Johnnie Savory v. William Cannon, Sr. ( 2020 )


Menu:
  •                                    In the
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the Seventh Circuit
    No. 17-3543
    JOHNNIE LEE SAVORY,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    WILLIAM CANNON, SR.,
    as special representative for
    CHARLES CANNON, et al.,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    Appeal from the United States District Court for the
    Northern District of Illinois, Eastern Division.
    No. 1:17-cv-00204 — Gary Feinerman, Judge.
    ARGUED SEPTEMBER 24, 2019 — DECIDED JANUARY 7, 2020
    Before WOOD, Chief Judge, and EASTERBROOK, KANNE,
    ROVNER, SYKES, HAMILTON, BARRETT, BRENNAN, SCUDDER and
    ST. EVE, Circuit Judges.*
    *
    Judge Flaum took no part in the decision to consider this case en banc,
    (continued...)
    2                                                          No. 17-3543
    ROVNER, Circuit Judge. Johnnie Lee Savory spent thirty years
    in prison for a 1977 double murder that he insists he did not
    commit. Even after his release from prison, he continued to
    assert his innocence. Thirty-eight years after his conviction, the
    governor of Illinois pardoned Savory. Within two years of the
    pardon, Savory filed a civil rights suit against the City of Peoria
    (“City”) and a number of Peoria police officers alleging that
    they framed him. The district court found that the claims
    accrued more than five years before Savory filed suit, when he
    was released from custody and could no longer challenge his
    conviction in habeas corpus proceedings. Because the statute
    of limitations on his claims is two years, the district court
    dismissed the suit as untimely. Savory appealed to this court,
    and the panel reversed and remanded after concluding that the
    claim was timely under Heck v. Humphrey, 
    512 U.S. 477
    (1994),
    because it accrued at the time of Savory’s pardon, within the
    two-year limitations period. We granted the defendants’
    petition for rehearing en banc and vacated the panel’s opinion
    and judgment. We again conclude that Heck controls the
    outcome here, and we reverse and remand for further proceed-
    ings.
    I.
    In reviewing a grant of a motion to dismiss, we are required
    to assume that the facts alleged in the complaint are true, but
    we offer no opinion on the ultimate merits because further
    development of the record may cast the facts in a light different
    *
    (...continued)
    nor in this court's subsequent en banc consideration and disposition.
    No. 17-3543                                                      3
    from the complaint. Dobbey v. Illinois Dep’t of Corr., 
    574 F.3d 443
    , 444, 447 (7th Cir. 2009). See also Tobey v. Chibucos, 
    890 F.3d 634
    , 645 (7th Cir. 2018) (on a motion to dismiss, a court must
    accept as true the well-pleaded factual allegations in the
    complaint). In January 1977, Peoria police officers arrested
    fourteen-year-old Savory for the rape and murder of nineteen-
    year-old Connie Cooper and the murder of her fourteen-year-
    old brother, James Robinson. According to the complaint, these
    officers subjected Savory to an abusive thirty-one hour
    interrogation over a two-day period. The officers fabricated
    evidence, wrongfully coerced a false confession from the teen,
    suppressed and destroyed evidence that would have exoner-
    ated him, fabricated incriminating statements from alleged
    witnesses, and ignored ample evidence pointing to other
    suspects. No legitimate evidence implicated Savory. His arrest,
    prosecution and conviction were based entirely on the officers’
    fabricated evidence and illegally extracted false confession.
    Savory was tried as an adult in 1977 and convicted of first
    degree murder. After that conviction was overturned on
    appeal, he was convicted again in 1981. He was sentenced to a
    term of forty to eighty years in prison. After Savory exhausted
    direct appeals and post-conviction remedies in state court, he
    unsuccessfully sought federal habeas corpus relief. He repeat-
    edly petitioned for clemency and also sought DNA testing.
    After thirty years in prison, he was paroled in December 2006.
    Five years later, in December 2011, the governor of Illinois
    commuted the remainder of Savory’s sentence. That action
    terminated his parole (and therefore his custody) but left his
    conviction intact. On January 12, 2015, the governor pardoned
    4                                                               No. 17-3543
    Savory of the crime of murder,1 and declared that Savory was
    “acquitted and discharged of and from all further imprison-
    ment and restored to all the rights of citizenship which may
    have been forfeited by the conviction.” The pardon was
    granted with an “Order Permitting Expungement Under The
    Provisions Of 20 ILCS 2630/5.2(e).” R. 71-3. On January 11,
    2017, less than two years after the pardon, Savory filed suit
    against the City and the police officers.
    That suit asserted six claims under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, five
    against the individual defendants and one against the City. The
    five counts against the individual defendants alleged that they:
    (1) coerced a false confession from Savory in violation of the
    Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments; (2) coerced a false confes-
    sion from Savory in violation of his due process rights under
    the Fourteenth Amendment; (3) maliciously prosecuted
    Savory, depriving him of liberty without probable cause in
    violation of the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments;2
    1
    The governor simultaneously pardoned Savory of the crime of possessing
    contraband in a penal institution, a crime for which he was convicted in
    1994.
    2
    Savory acknowledged that, at the time of filing his complaint, our circuit
    law held that a “so-called federal malicious prosecution claim” was not
    actionable under section 1983. R. 1, at 20 n.1. He nevertheless pled Count III
    under the Fourth and Fourteenth Amendments in order to preserve it
    pending the outcome of the Supreme Court’s consideration of Manuel v.
    City of Joliet, Ill., 590 F. App’x 641 (7th Cir. 2017). The Court subsequently
    held that “the Fourth Amendment governs a claim for unlawful pretrial
    detention even beyond the start of legal process.” See Manuel v. City of Joliet,
    Ill., 
    137 S. Ct. 911
    , 920 (2017). The Court remanded the case for consideration
    (continued...)
    No. 17-3543                                                                    5
    (4) deprived Savory of his right to a fair trial, his right not to be
    wrongfully convicted, and his right to be free of involuntary
    confinement and servitude in violation of the Thirteenth and
    Fourteenth Amendments; and (5) failed to intervene as their
    fellow officers violated Savory’s civil rights. In the sixth count,
    Savory alleged that the City’s unlawful policies, practices and
    customs led to his wrongful conviction and imprisonment in
    violation of section 1983. Savory also brought state law claims
    against the defendants but later conceded that those claims
    2
    (...continued)
    of the elements of the claim and the accrual date. Acknowledging that
    courts are to look first to the common law of torts in defining the contours
    and prerequisites of a section 1983 claim, the Court declined to resolve the
    dispute between the parties as to the most analogous common-law tort. The
    Court also noted that common-law principles guide rather than control the
    definition of section 1983 claims, and that “[i]n applying, selecting among,
    or adjusting common-law approaches, courts must closely attend to the
    values and purposes of the constitutional right at 
    issue.” 137 S. Ct. at 921
    .
    Manuel argued that the claim resembled malicious prosecution and the
    defendant likened the claim to false arrest. We subsequently held that the
    nature of Manuel’s claim was detention without probable cause, even
    though Manuel was being held by authority of a judicial decision that
    probable cause existed. Manuel had asserted that the police hoodwinked
    the judge by falsely asserting that pills he possessed contained unlawful
    substances. Manuel was released the day after the prosecutor dropped the
    charges. Because his detention was judicially authorized, we invoked the
    holdings of Preiser v. Rodriguez, 
    411 U.S. 475
    (1973), and Heck, and held that
    the claim would accrue when the detention ended. Manuel v. City of Joliet,
    Ill., 
    903 F.3d 667
    , 670 (7th Cir. 2018). In Savory’s case, the district court did
    not separately analyze the accrual date for Count III. Now that the Supreme
    Court has resolved Manuel, the accrual date for Count III should be
    considered on remand.
    6                                                    No. 17-3543
    were untimely under the state’s one-year statute of limitations.
    Those claims are not part of this appeal.
    The defendants moved to dismiss Savory’s section 1983
    claims on several grounds, but the district court addressed
    only one: the statute of limitations. The court recognized that,
    under Heck v. Humphrey, 
    512 U.S. 477
    (1994), Savory could not
    bring his section 1983 claims unless and until he obtained a
    favorable termination of a challenge to his conviction. The
    parties agreed that the relevant statute of limitations required
    Savory to bring his claims within two years of accrual, but the
    parties disagreed on when the Heck bar lifted. Savory asserted
    that his claims did not accrue until he received a pardon from
    the Illinois governor on January 12, 2015, rendering his January
    11, 2017 suit timely. The defendants asserted that the Heck bar
    lifted when Savory’s parole was terminated on December 6,
    2011, making his claims untimely. The district court concluded
    that the defendants had the better view of Heck and dismissed
    the claims with prejudice. Savory appeals.
    II.
    We review de novo a Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal on statute of
    limitations grounds. 
    Tobey, 890 F.3d at 645
    ; Amin Ijbara Equity
    Corp. v. Village of Oak Lawn, 
    860 F.3d 489
    , 492 (7th Cir. 2017).
    For a section 1983 claim, federal courts look to state law for the
    length of the limitations period. McDonough v. Smith, 
    139 S. Ct. 2149
    , 2155 (2019). See also Owens v. Okure, 
    488 U.S. 235
    , 249–50
    (1989) (“where state law provides multiple statutes of limita-
    tions for personal injury actions, courts considering § 1983
    claims should borrow the general or residual statute for
    personal injury actions”). In Illinois, the applicable limitations
    No. 17-3543                                                     7
    period is two years. 
    Tobey, 890 F.3d at 645
    . However, the
    “accrual date of a § 1983 cause of action is a question of federal
    law that is not resolved by reference to state law.” Wallace v.
    Kato, 
    549 U.S. 384
    , 388 (2007) (emphasis in original). Instead,
    certain aspects of section 1983 claims, including accrual dates,
    are “governed by federal rules conforming in general to
    common-law tort principles.” 
    Id. Under those
    common-law tort
    principles, claims accrue when a plaintiff has a complete and
    present cause of action. Id.; 
    McDonough, 139 S. Ct. at 2155
    . So
    we must determine the first moment at which Savory had a
    complete and present cause of action.
    A.
    We begin our analysis of the accrual date for Savory’s
    claims with Heck, which addressed whether and when a state
    prisoner may challenge the constitutionality of his conviction
    in a suit for damages under 42 U.S.C. § 1983. 
    Heck, 512 U.S. at 478
    . While Heck was serving a fifteen-year sentence for
    manslaughter, he brought a section 1983 action against two
    prosecutors and a state police inspector asserting that they
    engaged in an unlawful investigation that led to his arrest, that
    they knowingly destroyed exculpatory evidence, and that they
    caused an unlawful voice identification procedure to be used
    at his 
    trial. 512 U.S. at 478
    –79.
    The Court noted that such a case lies at the intersection of
    federal prisoner litigation under section 1983 and the federal
    habeas corpus 
    statute. 512 U.S. at 480
    . The Court had first
    considered the potential overlap between these two statutes in
    Preiser, and held then “that habeas corpus is the exclusive
    remedy for a state prisoner who challenges the fact or duration
    8                                                     No. 17-3543
    of his confinement and seeks immediate or speedier release,
    even though such a claim may come within the literal terms of
    § 1983.” 
    Heck, 512 U.S. at 481
    (citing 
    Preiser, 411 U.S. at 488
    –90).
    Heck, however, was not seeking immediate or speedier release,
    but monetary damages, and so his claim was not covered by
    the holding of Preiser. Section 1983 created “a species of tort
    liability,” and so in determining whether there were any bars
    to Heck’s suit, the Court turned first to the common law of
    torts. 
    Heck, 512 U.S. at 481
    , 483.
    Heck’s section 1983 claim most closely resembled the
    common-law tort of malicious prosecution, which allows
    damages for confinement imposed pursuant to legal process,
    including compensation for arrest and imprisonment, discom-
    fort or injury to health, and loss of time and deprivation of
    society. 
    Heck, 512 U.S. at 484
    . See also 
    McDonough, 139 S. Ct. at 2156
    (finding that the plaintiff’s section 1983 fabricated-
    evidence claim most closely resembled the tort of malicious
    prosecution). “One element that must be alleged and proved
    in a malicious prosecution action is termination of the prior
    criminal proceeding in favor of the accused.” 
    Heck, 512 U.S. at 484
    . This requirement avoids creating two conflicting resolu-
    tions arising out of the same transaction—an extant, enforce-
    able criminal conviction on the one hand, and a civil judgment
    implying the invalidity of that conviction on the other—and
    steers clear of parallel litigation over the issue of guilt. The
    requirement also prevents a convicted criminal from collater-
    ally attacking the conviction through a civil suit:
    We think the hoary principle that civil tort actions
    are not appropriate vehicles for challenging the
    validity of outstanding criminal judgments applies
    No. 17-3543                                                    9
    to § 1983 damages actions that necessarily require
    the plaintiff to prove the unlawfulness of his convic-
    tion or confinement, just as it has always applied to
    actions for malicious prosecution.
    We hold that, in order to recover damages for
    allegedly unconstitutional conviction or imprison-
    ment, or for other harm caused by actions whose
    unlawfulness would render a conviction or sentence
    invalid, a § 1983 plaintiff must prove that the convic-
    tion or sentence has been reversed on direct appeal,
    expunged by executive order, declared invalid by a
    state tribunal authorized to make such determina-
    tion, or called into question by a federal court’s
    issuance of a writ of habeas corpus, 28 U.S.C. § 2254.
    A claim for damages bearing that relationship to a
    conviction or sentence that has not been so invali-
    dated is not cognizable under § 1983. Thus, when a
    state prisoner seeks damages in a § 1983 suit, the
    district court must consider whether a judgment in
    favor of the plaintiff would necessarily imply the
    invalidity of his conviction or sentence; if it would,
    the complaint must be dismissed unless the plaintiff
    can demonstrate that the conviction or sentence has
    already been invalidated. But if the district court
    determines that the plaintiff’s action, even if success-
    ful, will not demonstrate the invalidity of any out-
    standing criminal judgment against the plaintiff, the
    10                                                  No. 17-3543
    action should be allowed to proceed, in the absence
    of some other bar to the suit.
    
    Heck, 512 U.S. at 486
    –87 (footnotes omitted; emphasis in
    original).
    The Court made pellucid the broad consequences of its
    plainly stated rule:
    We do not engraft an exhaustion requirement upon
    § 1983, but rather deny the existence of a cause of
    action. Even a prisoner who has fully exhausted
    available state remedies has no cause of action
    under § 1983 unless and until the conviction or
    sentence is reversed, expunged, invalidated, or
    impugned by the grant of a writ of habeas corpus.
    
    Heck, 512 U.S. at 489
    . Returning to its comparison to common-
    law torts, the Court concluded that, just as a claim for mali-
    cious prosecution does not accrue until the criminal proceed-
    ings have terminated in the plaintiff’s favor, “so also a § 1983
    cause of action for damages attributable to an unconstitutional
    conviction or sentence does not accrue until the conviction or
    sentence has been 
    invalidated.” 512 U.S. at 489
    –90.
    The Supreme Court has reaffirmed the Heck framework
    several times. See 
    Wallace, 549 U.S. at 393
    (noting that the Heck
    rule for deferred accrual is called into play only when there
    exists a conviction or sentence that has not been invalidated;
    Heck “delays what would otherwise be the accrual date of a
    tort action until the setting aside of an extant conviction which
    success in that tort action would impugn.”) (emphasis in
    original); Nelson v. Campbell, 
    541 U.S. 637
    , 646 (2004) (citing
    No. 17-3543                                                   11
    Heck for the proposition that “a § 1983 suit for damages that
    would ‘necessarily imply’ the invalidity of the fact of an
    inmate’s conviction, or ‘necessarily imply’ the invalidity of the
    length of an inmate’s sentence, is not cognizable under § 1983
    unless and until the inmate obtains favorable termination of a
    state, or federal habeas, challenge to his conviction or sen-
    tence”); Edwards v. Balisok, 
    520 U.S. 641
    , 643, 645–48 (1997)
    (reaffirming the holding of Heck and extending it to claims
    challenging prison disciplinary proceedings that implicate the
    length of a prisoner’s sentence). The Court most recently
    revisited Heck in McDonough v. Smith, 
    139 S. Ct. 2149
    (2019).
    There, the Court held that a section 1983 claim for fabricating
    evidence in a criminal prosecution accrued upon acquittal, and
    not when the prosecutor’s knowing use of the fabricated
    evidence first caused some deprivation of liberty for the
    
    plaintiff. 139 S. Ct. at 2153
    –54.
    The plaintiff in McDonough alleged that the prosecutor
    fabricated evidence in order to inculpate him, including
    falsifying affidavits, coaching witnesses to lie, and orchestrat-
    ing a suspect DNA analysis to link McDonough to the crime.
    The prosecutor brought criminal charges against McDonough
    and presented the fabricated evidence at a trial which ended in
    a mistrial. The same prosecutor then retried McDonough,
    again presenting the fabricated evidence. The second trial
    resulted in an acquittal. McDonough asserted two claims in his
    section 1983 action, one for malicious prosecution and one for
    fabricated evidence. The district court dismissed the malicious
    prosecution claim as barred by prosecutorial immunity, and
    dismissed the fabricated evidence claim as untimely, finding
    that the claim accrued when the fabricated evidence was used
    12                                                             No. 17-3543
    against McDonough. The court of appeals affirmed, finding
    that McDonough had a complete fabricated-evidence claim as
    soon as he could show that the prosecutor’s knowing use of
    fabricated evidence caused him some deprivation of liberty.
    Relying on Heck and its progeny, the Supreme Court reversed,
    concluding:
    The statute of limitations for a fabricated-evidence
    claim like McDonough’s does not begin to run until
    the criminal proceedings against the defendant (i.e.,
    the § 1983 plaintiff) have terminated in his favor.
    This conclusion follows both from the rule for the
    most natural common-law analogy (the tort of
    malicious prosecution) and from the practical
    considerations that have previously led this Court to
    defer accrual of claims that would otherwise consti-
    tute an untenable collateral attack on a criminal
    
    judgment. 139 S. Ct. at 2154
    –55. In McDonough’s case, favorable termina-
    tion occurred at acquittal after the second trial.3
    3
    Savory argued in supplemental briefing that this holding in McDonough
    calls into question the continued validity of Johnson v. Winstead, 
    900 F.3d 428
    (7th Cir. 2018). McDonough addressed claim accrual in the context of a trial
    resulting in mistrial, followed by retrial resulting in acquittal. Johnson
    addressed claim accrual in the context of a trial resulting in a conviction,
    followed by reversal on appeal, then retrial resulting in a second conviction,
    followed again by reversal on appeal. McDonough concluded that the claim
    accrued only at the resolution of the second trial. Johnson allowed for two
    accrual dates, one at favorable termination of the first trial (in the form of
    the appellate reversal) and the second at favorable termination of the
    (continued...)
    No. 17-3543                                                                  13
    The Court began the accrual analysis by identifying the
    specific constitutional right that had been infringed, a due
    process right not to be deprived of liberty as a result of the
    fabrication of evidence by a government officer. 
    McDonough, 139 S. Ct. at 2155
    ; Manuel v. City of Joliet, Ill., 
    137 S. Ct. 911
    , 920
    (2017). Noting its frequent practice of deciding accrual issues
    by reference to common-law principles governing analogous
    torts, the Court concluded that the most analogous common-
    law tort for McDonough’s fabricated-evidence claim was
    malicious prosecution.4 See 
    Heck, 512 U.S. at 484
    . Following that
    analogy, the Court concluded that McDonough could not bring
    his section 1983 fabricated evidence claim prior to the favor-
    3
    (...continued)
    second trial (again in the form of reversal on appeal). Savory asks this court
    to resolve the seeming inconsistency by finding that there is only one
    accrual date in a single criminal case with a retrial. To the extent that it is
    necessary to reconsider Johnson, we conclude that the more prudent course
    is to allow the district court to consider in the first instance, after full
    briefing from both the plaintiff and the defendants, whether and how
    McDonough affects Johnson.
    4
    Savory also argued in supplemental briefing that we should overrule
    Manuel v. City of Joliet, Ill., 
    903 F.3d 667
    (7th Cir. 2018), to the extent that
    opinion rejected analogies to common-law torts in section 1983 actions.
    Savory contends that McDonough dictates–contrary to our 2018 Manuel
    opinion–that his claim for unlawful detention after legal process accrued at
    the same time as all of his other claims, specifically at the time of his
    pardon. We again conclude that, to the extent that it is necessary to consider
    this argument, the prudent course of action is for Savory to raise these
    issues first in the district court, where, with the benefit of full briefing, the
    court may consider in the first instance whether and how McDonough affects
    our 2018 decision in Manuel.
    14                                                    No. 17-3543
    able termination of his prosecution. 
    McDonough, 139 S. Ct. at 2156
    . Citing Heck, 
    Preiser, 411 U.S. at 490
    , and Younger v. Harris,
    
    401 U.S. 37
    , 43 (1971), the Court reiterated the rationales
    underlying the favorable-termination rule:
    [The] favorable-termination requirement is rooted in
    pragmatic concerns with avoiding parallel criminal
    and civil litigation over the same subject matter and
    the related possibility of conflicting civil and crimi-
    nal judgments. … The requirement likewise avoids
    allowing collateral attacks on criminal judgments
    through civil litigation. … These concerns track
    similar concerns for finality and consistency that
    have motivated this Court to refrain from multiply-
    ing avenues for collateral attack on criminal judg-
    ments through civil tort vehicles such as § 1983.
    
    McDonough, 139 S. Ct. at 2156
    –57 (internal citations and
    quotation marks omitted). Although Heck involved a plaintiff
    who had been convicted rather than a plaintiff who was
    acquitted, the Court found that:
    the pragmatic considerations discussed in Heck
    apply generally to civil suits within the domain of
    habeas corpus, not only to those that challenge
    convictions. See 
    Preiser, 411 U.S. at 490
    –491, 
    93 S. Ct. 1827
    . The principles and reasoning of Heck thus
    point toward a corollary result here: There is not “ ‘a
    complete and present cause of action,’ ” 
    Wallace, 549 U.S. at 388
    , 
    127 S. Ct. 1091
    , to bring a
    fabricated-evidence challenge to criminal proceed-
    ings while those criminal proceedings are ongoing.
    No. 17-3543                                                            15
    Only once the criminal proceeding has ended in the
    defendant’s favor, or a resulting conviction has been
    invalidated within the meaning of Heck, 
    see 512 U.S. at 486
    –487, 
    114 S. Ct. 2364
    , will the statute of limita-
    tions begin to run.
    
    McDonough, 139 S. Ct. at 2158
    .
    B.
    Applying the analytical paradigm of Heck and McDonough
    to Savory’s case, we first look at the nature of his section 1983
    claims and conclude that, like Heck’s claims, they strongly
    resemble the common-law tort of malicious prosecution.
    Indeed, Savory’s claims largely echo Heck’s complaint,
    asserting the suppression of exculpatory evidence and the
    fabrication of false evidence in order to effect a conviction.
    There is no logical way to reconcile those claims with a valid
    conviction. Therefore, Heck supplies the rule for accrual of the
    claim. Because Savory’s claims “would necessarily imply the
    invalidity of his conviction or sentence,” his section 1983 claims
    could not accrue until “the conviction or sentence ha[d] been
    reversed on direct appeal, expunged by executive order,
    declared invalid by a state tribunal authorized to make such
    determination, or called into question by a federal court’s
    issuance of a writ of habeas corpus.” 
    Heck, 512 U.S. at 487
    . In
    Savory’s case, that occurred on January 12, 2015, when the
    governor of Illinois pardoned him.5 Gilbert v. Cook, 
    512 F.3d 5
      At oral argument for the en banc rehearing, counsel for the defendants
    took the position that Savory’s pardon was not a favorable termination
    (continued...)
    16                                                        No. 17-3543
    899, 900 (7th Cir. 2008) (“the plaintiff in an action under 42
    U.S.C. § 1983 may not pursue a claim for relief that implies the
    invalidity of a criminal conviction, unless that conviction has
    been set aside by appeal, collateral review, or pardon.”). Until
    that moment, his conviction was intact and he had no cause of
    action under section 1983. 
    Heck, 512 U.S. at 489
    –90. His January
    11, 2017, lawsuit was therefore timely under Heck, and we
    must reverse the district court’s judgment and remand for
    further proceedings.
    McDonough supports the same result. Because McDonough
    (who was not held in custody during his trials) was acquitted
    rather than convicted, his section 1983 claim would not have
    infringed upon the exclusivity of the habeas corpus remedy.
    The Court nevertheless indicated that the other concerns
    discussed in Heck still guided the outcome, and no section 1983
    claim could proceed until the criminal proceeding ended in the
    defendant’s favor or the resulting conviction was invalidated
    within the meaning of Heck. So too with Savory. Although his
    sentence had been served and habeas relief was no longer
    available to him (and thus habeas exclusivity was not at issue),
    the other considerations raised in Heck controlled the outcome:
    he had no complete cause of action until he received a favor-
    able termination of his conviction, which occurred when the
    governor issued a pardon for the subject conviction.
    5
    (...continued)
    because it was a general pardon rather than a pardon based on innocence.
    As we will discuss below, Savory’s pardon does operate as a favorable
    termination for the purposes of the Heck analysis.
    No. 17-3543                                                                  17
    C.
    The defendants here contend that Savory’s federal claims
    accrued when he was released from state custody in 2011, even
    though his conviction remained intact. The rule urged by the
    defendants would result in claims being dead on arrival in
    virtually all section 1983 suits brought in relation to extant
    convictions. “Congress has specifically required all federal
    courts to give preclusive effect to state–court judgments
    whenever the courts of the State from which the judgments
    emerged would do so[.]” Allen v. McCurry, 
    449 U.S. 90
    , 96
    (1980). See 28 U.S.C. § 1738 (judicial proceedings of any court
    of any State “shall have the same full faith and credit in every
    court within the United States and its Territories and Posses-
    sions as they have by law or usage in the courts of such State”).
    In Allen, the Supreme Court considered “whether the rules of
    res judicata and collateral estoppel are generally applicable to
    § 1983 
    actions.”6 449 U.S. at 96
    . The Court concluded that the
    usual rules of preclusion apply in section 1983 
    actions. 449 U.S. at 103
    –05. Federal courts apply the preclusion law of the state
    where the judgment was rendered, so long as the state in
    question satisfies the applicable requirements of the Due
    Process Clause. Kremer v. Chemical Constr. Corp., 
    456 U.S. 461
    ,
    481–82 (1982). The Heck bar accounts for the preclusive effect
    6
    Under res judicata, also known as claim preclusion, “a final judgment on
    the merits of an action precludes the parties or their privies from relitigating
    issues that were or could have been raised in that action.” 
    Allen, 449 U.S. at 94
    . Under collateral estoppel, also known as issue preclusion, “once a court
    has decided an issue of fact or law necessary to its judgment, that decision
    may preclude relitigation of the issue in a suit on a different cause of action
    involving a party to the first case.” 
    Id. 18 No.
    17-3543
    of state court criminal judgments on civil litigation by lifting
    the bar only when the plaintiff has achieved a favorable
    termination of the criminal proceeding. See Morgan v. Schott,
    
    914 F.3d 1115
    , 1120 (7th Cir. 2019) (the Heck rule is a version of
    issue preclusion under which the outstanding criminal
    judgment or disciplinary sanction, as long as it stands, blocks
    any inconsistent civil judgment). Under the defendants’ rule,
    a section 1983 claim would accrue on release from custody
    even though the conviction remained intact, and even though
    preclusion rules would effectively prevent the plaintiff from
    bringing any claim inconsistent with the original criminal
    conviction. Claimants like Savory, who obtained a pardon
    several years after release from custody and who may have the
    most meritorious claims, would be too late. Nothing in Heck
    requires such a result.
    D.
    Although a straight-forward reading of Heck and its
    progeny (including McDonough) determines the outcome here,
    we must address the defendant’s arguments that concurring
    and dissenting opinions of certain Supreme Court justices
    cobbled together into a seeming majority or the opinions of this
    court may somehow override the prime directive of Heck.
    Several of our post-Heck cases contain dicta or rely on reason-
    ing that is in conflict with Heck and McDonough, and we must
    address and clarify those cases as well.
    1.
    The misunderstanding that led to the erroneous result in
    the district court here originated in a concurrence in Heck filed
    by Justice Souter and joined by Justices Blackmun, Stevens and
    No. 17-3543                                                     19
    O’Connor. In that concurrence, Justice Souter agreed that
    reference to the common-law tort of malicious prosecution was
    a useful starting point but he asserted that it could not alone
    provide the answer to the conundrum found at the intersection
    between section 1983 and the federal habeas statute. Ulti-
    mately, Justice Souter suggested a slightly different rule that he
    submitted would avoid any collision between section 1983 and
    the habeas statute:
    A state prisoner may seek federal-court § 1983
    damages for unconstitutional conviction or confine-
    ment, but only if he has previously established the
    unlawfulness of his conviction or confinement, as on
    appeal or on habeas. This has the effect of requiring
    a state prisoner challenging the lawfulness of his
    confinement to follow habeas’s rules before seeking
    § 1983 damages for unlawful confinement in federal
    court[.]
    
    Heck, 512 U.S. at 498
    (Souter, J., concurring).
    For persons not in custody for the purposes of the habeas
    statute, “people who were merely fined, for example, or who
    have completed short terms of imprisonment, probation, or
    parole, or who discover (through no fault of their own) a
    constitutional violation after full expiration of their sentences,”
    there would be no requirement to show “the prior invalidation
    of their convictions or sentences in order to obtain § 1983
    damages for unconstitutional conviction or imprisonment”
    because:
    the result would be to deny any federal forum for
    claiming a deprivation of federal rights to those who
    20                                                   No. 17-3543
    cannot first obtain a favorable state ruling. The
    reason, of course, is that individuals not “in cus-
    tody” cannot invoke federal habeas jurisdiction, the
    only statutory mechanism besides § 1983 by which
    individuals may sue state officials in federal court
    for violating federal rights. That would be an unto-
    ward result.
    
    Heck, 512 U.S. at 500
    (Souter, J., concurring).
    In contrast, of course, the Heck majority’s rule requires that
    a plaintiff always obtain a favorable resolution of the criminal
    conviction before bringing a section 1983 claim that would
    necessarily imply the invalidity of a conviction or sentence.
    The majority opinion specifically rejected Justice Souter’s
    alternate rule:
    Justice SOUTER also adopts the common-law
    principle that one cannot use the device of a civil
    tort action to challenge the validity of an outstand-
    ing criminal conviction, but thinks it necessary to
    abandon that principle in those cases (of which no
    real-life example comes to mind) involving former
    state prisoners who, because they are no longer in
    custody, cannot bring postconviction challenges. We
    think the principle barring collateral attacks—a
    longstanding and deeply rooted feature of both the
    common law and our own jurisprudence—is not
    rendered inapplicable by the fortuity that a con-
    victed criminal is no longer incarcerated.
    
    Heck, 512 U.S. at 490
    n.10 (citations omitted). The Court thus
    expressly rejected a rule tied to the end of custody. In that
    No. 17-3543                                                             21
    same footnote, the Court also dismissed the notion that section
    1983 must be interpreted in a manner that provides a remedy
    for all conceivable invasions of federal rights. 
    Id. See also
    Allen,
    449 U.S. at 103
    –04 (inability to obtain federal habeas corpus
    relief upon a Fourth Amendment claim does not render the
    doctrine of collateral estoppel inapplicable to a section 1983
    suit on that same claim). In other words, there is not always a
    section 1983 remedy for every constitutional wrong. See San
    Remo Hotel, L.P. v. City and Cty. of San Francisco, 
    545 U.S. 323
    ,
    342 (2005) (issues actually decided in valid state-court judg-
    ments may well deprive plaintiffs of the right to have their
    federal claims re-litigated in federal court). In Allen, for
    example, the Court made clear that an inability to pursue relief
    through the habeas statute would not relieve a section 1983
    claimant of the preclusive effect of a state court judgment
    where the claimant had a full and fair opportunity to litigate
    the issue in state court. 
    Allen, 449 U.S. at 102
    –05.
    But in Spencer v. Kemna, 
    523 U.S. 1
    , 21 (1998), Justice Souter
    again filed a concurrence expressing the view that he urged in
    his Heck concurrence, namely “that a former prisoner, no
    longer ‘in custody,’ may bring a § 1983 action establishing the
    unconstitutionality of a conviction or confinement without
    being bound to satisfy a favorable-termination requirement
    that it would be impossible as a matter of law for him to
    satisfy.”7 Justice Ginsburg, who had been in the majority in
    7
    In Savory’s case, of course, it was not impossible as a matter of law to
    satisfy the favorable-termination rule even though he had fully served his
    sentence and lacked access to habeas corpus. Savory sought and received
    (continued...)
    22                                                            No. 17-3543
    Heck, this time agreed with Justice Souter (who was also joined
    by Justices O’Connor and Breyer), joining his concurrence and
    filing her own: “Individuals without recourse to the habeas
    statute because they are not ‘in custody’ (people merely fined
    or whose sentences have been fully served, for example) fit
    within § 1983's ‘broad reach.’” 
    Spencer, 523 U.S. at 21
    (Ginsburg, J., concurring). Justice Stevens dissented in Spencer,
    but he approved Justice Souter’s basic premise: “Given the
    Court’s holding that petitioner does not have a remedy under
    the habeas statute, it is perfectly clear, as Justice SOUTER
    explains, that he may bring an action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.”
    
    Spencer, 523 U.S. at 25
    n.8 (Stevens, J., dissenting).
    The defendants contended in the district court and main-
    tain on appeal that this dicta in concurring and dissenting
    opinions, cobbled together, now formed a new majority,
    essentially overruling footnote 10 in Heck. But it is axiomatic
    that dicta from a collection of concurrences and dissents may
    not overrule majority opinions. See Agostini v. Felton, 
    521 U.S. 203
    , 217, 238 (1997) (the views of five concurring Justices that
    a case should be reconsidered or overruled cannot be said to
    have effected a change in the law when the propriety of that
    case was not before the Court; instead, the case controls until
    the Court reinterprets and overrules the binding precedent);
    Cross v. United States, 
    892 F.3d 288
    , 303 (7th Cir. 2018) (“Unless
    and until a majority of the Court overrules the majority
    7
    (...continued)
    an executive pardon. Illinois also provides a statutory remedy allowing
    petitioners to seek relief from final judgments in certain circumstances. See
    735 ILCS 5/2-1401.
    No. 17-3543                                                     23
    opinions in [two prior cases], they continue to bind us.”). The
    Supreme Court may eventually adopt Justice Souter’s view,
    but it has not yet done so and we are bound by Heck. Rodriguez
    de Quijas v. Shearson/American Express, Inc., 
    490 U.S. 477
    , 484
    (1989) (“If a precedent of this Court has direct application in a
    case, yet appears to rest on reasons rejected in some other line
    of decisions, the Court of Appeals should follow the case
    which directly controls, leaving to this Court the prerogative
    of overruling its own decisions.”). See also Muhammad v. Close,
    
    540 U.S. 749
    , 752 n.2 (2004) (noting that members of the Court
    had expressed the view that “unavailability of habeas for other
    reasons may also dispense with the Heck requirement” but
    indicating that “[t]his case is no occasion to settle the issue.”).
    The defendants also assert that footnote 10 of Heck (which
    specifically rejected Justice Souter’s proposed rule) was dicta,
    and therefore does not control the outcome here. The plaintiff
    in Heck, they note, was incarcerated and allowing a section
    1983 suit during incarceration would have permitted an end-
    run around the habeas corpus statute. No such concern is
    present, they argue, in the scenario addressed in footnote 10 of
    Heck, specifically, persons who are no longer in custody and
    cannot bring habeas challenges. But Heck was concerned with
    more than the exclusivity of the habeas corpus remedy for
    persons in custody, or the intersection between habeas corpus
    and section 1983. The favorable termination rule in Heck also
    rested on concerns arising generally from collateral attacks on
    extant criminal convictions through civil law suits. Specifically,
    requiring a section 1983 plaintiff to prove favorable termina-
    tion of the criminal conviction avoids parallel litigation over
    the issues of probable cause and guilt, and precludes the
    24                                                   No. 17-3543
    possibility that a plaintiff might succeed in a civil tort action
    after having been convicted in the underlying criminal prose-
    cution, allowing the creation of conflicting judgments arising
    out of the same transaction. 
    Heck, 512 U.S. at 485
    –86. These
    concerns were repeated recently in McDonough as rationales
    supporting the application of Heck’s favorable termination rule
    in a case that did not implicate concerns about habeas corpus.
    Because the plaintiff had been acquitted rather than convicted,
    there was little likelihood of a collision between habeas corpus
    and section 1983. Yet the Court cited the continued relevance
    of the favorable-termination rule as being “rooted in pragmatic
    concerns with avoiding parallel criminal and civil litigation
    over the same subject matter and the related possibility of
    conflicting civil and criminal judgments.” 
    McDonough, 139 S. Ct. at 2156
    –57. In further support of the favorable termina-
    tion rule, the Court also cited related concerns for finality,
    consistency, and the avoidance of unnecessary friction between
    the state and federal court 
    systems. 139 S. Ct. at 2157
    . Although
    footnote 10 of Heck addressed a factual scenario that was not
    before the Court, to dismiss all of footnote 10 as dicta is to
    divorce a significant part of the Court’s rationale from its
    holding. The Court was simply making clear how broadly it
    intended its holding to apply.
    2.
    The defendants also asserted below and argued on appeal
    that this court has abrogated the rule in Heck, citing five cases:
    DeWalt v. Carter, 
    224 F.3d 607
    (7th Cir. 2000); Simpson v. Nickel,
    
    450 F.3d 303
    (7th Cir. 2006); Burd v. Sessler, 
    702 F.3d 429
    (7th
    Cir. 2012); Whitfield v. Howard, 
    852 F.3d 656
    (7th Cir. 2017); and
    Sanchez v. City of Chicago, 
    880 F.3d 349
    (7th Cir. 2018). Accord-
    No. 17-3543                                                    25
    ing to the defendants, those cases “together sensibly hold an
    individual who is no longer in custody with no access to
    habeas corpus relief may bring a § 1983 action challenging the
    constitutionality of a still standing conviction without first
    satisfying the favorable termination rule of Heck.” Brief of
    Defendants-Appellees (hereafter “Defendants’ Brief”), at 7–8.
    As we just explained, however, this court may not on its own
    initiative overturn decisions of the Supreme Court. Although
    four of those five cases came to correct resolutions, some of our
    language and reasoning has created confusion regarding the
    applicability of Heck in cases where habeas relief is not avail-
    able. Indeed, it was on these cases that the district court relied
    in concluding that Savory had brought his claims too late. The
    confusion began in DeWalt, an opinion that had been circulated
    to the full court under Circuit Rule 40(e). 
    DeWalt, 224 F.3d at 618
    n.6 (noting that no judge in active service favored rehear-
    ing en banc).
    a.
    In DeWalt, we considered whether a prisoner could bring
    a section 1983 claim related to the loss of his prison job when
    the underlying disciplinary sanction had not been overturned
    or invalidated. Because DeWalt did not challenge the fact or
    duration of his confinement, a habeas petition was not the
    appropriate vehicle for his 
    claims. 224 F.3d at 617
    . DeWalt
    challenged only a condition of his confinement—namely, the
    loss of his prison job—making a section 1983 claim the appro-
    priate course of action. 
    Id. We summarized
    our holding with
    the rule “that the unavailability of federal habeas relief does
    not preclude a prisoner from bringing a § 1983 action to
    challenge a condition of his confinement that results from a
    26                                                   No. 17-3543
    prison disciplinary 
    action.” 224 F.3d at 618
    . We discussed the
    minority views in Spencer and Heck in the context of answering
    a then-open question, namely, “whether Heck's favorable-
    termination requirement bars a prisoner’s challenge under
    § 1983 to an administrative sanction that does not affect the
    length of 
    confinement.” 224 F.3d at 616
    . We concluded that it
    did not, a position later approved by the Supreme Court. See
    
    Muhammad, 540 U.S. at 754
    (noting that the Seventh Circuit in
    DeWalt had taken the position that Heck did not apply to prison
    disciplinary proceedings in the absence of any implication
    going to the fact or duration of the underlying sentence, and
    likewise concluding that because Muhammad’s claim did not
    seek a judgment at odds with his conviction or with the state’s
    calculation of time to be served, Heck’s favorable-termination
    requirement was inapplicable). We reaffirm DeWalt’s basic
    holding today: a section 1983 complaint that challenges a
    disciplinary sanction related only to the conditions of confine-
    ment and that does not implicate the validity of the underlying
    conviction or the duration of the sentence (e.g. loss of good
    time credits) is not subject to Heck’s favorable termination
    requirement. See also 
    Muhammad, 540 U.S. at 754
    –55.
    But part of the reasoning and language of DeWalt went
    further than that and implied that, in all cases where habeas
    relief is unavailable, then section 1983 must provide an avenue
    of relief. See 
    DeWalt, 224 F.3d at 617
    (“Because federal habeas
    relief is not available to Mr. DeWalt, the language of § 1983 and
    the Court's decision in Preiser dictate that he be able to proceed
    No. 17-3543                                                                  27
    on his § 1983 action.”).8 This language suggesting that a section
    1983 remedy must be available when habeas relief is unavail-
    able is in conflict with footnote 10 of Heck and with our holding
    today. Moreover, it was unnecessary to the holding in DeWalt,
    and we now disavow that language.
    In DeWalt, we also overruled our prior decisions in Ander-
    son v. County of Montgomery, 
    111 F.3d 494
    (7th Cir. 1997), and
    Stone-Bey v. Barnes, 
    120 F.3d 718
    (7th Cir. 1997), to the extent
    that they applied the rule in Heck to situations in which habeas
    relief was not available:
    We are aware that our decisions in Anderson v.
    County of Montgomery, 
    111 F.3d 494
    (7th Cir.1997),
    and Stone–Bey v. Barnes, 
    120 F.3d 718
    (7th Cir. 1997),
    precluded plaintiffs from pursuing § 1983 actions
    when federal habeas was not available or when the
    prisoner had not first availed himself of that option.
    However, we note that both of these cases preceded
    Spencer. Indeed, our more recent cases have ques-
    tioned the viability of Anderson and Stone–Bey in
    light of the Justices’ reluctance to apply the Heck rule
    to situations in which habeas relief is not available.
    See Hoard v. Reddy, 
    175 F.3d 531
    , 533 (7th Cir.)
    8
    Preiser held that a section 1983 action “is a proper remedy for a state
    prisoner who is making a constitutional challenge to the conditions of his
    prison life, but not to the fact or length of his custody.” Preiser v. Rodriguez,
    
    411 U.S. 475
    , 499 (1973). Muhammad then later clarified that Heck does not
    apply to prison disciplinary suits related only to conditions of confinement
    when those suits do not raise any implication about the validity of the
    conviction or the length of the 
    sentence. 540 U.S. at 754
    –55.
    28                                                   No. 17-3543
    (“[T]here is probably an exception to the rule of Heck
    for cases in which no route other than a damages
    action under section 1983 is open to the person to
    challenge his conviction.”), cert. denied, 
    528 U.S. 970
    ,
    
    120 S. Ct. 411
    , 
    145 L. Ed. 2d 320
    (1999); Carr v. O'Leary,
    
    167 F.3d 1124
    , 1127 (7th Cir.1999) (“With Carr
    unable to get the disciplinary sanction reversed, five
    Justices would not consider the sanction a bar to a
    section 1983 suit even though that suit calls into
    question the validity of the sanction.”); Sylvester v.
    Hanks, 
    140 F.3d 713
    , 714 (7th Cir.1998) (questioning
    whether Heck would preclude a § 1983 action to
    review placement in segregation given that “few
    states afford collateral review of prison disciplinary
    hearings”). Our decision today necessitates that we
    overrule Anderson and Stone–Bey to the extent they
    take the contrary position.
    
    DeWalt, 224 F.3d at 617
    –18.
    It was appropriate to overrule Stone-Bey, but not for the
    reason that we stated in DeWalt. Stone-Bey involved a pris-
    oner’s section 1983 challenge to conditions of confinement
    alone. In determining whether the Heck bar applied to his
    claim, we considered whether it made “any difference in
    applying Heck that the sentence imposed was one of disciplin-
    ary segregation alone, as opposed to segregation coupled with
    a loss of good-time credits,” and erroneously concluded that it
    did 
    not. 120 F.3d at 721
    . We then applied Heck’s favorable
    termination rule and barred the prisoner’s claim even though
    it did not implicate the validity of his conviction or sentence.
    That holding conflicts with Muhammad. Stone-Bey was in error
    No. 17-3543                                                 29
    but not because, as DeWalt stated, section 1983 must be
    available when habeas is 
    not. 224 F.3d at 617
    . Instead, the
    holding in Stone-Bey was incorrect because Heck does not apply
    to conditions-of-confinement claims that do not implicate the
    validity of the underlying conviction or the length of custody.
    There was no need to overrule Anderson. Anderson filed a
    section 1983 action that challenged the validity of his extant
    conviction, a claim that normally would be barred by Heck
    unless and until the plaintiff obtained a favorable termination
    of that underlying 
    conviction. 111 F.3d at 498
    –99. Anderson
    argued that, because he had been released from prison and no
    longer had access to habeas relief, he must have access to
    section 1983. The Anderson panel rejected that contention for
    two reasons: first, Anderson was on “conditional release,” a
    form of parole that likely meant he did retain access to habeas
    as a means of challenging his conviction. Second, Heck had
    rejected in footnote 10 the very argument which Anderson
    raised. We noted that, even if footnote 10 was dicta, the
    favorable termination rule of Heck also applied to persons no
    longer in custody because it was an element of the analogous
    common-law tort claim on which the section 1983 claim was
    based. That analysis was perfectly consistent with Heck and
    with our holding today.
    b.
    Simpson similarly addressed a claim by a prisoner related
    to disciplinary segregation and loss of recreation privileges.
    Because the claim related to conditions of confinement rather
    than to the lawfulness of a conviction or duration of confine-
    ment, we held that Heck’s favorable termination rule did not
    30                                                 No. 17-3543
    apply, reversing the district court’s decision to the 
    contrary. 450 F.3d at 306
    –07 (citing 
    Muhammad, 540 U.S. at 754
    –55). That
    holding of Simpson is correct. But we also asserted that Muham-
    mad and DeWalt established that:
    the doctrine of Heck and Edwards [v. Balisok] is
    limited to prisoners who are “in custody” as a result
    of the defendants’ challenged acts, and who there-
    fore are able to seek collateral review. Take away the
    possibility of collateral review and § 1983 becomes
    available. Simpson can’t obtain collateral relief in
    either state or federal court, so he isn’t (and never
    was) affected by Heck or Edwards.
    
    Simpson, 450 F.3d at 307
    (emphasis in original). This and
    similar passages in Simpson cannot survive our decision today.
    Heck did not lose its vitality because Simpson had been
    released from custody. Instead, Heck did not apply because
    Simpson’s conditions-of-confinement claim did not implicate
    the validity of his conviction or the length of his sentence.
    Muhammad in fact indicated that the Court had not yet had
    an occasion to revisit the minority views expressed in Spencer:
    Members of the Court have expressed the view that
    unavailability of habeas for other reasons may also
    dispense with the Heck requirement. See Heck v.
    Humphrey, 
    512 U.S. 477
    , 491, 
    114 S. Ct. 2364
    , 
    129 L. Ed. 2d 383
    (1994) (SOUTER, J., concurring in
    judgment); Spencer v. Kemna, 
    523 U.S. 1
    , 21–22, 
    118 S. Ct. 978
    , 
    140 L. Ed. 2d 43
    (1998) (GINSBURG, J.,
    concurring). This case is no occasion to settle the
    issue.
    No. 17-3543                                                      31
    
    Muhammad, 540 U.S. at 752
    n.2. Simpson read that footnote as
    conceding that Heck left this issue open. But footnote 2 of
    Muhammad merely acknowledged the possibility that the Court
    may someday revisit footnote 10 of Heck. Because it has not yet
    done so, we are bound by the holding and reasoning of Heck.
    c.
    Burd involved a section 1983 suit for damages, alleging that
    prison officials deprived the plaintiff of access to the prison
    library, which in turn prevented him from preparing a timely
    motion to withdraw his guilty plea. 
    Burd, 702 F.3d at 431
    . We
    concluded that the damages that Burd was seeking to recover
    were predicated on a successful challenge to his conviction,
    and so Heck 
    applied. 702 F.3d at 434
    –35. And “[t]he rule in Heck
    forbids the maintenance of such a damages action until the
    plaintiff can demonstrate his injury by establishing the
    invalidity of the underlying 
    judgment.” 702 F.3d at 435
    (empha-
    sis in original). That reasoning and holding was sound.
    But in rejecting Burd’s alternate theory, we endorsed the
    reasoning from DeWalt and Simpson that we now disavow. We
    stated “that Heck applies where a § 1983 plaintiff could have
    sought collateral relief at an earlier time but declined the
    opportunity and waited until collateral relief became unavail-
    able before 
    suing.” 702 F.3d at 436
    (emphasis in original). We
    added:
    Permitting a plaintiff who ignored his opportunity
    to seek collateral relief while incarcerated to skirt the
    Heck bar simply by waiting to bring a § 1983 claim
    until habeas is no longer available undermines Heck
    and is a far cry from the concerns, as we understand
    32                                                   No. 17-3543
    them, of the concurring Justices in Spencer for those
    individuals who were precluded by a legal impedi-
    ment from bringing an action for collateral 
    relief. 702 F.3d at 436
    . Nothing in the record revealed any impedi-
    ment to Burd seeking collateral relief while he was in custody.
    We therefore:
    join[ed] the Sixth and Ninth Circuits in holding that
    Heck bars a § 1983 action where: (1) [a] favorable
    judgment would necessarily call into question the
    validity of the underlying conviction or sentence
    and (2) the plaintiff could have pursued collateral
    relief but failed to do so in a timely 
    manner. 702 F.3d at 436
    . That statement should have ended after item
    (1). The dicta of five Justices in Spencer did not overrule the
    holding and reasoning of Heck, and a plaintiff’s failure to
    pursue habeas relief when it was available is irrelevant to
    whether the Heck bar applies. We repudiate that part of Burd
    that gives any significance to whether the plaintiff lost access
    to habeas relief through no fault of his own.
    d.
    The confusion that began in DeWalt, and that continued in
    dicta in Simpson and Burd, eventually led to a result in Whitfield
    v. Howard, 
    852 F.3d 656
    (7th Cir. 2017), which was, in retro-
    spect, incorrect. Although Whitfield was controlled by Edwards
    v. 
    Balisok, supra
    , rather than by Heck, we relied in part on dicta
    from both Burd and Carr v. O’Leary, 
    167 F.3d 1124
    (7th Cir.
    1999), to conclude that a former prisoner could pursue a
    section 1983 claim challenging prison disciplinary proceedings
    No. 17-3543                                                   33
    that led to loss of good time credits without first obtaining a
    favorable termination of those proceedings.
    Whitfield sought damages under section 1983 for the
    retaliatory revocation of good time 
    credits. 852 F.3d at 659
    . He
    pursued collateral review while he was in prison (albeit in a
    manner we characterized as not “procedurally perfect”),
    including a federal habeas claim, but was released from
    custody before his claims were resolved. We found that Balisok
    rather than Heck most directly governed Whitfield’s section
    1983 claims. 
    Whitfield, 852 F.3d at 663
    . Balisok addressed the
    claim of a state prisoner alleging due process violations for
    procedures used in a disciplinary hearing that resulted in a loss
    of “good-time” credits. 
    Balisok, 520 U.S. at 643
    . The Balisok
    Court found that “[t]he principal procedural defect complained
    of by respondent would, if established, necessarily imply the
    invalidity of the deprivation of his good-time 
    credits.” 520 U.S. at 646
    . But Balisok had not demonstrated that the result of the
    disciplinary hearing had been set aside, and so the Court found
    his claim not cognizable under § 
    1983. 520 U.S. at 648
    .
    Whitfield first nodded to the holding in Heck, noting that in
    “section 1983 suits that did not directly seek immediate or
    speedier release, but rather sought monetary damages that
    would call into question the validity of a conviction or term of
    confinement, … a prisoner has no claim under section 1983
    until he receives a favorable decision on his underlying
    conviction or sentence, such as through a reversal or grant of
    habeas corpus relief.” 
    Whitfield, 852 F.3d at 661
    . We also noted
    that Balisok extended the Heck bar to section 1983 suits brought
    by prisoners challenging the outcome of prison disciplinary
    34                                                    No. 17-3543
    proceedings in which the plaintiffs sought damages rather than
    earlier release. 
    Id. We then
    attempted to distinguish Balisok:
    Had [Balisok] prevailed, the result of the disciplin-
    ary proceeding would have to have been set aside.
    Whitfield, in contrast, is arguing that the [disciplin-
    ary] hearings should never have taken place at all,
    because they were acts of retaliation for his exercise
    of rights protected by the First Amendment. He has
    no quarrel with the procedures used in the prison
    disciplinary system. He could just as well be saying
    that a prison official maliciously calculated an
    improper release date, or “lost” the order authoriz-
    ing his release in retaliation for protected activity. In
    short, the essence of Whitfield’s complaint is the link
    between retaliation and his delayed release; the fact
    that disciplinary proceedings were the mechanism
    is not essential. Balisok also took care to be precise,
    when it held that the petitioner’s claim for prospec-
    tive injunctive relief could go forward under section
    1983, since it did not necessarily imply anything
    about the loss of good-time credits.
    
    Whitfield, 852 F.3d at 663
    . Unlike Balisok, we asserted,
    Whitfield was not seeking to set aside the result of a process
    but rather was claiming that the process should not have
    occurred at all. And unlike Burd, Whitfield had pursued
    collateral relief to the degree possible, until he was released
    from custody and the district court dismissed his habeas
    petition as moot.
    No. 17-3543                                                    35
    We found those factors distinguishing and allowed the
    claims to proceed. But Whitfield’s circumstances were not truly
    distinguishable from those of Balisok or Burd. A plaintiff’s
    good-faith but unsuccessful pursuit of collateral relief does not
    relieve him of Heck’s favorable termination requirement.
    Because Whitfield had not yet obtained a favorable termination
    of the disciplinary proceedings that led to a loss of good time
    credit, he had no cognizable claim under section 1983. We must
    therefore overrule our decision in Whitfield.
    e.
    That leaves Sanchez, the last case on which the defendants
    relied. Sanchez brought section 1983 claims asserting wrongful
    arrest and excessive force, claims that would not necessarily
    imply the invalidity of his conviction, and so we noted cor-
    rectly that Heck did not apply to those 
    claims. 880 F.3d at 356
    .
    See also 
    Wallace, 549 U.S. at 389
    –91 (statute of limitations for a
    claim for false arrest begins to run upon initiation of legal
    process). But Sanchez also suggested that he was framed, a
    claim that would imply the invalidity of his conviction. We
    relied on Whitfield to find that “Heck does not bar a suit by a
    plaintiff who is no longer in custody but who pursued a
    collateral attack through appropriate channels while he was in
    custody, even if such efforts were 
    unavailing.” 880 F.3d at 356
    .
    Because Sanchez sought post-conviction relief in state courts
    before his release from custody, we concluded that Heck did
    not apply. That reasoning does not survive our decision today.
    But the final result in Sanchez is nevertheless correct, because
    we went on to conclude that Sanchez’s claim that he was
    framed was subject to issue preclusion, and so there was no
    need to remand for a new 
    trial. 880 F.3d at 358
    . See also Green
    36                                                          No. 17-3543
    v. Junious, 
    937 F.3d 1009
    , 1014 (7th Cir. 2019) (noting that Heck
    did not categorically bar the suit in Sanchez but the state
    criminal judgment had preclusive effect under traditional
    collateral-estoppel analysis).
    E.
    Our dissenting colleague urges the court to adopt an
    accrual rule tied to the end of custody. A claim accrues when
    a plaintiff has “a complete and present cause of action.”
    
    McDonough, 139 S. Ct. at 2155
    ; 
    Wallace, 549 U.S. at 388
    ; Bay Area
    Laundry & Dry Cleaning Pension Trust Fund v. Ferbar Corp. of
    Cal., 
    522 U.S. 192
    , 201 (1997). When a section 1983 claim
    resembles the common-law tort of malicious prosecution, the
    Court treats favorable termination as an element of the claim.
    
    McDonough, 139 S. Ct. at 2156
    -57; 
    Heck, 512 U.S. at 484
    .
    Without favorable termination, a plaintiff lacks “a complete
    and present cause of action.” Yet the dissent’s rule would
    require a plaintiff to file suit without this essential element of
    the claim. See 
    Heck, 512 U.S. at 489
    (“deny[ing] the existence of
    a cause of action” until favorable termination of the convic-
    tion).
    As a model for this rule, the dissent cites Poventud v. New
    York, 
    715 F.3d 57
    (2d Cir. 2013), a decision vacated by the en
    banc Second Circuit.9 Poventud, in turn, relied on Jenkins v.
    Haubert, 
    179 F.3d 19
    (2d Cir. 1999), and Leather v. Eyck, 
    180 F.3d 420
    (2d Cir. 1999). Jenkins, like DeWalt, correctly decided that
    9
    The en banc Second Circuit resolved the case on other grounds that have
    no bearing on the circumstances that we address here. Poventud v. New York,
    
    750 F.3d 121
    (2d Cir. 2014).
    No. 17-3543                                                    37
    the Heck bar does not apply in conditions-of-confinement cases
    brought under section 
    1983. 179 F.3d at 27
    . Jenkins also in-
    cluded dicta that suggested that a section 1983 remedy must be
    available when habeas relief is not 
    available. 179 F.3d at 27
    .
    That language is virtually identical to the dicta in our own
    cases that we disavow today. In Leather, the Second Circuit
    relied on the dicta from Jenkins to conclude that a section 1983
    plaintiff who was assessed a fine but was never in custody
    could bring his claim even though his conviction was 
    extant. 180 F.3d at 424
    . For the reasons we have discussed above, we
    find none of these cases persuasive.
    In requiring favorable termination before allowing a section
    1983 claim to proceed, Heck sets a high standard. Undoubtedly,
    as the dissent asserts, some valid claims will never make it past
    the courthouse door. Heck explains, though, why a high bar
    must be cleared before seeking damages in a civil action on
    claims that imply the invalidity of a criminal conviction. The
    Court sought to avoid parallel litigation on the issue of guilt,
    preclude the possibility of conflicting resolutions arising out of
    the same transaction, prevent collateral attacks on criminal
    convictions through the vehicle of civil suits, and respect
    concerns for comity, finality and consistency. 
    Heck, 512 U.S. at 485
    –86. See also 
    McDonough, 139 S. Ct. at 2156
    –57. We are not in
    a position to alter the Heck standard or set aside these concerns.
    F.
    We have said several times that Savory’s claims did not
    accrue until he obtained a favorable termination of his convic-
    tion and that this occurred when the governor of Illinois
    pardoned him. We base this conclusion on Heck itself, which
    38                                                   No. 17-3543
    lists “expunge[ment] by executive order” as one of the ways in
    which a plaintiff may demonstrate favorable termination. 
    Heck, 512 U.S. at 487
    . At the en banc oral argument, the defendants
    alerted the court for the first time that, if we were to hold that
    Savory’s claim accrued on favorable termination, they in-
    tended to argue on remand that the governor’s January 12,
    2015, pardon is not a favorable termination. Under that theory,
    the defendants contend, Savory brought his claims not too late
    (as they claimed on appeal) but too early. The district court
    rested its dismissal of the case solely on the defendants’
    argument that Savory’s claim was too late because it accrued
    on December 6, 2011, when his sentence was commuted, his
    custody ended, and he lost access to the remedy of habeas
    corpus. At no time in the district court did the defendants
    argue in the alternative that Savory’s federal claims were too
    early, or that the date of accrual was anything other than
    December 6, 2011. This entire appeal has been framed as a
    contest between two possible dates of accrual: the end of
    custody versus favorable termination. The defendants never
    suggested until the en banc oral argument that there was a third
    possible date for accrual, one that has yet to occur. Savory’s
    claims have already been more than forty years in the making
    and we wish to avert further delays due to any misunderstand-
    ing of this court’s holding today; and so we now clarify that the
    governor’s January 12, 2015, pardon was a favorable termina-
    tion for the purposes of the Heck analysis.
    For many reasons, this holding should not be a surprise to
    the defendants. On the first page of their appellate brief, they
    stated that, “[O]n January 12, 2015, Savory was granted a
    general pardon from then Illinois Governor Pat Quinn. That
    No. 17-3543                                                     39
    pardon set aside Savory’s double murder conviction.” Defendants’
    Brief, at 1 (emphasis added). Although they later asserted that
    this general pardon was not based on innocence and failed to
    restore all of Savory’s rights of citizenship (they interpret the
    pardon to withhold the right to sell, receive, or possess a
    firearm), they attached no significance to this assertion within
    the Heck framework. Defendant’s Brief, at 5. Instead, they later
    conceded that this court has already stated that a section 1983
    plaintiff’s claims related to a conviction accrue at the time of a
    pardon. See Defendants’ Brief, at 23 (“It is true that this Court,
    in Newsome, said it was the plaintiff’s pardon that marked the
    accrual of the § 1983 claims.”). See also Newsome v. McCabe, 
    256 F.3d 747
    , 749, 752 (7th Cir. 2001) (“a claim based on wrongful
    conviction and imprisonment did not accrue until the pardon”
    and “the due process claim’s accrual was postponed by Heck
    until the pardon.”), abrogated on other grounds, Manuel v. City
    of Joliet, Ill., 
    137 S. Ct. 911
    (2017).
    The defendants attempted to distinguish Newsome, but that
    case is neither meaningfully distinguishable nor unique in
    characterizing a pardon by a state’s executive as adequate for
    Heck’s favorable termination requirement. In the context of
    discussing favorable terminations under Heck, we have often
    used “pardon” or “executive pardon” as synonyms for
    “expunged by executive order,” the phrase that the Court
    employed in Heck. Manuel v. City of Joliet, Ill., 
    903 F.3d 667
    , 670
    (7th Cir. 2018) (Ҥ 1983 cannot be used to obtain damages for
    custody based on a criminal conviction—not until the convic-
    tion has been set aside by the judiciary or an executive par-
    don”); Moore v. Burge, 
    771 F.3d 444
    , 446 (7th Cir. 2014) (“a claim
    that implies the invalidity of a criminal conviction does not
    40                                                   No. 17-3543
    accrue … until the conviction is set aside by the judiciary or the
    defendant receives a pardon”); Gilbert v. Cook, 
    512 F.3d 899
    , 900
    (7th Cir. 2008) (“the plaintiff in an action under 42 U.S.C. §
    1983 may not pursue a claim for relief that implies the invalid-
    ity of a criminal conviction, unless that conviction has been set
    aside by appeal, collateral review, or pardon”). That a pardon
    is a favorable termination under Heck is well-settled.
    Nevertheless, the defendants assert that Illinois employs
    two kinds of pardons, a general pardon and a pardon based on
    innocence. They argue that only a pardon based on innocence
    is a favorable termination for the purposes of Heck. Because
    Savory has obtained only a general pardon and not a pardon
    based on innocence, the defendants indicated at oral argument
    that they intended to argue on remand that he brought his
    claims too soon. The contention that a pardon must be based
    on innocence in order to serve as a favorable termination finds
    no support in Heck, and we see no reason to impose that
    additional limitation on Heck’s holding. If the Court had
    wanted to specify that the pardon must be based on innocence,
    it certainly could have done so, but it did not. Instead, the
    Court offered a list of possible resolutions that would satisfy
    the favorable termination requirement, and none require an
    affirmative finding of innocence. A conviction need only be
    “reversed on direct appeal, expunged by executive order,
    declared invalid by a state tribunal authorized to make such
    determination, or called into question by a federal court's
    issuance of a writ of habeas corpus.” 
    Heck, 512 U.S. at 487
    . Any
    of these outcomes can occur without a declaration of a defen-
    dant’s innocence. McDonough added that acquittal is a favor-
    able termination under Heck that starts the clock on claim
    No. 17-3543                                                     41
    accrual, another resolution that does not necessarily imply
    innocence. 
    McDonough, 139 S. Ct. at 2161
    .
    The Governor’s pardon of Savory meets the standard
    articulated in Heck:
    Now, Know Ye, that I, PAT QUINN, Governor of
    the State of Illinois, by virtue of the authority vested
    in me by the Constitution of the State, do by these
    presents: PARDON JOHNNY [sic] L. SAVORY (SID:
    23061880) of the said crime of which convicted, and
    JOHNNY [sic] L. SAVORY (SID: 23061880) is hereby
    acquitted and discharged of and from all further
    imprisonment and restored to all the rights of
    citizenship which may have been forfeited by the
    conviction.
    R. 71-3. See Ill. Const. Art. 5, § 12 (“The Governor may grant
    reprieves, commutations and pardons, after conviction, for all
    offenses on such terms as he thinks proper. The manner of
    applying therefore may be regulated by law.”). This full
    pardon is followed by language authorizing expungement of
    the records of Savory’s conviction, which in Illinois must be
    accomplished by application to a court that may, in its discre-
    tion order the records sealed. 20 ILCS 2630/5.2(e). It would be
    passing strange if the Governor authorized expungement of
    the record of conviction without first meaning to expunge the
    conviction itself. For the purposes of Heck, as the defendants
    themselves conceded on the first page of their brief, Savory’s
    42                                                        No. 17-3543
    conviction was set aside with this pardon. Under Heck, his
    section 1983 claim accrued on that date.10
    Finally, we note that the defendants’ failure to raise this
    third possible accrual date in the district court and on appeal
    appears to have been a deliberate choice. In the district court,
    the defendants also moved to dismiss Savory’s state law
    claims, and Savory has not challenged that dismissal on
    appeal. One of Savory’s state law claims was for the Illinois
    tort of malicious prosecution. R. 71, at 16. To proceed on that
    tort claim, Illinois requires that the plaintiff prove that the
    underlying criminal proceedings terminated in a manner
    indicative of the innocence of the accused, a higher standard than
    Heck’s favorable termination accrual rule. See Swick v. Liautaud,
    
    662 N.E.2d 1238
    , 1242 (Ill. 1996) (“a malicious prosecution
    action cannot be predicated on underlying criminal proceed-
    ings which were terminated in a manner not indicative of the
    innocence of the accused”). The defendants argued in the
    district court that Savory’s general pardon was insufficient to
    meet this Illinois standard because it was not indicative of his
    innocence. R. 71, at 16–18.
    In support of this contention, the defendants relied on a
    federal district court case that held that both a state law
    malicious prosecution claim and a section 1983 claim resem-
    10
    The defendants also suggested that the pardon did nothing more than
    discharge Savory from any further imprisonment. This assertion would
    render the pardon essentially meaningless in light of the commutation of
    sentence granted to Savory in 2011 which discharged him from all further
    custody. A pardon is broader in scope and effect than a commutation of a
    sentence.
    No. 17-3543                                                     43
    bling malicious prosecution accrued when the plaintiff
    received an innocence pardon in 2003 rather than when he
    received a general pardon in 1978. Walden v. City of Chicago, 
    391 F. Supp. 2d 660
    , 671–72 (N.D.Ill. 2005). But unlike the defen-
    dants in Walden, the defendants here did not raise that same
    argument in the district court in relation to the section 1983
    claims. The defendants were therefore aware of this argument
    for a third possible accrual date and chose to raise it only in
    relation to the state law claim in the district court. And the
    defendants conceded on page one of their brief on appeal that
    the pardon set aside Savory’s conviction. For all intents and
    purposes, the claim is therefore waived and is not open to re-
    litigation on remand. Milwaukee Ctr. for Indep., Inc. v. Milwaukee
    Health Care, LLC, 
    929 F.3d 489
    , 493–94 (7th Cir. 2019) (failure to
    bring an argument in the district court results in waiver on
    appeal; and a blatant attempt to contradict what has already
    been admitted in formal briefing will not be allowed). Because
    of this waiver and because Savory’s pardon clearly meets the
    Heck standard for favorable termination, we leave for another
    day the consideration of whether some state executive action
    labeled “pardon” does not meet Heck’s standard.
    III.
    Heck controls the outcome where a section 1983 claim
    implies the invalidity of the conviction or the sentence,
    regardless of the availability of habeas relief. Claims that relate
    only to conditions of confinement and that do not implicate the
    validity of the conviction or sentence are not subject to the Heck
    bar. We disavow the language in any case that suggests that
    release from custody and the unavailability of habeas relief
    means that section 1983 must be available as a remedy. That
    44                                                    No. 17-3543
    includes the cases on which the district court, in good faith,
    reasonably relied. McDonough confirms that habeas exclusivity
    is just one part of the rationale for Heck’s holding. Concerns
    about comity, finality, conflicting judgments, and “the hoary
    principle that civil tort actions are not appropriate vehicles for
    challenging the validity of outstanding criminal judgments” all
    underpin Heck’s favorable termination rule. 
    Heck, 512 U.S. at 486
    . The Supreme Court may revisit the need for the favorable
    termination rule in cases where habeas relief is unavailable, but
    it has not yet done so.
    Savory’s claims, which necessarily imply the invalidity of
    his conviction, accrued when he was pardoned by the gover-
    nor of Illinois. His section 1983 action, filed within two years of
    the pardon, was therefore timely filed. We reverse the district
    court’s judgment and remand for further proceedings.
    REVERSED AND REMANDED.
    No. 17-3543                                                               45
    EASTERBROOK, Circuit Judge, dissenting. The court is
    unanimous in concluding that only two potential accrual
    rules make sense: either a §1983 claim does not accrue until a
    criminal judgment has been set aside, or release from prison
    marks the claim’s accrual even if the judgment is unaltered.
    All the exceptions, variations, and tergiversation found in
    earlier decisions of our panels, and other circuits,1 must be
    cast aside. One clear rule or the other is essential.
    Unlike my colleagues, however, I think that we should
    adopt the rule proposed by Justice Souter, concurring in
    Heck v. Humphrey, 
    512 U.S. 477
    , 491–503 (1994) (joined by
    three other Justices), and later espoused by Justice Ginsburg,
    see Spencer v. Kemna, 
    523 U.S. 1
    , 21–22 (1998), under which
    the end of custody marks the end of deferral. One court of
    appeals has followed that path. See Poventud v. New York, 
    715 F.3d 57
    , 61 (2d Cir. 2013), resolved en banc on other grounds,
    
    750 F.3d 121
    (2014); Leather v. Eyck, 
    180 F.3d 420
    , 424 (2d Cir.
    1999); Jenkins v. Haubert, 
    179 F.3d 19
    (2d Cir. 1999). We
    should too.
    1 In one circuit the claim accrues on release if the ex-prisoner “could not
    have practicably sought habeas relief while in custody.” Griffin v. Balti-
    more Police Department, 
    804 F.3d 692
    , 696 (4th Cir. 2015) (cleaned up). In
    another the claim accrues on release if the prisoner “was precluded as a
    matter of law from seeking habeas redress”. Powers v. Hamilton, 
    501 F.3d 592
    , 601 (6th Cir. 2007) (cleaned up). In a third the law is similar, but the
    court lists the circumstances that it believes prevent a prisoner from ob-
    taining collateral relief. Guerrero v. Gates, 
    442 F.3d 697
    , 704–05 (9th Cir.
    2006). And in a fourth circuit the claim accrues on release if the prisoner
    has not been able to obtain collateral relief “through no lack of diligence
    on his part”. Cohen v. Longshore, 
    621 F.3d 1311
    , 1317 (10th Cir. 2010).
    None of these approaches enables either a plaintiff or a district judge to
    know when a claim has accrued and the clock is ticking.
    46                                                No. 17-3543
    The opinion in Heck states that a §1983 claim for uncon-
    stitutional conviction or imprisonment does not accrue until
    “the conviction or sentence has been reversed on direct ap-
    peal, expunged by executive order, declared invalid by a
    state tribunal authorized to make such determination, or
    called into question by a federal court’s issuance of a writ of
    habeas 
    corpus”. 512 U.S. at 487
    . That is the source of my col-
    leagues’ bright-line rule. It also has the support of Heck’s
    footnote 
    10, 512 U.S. at 490
    n.10:
    JUSTICE SOUTER also adopts the common-law
    principle that one cannot use the device of a
    civil tort action to challenge the validity of an
    outstanding criminal conviction, but thinks it
    necessary to abandon that principle in those
    cases (of which no real-life example comes to
    mind) involving former state prisoners who,
    because they are no longer in custody, cannot
    bring postconviction challenges. Post, at 500.
    We think the principle barring collateral
    attacks—a longstanding and deeply rooted fea-
    ture of both the common law and our own ju-
    risprudence—is not rendered inapplicable by
    the fortuity that a convicted criminal is no
    longer incarcerated. JUSTICE SOUTER opines that
    disallowing a damages suit for a former state
    prisoner framed by Ku Klux Klan-dominated
    state officials is “hard indeed to reconcile …
    with the purpose of §1983.” Post, at 502. But if,
    as JUSTICE SOUTER appears to suggest, the goal
    of our interpretive enterprise under §1983 were
    to provide a remedy for all conceivable inva-
    sions of federal rights that freedmen may have
    No. 17-3543                                                            47
    suffered at the hands of officials of the former
    States of the Confederacy, the entire landscape
    of our §1983 jurisprudence would look very
    different. We would not, for example, have
    adopted the rule that judicial officers have ab-
    solute immunity from liability for damages
    under §1983, Pierson v. Ray, 
    386 U.S. 547
    (1967),
    a rule that would prevent recovery by a former
    slave who had been tried and convicted before
    a corrupt state judge in league with the Ku
    Klux Klan.
    I do not think, however, that either aspect of the opinion in
    Heck is conclusive.
    Statements in Heck (other than note 10) about the need to
    wait for a prisoner’s vindication discuss the claim at hand:
    by a prisoner then in custody. Opinions are not statutes and
    should not be read as if they were. See, e.g., Zenith Radio
    Corp. v. United States, 
    437 U.S. 443
    , 462 (1978). Footnote 10 is
    the only part of the Court’s opinion in Heck to address the
    appropriate treatment of plaintiffs whose custody has end-
    ed, and a clearer example of dicta is hard to imagine. The
    footnote concerns a subject that had not been briefed by the
    parties, that did not matter to the disposition of Heck’s
    claim, and that the majority thought would not matter to an-
    yone, ever. That belief has been embarrassed by the fact that
    many former prisoners contend that their convictions were
    wrongful but are no longer in a position to seek collateral
    review.2 Heck did not present for decision any question
    2 This circuit alone has seen dozens of such cases. The cases cited on the
    first page (including footnote 1) of this opinion represent the tip of the
    iceberg in other circuits. And four more circuits, which read Heck as my
    48                                                            No. 17-3543
    about the appropriate treatment of this situation. And the
    Justices themselves have told us that Heck did not decide the
    question.
    Members of the Court have expressed the view
    that unavailability of habeas for other reasons
    may also dispense with the Heck requirement.
    See Heck v. Humphrey, 
    512 U.S. 477
    , 491 (1994)
    (SOUTER, J., concurring in judgment); Spencer v.
    Kemna, 
    523 U.S. 1
    , 21–22 (1998) (GINSBURG, J.,
    concurring). This case is no occasion to settle
    the issue.
    Muhammad v. Close, 
    540 U.S. 749
    , 752 n.2 (2004). To say that
    “[t]his case is no occasion to settle the issue” is to say that the
    issue is open—in other words, that it was not settled by Heck,
    which occasioned an exchange of competing views but did
    not yield a holding. No later case has done so either. Certain-
    ly McDonough v. Smith, 
    139 S. Ct. 2149
    (2019), did not do so.
    McDonough repeats Heck’s conclusion that an acquittal caus-
    es the claim to accrue, without discussing the question
    whether release from prison at the end of the sentence also
    does so. Justice Ginsburg, who joined the opinion in
    McDonough, did not suggest that she has abandoned her
    view that a sentence’s end permits suit.
    Although footnote 10 is dictum, we are bound by the
    Court’s rationales for holding that a person still in prison
    may not use §1983 to obtain damages on account of the con-
    colleagues do, have addressed similar claims. See Figueroa v. Rivera, 
    147 F.3d 77
    (1st Cir. 1998); Gilles v. Davis, 
    427 F.3d 197
    (3d Cir. 2005); Randell
    v. Johnson, 
    227 F.3d 300
    (5th Cir. 2000); Entzi v. Redmann, 
    485 F.3d 998
    (8th
    Cir. 2007).
    No. 17-3543                                                  49
    viction and confinement. There are three: first, the rule from
    Preiser v. Rodriguez, 
    411 U.S. 475
    (1973), that §1983 cannot be
    used to obtain relief from ongoing custody (the right remedy
    is a collateral attack under 28 U.S.C. §§ 2241, 2254, or 2255);
    second, the rule that people in state custody must exhaust
    state remedies before obtaining federal review (see 28 U.S.C.
    §2254(b)(1)); third, the rule that a criminal conviction is a
    judgment that the loser normally may not contradict in an-
    other court. The first two rationales drop out after a person
    has been released from prison, and the third is not a federal
    bar when the judgment was entered by a state court. The
    effect of a state judgment depends on state law. 28 U.S.C.
    §1738; Marrese v. American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons,
    
    470 U.S. 373
    (1985).
    Neither §1983 nor any other federal statute specifies
    when a claim accrues. That time has been established by the
    Supreme Court as a matter of federal common law. See Wal-
    lace v. Kato, 
    549 U.S. 384
    , 388 (2007). Wallace adjusted the ac-
    crual rules to address claims arising under the Fourth
    Amendment, a category of suits that had been the subject of
    dictum in some of Heck’s other footnotes (512 U.S. at 486–87
    nn. 6, 7) but did not represent a holding any more than note
    10 did. Then Manuel v. Joliet, 
    137 S. Ct. 911
    (2017), adjusted
    Wallace to address situations in which custody without prob-
    able cause continued after an initial judicial appearance.
    Both Wallace and Manuel set out to produce accrual doctrines
    that respect the need to allow remedies for serious wrongdo-
    ing, while avoiding premature litigation. We can and should
    do the same.
    The Justices expressed concern in Manuel and its succes-
    sor McDonough about a rule starting the time so early that
    50                                                  No. 17-3543
    legitimate claims would be lost. We should be equally con-
    cerned about a rule starting the time so late that claims never
    accrue. The majority’s approach does just that.
    Some sentences are too short to allow collateral relief. We
    routinely see cases in which it has taken a decade to pursue a
    direct appeal, collateral review in state court, and collateral
    review in federal court. If confinement ends before collateral
    review begins, the custody requirement prevents all further
    review. If the sentence is fully served while state collateral
    review is ongoing, federal collateral review cannot begin.
    (Only state prisoners “in custody” can seek review under
    §2254(a).) So a rule under which a §1983 claim does not ac-
    crue as long as the criminal judgment stands means that
    thousands of defendants sentenced to less than five or ten
    years in prison can never present a §1983 claim, no matter
    how egregious the constitutional violations that led to
    wrongful conviction and custody.
    Released prisoners can obtain relief under the majority’s
    approach if their convictions are set aside by pardon (Sa-
    vory’s situation) or certificate of innocence. Yet in most states
    pardons are rare, and pardons for federal crimes are rarer
    still. Getting a certificate of innocence is wickedly hard in
    both state and federal systems, because the applicant must
    show factual innocence, and even an acquittal does not es-
    tablish that. See Pulungan v. United States, 
    722 F.3d 983
    (7th
    Cir. 2013). Proof of innocence—the need to prove a nega-
    tive—is difficult to come by. Again Savory may be an excep-
    tion; he eventually found conclusive DNA evidence. Few
    wrongly convicted persons are so fortunate.
    Delayed availability of evidence is another problem.
    Proof that a given police officer systematically lied or fabri-
    No. 17-3543                                                  51
    cated evidence in a way that produced convictions may not
    become available until any particular sentence is over. It may
    take decades for official misconduct to come to light. Under
    the majority’s rule this delay means that a §1983 claim will
    never accrue unless the former prisoner can obtain a pardon
    or certificate of innocence. On my view, by contrast, the
    claim accrues no later than release from prison.
    Even after a prisoner’s release, suit may be blocked by
    the preclusive effect of the state judgment, but that is a
    matter of state law under §1738 and should be dealt with in
    the same way as any other invocation of issue or claim pre-
    clusion. Likewise, if a state claim does not accrue as a matter
    of state law—if, for example, exoneration is an element of a
    malicious-prosecution claim—a federal court should honor
    that rule.
    Ex-prisoners who, despite exercising reasonable dili-
    gence, cannot obtain essential evidence within two years of
    their release, may invoke the doctrine of equitable tolling to
    postpone the time to litigate. It is neither necessary nor ap-
    propriate to have a federal rule that defers accrual indefinite-
    ly. Savory’s claim may well be timely on my approach, but
    he did not make an equitable-tolling argument in the district
    court, see 
    338 F. Supp. 3d 860
    , 866 (N.D. Ill. 2017), and does
    not make one here.
    Congress could create by legislation a rule foreclosing
    damages until a plaintiff, although no longer in prison, has
    been vindicated by a pardon or certificate of innocence, but
    such a rule cannot be found in any enacted statute. As long
    as accrual is governed by federal common law we ought to
    implement a rule that protects the states’ principal interests
    (avoiding the use of §1983 to attack ongoing custody and en-
    52                                               No. 17-3543
    suring that prisoners present their contentions to the state
    judiciary) without needlessly blocking potentially legitimate
    federal claims. Savory’s victory today comes at a terrible
    price—the extinguishment of many substantively valid con-
    stitutional claims.