In thе tradition of the long line of political discrimination cases arising from the federal trial courts of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, plaintiff-appellant Alicia Rodríguez Narvaez instituted this civil rights action against officials of the Island’s Housing Department for a mid-quadrennium transfer which she perceived to be motivated on political grounds. Both parties then loosed a series of motions centering on the issue of the timeliness of the complaint and thе District Court ultimately dismissed the action as being time-barred. It is from this dismissal that plaintiff now appeals in a Lazarus-like effort to resurrect her claim. A careful review of appellant’s arguments, however, leaves us unpersuaded, and we therefore affirm.
I
Although this appeal ultimately hinges on a determination of a couple of mixed questions of fact and law, the facts germane to this controversy are, for the most part, not in dispute. We summarize them in cоmpendiary fashion, then survey the applicable law.
A
Plaintiff-appellant was hired by the Urban Renewal and Housing Corporation of Puerto Rico (CRUV) for a career position as a legal secretary on or about the year 1972. During the next 15 years or so she was promoted several times within both the CRUV and Housing Department of Puerto Rico. In the dawning days of 1986, however, the winds of change began to blow. On January 21, 1986, Rodriguez Narváez was notified by codefendant-aрpellee Jose L. Purcell — then Deputy Secretary of Legal Affairs of the Housing Department— that she would be transferred to the Litigation Division of the Housing Department. The transfer was considered by plaintiff to be a demotion.
Though somewhat slow in reacting, appellant eventually let the fact be known that she had not taken her “demotion” lightly. On September 1, 1986, she sent a letter through her attorney to codefendant-appellee Ariel Nazario — then Secretary of the Housing Department — requesting reinstatement to her previous position in the office of the Deputy Secretary for Legal Affairs. The letter, among other things, alleged that the transfer was the result of political discrimination and failed to comport with the Public Service Personnel Act of Puerto Rico. The letter also closed with a veiled threat, as it stated that it (the letter) was “a step which I deem proper before initiating any legal proceedings under 42 U.S.C. § 1983.”
On October 24, 1986, the Secretary answered appellant’s letter. Outside counsel had been assigned to investigate Rodriguez Narváez’s transfer, the letter read, and any political wrongdoing was vigorously denied. In a move which more than anything else provided appellant with the strongest argument she would be able to present on her behalf, the letter stated that he “ha[d] given instructions to counsel [codefendant-appellee] Purcеll to reinstate Mrs. Rodriguez to her usual place of work and to continue assigning her duties becoming her position.”
In the latter days of October, 1986, appellant met with Purcell and an agreement was reached regarding her reinstatement. Days became nights and nights became days, however, and there was no positive action on defendants’ part, so Rodriguez Narvaez wrote a second letter, this time addressed to Purcell, requesting only her reinstatement. Thе letter was dated March 12, 1987, and a copy of it was sent to Secretary Nazario.
On August 1, 1987, codefendant Pablo J. Santiago was appointed to replace Purcell. Appellant immediately made Santiago aware of her reinstatement dispute. Whatever negotiations took place this time around, it appears, were carried out strictly on verbal terms. After a couple of months of roundabouts, however, Santiago informed apрellant that “pressure from above” prevented him from reinstating her.
Appellant filed her Section 1983 complaint on October 5, 1987, seeking damages for violation of her civil rights under the
*41
First and Fourteenth Amendments to the federal Constitution, as well as injunctive relief by way of reinstatement. After some preliminary skirmishing, on January 28, 1988, defendant-appellees filed a Fed.R. Civ.P.Rule 12(b)(1) Motion to Dismiss on statute of limitation grounds. Oppositions and replies followed, discovery was completed, and the case was set for trial on May 6, 1988. On April 25, 1988, however, the District Court entered an Order vacating the trial setting. On December 6,1988, the Court entered its Opinion and Order dismissing the action on statute of limitation grounds,
B
The parties agree, as they must, over the law to be applied to the instant case. Section 1988 1 of the Civil Rights Acts directs courts to resort to a three-step process in order to determine the rules of decision applicable to civil rights claims:
First, courts are to look to the laws of the United States “so far as such laws are suitable to carry [the civil and criminal civil rights statutes] into effect.” If no suitable federal rule exists, courts undertake the second step by considering application of state “common law, as modified and changed by the Constitution and statutes” of the forum State. A third step asserts the predominance of the federal interest: courts are to apply state law only if it is not “inconsistent with the Constitution and laws of the United States.”
Burnett v. Grattan,
The search for the “most analogous” state limitations period predictably produced numerous and contrasting results.
4
In
Wilson v. García,
The borrowing, we suggest, did not stop there. In
Johnson v. Railway Express Agency,
Our survey must thus proceed along two distinct, albeit related, roads. Along the first of them, however, we need not travel far. Ever since the days of the Spanish-American war it has been the law of Puerto Rico that the limitations period for tort actions, or “obligations arising from fault or negligence,” is the one year limitations period provided by Article 1868(2) of the Civil Code, P.R.Laws Ann. tit. 31, § 5298(2).
De León Otero v. Rubero,
Turning to the tolling issue, however, we observe that although this path has been just as well travelled in our courts, it does require a little clearing. We therefore digress for a moment and proceed to present it in expository form.
We begin with bedrock concepts of Puerto Rico’s limitation laws.
Le raison d’etre
of the doctrine of “extinctive prescription” has been worded differently at different periods of time by the Puerto Rico Supreme Court, but we consider the
*43
ensuing definition to be a fair representation of it. In
Agulló v. ASERCO,
The statutory limitation of actions protects ... a very concrete particular interest: the interest of an individual not to be exposed to old claims, of which memory has been lost, because silence has created an objective and reasonable confidence thаt the right or power would not be exercised. Diez Picazo, La Prescripción en el Código Civil, (1964), p. 56.
Thus, its objective is threefold: it attempts to punish the negligent prosecution of actions,
see Silva Wiscovich,
87 J.T.S. at 5132, 5133; it seeks to promote stability in juridical relations,
see Ortiz v. Municipality of Orocovis,
Several other points of law are worthy of mention at this juncture in our discourse. The Suprеme Court of Puerto Rico has stated that in view of the importance of the institution of “extinctive prescription” in the civil law tradition tolling provisions must be interpreted restrictively against the person invoking their protection.
8
Diaz de Diana v. A.J.A.S. Ins. Co.,
We now introduce the specific tolling provisions prescribed by Puerto Rican law. They are found in Article 1873 of the Civil *44 Code, P.R.Laws Ann. tit. 31, § 5303, which states:
Prescription of actions is interrupted by their institution before the courts, by extrajudicial claim of the creditor, and by any act of acknowlеdgement of the debt by the debtor.
See Federal Insurance Co. v. Banco Popular,
This is not the first time this Court has had to do battle with the meaning of the words “extrajudicial claim of the creditor,”
see Hernández del Valle v. Santa Aponte,
In principle, claim stands for demand or notice. That is: it is an act for which the holder of a substantive right, addresses the passive subject of said right, demanding that he adopt the required conduct. The claim, then, is a pretension in a technical sense.
Díaz de Diana,
As for the latter tolling provision of Article 1873, the “act of acknowledgement of the debt by the debtor,” we look tо the Puerto Rico Supreme Court’s extensive discussion in
Widow of Carlo v. Toro,
II
Having examined the case law, we now turn to the task at hand. There is no *45 dispute over the fact that appellant’s right of action accrued on January 21, 1986, the date she was notified of her transfer. Equally uncontestable is the fact that her Section 1983 complaint was filed on October 5, 1987, almost nineteen months after the date of accrual. Thus, one or more tolling acts must have occurred during these nineteen months to render her action timely. Appellant points to her letters of September 1, 1986, and March 12, 1987, addressed to appellees Nazario and Purcell, respectively, as well as to Nazario’s response letter of Octоber 24, 1986. 12 Appel-lees, predictably, contest them. Mindful of the Puerto Rico’s Supreme Court admonition that tolling acts must be interpreted restrictively against the party invoking their protection, we evaluate the candidates.
The moment we turn to consider the tolling effect of the September 1, 1986, letter we realize that we need not answer such a question in this case. We explain briefly. Even had said letter tolled the period of limitations which began to run on January 21, 1986, another tolling act would have been needed for the October 5, 1987, complaint to be timely. This is so because by the filing date the letter had been history for more than a year. As noted above, tolling acts under Puerto Rican law have the effect of causing the limitations period to run anew for another year in full. On the other hand, the October 24,1986, letter, standing by itself, would have been sufficient to render the suit timely if it did in fact toll the period of limitations. As for the Marсh 12, 1987, letter, its tolling effect had to be coupled with a corresponding tolling effect of the September 1 letter to be of any significance. If the statute of limitations had not been interrupted on September 1, 1986, the March 12, 1987, letter would be inconsequential, and we would have no occasion to consider it. Accordingly, we assume, arguendo, that the September 1 letter did toll the statute of limitations and focus our attention on the other two.
In order for us to conclude that the October 24 letter tolled the statute of limitations we must determine that it falls within the purview of the third of the tolling provisions listed in Article 1873 of the Civil Code of Puerto Rico; that is to say, that it constitutes an “act of acknowledgement of the debt by the debtor.” We have read the letter, however, and we fail to detect the tone of
mea culpa
in the Secretary’s prose. To the contrary, Nazario related how an outside counsel’s investigation into the matter could find nо wrongdoing in appellant’s transfer, he praised the virtues of those who commit their lives to public service while encouraging appellant to follow their lead, and he finally “reject[ed] with all [his] might and [his] understanding the allegations [made] about partisan political discrimination.” This is a far cry from the expression of “absolute conformity with the right of the creditor” required by the case law of the Puerto Rico Supreme Court.
Widow of Carlo v. Toro,
Although we believe the aforementioned arguments lend sufficient support to our conclusion today, we leave no stone unturned. Appellant relies heavily on Naza-rio’s instruction to co-appellee Purcell, as expressed in the letter in controversy, that notwithstanding his denial of the existence of political motivаtions behind appellant’s transfer he had given instructions to co-ap-pellee Purcell to reinstate her to her previous position and to continue assigning her duties which were appropriate to her posi *46 tion. However, this instruction, it seems to us, far from being a result of appellee’s acknowledgement of Rodriguez Narvaez’s right to her previous position, constituted an attempt by Nazario to send the problem on to another officiаl’s desk. Put another way, the Secretary, like Pilatus, was trying to divert whatever responsibility might arise from the situation before him away from his own hands. But unlike the procurator of old, he cannot now be called forward to face the consequences of his act. His instruction, as far as the “debt ac-knowledgement” provision of Article 1873 goes, does not have the effect of interrupting the period of limitations. It no more acknowledged the effectiveness of Rоdriguez Narvaez’s alleged right than the rest of the letter did. The only effect, if any, that it should have had was that of making appellant aware of the fact that, in between appellees’ runarounds and roundabouts, the time was getting ever nearer when she should seriously begin thinking about filing her Section 1983 complaint.
Appellant’s chances thus depend on the tolling effect that can be attributed to the March 12, 1987, letter addressed to codefendant Purcell. The lettеr, however, fails to pass muster on at least one of the requisites established by the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico for extrajudicial claims of creditors under Article 1873. A dispassionate reading of the letter reveals that it merely recounts the conversations she had had with the parties to this appeal and only complains about the inordinate workload that she presumably was carrying at the time. At no time is any mention made of the political discriminаtion allegations that would be central, to her suit. No claim for damages is made, no legal action is announced, no Section 1983 suit is implied. It is clear then that her professed extrajudicial claim did not “seek the same relief ultimately sought in the subsequent lawsuit,”
Fernandez v. Chardon,
Ill
The balance of appellant’s arguments requires no additional response. If Rodriguez Narvaez had a case to make she had to be diligent in exercising her rights before our courts. Taking into account the facts that her action accrued nineteen months before the filing of her complaint, and that the tolling acts, if any, that occurred during those months could not be arranged to fall within a year of the filing date, it is clear that the limitations clock ticked for the final time well before her action was filed. The District Court’s dismissal is therefore
Affirmed.
Notes
. 42 U.S.C. § 1988.
. Limitation borrowing has been practiced in federal courts since as early as 1914 in
O’Sullivan v. Felix,
. Among the federal interests most frequently cited by the Supreme Court in relation with the Civil Rights Act are compensation and deterrence,
see Burnett v. Grattan,
. See
Owens v. Okure,
— U.S. -,
. Another issue which is a matter of federal law is the question of when plaintiff-appellant’s cause of action accrued.
Rivera Fernández v. Chardón,
. In
Owens v. Okure,
- U.S. -,
. Where the Court stated, quoting from another famed Spanish commentator, in pages 623-624:
... the principle of the statute of limitations should be seеn objectively since through it "the stability of property and certainty of other rights are guaranteed. The economy and the juridical sector would suffer a serious blow if the state of facts represented by the exercise of a right or by the failure to exercise a right would not in time become an inviolable state of law.” Castán Tobeñas, Derecho Civil Español, Común y Foral, 10ma ed., 1963, T. 1, Vol. 2, p. 834 (official translation).
. With regard to its tolling doctrine, the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico phrased its objeсtive in the following terms:
[T]he acknowledged principle of interruption is the unmistakable manifestation of one who threatened with the loss of his right expresses his wish not to lose it.
Díaz de Diana,
. Without expressly ruling on the issue (since it was not necessary for the resolution of the case) this Court in
Ramirez Morales v. Rosa Viera,
. For a decision of the Supreme Court of Puer-to Rico discussing the cases under the first of the methods of tolling the statute of limitations (the filing of the complaint) see Silva Wiscovich v. The Weber Dental Manufacturing Co., 87 J.T.S. 93 (1987).
.In the
Chardón
case this Court also noted, relying on the language used by the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico in
Jiménez v. District Court,
. As appellant iterates and reiterates in her appellate brief, the Supreme Cоurt of Puerto Rico has held that the admission by the debtor of the existence of the claim or right asserted, whether verbal or in writing, must be clear and unequivocal and not part of settlement negotiations. Dí
az de Diana,
