ORDER
The opinion filed on October 11, 1989,
With these amendments the petition for rehearing is denied. The full court has been advised of the suggestion for en banc rehearing and no judge has requested a vote thereon. The suggestion for rehearing en banc is therefore rejected. Fed.R. App.P. 35(b).
OPINION
Robert Young, a Washington state prisoner, filed a complaint for damages pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1982), claiming that state officials had unconstitutionally failed to apply jail-time credits to his prison sentence. The district court dismissed his complaint; we modify the district court’s order to stay rather than dismiss the claim.
1. Where a state prisoner challenges the fact or duration of his confinement, his sole federal remedy is a writ of habeas corpus. Preiser v. Rodriguez,
If habeas were not the exclusive federal method for challenging the length of a state prison sentence, the exhaustion requirement could be undermined by a section 1983 plaintiff who obtains a federal court’s ruling that his sentence is too long. A prevailing section 1983 plaintiff in an action seeking release from jail or other prospective relief could obtain a judgment against state officials in their official capacities. See Will v. Michigan Dep’t of State Police, — U.S. -,
Federal-state comity is a concern even where, as here, the prisoner does not specifically request the reduction of his sentence in the section 1983 complaint. Before a district court could award damages to Young, it would have to determine that his jail-time credits were unconstitutionally withheld. Such a ruling would not bar a state from relitigating the issue in a subsequent state habeas proceeding because “neither a State nor its officials acting in their official capacity are ‘persons’ under § 1983” when the relief requested is damages. Will,
All nine federal circuit courts to consider this question have arrived at the same conclusion. See Guerro v. Mulhearn,
Such a rule is not inconsistent with our prior decisions, which have never expressly addressed the question, but point in the same general direction. See Toussaint v. McCarthy,
2. Although we join our sister circuits, we share a concern expressed by many of them. In Wolff v. McDonnell,
The complaint in this case sought restoration of good-time credits, and the Court of Appeals correctly held this relief foreclosed under Preiser. But the complaint also sought damages; and Preiser expressly contemplated that claims properly brought under § 1983 could go forward while actual restoration of good-time credits is sought in state proceedings. Respondent’s damages claim was therefore properly before the District Court and required determination of the validity of the procedures employed for imposing sanctions, including loss of good time, for flagrant or serious misconduct. Such a declaratory judgment as a predicate to a damages award would not be barred by Preiser
Id. at 554-55,
We would nevertheless feel bound to follow Wolff, and thereby create a conflict with nine of our sister circuits, were it not for a brief excursion made by the Supreme Court at the end of its opinion in Tower v. Glover,
3. Because Young is still in prison and has failed to exhaust his state remedies, a federal court judgment that his jail-time credits have been improperly withheld would undermine the exhaustion requirement in federal habeas actions and frustrate important values of federal-state comity.
We therefore vacate the district court’s order dismissing Young’s complaint. The court shall, instead, stay federal proceedings so that Young may have an opportunity to pursue state remedies. Young may proceed further in the district court only after he has exhausted those remedies or is no longer serving a prison sentence capable of being reduced by the application of jail-time credits.
Notes
. Where a prisoner wishes to challenge the conditions of his confinement, by contrast, a section 1983 action is a proper avenue of redress.
. Justice Brennan, joined by Justices Marshall, Blackmun and Stevens, complained about this:
Although the issue was never raised by the parties, and although, as the Court properly concedes, the issue has absolutely no bearing on the disposition of this case, the Court nevertheless has seen fit to observe that it "ha[s] no occasion to decide" whether federal courts should "abstain” from deciding a state prisoner's § 1983 suit for damages stemming from an unlawful conviction pending that prisoner’s exhaustion of collateral state-court challenges to his conviction. The reasons why the Court has no "occasion” to decide this question are clear enough: The question was never pressed or passed upon below, never briefed or argued in this Court, and, because respondent Glover has already exhausted all state-court remedies, the issue has no bearing whatsoever on the proper resolution of the controversy we have been called upon to decide.
. The district court did not consider Young's claims that restoration of his jail-time credits will not reduce the sentence he is currently serving. On remand, the district court shall determine whether restoration of Young’s jail-time credits could result in his speedier release. If not, habeas would no longer be his exclusive federal remedy, see Preiser,
