” — in either case, the inmate “has deprived the state courts of an opportunity to address those claims in the first instance.” 501 U.S. at 732, 111 S. Ct. at 2555. Moreover, the Court invoked the procedural default rule to ensure that prisoners did not “avoid the exhaustion requirement by defaulting their federal claims in state court,” 501 U.S. at 732, 111 S. Ct. at 2555 — precisely the reasoning which the various Courts of Appeals have employed in resolving the issue now before us, yet which the lead opinion summarily rejects as contrary to the purported views of the Supreme Court and the “meaning of exhaustion,” (Lead Op. at 18).
