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Petitioners are unemployed workers who contend that the Alabama Department of Labor unlawfully delayed processing their state unemployment benefits claims. They sued the Alabama Secretary of Labor in state court under 42 U. S. C. §1983, raising due process and federal statutory arguments and seeking a court order requiring the Department to process their claims more quickly. The Secretary moved to dismiss on several grounds, including that the state trial court lacked jurisdiction because the claimants had not satisfied the relevant statute's strict administrative-exhaustion requirement. See Ala. Code §25-4-95. The state trial court granted the Secretary's motion and dismissed the complaint, leaving the claimants in a catch-22--unable to sue to obtain an order expediting the administrative process because they had not yet completed the process allegedly being delayed. The Alabama Supreme Court affirmed on failure-to-exhaust grounds, concluding that §1983 did not preempt the State's administrative-exhaustion requirement.
Held: Where a state court's application of a state exhaustion requirement in effect immunizes state officials from §1983 claims challenging delays in the administrative process, state courts may not deny those §1983 claims on failure-to-exhaust grounds. Pp. 5-10.
(a) "[A] state law that immunizes government conduct otherwise subject to suit under §1983 is preempted, even where the federal civil rights litigation takes place in state court." Felder v. Casey,
(b) Under Alabama's exhaustion requirement, state courts cannot review claims of unlawful delays under §1983 unless and until the claimants first complete the administrative process and receive a final decision on their claims. Such a requirement operates to immunize state officials from a narrow class of claims brought under §1983. Under this Court's precedents, Alabama cannot apply such an immunity rule. P. 7.
(c) According to the Secretary, the jurisdictional nature of Alabama's exhaustion provision distinguishes it from the state rules at issue in Haywood and Howlett. But this Court's precedents have not treated the jurisdictional label of state rules as dispositive when state rules functionally immunize defendants from a class of §1983 claims in state court. In Haywood, for example, the Court stated that the jurisdictional status of New York's rule did not insulate it from preemption.
Next, the Secretary suggests that any delays in the state administrative process can be cured by claimants' seeking a writ of mandamus from the state courts to compel the Department to act more quickly. It is not evident, however, that mandamus is available to the claimants here. In any event, the Secretary's argument is simply another way of saying that the claimant must go through the state process before suing under §1983 to challenge any delays in that process. Just as Alabama may not force plaintiffs to complete the state administrative process before plaintiffs may sue under §1983 to challenge allegedly unlawful delays, the State may not force plaintiffs to seek mandamus before bringing those claims. Pp. 8-10.
387 So. 3d 138, reversed and remanded.
Kavanaugh, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which Roberts, C. J., and Sotomayor, Kagan, and Jackson, JJ., joined. Thomas, J., filed a dissenting opinion, in which Alito, Gorsuch, and Barrett, JJ., joined as to Part II.
Opinion of the Court
604 U. S. ____ (2025)
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the United States Reports. Readers are requested to notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Washington, D. C. 20543, pio@supremecourt.gov, of any typographical or other formal errors.
No. 23-191
NANCY WILLIAMS, et al., PETITIONERS v.
GREG REED, SECRETARY, ALABAMA
DEPARTMENT OF WORKFORCE
on writ of certiorari to the supreme court of alabama
[February 21, 2025]
Justice Kavanaugh delivered the opinion of the Court.
Several unemployed workers in Alabama applied for unemployment benefits from the State. In their view, the Alabama Department of Labor has unlawfully delayed the processing of their benefits claims. So the claimants sued the Alabama Secretary of Labor in state court under 42 U. S. C. §1983, raising due process and federal statutory arguments and seeking a court order requiring the Department to process their claims more quickly. The Alabama Supreme Court ruled that the claimants could not sue under §1983 to challenge delays in the administrative process until the claimants completed that process. But that ruling created a catch-22: Because the claimants cannot sue until they complete the administrative process, they can never sue under §1983 to obtain an order expediting the administrative process. This Court's precedents do not permit States to immunize state officials from §1983 suits in that way. See Haywood v. Drown,
I
A
The State of Alabama grants monetary benefits to unemployed claimants who meet certain eligibility criteria. See Ala. Code §25-4-90 et seq. (2016); Ala. Admin. Code, ch. 480-4-3 (Supp. 2019). To obtain unemployment benefits, a claimant first must apply to the Alabama Department of Labor "in accordance with such general rules as the secretary may prescribe." Ala. Code §25-4-90.1 After receiving an application, the Department, through an examiner designated by the Secretary, must "promptly" make a "determination" on the claim. §25-4-91(a). The Department also must "promptly" notify the claimant of the determination, generally by mailing a notice to his or her last known address. §25-4-91(c)(1). The relevant statutory provisions do not define "promptly."
A claimant who wants to appeal an adverse determination must, within 7 days of the delivery of the notice or 15 days of the mailing of the notice, seek review by an appeals tribunal. §25-4-91(d). That tribunal consists of a Department employee who is appointed by the Secretary. §25-4-92(a). The tribunal must "hear and decide disputed claims and other due process cases" related to benefits claims. Ibid. And the tribunal must "promptly" hold a hearing. Ala. Admin. Code Rule 480-1-4-.09(2). The tribunal must then decide the appeal "within 30 days" of the hearing. Ala. Admin. Code Rule 480-1-4-.11(1).
A claimant who loses before the appeals tribunal may seek discretionary review before the Department's Board of Appeals, which is composed of three members appointed by the Governor. Ala. Code §25-2-12. A claimant must seek review within 15 days from the date when the appeals tribunal's decision was mailed to the claimant. §25-4-92(c). If the Board of Appeals does not grant review within 10 days of the claimant's filing, then the decision of the appeals tribunal becomes final. §25-4-94(b).
After the Board of Appeals denies review, fails to grant review within the 10-day period, or grants review and issues an adverse decision, the claimant may then challenge the denial of benefits in Alabama state court. §25-4-95. But not until then. The Alabama law setting forth these procedures includes a strict exhaustion requirement, which provides:
"No circuit court shall permit an appeal from a decision allowing or disallowing a claim for benefits unless the decision sought to be reviewed is that of an appeals tribunal or of the board of appeals and unless the person filing such appeal has exhausted his administrative remedies as provided by this chapter." Ibid.
That statutory procedure "shall be exclusive." §25-4-96. On its face, the State's exhaustion requirement prevents claimants from challenging adverse benefits determinations in state court, including in suits brought under §1983, until the Board of Appeals has completed or denied review.
B
In this case, 21 Alabama claimants applied for unemployment benefits. They contend that the Department, in various ways, has unlawfully delayed the processing of their benefits claims. For example, plaintiff Derek Bateman alleges that he attempted to appeal his claim to an appeals tribunal. But according to Bateman, the Department never scheduled a hearing or otherwise acted on his appeal, even after he attempted to follow up by email and phone calls numerous times.
The 21 claimants sued the Secretary of Labor in his official capacity in the Circuit Court of Montgomery County, Alabama. Invoking 42 U. S. C. §1983, they asserted among other things that the Department's delays in processing their benefits claims violated the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment and the Social Security Act of 1935.
The claimants did not ask the court to rule that they were entitled to unemployment benefits. Rather, they simply asked the court to order the Department to promptly address their benefits claims. As relevant here, the claimants sought a court order requiring the Department to: (1) "issue an initial nonmonetary decision within the next ten days to every plaintiff who has not yet received a decision"; (2) "provide within ten days a hearing date for each of the plaintiffs who [has] requested a hearing"; (3) schedule such hearings for a date not later than 90 days after the request for the hearing; and (4) pay every approved claim within two days of the date of approval. App. 42-43.
The Secretary moved to dismiss the complaint on several grounds. The Secretary argued, among other things, that the state trial court lacked jurisdiction because the claimants had not satisfied the administrative-exhaustion requirement in Alabama Code §25-4-95. The court granted the Secretary's motion and dismissed the complaint.
The claimants appealed to the Alabama Supreme Court. That court affirmed on failure-to-exhaust grounds. Johnson v. Washington, 387 So. 3d 138, 144 (Ala. 2023). The court concluded that under this Court's precedents, §1983 did not preempt the State's administrative-exhaustion requirement. Id., at 143-144.
Justice Cook dissented. He reasoned that under this Court's §1983 precedents, the State could not bar a suit challenging the Department's delays in making a determination on a benefits claim. Id., at 146-150.
This Court granted certiorari. 601 U. S. ___ (2024).
II
The Secretary argues that Alabama's exhaustion requirement constitutes a "neutral rule of judicial administration" and that the Alabama Supreme Court permissibly applied that statutory rule to bar the claimants' §1983 suit in state court. Haywood v. Drown,
In light of this Court's precedents, we agree with the claimants. In the unusual circumstances presented here--where a state court's application of a state exhaustion requirement in effect immunizes state officials from §1983 claims challenging delays in the administrative process--state courts may not deny those §1983 claims on failure-to-exhaust grounds.
A
This Court has long held that "a state law that immunizes government conduct otherwise subject to suit under §1983 is preempted, even where the federal civil rights litigation takes place in state court." Felder v. Casey,
In Howlett v. Rose, for example, the Court analyzed a Florida rule extending the State's sovereign immunity from §1983 suits "not only to the State and its arms but also to municipalities, counties, and school districts that might otherwise be subject to suit under §1983."
And in Haywood v. Drown, the Court addressed a New York statute depriving state courts of jurisdiction over claims by prisoners seeking damages against state correctional officers. See
B
Here, the Alabama Supreme Court ruled that the State's exhaustion requirement applies to "procedural challenges related to the administration of unemployment-compensation benefits in addition to substantive challenges regarding the decision to award (or not award) those benefits." Johnson v. Washington, 387 So. 3d 138, 143 (2023). And it concluded that the universe of "procedural challenges" requiring exhaustion includes §1983 suits alleging that the Department is unlawfully delaying the processing of benefits claims.
Alabama's exhaustion requirement operates to immunize state officials from a narrow class of claims brought under §1983--namely, claims of unlawful delay in the administrative process. Under Alabama's exhaustion requirement, state courts cannot review claims of unlawful delays under §1983 unless and until the claimants first complete the administrative process and receive a final decision on their claims. In essence, Alabama has said that to challenge delays in the administrative process under §1983, you first have to exhaust the administrative process. Of course, that means that you can never challenge delays in the administrative process. That catch-22 prevents the claimants here from obtaining a merits resolution of their §1983 claims in state court and in effect immunizes state officials from those kinds of §1983 suits for injunctive relief.
Under this Court's precedents, however, Alabama cannot maintain such an immunity rule. As this Court's cases have repeatedly held, "a state law that immunizes government conduct otherwise subject to suit under §1983 is preempted, even where the federal civil rights litigation takes place in state court." Felder,
C
In response, the Secretary advances two primary points.
First, the Secretary argues that the "jurisdictional nature of Alabama's exhaustion provision sets it apart from procedural rules that may be more readily preempted by §1983." Brief for Respondent 25. In particular, according to the Secretary, the jurisdictional status of Alabama's exhaustion requirement distinguishes it from the state rules at issue in Haywood and Howlett.
States "retain substantial leeway to establish the contours of their judicial systems" and are free to enforce "neutral" jurisdictional rules. Haywood,
Second, the Secretary suggests that the claimants could seek a writ of mandamus from the state courts to compel the Department to act more quickly. For that reason, the Secretary says that any delays in the state administrative process can be cured within the state judicial system.
To begin with, it is not evident that mandamus is available to the claimants here. The Secretary cites a lone decades-old case from an Alabama intermediate appellate court suggesting in dicta that mandamus would be "appropriate" in a case where a state agency intentionally delayed its decision on a couple's application to become adoptive parents. Vance v. Montgomery Cty. Dept. of Human Resources, 693 So. 2d 493, 495 (Ala. Civ. App. 1997). If mandamus relief were available in these unemployment benefits cases, one would have expected the Alabama Supreme Court to say so in its opinion here. Yet the court did not say or suggest that mandamus relief would be available.
In any event, the Secretary's argument based on the supposed availability of mandamus is simply another way of saying that the claimant must go through the process provided by the State before suing under §1983 to challenge delays in the state process. To be sure, the availability of mandamus relief in state court might be relevant to the merits of a due process or federal statutory claim challenging delays in the state process. But just as Alabama may not force plaintiffs to complete the state administrative process before plaintiffs may sue under §1983 to challenge allegedly unlawful delays, Alabama may not force plaintiffs to seek mandamus before bringing those §1983 claims. Otherwise, by the time the plaintiffs could sue for injunctive relief under §1983, their claims would be moot.
For its part, the dissent largely discusses issues that we do not address in this opinion. In Part II-C-2, when the dissent eventually turns to the merits of our legal analysis, the dissent argues that Haywood's reasoning about immunity rules applies only where a "focus on statutory purpose" reveals that a state rule reflects " 'policy disagreement' " with federal law. Post, at 11 (opinion of Thomas, J.) (quoting Haywood,
The dissent also suggests that the claimants forfeited their argument based on Haywood and Howlett in the Alabama Supreme Court. In that court, however, the claimants clearly raised the argument that under §1983 the State could not apply an administrative-exhaustion requirement to their claims challenging delays in the administrative process. Reply Brief for Appellant in Johnson v. Washington, No. SC-2022-0897 (Ala. Sup. Ct.), pp. 16-17.
The dissent further says that our opinion may have "ripple effects." Post, at 12. But as we have emphasized, our opinion today is narrow; it resolves this dispute but is careful not to go beyond this Court's existing precedents. See n. 2, supra.
* * *
The Alabama Supreme Court interpreted the State's administrative-exhaustion requirement for unemployment benefits claims to in effect immunize the Alabama Secretary of Labor from §1983 due process suits alleging that the Department has unlawfully delayed in processing benefits claims. By affording immunity from those claims, the Alabama ruling contravenes this Court's §1983 precedents. We therefore reverse the judgment of the Alabama Supreme Court and remand the case for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
It is so ordered.
Thomas, J., dissenting
604 U. S. ____ (2025)
No. 23-191
NANCY WILLIAMS, et al., PETITIONERS v. GREG REED, SECRETARY, ALABAMA DEPARTMENT OF WORKFORCE
on writ of certiorari to the supreme court of alabama
[February 21, 2025]
Justice Thomas, with whom Justice Alito, Justice Gorsuch, and Justice Barrett join as to Part II, dissenting.
Alabama law requires claimants seeking unemployment benefits to exhaust their administrative remedies before suing over those benefits in state court. Petitioners, the claimants here, failed to complete that process before they sued under Rev. Stat. §1979, 42 U. S. C. §1983. The Alabama Supreme Court accordingly held that it lacked jurisdiction over the suit. That holding was plainly permissible. As a matter of first principles, States have unfettered discretion over whether to provide a forum for §1983 claims in their courts. And, Alabama's exhaustion rule does not transgress the limitations that our precedents have recognized. The Court concludes otherwise by endorsing an as-applied theory of futility that is both forfeited and meritless, moving our jurisprudence even further off course. I respectfully dissent.
I
This case is straightforward under first principles. Our federal system gives States "plenary authority to decide whether their local courts will have subject-matter jurisdiction over federal causes of action." Haywood v. Drown,
The only potential constraint that the Constitution places on a State's jurisdictional discretion is the possibility that a federal statute may preempt state law. The Supremacy Clause makes the "Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof . . . the supreme Law of the Land." Art. VI, cl. 2. Accordingly, "[f]ederal law must prevail when Congress validly enacts a statute that expressly supersedes state law, or when the state law conflicts with a federal statute." Haywood,
We need not answer that question here because §1983 does not raise any preemption issue. By its text, the provision does not "command" States to provide a forum for §1983 plaintiffs. Id., at 765. Instead, it merely "addresses who may sue and be sued for violations of federal law." Ibid.; see §1983 (deeming "liable" state officials who deny "any citizen of the United States or other person within the jurisdiction thereof . . . any rights, privileges, or immunities secured by the Constitution and laws"). Nor does Alabama's exhaustion bar, which regulates state-court litigation, create any implicit conflict with §1983. Plaintiffs who do not exhaust state remedies are always free to bring their claims in a federal forum. Id., at 766; see also Felder v. Casey,
This Court's precedents err to the extent they recognize a broader form of conflict preemption for "state-court procedural rules that are perceived to 'burde[n] the exercise of the federal right' in state court." Haywood,
Our precedents also err in establishing the requirement at issue here--that state jurisdictional rules be "neutral," even in the absence of a directly conflicting federal law. See infra, at 5. The Supremacy Clause does not of its own force "constrai[n] the States' authority to define the subjectmatter jurisdiction of their own courts." Haywood,
Taken together, this case should begin and end with Alabama's plenary authority to decide which federal matters its state courts will have subject-matter jurisdiction to hear. Alabama exercised that authority to create an exhaustion requirement, and we should respect its decision.
II
This Court should affirm even under existing precedents. Alabama's exhaustion requirement does not run afoul of the limitations that this Court has identified on a State's authority to restrict federal causes of action from proceeding in state court. Petitioners misread our precedents in arguing otherwise, and the majority's theory likewise cannot pass muster.
A
Although this Court has held that there are limits on a State's discretion in regulating state-court jurisdiction over federal causes of action, our precedents emphasize that state authority predominates. "The general rule 'bottomed deeply in belief in the importance of state control of state judicial procedure, is that federal law takes the state courts as it finds them.' " Howlett v. Rose,
As relevant here, our precedents establish that States must exercise this jurisdictional latitude only through "neutral" rules that do not embody any "policy disagreement" with federal law. Haywood,
For good reason, no one suggests that the first exception applies. Alabama's exhaustion requirement by its terms does "not discriminate against rights arising under federal laws." See McKnett,
The second exception does not apply either. Alabama's exhaustion requirement is nothing like the statute in Haywood that this Court viewed as "disfavor[ing]" federal law.
Alabama's decision to create an exhaustion requirement for all unemployment-benefits-related claims does not embody any comparable policy judgment. Rather, this requirement, which has existed since 1939, is an ordinary jurisdictional rule reflecting the Alabama Department of Labor's comparative "competence over the subject matter" of unemployment benefits. Howlett,
B
Petitioners try to evade Alabama's exhaustion requirement by arguing for a different exception. On their view, our decisions in Patsy v. Board of Regents of Fla.,
Patsy addressed whether federal courts can impose an exhaustion requirement for §1983 cases in the absence of a congressional directive to do so. See
Felder too is inapposite. That decision held that §1983 preempted a Wisconsin notice-of-claim statute that effectively altered the scope of §1983 liability on the merits. See
Felder would remain inapposite even if it had involved a purportedly jurisdictional rule compelling dismissal without prejudice. In that event, the Wisconsin statute would simply have raised the problem that this Court later confronted in Haywood, where the State singled out a "disfavored" category of claims for second-class treatment.
C
The majority rules for petitioners on narrower grounds, but its holding is equally unpersuasive. The majority does not dispute that, as a general matter, Alabama is entitled to apply its exhaustion requirement to §1983 claims. See ante, at 5, n. 2. It instead holds that, under Haywood, Alabama's discretion cannot extend to the specific claims here, which challenge delays in the exhaustion process itself. Ante, at 5. On the majority's view, maintaining the exhaustion requirement for such claims would mean that petitioners will never be able to advance to state court, leaving the State essentially "immun[e]" from challenges to its exhaustion process. Ante, at 7. This theory of futility is both forfeited and meritless.
1
"[T]his Court has almost unfailingly refused to consider any federal-law challenge to a state-court decision unless the federal claim 'was either addressed by or properly presented to the state court that rendered the decision we have been asked to review.' " Howell v. Mississippi,
Until seeking certiorari, petitioners litigated this case as a facial challenge, arguing solely that §1983 "categorically" preempted States from applying exhaustion requirements in the §1983 context. Reply Brief for Appellant in Johnson v. Washington, No. SC-2022-0897 (Ala. Sup. Ct.), p. 16. The Alabama Supreme Court accordingly understood that this facial challenge was petitioners' "only" argument for federal preemption. 387 So. 3d, at 143-144. Petitioners belatedly contend that they also raised a futility-based argument, but the briefing they cite merely addressed how the futility of waiting for exhaustion affected the proper timing of their facial challenge. See Reply Brief 24, n. 3 (citing Reply Brief for Appellant in No. SC-2022-0897, at 16-17).
Because petitioners raised only a facial challenge below, they cannot press an as-applied challenge here. "[F]acial" and "as-applied" claims are distinct and must be individually preserved. See United States v. Stevens,
There is no reason to treat this case as the "very rare exceptio[n]" in which petitioners' forfeiture might be overlooked. Adams,
The majority's futility theory depends on the assumption that petitioners will never have their day in court if we leave Alabama's exhaustion requirement intact. See ante, at 7. But, petitioners' failure to raise their as-applied claim below means that we have no way of knowing whether this assumption is true. It may be the case that the exhaustion requirement here contains an implicit futility exception. Cf. Graysville v. Glenn, 46 So. 3d 925, 929 (Ala. 2010) (identifying futility as a "recognized exceptio[n]" to the "exhaustion-of-administrative-remedies doctrine" generally). Or, it may be the case that petitioners may obtain mandamus relief, as the dissent below suggested and the State underscored. See 387 So. 3d, at 146 (Cook, J., dissenting); Tr. of Oral Arg. 54-56. As a federal court assessing petitioners' objection in the first instance, we have no way to assess the viability of these or any other mechanisms.
The majority's attempts to disregard this uncertainty are unpersuasive. The majority concludes that the uncertainty should count against the State, and expresses doubt about the availability of mandamus based on the Alabama Supreme Court's failure to address that form of relief. Ante, at 9. But, that court had no reason to opine on the alternative pathways available to petitioners, given that petitioners failed to raise an as-applied challenge. We should not reward petitioners for their own mistake. Likewise, the majority's assertion that mandamus would be irrelevant even if it were available is puzzling. Ante, at 9-10. If petitioners can secure completion of the exhaustion process through mandamus, then by definition they will not be in a "catch-22" that "prevents [them] from obtaining a merits resolution of their §1983 claims in state court." Ante, at 7.
2
In any event, petitioners' as-applied challenge fails on the merits. Unlike the New York statute in Haywood, Alabama's exhaustion requirement is not " 'an immunity statute cloaked in jurisdictional garb.' " Contra, ante, at 9 (quoting Haywood,
Properly understood, Haywood directs our focus to the challenged statute's purpose. The Court there viewed the New York statute as an immunity statute because it was "designed to shield" correction officers from damages claims brought by prisoners, "[b]ased on the belief " that these claims tended to be "frivolous and vexatious." Id., at 741-742. In other words, States cannot implicitly reject the supremacy of federal law by basing a jurisdictional limitation--even one that also applies to state claims--on "policy disagreement" with federal law. Id., at 737-738.
A focus on statutory purpose makes clear that Alabama's exhaustion requirement raises no Haywood problem. There is no credible argument that Alabama adopted its exhaustion requirement in order to defeat challenges to the exhaustion process itself. Alabama created its exhaustion scheme in 1939, decades before the understanding that public benefits give rise to a due process interest emerged. See supra, at 3-4, n. And, the Alabama exhaustion process is by all accounts an ordinary exhaustion requirement common among public-benefits schemes, which in the mine-run case serves to facilitate the adjudication of benefits determinations on the merits. There is no reason to think that Alabama intended to cause mischief in the rare context of a §1983 challenge to its procedures.
At most, this case presents a circumstance in which Alabama's "neutral jurisdictional rule" has the effect of defeating a federal claim. See Haywood,
The majority's contrary conclusion misunderstands Haywood. Ignoring that decision's purpose-focused language, the majority asserts that it disallows any state rule that "operates as an 'immunity statute' . . . by wholly barring a 'particular species' of §1983 suits in state court." Ante, at 10 (quoting
The majority also does not grapple with the possible ripple effects of its reading of Haywood. It professes only that its opinion is "narrow" and does nothing more than "resolv[e] this dispute." Ante, at 10. But, the majority's protestations do not make it so.
A constraint based on incidental effects is notably more amorphous than our prior focus on statutory purpose. After all, to the extent the Supremacy Clause bars States from enacting nominally jurisdictional rules that "registe[r their] dissent" from federal policy, States may craft their laws with an eye toward avoiding conflict. Haywood,
III
The Court's decision is irreconcilable with both first principles and precedent. I respectfully dissent.
During this litigation, Alabama changed the name of its Department of Labor to the Department of Workforce, and Greg Reed, Alabama's first Secretary of Workforce, was substituted as the respondent. See 2024 Ala. Acts no. 2024-115. Like the parties' briefing, we refer to the Secretary and the Department by their titles when this suit was filed.
The claimants also contend, more broadly, that this Court's §1983 precedents--especially Patsy v. Board of Regents of Fla.,
In Haywood, the Court declined to address "whether Congress may compel a State to offer a forum, otherwise unavailable under state law, to hear suits brought pursuant to §1983."
Importantly, the Court's holding today does not mean that premature procedural due process claims will necessarily prevail. As this Court has stated, "a procedural due process claim is not complete when the deprivation occurs. Rather, the claim is complete only when the State fails to provide due process." Reed v. Goertz,
Here, the claimants allege that the State's delays in completing the administrative process violated their due process and statutory rights. We take no position on the merits of those claims.
Petitioners' suit implicates other precedents that may not withstand scrutiny. I doubt that petitioners have a true due process interest in "mere Government benefits and entitlements." Axon Enterprise, Inc. v. FTC,
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No. 23-191
Argued: October 07, 2024
Decided: February 21, 2025
Court: United States Supreme Court
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