Police officers searched McCurry's residence and seized evidence he claimed was obtained in violation of the Fourth Amendment. In the ensuing state criminal prosecution, McCurry moved to suppress the evidence. After an evidentiary hearing, the state trial court denied suppression, finding the search and seizure lawful under the Fourth Amendment. The criminal case proceeded to final judgment. Thereafter, McCurry filed a federal civil rights action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the officers (including Allen), alleging an unconstitutional search and seizure and seeking damages. The defendants argued that collateral estoppel (issue preclusion) barred relitigation of the Fourth Amendment question because it had already been actually litigated and decided in the state proceeding. The federal district court agreed and entered judgment for the defendants. The court of appeals reversed, reasoning that § 1983 actions should not be restricted by state-court determinations in prior criminal cases. The Supreme Court granted certiorari.
Does 28 U.S.C. § 1738 require federal courts to give collateral-estoppel effect to state-court determinations of Fourth Amendment issues, thereby barring a § 1983 plaintiff from relitigating those issues in federal court when the plaintiff had a full and fair opportunity to litigate them in the state proceedings?
Under 28 U.S.C. § 1738 (the Full Faith and Credit Statute), federal courts must give state-court judgments the same preclusive effect they would receive in the courts of the rendering state. Absent a contrary congressional directive, traditional preclusion doctrines—issue preclusion (collateral estoppel) and claim preclusion (res judicata)—apply in subsequent federal litigation. Section 1983 contains no express or implied exception to § 1738; thus, issues actually litigated and necessarily decided in prior state proceedings cannot be relitigated in a later § 1983 action, provided the party had a full and fair opportunity to litigate the issue in state court.
Yes. Federal courts must give state-court determinations the same preclusive effect they would have in that state's courts; § 1983 does not create an exception. Accordingly, a § 1983 plaintiff may be collaterally estopped from relitigating Fourth Amendment issues decided in prior state proceedings when there was a full and fair opportunity to litigate.
The Court grounded its analysis in § 1738, which codifies the constitutional command of full faith and credit by directing federal courts to accord state-court judgments the same preclusive effect they would receive in the rendering state's courts. The majority emphasized that Congress, when enacting § 1983, did not provide an exception to § 1738's operation. Nor does the purpose of § 1983—to provide a federal damages remedy for constitutional violations—suggest a congressional intent to authorize federal relitigation of issues conclusively resolved in state judicial proceedings. The Court rejected the argument that Monroe v. Pape implied a right to a federal forum unencumbered by preclusion, explaining that Monroe ensured availability of a federal cause of action; it did not abrogate ordinary rules of finality or create an automatic second bite at the apple. The Court also distinguished Stone v. Powell, which limited federal habeas review of Fourth Amendment claims; Allen was not about habeas but about the preclusive effect of a state-court judgment in a civil action. The majority reaffirmed that issue preclusion applies only if the party had a full and fair opportunity to litigate the constitutional issue in the prior proceeding—an inquiry that protects due process values. If state procedures were deficient or state law would not preclude relitigation, federal courts should not apply collateral estoppel. Here, because the suppression issue was fully litigated and decided against McCurry in the state case, and because the applicable state preclusion law would give that determination estoppel effect, § 1738 required the federal court to do the same. The Court therefore reversed the court of appeals and reinstated the district court's judgment for the defendants.
Allen v. McCurry cements that § 1983 is not a vehicle to relitigate constitutional issues decided in state court. It integrates civil rights litigation with the broader doctrines of preclusion and full faith and credit, promoting finality, comity, and judicial efficiency. For law students, Allen is a critical building block for understanding how federal civil rights actions interact with prior state proceedings, and it foreshadows related decisions: Haring v. Prosise (guilty pleas and issue preclusion), Migra v. Warren City School District (claim preclusion in § 1983 suits), and the "full and fair opportunity" safeguard. Practically, Allen teaches that litigants must vigorously present and preserve constitutional issues in state court because adverse determinations may foreclose later federal damages claims.
Allen v. McCurry establishes that § 1983 does not confer a right to re-try constitutional issues in federal court once they have been fully litigated and resolved in state court. By tethering § 1983 litigation to the Full Faith and Credit Statute, the decision affirms that preclusion principles apply with full force unless Congress clearly provides otherwise.