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Ross v. Blake

Ross v. Blake, 578 U.S. ___ (2016), was a United States Supreme Court case in which the Court held that "special circumstances" cannot excuse an inmate's failure to exhaust administrative remedies before filing a lawsuit under the Prison Litigation Reform Act of 1995,[1] but clarified that inmates are required to exhaust only administrative remedies that are genuinely available.[2] In so doing, it vacated and remanded the decision of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit.[3][4]

Ross v. Blake
Argued March 29, 2016
Decided June 6, 2016
Full case nameMichael Ross, Petitioner v. Shaidon Blake
Docket no.15-339
Citations578 U.S. ___ (more)
136 S. Ct. 1850; 195 L. Ed. 2d 117
ArgumentOral argument
Opinion announcementOpinion announcement
Case history
PriorBlake v. Ross, 787 F.3d 693 (4th Cir. 2015); cert. granted, 136 S. Ct. 614 (2015).
Holding
The Prison Litigation Reform Act’s requirement to exhaust administrative remedies does not have a “special circumstances” exception, but inmates are only required to exhaust administrative remedies that are genuinely available to them.
Court membership
Chief Justice
John Roberts
Associate Justices
Anthony Kennedy · Clarence Thomas
Ruth Bader Ginsburg · Stephen Breyer
Samuel Alito · Sonia Sotomayor
Elena Kagan
Case opinions
MajorityKagan, joined by Roberts, Kennedy, Ginsburg, Alito, Sotomayor
ConcurrenceThomas (in part)
ConcurrenceBreyer (in part)
Laws applied
Prison Litigation Reform Act of 1995

Facts and Procedural History Edit

In 2007, Shaidon Blake, an inmate in a Maryland prison, was assaulted by guards James Madigan and Michael Ross while being moved from his regular cell to the segregation unit.[5] Blake reported the incident to a senior corrections officer who referred it to the Maryland prison system's Internal Investigative Unit (IIU), which investigates employee misconduct.[5] The IIU investigated for a year, and then issued a report that condemned Madigan but made no findings regarding Ross.[5] Madigan then resigned.[5]

After the IIU issued its report, Blake sued Madigan and Ross under 42 U.S.C. § 1983; he claimed that Madigan used excessive force and Ross failed to take protective action.[5] A jury awarded Blake $50,000 as to his claim against Madigan.[5]

Ross presented an affirmative defense: Blake had sued without first exhausting the prison's Administrative Remedy Procedure (ARP) process, and thus was barred from court under the PLRA.[5] The PLRA, 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a) provides that “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.”[6] Blake conceded that he had not submitted a formal grievance through the ARP, "because, he thought, the IIU investigation served as a substitute for that otherwise standard process."[5]

District Court Decision Edit

Judge Alexander Williams, Jr. of the United States District Court for the District of Maryland dismissed the case, reasoning that "the commencement of an internal investigation does not relieve prisoners from the [PLRA's] exhaustion requirement."[7]

Court of Appeals Decision Edit

The United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit reversed.[4] It explained that the PLRA's "exhaustion requirement is not absolute."[8] Rather, there are certain "special circumstances" that can justify an inmate's failure to exhaust available administrative remedies.[8] One such circumstance, the Fourth Circuit panel held, was when an inmate failed to exhaust because he reasonably believed that he had already exhausted and no additional remedies were available.[8] And here, the court held that Blake was entitled to the "special circumstances" exception because he thought the IIU investigation precluded him from pursuing remedies through the regular ARP process.[9] Judge G. Steven Agee dissented, holding that judge-made exceptions to the PLRA's Congressionally-mandated exhaustion requirement were impermissible.[10]

Decision of the Court Edit

Associate Justice Elena Kagan authored the majority opinion.[1] The Supreme Court vacated the judgment of the Fourth Circuit and remanded for the lower court to determine whether the ARP process was, in fact, “available” to Blake.[3]

The Court criticized the Fourth Circuit for making “no attempt to ground its analysis in the PLRA’s language.”[11] It agreed with Blake's characterization of the Fourth Circuit's rule as an “extra-textual exception to the PLRA’s exhaustion requirement.”[11] The PLRA's text, it held, “suggests no limits on an inmate’s obligation to exhaust – irrespective of any ‘special circumstances.’”[11] While the Court acknowledged that judges can craft exceptions to judge-made exhaustion requirements, it emphasized that statutory exhaustion requirements are different, and only Congress can create exceptions.[12] In this case, it explained, both Supreme Court precedent and the broader history of the PLRA supported the conclusion that Congress intended the exhaustion requirement to be mandatory.[13]

The Court noted, however, that its rejection of the “special circumstances” exception did not decide the case, because “the PLRA contains its own, textual exception to mandatory exhaustion.”[13] Inmates are required to exhaust only “such administrative remedies as are available.”[6] In other words, inmates must only exhaust remedies that are capable of use to obtain some relief.[14] The Court then outlined three situations in which an administrative remedy may be official policy, but yet is “not capable of use to obtain relief.” First, a remedy is unavailable when officers are consistently unable or unwilling to give inmates any sort of relief.[14] Second, a remedy is unavailable if it is “so opaque” that “no ordinary prisoner can discern or navigate it.”[14] Third, a remedy is unavailable if administrators “thwart inmates from taking advantage of a grievance process through machination, misrepresentation, or intimidation.”[15]

In this case, the Court noted, the facts suggested it was possible (but not certain) that the ARP was not “available” for Blake to exhaust.[16] While Maryland's Inmate Handbook provided that prisoners could use the ARP for all kinds of grievances, Blake maintained that “once the IIU commences such an inquiry, a prisoner cannot obtain relief through the standard ARP process – whatever the Handbook may say to the contrary.”[15] Because the materials the Court had seen concerning the operation of the IIU and ARP processes were “not conclusive,” it remanded for the lower courts to “perform a thorough review of such materials, and then address the legal issues [the Court] has highlighted concerning the availability of administrative remedies.”[17]

Concurrence of Justice Thomas Edit

Justice Thomas concurred in part and in the judgment. He joined the Court's opinion, except for its discussion of the interaction of the ARP and IIU systems, which involved consideration of documents lodged with the Supreme Court, but never previously raised in the lower courts.[18] Justice Thomas opined that “[t]aking notice of the documents encourages gamesmanship and frustrates our review.”[18]

Concurrence of Justice Breyer Edit

Justice Breyer concurred in part. Echoing his concurrence in Woodford v. Ngo, he wrote that the PLRA exhaustion requirement is subject to administrative law's “well-established exceptions” to exhaustion. While these do not include a “special circumstances” exception, other non-textual exceptions may apply.[19]

Implications Edit

Ross v. Blake has been cited in nearly 2,000 cases as of March 2019.[20] While it is sometimes described as limiting access to courts for prisoners by abrogating the “special circumstances” exception, it is also often characterized as expanding prisoner recourse by clarifying that, in certain circumstances, administrative remedies may be on the books but yet practically “unavailable.” Though Ross has been discussed extensively by courts, it has received limited attention from scholars and news outlets.

Selected Supreme Court and Federal Courts of Appeals Cases Edit

  • Fry v. Napoleon Cmty. Sch., 137 S. Ct. 743, 753 (2017) (citing Ross for the proposition that administrative relief is only available when it is "accessible or may be obtained," and applying this principle in the context of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act).
  • Williams v. Corr. Officer Priatno, 829 F.3d 118, 121 (2d Cir. 2016) (finding a prison grievance process unavailable in light of Ross, which "clarified the framework under which courts should assess whether a prisoner has complied with the PLRA exhaustion requirement").
  • Rinaldi v. United States, 904 F.3d 257, 267-70 (3d Cir. 2018) (applying Ross and holding that intimidation by prison officials thwarted appellant from using the grievance process, rendering it unavailable to him).
  • Ramirez v. Young, 906 F.3d 530, 538 (7th Cir. 2018) (holding that Ross’s three examples of when administrative remedies are unavailable were “not a closed list” and finding unavailability where the prison did not take reasonable steps to inform the inmate about his remedies).
  • Townsend v. Murphy, 898 F.3d 780, 783-84 (8th Cir. 2018) (applying Ross and finding a formal grievance procedure unavailable where an inmate was denied access to the prison library that contained the only copy of the administrative directive).
  • Fuqua v. Ryan, 890 F.3d 838, 849-50 (9th Cir. 2018) (concluding that a particular prison administrative remedy was so opaque as to be functionally unavailable based on the reasoning in Ross).

Selected Scholarship Edit

  • Jacqueline Hayley Summs, Comment, Grappling with Inmates' Access to Justice: The Narrowing of the Exhaustion Requirement in Ross v. Blake, 69 ADMIN. L. REV. 467 (2017) (arguing that while “the immediate effect” of Ross may be “to create more obstacles” for inmates, “the larger significance of the case lies in the Court's decision to provide specific language to the PLRA's textual exception).
  • Nicola A. Cohen, Note, Why Ross v. Blake Opens a Door to Federal Courts for Incarcerated Adolescents, 51 COLUM. J.L. & SOC. PROBS. 177 (2017) (arguing that adolescents incarcerated in adult facilities face increased difficulty comprehending grievance processes, which should excuse their failure to exhaust in light of Ross).

Selected Treatises and Manuals Edit

  • 4 ADMINISTRATIVE LAW AND PRACTICE § 12:21 (3d ed., February 2019)
  • 15 AMERICAN JURISPRUDENCE CIVIL RIGHTS § 124 (2d ed., February 2019)
  • Prison Litigation Reform Act (PLRA): Procedural Basics, PRACTICAL LAW PRACTICE NOTE w-015-8501
  • 14A CORPUS JURIS SECUNDUM CIVIL RIGHTS § 350 (March 2019 update)

Selected News Articles and Blog Posts Edit

  • Celeste Valencia & Charles C. Dike, Prison Litigation Reform Act: Congressional Statute Not Open to Judicial Discretion, 45 J. AM. ACAD. PSYCHIATRY L. ONLINE 116 (2017).
  • Federalist Society, Ross v. Blake - Post-Decision SCOTUScast (July 28, 2016).
  • Prison Legal News, Second Circuit: Ross Abrogates “Special Circumstances” Exhaustion Exception (Oct. 10, 2017).
  • Steven D. Schwinn, Constitutional Law Prof. Blog, Mixed Result in State Prisoner-Rights Case (June 6, 2016).

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ a b Ross v. Blake, No. 15-339, 578 U.S. ___, 136 S. Ct. 1850, 1857-58 (2016).
  2. ^ Ross, 136 S. Ct. at 1859-60.
  3. ^ a b Ross, 136 S. Ct. at 1862.
  4. ^ a b Blake v. Ross, 787 F.3d 693 (4th Cir. 2015).
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h Ross, 136 S. Ct. at 1855.
  6. ^ a b 42 U.S.C. § 1997e(a).
  7. ^ Blake v. Maynard, No. 8:2009cv02367, Doc. 110 (D. Md. Nov. 14, 2012), at 9.
  8. ^ a b c Blake, 787 F.3d at 698.
  9. ^ Blake, 787 F.3d at 700.
  10. ^ Blake, 787 F.3d at 703 (Agee, J., dissenting).
  11. ^ a b c Ross, 136 S. Ct. at 1856.
  12. ^ Ross, 136 S. Ct. at 1857.
  13. ^ a b Ross, 136 S. Ct. at 1858.
  14. ^ a b c Ross, 136 S. Ct. at 1859.
  15. ^ a b Ross, 136 S. Ct. at 1860.
  16. ^ Ross, 136 S. Ct. at 1860-61.
  17. ^ Ross, 136 S. Ct. at 1861.
  18. ^ a b Ross, 136 S. Ct. at 1862 (Thomas, J., concurring in part and concurring in the judgment).
  19. ^ Ross, 136 S. Ct. at 1862-63 (Breyer, J., concurring in part).
  20. ^ https://1.next.westlaw.com (citing references for Ross v. Blake).

External links Edit

  • Text of Ross v. Blake, 578 U.S. ___ (2016) is available from: Cornell CourtListener  Justia  Oyez (oral argument audio)  Supreme Court (slip opinion)
  • SCOTUSblog coverage

ross, blake, 2016, united, states, supreme, court, case, which, court, held, that, special, circumstances, cannot, excuse, inmate, failure, exhaust, administrative, remedies, before, filing, lawsuit, under, prison, litigation, reform, 1995, clarified, that, in. Ross v Blake 578 U S 2016 was a United States Supreme Court case in which the Court held that special circumstances cannot excuse an inmate s failure to exhaust administrative remedies before filing a lawsuit under the Prison Litigation Reform Act of 1995 1 but clarified that inmates are required to exhaust only administrative remedies that are genuinely available 2 In so doing it vacated and remanded the decision of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit 3 4 Ross v BlakeSupreme Court of the United StatesArgued March 29 2016Decided June 6 2016Full case nameMichael Ross Petitioner v Shaidon BlakeDocket no 15 339Citations578 U S more 136 S Ct 1850 195 L Ed 2d 117ArgumentOral argumentOpinion announcementOpinion announcementCase historyPriorBlake v Ross 787 F 3d 693 4th Cir 2015 cert granted 136 S Ct 614 2015 HoldingThe Prison Litigation Reform Act s requirement to exhaust administrative remedies does not have a special circumstances exception but inmates are only required to exhaust administrative remedies that are genuinely available to them Court membershipChief Justice John Roberts Associate Justices Anthony Kennedy Clarence ThomasRuth Bader Ginsburg Stephen BreyerSamuel Alito Sonia SotomayorElena KaganCase opinionsMajorityKagan joined by Roberts Kennedy Ginsburg Alito SotomayorConcurrenceThomas in part ConcurrenceBreyer in part Laws appliedPrison Litigation Reform Act of 1995 Contents 1 Facts and Procedural History 1 1 District Court Decision 1 2 Court of Appeals Decision 2 Decision of the Court 2 1 Concurrence of Justice Thomas 2 2 Concurrence of Justice Breyer 3 Implications 3 1 Selected Supreme Court and Federal Courts of Appeals Cases 3 2 Selected Scholarship 3 3 Selected Treatises and Manuals 3 4 Selected News Articles and Blog Posts 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksFacts and Procedural History EditIn 2007 Shaidon Blake an inmate in a Maryland prison was assaulted by guards James Madigan and Michael Ross while being moved from his regular cell to the segregation unit 5 Blake reported the incident to a senior corrections officer who referred it to the Maryland prison system s Internal Investigative Unit IIU which investigates employee misconduct 5 The IIU investigated for a year and then issued a report that condemned Madigan but made no findings regarding Ross 5 Madigan then resigned 5 After the IIU issued its report Blake sued Madigan and Ross under 42 U S C 1983 he claimed that Madigan used excessive force and Ross failed to take protective action 5 A jury awarded Blake 50 000 as to his claim against Madigan 5 Ross presented an affirmative defense Blake had sued without first exhausting the prison s Administrative Remedy Procedure ARP process and thus was barred from court under the PLRA 5 The PLRA 42 U S C 1997e a provides that 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 6 Blake conceded that he had not submitted a formal grievance through the ARP because he thought the IIU investigation served as a substitute for that otherwise standard process 5 District Court Decision Edit Judge Alexander Williams Jr of the United States District Court for the District of Maryland dismissed the case reasoning that the commencement of an internal investigation does not relieve prisoners from the PLRA s exhaustion requirement 7 Court of Appeals Decision Edit The United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit reversed 4 It explained that the PLRA s exhaustion requirement is not absolute 8 Rather there are certain special circumstances that can justify an inmate s failure to exhaust available administrative remedies 8 One such circumstance the Fourth Circuit panel held was when an inmate failed to exhaust because he reasonably believed that he had already exhausted and no additional remedies were available 8 And here the court held that Blake was entitled to the special circumstances exception because he thought the IIU investigation precluded him from pursuing remedies through the regular ARP process 9 Judge G Steven Agee dissented holding that judge made exceptions to the PLRA s Congressionally mandated exhaustion requirement were impermissible 10 Decision of the Court EditAssociate Justice Elena Kagan authored the majority opinion 1 The Supreme Court vacated the judgment of the Fourth Circuit and remanded for the lower court to determine whether the ARP process was in fact available to Blake 3 The Court criticized the Fourth Circuit for making no attempt to ground its analysis in the PLRA s language 11 It agreed with Blake s characterization of the Fourth Circuit s rule as an extra textual exception to the PLRA s exhaustion requirement 11 The PLRA s text it held suggests no limits on an inmate s obligation to exhaust irrespective of any special circumstances 11 While the Court acknowledged that judges can craft exceptions to judge made exhaustion requirements it emphasized that statutory exhaustion requirements are different and only Congress can create exceptions 12 In this case it explained both Supreme Court precedent and the broader history of the PLRA supported the conclusion that Congress intended the exhaustion requirement to be mandatory 13 The Court noted however that its rejection of the special circumstances exception did not decide the case because the PLRA contains its own textual exception to mandatory exhaustion 13 Inmates are required to exhaust only such administrative remedies as are available 6 In other words inmates must only exhaust remedies that are capable of use to obtain some relief 14 The Court then outlined three situations in which an administrative remedy may be official policy but yet is not capable of use to obtain relief First a remedy is unavailable when officers are consistently unable or unwilling to give inmates any sort of relief 14 Second a remedy is unavailable if it is so opaque that no ordinary prisoner can discern or navigate it 14 Third a remedy is unavailable if administrators thwart inmates from taking advantage of a grievance process through machination misrepresentation or intimidation 15 In this case the Court noted the facts suggested it was possible but not certain that the ARP was not available for Blake to exhaust 16 While Maryland s Inmate Handbook provided that prisoners could use the ARP for all kinds of grievances Blake maintained that once the IIU commences such an inquiry a prisoner cannot obtain relief through the standard ARP process whatever the Handbook may say to the contrary 15 Because the materials the Court had seen concerning the operation of the IIU and ARP processes were not conclusive it remanded for the lower courts to perform a thorough review of such materials and then address the legal issues the Court has highlighted concerning the availability of administrative remedies 17 Concurrence of Justice Thomas Edit Justice Thomas concurred in part and in the judgment He joined the Court s opinion except for its discussion of the interaction of the ARP and IIU systems which involved consideration of documents lodged with the Supreme Court but never previously raised in the lower courts 18 Justice Thomas opined that t aking notice of the documents encourages gamesmanship and frustrates our review 18 Concurrence of Justice Breyer Edit Justice Breyer concurred in part Echoing his concurrence in Woodford v Ngo he wrote that the PLRA exhaustion requirement is subject to administrative law s well established exceptions to exhaustion While these do not include a special circumstances exception other non textual exceptions may apply 19 Implications EditRoss v Blake has been cited in nearly 2 000 cases as of March 2019 20 While it is sometimes described as limiting access to courts for prisoners by abrogating the special circumstances exception it is also often characterized as expanding prisoner recourse by clarifying that in certain circumstances administrative remedies may be on the books but yet practically unavailable Though Ross has been discussed extensively by courts it has received limited attention from scholars and news outlets Selected Supreme Court and Federal Courts of Appeals Cases Edit Fry v Napoleon Cmty Sch 137 S Ct 743 753 2017 citing Ross for the proposition that administrative relief is only available when it is accessible or may be obtained and applying this principle in the context of the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act Williams v Corr Officer Priatno 829 F 3d 118 121 2d Cir 2016 finding a prison grievance process unavailable in light of Ross which clarified the framework under which courts should assess whether a prisoner has complied with the PLRA exhaustion requirement Rinaldi v United States 904 F 3d 257 267 70 3d Cir 2018 applying Ross and holding that intimidation by prison officials thwarted appellant from using the grievance process rendering it unavailable to him Ramirez v Young 906 F 3d 530 538 7th Cir 2018 holding that Ross s three examples of when administrative remedies are unavailable were not a closed list and finding unavailability where the prison did not take reasonable steps to inform the inmate about his remedies Townsend v Murphy 898 F 3d 780 783 84 8th Cir 2018 applying Ross and finding a formal grievance procedure unavailable where an inmate was denied access to the prison library that contained the only copy of the administrative directive Fuqua v Ryan 890 F 3d 838 849 50 9th Cir 2018 concluding that a particular prison administrative remedy was so opaque as to be functionally unavailable based on the reasoning in Ross Selected Scholarship Edit Jacqueline Hayley Summs Comment Grappling with Inmates Access to Justice The Narrowing of the Exhaustion Requirement in Ross v Blake 69 ADMIN L REV 467 2017 arguing that while the immediate effect of Ross may be to create more obstacles for inmates the larger significance of the case lies in the Court s decision to provide specific language to the PLRA s textual exception Nicola A Cohen Note Why Ross v Blake Opens a Door to Federal Courts for Incarcerated Adolescents 51 COLUM J L amp SOC PROBS 177 2017 arguing that adolescents incarcerated in adult facilities face increased difficulty comprehending grievance processes which should excuse their failure to exhaust in light of Ross Selected Treatises and Manuals Edit 4 ADMINISTRATIVE LAW AND PRACTICE 12 21 3d ed February 2019 15 AMERICAN JURISPRUDENCE CIVIL RIGHTS 124 2d ed February 2019 Prison Litigation Reform Act PLRA Procedural Basics PRACTICAL LAW PRACTICE NOTE w 015 8501 14A CORPUS JURIS SECUNDUM CIVIL RIGHTS 350 March 2019 update Selected News Articles and Blog Posts Edit Celeste Valencia amp Charles C Dike Prison Litigation Reform Act Congressional Statute Not Open to Judicial Discretion 45 J AM ACAD PSYCHIATRY L ONLINE 116 2017 Federalist Society Ross v Blake Post Decision SCOTUScast July 28 2016 Prison Legal News Second Circuit Ross Abrogates Special Circumstances Exhaustion Exception Oct 10 2017 Steven D Schwinn Constitutional Law Prof Blog Mixed Result in State Prisoner Rights Case June 6 2016 See also EditPrison Litigation Reform Act PLRA Exhaustion of remedies List of United States Supreme Court cases by the Roberts Court List of United States Supreme Court cases volume 578References Edit a b Ross v Blake No 15 339 578 U S 136 S Ct 1850 1857 58 2016 Ross 136 S Ct at 1859 60 a b Ross 136 S Ct at 1862 a b Blake v Ross 787 F 3d 693 4th Cir 2015 a b c d e f g h Ross 136 S Ct at 1855 a b 42 U S C 1997e a Blake v Maynard No 8 2009cv02367 Doc 110 D Md Nov 14 2012 at 9 a b c Blake 787 F 3d at 698 Blake 787 F 3d at 700 Blake 787 F 3d at 703 Agee J dissenting a b c Ross 136 S Ct at 1856 Ross 136 S Ct at 1857 a b Ross 136 S Ct at 1858 a b c Ross 136 S Ct at 1859 a b Ross 136 S Ct at 1860 Ross 136 S Ct at 1860 61 Ross 136 S Ct at 1861 a b Ross 136 S Ct at 1862 Thomas J concurring in part and concurring in the judgment Ross 136 S Ct at 1862 63 Breyer J concurring in part https 1 next westlaw com citing references for Ross v Blake External links EditText of Ross v Blake 578 U S 2016 is available from Cornell CourtListener Justia Oyez oral argument audio Supreme Court slip opinion SCOTUSblog coverage Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ross v Blake amp oldid 1165325138, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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