At its Nov. 23rd conference, the Supreme Court will decide whether to grant certiorari in Johnson v. Meadows, No. 05-6336. [UPDATE: On November 14th, the Supreme Court granted cert. in a similar case - Woodford v. Ngo, No. 05-416; my collected Woodford-related posts are available here.] At issue in Meadows is whether the Prison Litigation Reform Act, which
requires prisoners to exhaust administrative remedies before bringing a
Section 1983 action against prison officials, also contains a
procedural default component. There are three good reasons for the Court to review the case.
There is a circuit split. The Supreme Court has becoming
increasingly interested in resolving circuit splits. There is a clear
circuit split on this issue. Johnson v. Meadows, which held
that the PLRA does contain a procedural default component, differs from
the Sixth's and Ninth Circuit's approaches. (It's worth noting that
Judge Alex Kozinski joined the Ninth Circuit panel's decision in Ngo v. Woodford (here), which held the PLRA does not contain a procedural default component.)
The issue is of national importance. Section 1983 actions arising
out of prison conditions number in the tens of thousands. According to this 1994 report from the
Department of Justice's Office of Legal Policy: "[T]here is approximately one lawsuit for every thirty state prison inmates ...." The importance of procedural issues touching Section 1983 litigation cannot be overstated.
The case will be well-argued. Many Section 1983 cases reach the Court by accident, and they are argued by people lacking subject-matter fluency. Steve Dillard is representing the petitioner in this case. The prisoner will be ably represented, and all arguments supporting the prisoner will be presented.
Moreover (and this goes to the merits as much as to the
cert.-worthiness), by reading into the PLRA a procedural default
component, the circuits are creating different standards for every prison, and also frustrating Congress' goal that civil rights claims, though they must be exhausted, should also be heard. In the Johnson
case, e.g., the prisoner only had 5 days to give prison officials
notice that his rights had been violated. This has two
unfortunate effects.
First, it imposes a de facto 5-day statute of limitations on
prisoner civil rights claims, even though under 42 U.S.C. Section 1988,
the statute of limitations for civil rights actions is supposed to
mirror the state's general personal injury statute of limitations. In
Georgia, the relevant statute of limitations should have been two years. Under the Eleventh Circuit's reading of the PLRA, the statute of limitations for prison civil rights suit is 5 days.
This disparate treatment of regular civil rights suits vs. prisoner
civil rights suit is intolerable, and it is not required or even suggested by
the PLRA's text, history, or structure.
Second, the Eleventh Circuit's reading of the PLRA allows potentially different
limitations periods in every prison. Federal law, to the extent
possible, should be uniform. By allowing each prison to set a
different exhaustion deadline, there could potentially be as much
disconformity as there are prisons.
Johnson v. Meadows is of important practice significance. The
Supreme Court should grant cert. to resolve the circuit split, and then
it should reverse the judgment of the Eleventh Circuit.