McCARTHY V. MADIGAN
503 U.S. 140 (1992)
NATURE OF THE CASE: McCarthy (P) appealed the dismissal of his suit for damages against
Madigan (D) and the district court dismissal on failure to exhaust remedies and the Tenth
Circuit affirmation that exhaustion of the grievance procedures was required.
FACTS: Under the 'Administrative Remedy Procedure for Inmates' at federal correctional
institutions, a prisoner may 'seek formal review of a complaint which relates to any aspect
of his imprisonment.' When an inmate files a complaint or appeal, the responsible officials
are directed to acknowledge the filing with a 'signed receipt' which is returned to the
inmate, to 'conduct an investigation,' and to 'respond to and sign all complaints or
appeals.' The general grievance regulations do not provide for any kind of hearing or for
the granting of any particular type of relief. The procedure includes rapid filing and
response timetables. An inmate first seeks informal resolution of his claim by consulting
prison personnel. If this informal effort fails, the prisoner 'may file a formal written
complaint on the appropriate form, within 15 calendar days of the date on which the basis of
the complaint occurred.' Should the warden fail to respond to the inmate's satisfaction
within 15 days, the inmate has 20 days to appeal to the Bureau's Regional Director, who has
30 days to respond. If the inmate still remains unsatisfied, he has 30 days to make a final
appeal to the Bureau's General Counsel, who has another 30 days to respond. f the inmate can
demonstrate a 'valid reason for delay,' he 'shall be allowed' an extension of any of these
time periods for filing. P filed a pro se complaint against four prison employees: the
hospital administrator, the chief psychologist, another psychologist, and a physician (Ds).
P alleged that Ds had violated his constitutional rights under the Eighth Amendment by their
deliberate indifference to his needs and medical condition resulting from a back operation
and a history of psychiatric problems. The District Court dismissed because P had failed to
exhaust prison administrative remedies. The appeals Court affirmed. The Supreme Court
granted certiorari.
ISSUE:
RULE OF LAW:
HOLDING AND DECISION:
LEGAL ANALYSIS:
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