Federal courts treat the filing of a complaint as satisfying the statute of limitations, even though the defendant may not learn about the suit until service of process after the period of limitations has expired.
West v. Conrail,
Animating this approach is the language of Fed.R.Civ.P. 3, which provides: “A civil action is commenced by filing a complaint with the court.” If the action is “commenced” by filing, that ought to satisfy the statute of limitations. When the plaintiff seeks to proceed without prepayment of fees, however, 28 U.S.C. § 1915(a) implies a different approach. For that statute says that a court “may authorize the commencement ... of any suit ... without prepayment of fees and costs” if the plaintiff is unable to pay. To say that the judge may “authorize the commencement” of a suit is to imply that depositing a copy of the complaint with the clerk does
not
commence the litigation and therefore does not satisfy the statute of limitations. Only the judge’s order permitting the plaintiff to proceed
in forma pauperis,
and accepting the papers for filing, would commence the action. This understanding, though, would make judicial delay fatal to some actions. In
Gilardi v. Schroeder,
What happens if the district judge denies the application to proceed IFP and the plaintiff does not pay promptly? If both
Gilardi
and
Robinson
are read as favorably to the plaintiff as their language would permit, then by applying for IFP status a litigant may obtain an indefinite extension of time to serve the defendant. Lodging the complaint satisfies the statute of limitations, and by failing to pay the docket fee the plaintiff prevents the 120-day period from starting, because the clerk will not stamp “filed” on the complaint until the fee has been paid. Even well-to-do plaintiffs could obtain this self-help extension of time, which would leave defendants in the dark for extended periods. Such a maneuver not only undermines the mechanism created by Rules 3 and 4(m) but also is inconsistent with the rationale for periods of limitations. Sometimes Congress chooses a particularly short period of limitations because damages may be piling up during delay. Claims arising out of employment generally are handled by short periods for action, because back pay is mounting (and because the injury, such as a discharge, is so apparent that it does not overtax anyone to require prompt action). See generally
Smith v. Chicago,
Today we must deal with a worst-case scenario under Gilardi and Robinson. Ann Williams-Guiee believes that the Chicago Board of Education discriminated against her on the basis of race by declining to award her a full-time position as a substitute teacher. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 sets two short periods for action: an employee must complain to the EEOC within 270 days, and must file suit within 90 days after receiving notice of the EEOC’s decision. On August 25, 1992, the EEOC determined that Williams-Guice is not a victim of discrimination. This final decision permitted her to file suit. The district court received her complaint 99 days later, on December 2, 1992. Williams-Guice asserted that she had not received the EEOC’s decision until September 15, 1992, a date defendants do not dispute. This would make the complaint timely — if “filed” on December 2. But Williams-Guiee did not pay the docket fee, and the clerk treated the complaint as received but not filed. The application for leave to proceed IFP accompanying the complaint was deficient; the district court permitted Williams-Guice to amend it. On February 10, 1993, the court denied the application, observing that Williams-Guice is employed as a part-time substitute and has a substantial equity interest in her house. Local Rule 11D in the Northern District of Illinois gives a plaintiff 15 days to pay the docket fee following denial of an application for leave to proceed IFP. Williams-Guice did not pay until May 24, 1993, or 103 days after the district court’s order (and 251 days after September 15, 1992, when, she says, she received the EEOC’s decision). The Board of Education was not served with process until August 27, 1993, or 198 days after the district court’s order denying IFP status. August 27 is 268 days after the lodging of the complaint and more than a year after the EEOC’s decision. But August 27 is only 95 days after Williams-Guice paid the docket fee.
Combining
Gilardi
with
Robinson,
Williams-Guice contends that both the complaint and service were timely. The district judge disagreed, dismissing the action for failure to comply with Rule 4(m).
We agree with the district court that plaintiffs should not possess an option to delay service indefinitely by declining to pay the docket fee. Yet the holding of Robinson— that the time specified by Rule 4(m) does not commence until the complaint is stamped “filed” by the clerk — does not accommodate the solution the district court selected. For the passage of 15 days does not cause the clerk to accept the complaint and deem it “filed.” Quite the contrary, Local Rule 11D says that if the fees are not paid within 15 days “the clerk shall notify the judge” who will take appropriate action, including directing the clerk to return the complaint un-SLed, ending the litigation. Filing and dismissal are opposites, and equating them for purposes of Rule 4(m) stretches language altogether too far. Treating the complaint as “filed” for purposes of Rule 4(m) on the date the judge denies leave to proceed IFP, no matter when (if ever) the plaintiff pays, would have a sounder footing in the language of the statutes and rules, but such an approach would require us to modify Robinson.
The clerk did not enforce Local Rule 11D, and the district court took no action when Williams-Guice tarried in pay
*164
ment. When the dispute about the time of service brought this omission to the court’s attention, it would have been within its rights to dismiss the suit for delay in payment. Williams-Guice objects to this possibility on the ground that she did not have counsel at the time, and the judge did not expressly call Rule 11D to her attention. This is not an excuse. Even uncounseled litigants must act within the time provided by statutes and rules. “[W]e have never suggested that procedural rules in ordinary civil litigation should be interpreted so as to excuse mistakes by those who proceed without counsel.”
McNeil v. United States,
— U.S. -, -,
Yet the court did not dismiss the case under Local Rule 11D; instead it invoked Rule 4(m). Using Rule 4(m) is problematic not only because of the way
Robinson
understood “filing” but also because Rule 4(m) affords additional time to a plaintiff who can show “good cause for the failure” to serve within 120 days. Williams-Guice appealed to this language by pointing out that the process server she had hired made two unsuccessful attempts at service — the first on June 17, 1993, “only” 112 days from the expiration of the Local Rule 11D period. An employee of the Board of Education designated to receive service declined to accept the papers from the process server, deeming service untimely when measured from December 2, 1992, the date shown on the complaint. Inexplicably the process server picked up the papers and left. Talking the process server out of leaving the papers cannot exactly be called avoiding service, but it is not exactly cooperative either, and this episode might readily be called “good cause” for further delay. See
Bachenski v. Malnati,
Although Rule 4(m), as
Robinson
understood it, does not permit a district court to use Local Rule 11D to define, “filing,” the foundation of the delay in this case is not delay in service so much as it is delay in payment — and therefore in “filing” the complaint.
Gilardi
holds that the complaint is deemed filed when lodged with the clerk, provided the judge permits the plaintiff to proceed IFP. We did not discuss in
Gilardi
what happens when the judge denies the application. The parties have not discussed it either. Still, litigants’ failure to address the legal question from the right perspective does not render us powerless to work the problem out properly. A court of appeals may and often should do so unbidden rather than apply an incorrect rule of law to the parties’ circumstances.
United States National Bank of Oregon v. Independent Insurance Agents of America, Inc.,
— U.S. -, -,
The tenth circuit’s answer in
Jarrett
to the question ‘What happens if the judge denies the application?” is that the clock resumes ticking on the date of denial.
Jarrett
is a close parallel to
American Pipe & Construction Co. v. Utah,
Such an understanding protects both parties. The plaintiff remains entitled to litigate even if the district judge concludes that he is not entitled to proceed IFP. The defendant gets timely notice — for the plaintiff must pay the docket fee within the remainder of the period of limitations, and once the fee had been paid
Robinson
starts the clock for service under Rule 4(m). One potential pitfall deserves notice: suppose the plaintiff lodges the complaint (and application to proceed IFP) with two days to go and does not learn about the judge’s order denying the complaint until the time has run? One potential answer is: “Tough luck, that’s a consequence you accepted by waiting until the eleventh hour to file the complaint and seeking a dispensation to which you were not entitled.” It is the answer the Supreme Court contemplated in
American Pipe.
See also
Brown,
Although defendants have not formally pleaded the statute of limitations as a defense, they have not waived the right to do so. The ease was dismissed for improper service of process, and therefore before the time had come to invoke the statute of limitations in the answer to the complaint. After the oral argument, we asked the parties for supplemental memoranda addressing the question whether we should follow Jarrett; defendants asked us to do so and to affirm on the basis of its reasoning. (Plaintiff did not respond to our invitation.) We see no point in remanding to the district court, for now that the legal rules have been clarified the application of the statute of limitations is straightforward. Wasted motion should be avoided when possible, and a remand would lead to nothing but paper-shuffling.
Affirmed.
