Lead Opinion
This is a suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 by a Wisconsin state prisoner against prison officials and a former governor of the state, charging a variety of violations of the plaintiffs federal rights, only three of which need detain us: that the defendants conspired to keep him and other prisoners in prison beyond their mandatory release date; that the defendant prison officials retaliated against him for using the law library; and that they also retaliated against him for filing grievances complaining about prison conditions.
The district judge dismissed the suit for failure to state a claim. She based dismissal of the first of the plaintiffs charges on alternative grounds: that the complaint failed to allege an overt act, and that a federal suit complaining of the duration of a prisoner’s confinement must be brought under the habeas corpus statute. The second ground is of course solid, but the first is not. As the Supreme Court has recently reaffirmed, Swierkiewicz v. Sorema N.A.,
We did hold in Ryan v. Mary Immaculate Queen Center,
Nothing in the reasoning or result in Ryan compels a conclusion that the plaintiff in a conspiracy case must plead the overt act that is required — because without an overt act there is no injury from a conspiracy and hence no tort, Beck v. Prupis,
Of course, if it became apparent in the course of the litigation that there was no overt act, the plaintiffs suit would have to be dismissed; but a failure of proof is not a failure to state a claim. The plaintiff attached to his brief in this court a document claiming that there was indeed an overt act, namely a refusal to release him when his prison term expired. The document had not been submitted to the district court, but that is of no moment, in view of another rule repeatedly reaffirmed by this court — that an appellant complaining about the dismissal of his suit for failure to state a claim may hypothesize any set of facts consistent with the complaint that shows that the complaint states a claim. American Inter-Fidelity Exchange v. American Re-Insurance Co.,
Regarding the claim that the defendants retaliated against the plaintiff for using the law library by refusing tо let him exercise outside his cell, the district judge interpreted the plaintiff to be complaining merely about being forced to choose between use of the library and exercise. Anyone who has alternative uses for the same block of time is “forced” to choose between them. But thе complaint alleges more — that the plaintiff was denied out-of-cell exercise because he had exercised his constitutional right to seek access to the courts, and while this could just mean that he forewent exercise because he wanted to
The district judge also had alternative grounds for dismissing the plaintiffs claim of retaliation for filing grievances about prison conditions: failure to exhaust administrative remedies within the deadline provided by state law; and, again, failure to state a claim. The difference in grounds is potentially consequential. Dismissal for failure to exhaust is without prejudice and so does not bar the reinstatement of the suit unless it is too late to exhaust, Pozo v. McCaughtry,
The judge’s basis for holding that the plaintiff had failed to state a claim was, this time, nоt a defect in pleading, but that the plaintiff had failed to file his grievances on the forms provided for that purpose by the prison. But it is one thing to refuse to accept an improperly filed grievance and another to retaliate against the grievant (by, he alleges, instituting disciplinary proceedings against him). If the grievance is constitutionally protected speech, which on this record we must assume the plaintiffs grievances were (they might be protected by the speech or petition clauses of the First Amendment, Bradley v. Hall,
With regard to the alternative ground, the judge said that the plaintiff had faded to file a timely grievance. She may have been correct, but the record is hopelessly unclear on whether he did fail to file a timely grievance and, if so, whether any administrative rеmedy nevertheless remained open to him. Failure to exhaust administrative remedies is an affirmative defense, Massey v. Helman,
In this case, hоwever, unaided by an answer, the judge when she ruled did not have enough information to enable her to determine whether the plaintiff had exhausted his administrative remedies.
The judgment of the district court is affirmed in part and reversed in part and the case remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
I am in complete agreement with my colleagues that there are no special pleading requirements for civil rights matters. The Supreme Court made that proposition clear in Leatherman v. Tarrant County Narcotics Intelligence and Coordination Unit,
As my colleagues note, to satisfy the mandate of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 8(a)(2), a pleading merely must contain “a short and plain statement оf the claim showing that the pleader is entitled to relief.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 8(a)(2). Except in a limited set of cases,
In the wake of Swierkiewicz, this court has emphasized that there are no special pleading requirements in prisoners’ civil rights cases. See Higgs v. Carver,
In Higgs, we rejected a district court’s insistence on the allegatiоn of a “chronology of events” because that requirement, as understood and applied by the district court in that case, was at odds with the “plain statement” standard of pleading required by the rules. Indeed, in many, perhaps most, cases, requiring the pleading of a chronology of events will be аt odds with the liberal notice pleading requirements of Rule 8(a)(2). Plaintiffs, including prisoners, need not articulate detailed facts in order to state a claim for retaliation. A litany of particularized facts might be appropriate if the purpose of the complaint were to establish the plausibility of the plaintiffs allegations. But, as my colleagues note, the complaint is simply not designed to perform that function.
Having stated my agreement with the general proposition expressed in today’s opinion, I must also note that it would be an overstatement to assert that the pleading of a chronology of facts is, in all cases, symptomatic of adherence to a heightened pleading standard. As some of our cases make clear,
In short, in the context of a retaliation allegation, the obligation of adequate notice to the defendant is sometimes most easily accomplished by the statement of the essential events that constitute the retaliation. This situation arises especially when the alleged retaliation constitutes a series of acts, inconsequential in themselves, that in the aggregate constitute actionable retaliatory conduct.
Notes
. Rule 9(b) enumerates these exceptions. See Swierkiewicz,
. Indeed, courts often reference Form 9 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure Forms as an exemplar of the notice pleading requirements. See, e.g., Swierkiewicz,
. In Black v. Lane,
