10th Cir.

Shores v. Williams, et al.

April 29, 2026 ·1:23-CV-02540-LTB-SBP ·Panel Decision ·Veronica S. Rossman · By Aisha Johnson

The Tenth Circuit reversed the dismissal of a prisoner's Eighth Amendment claims against prison officials and medical providers. The court held that the district court erred by failing to consider tolling of the statute of limitations and by denying the plaintiff leave to amend his complaint without addressing futility.

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Background

Donald Ray Shores, an inmate in the custody of the Colorado Department of Corrections, filed a pro se complaint under Section nineteen hundred eighty-three alleging deliberate indifference to serious medical needs and denial of access to the courts. After the district court ordered him to amend his complaint, he filed an amended complaint alleging violations against prison officials and medical providers. The district court dismissed all claims without allowing further amendment, citing failure to comply with Federal Rule of Civil Procedure eight and statute of limitations issues.

The court’s reasoning

The court reviewed the dismissal de novo and found error in three areas. First, regarding the claim against defendant Harmonn, the court held that the district court could not dismiss on statute of limitations grounds without considering whether the filing of administrative grievances tolled the deadline. Second, regarding claims against other individual defendants, the court found it was improper to dismiss without addressing whether it would be futile to allow the plaintiff to file a second amended complaint. Third, the court reversed the implicit denial of the request to appoint counsel because the district court failed to explain its reasoning. The court affirmed the dismissal against the two entity defendants because the plaintiff waived any argument challenging that specific dismissal.

What it means going forward

The case is remanded to the district court to determine if tolling applies to the statute of limitations, to decide whether to permit a second amended complaint, and to rule on the request for appointed counsel with a reasoned explanation.

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