David PEARL, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
Thе CITY OF LONG BEACH, Long Beach City Police Department, Long Beach Police Officer Leo Nolan, Arthur Whitman and Long Beach Police Officer Vincent Milo, Defendants-Appellees.
Docket No. 01-7914.
United States Court of Appeals, Second Circuit.
Argued: April 2, 2002.
Decided: July 15, 2002.
Stephan H. Peskin, Tolmage, Peskin, Harris & Falick, New York, N.Y. (Jonathan C. Moore, New York, NY; William H. Goodman, Center for Constitutional Rights, New York, NY, on the brief), for Plaintiff-Appellant.
Corey E. Klein, Acting Corporation Counsel, Long Beach, NY, for Defendants-Appellees The City of Long Beach and Long Beach City Police Department.
Orrit Hershkovitz, Snitow Kanfer Holtzer & Millus, LLP, New York, N.Y. (Paul F. Millus, New York, NY, on the brief), for Defendant-Appellee Leo Nolan.
Michael T. Hopkins, Hopkins & Kopilow, Garden City, NY, for Defendant-Appellee Arthur Whitman.
Christine McInerney, Ruskin, Moscou, Evans & Faltischek, P.C., Uniondale, NY, submitted papers for Defendant-Appellee Vincent Milo.
Before WALKER, Chief Judge, NEWMAN, and KEARSE, Circuit Judges.
JON O. NEWMAN, Circuit Judge.
This appeal illustrates, in a dramatic context, the tension between the judicial system's instinct to provide a remedy fоr every wrong and the system's recognition that the passage of time must leave some wrongs without a remedy. David Pearl appeals from the July 18, 2001, judgment of the District Court for the Eastern District of New York (Leonard D. Wexler, District Judge) dismissing, as barred by the statute of limitations, his suit seeking damages for police brutality allegedly inflicted upon him 35 years ago. Acknowledging the normally applicable barrier of the statute of limitations, Pearl contends that he may sue at this late date because the settlement of his prior timely lawsuit was obtained by fraud, his currently pleaded causes of action were concealed by fraud, and he can now establish the truth through the testimony of a conscience-stricken police officer who admits that he participated in the brutality and that he and the other defendants lied about Pearl's claim. We are obliged to agree with the District Court that Pearl's evidence, accepted as true for purposes of this appeal, does not permit his current suit to proceed. We therefore affirm.
Background
The alleged assault. Pearl alleges the following circumstances. In 1967, Pearl, then sixteen years old, was stopped on the street and brutally attacked by four City of Long Beach (Nassau County, N.Y.) police officers — Appellees Leo J. Nolan and Vincent F. Milo, Jr., and George F. Ellert and Sergeant James Rosengrave, both now deceased. As detailed in Pearl's 1968 state court civil complaint, on August 9, 1967, he was called over to a police car by Officer Nolan. After asking Pearl a few questions, Nolan told him to get into the back of the police car. In the course of being transported to the police station, Pearl was repeatedly punched in the stomach and face by Nolan, while restrained by Officer Milo. Officer Ellert drove the car. Nolan and the other officers continued to hit and kick Pearl at the police station, causing Pearl to lose consciousness for a period of time. Pearl's injuries required a ten-day period of hospitalization and left him permanently blind in one eye.
The officers, including Appellee Arthur Whitman, testified to a different version of the episode at two state court criminal trials. They said that Pearl swore at Officer Whitman, who was on traffic patrol, as he was walking by. Officer Nolan called Pearl over to his car after hearing him swear. Pearl then swore at Nolan and, after getting into the police car, struck him. The officers (other than Whitman) used force in the cаr and in the station only in order to subdue Pearl.
The criminal case. The Nassau County prosecutor charged Pearl with assaulting a police officer, resisting arrest, and disorderly conduct. Pearl was initially convicted at a bench trial, but the conviction was overturned on appeal because Pearl had unconstitutionally waived his right to a jury trial, which Pearl had done in order to maintain juvenile offender status. People v. David P.,
The state court civil case. Just prior to sentencing in the first trial, Pearl and his mother, Florence Wexler, brought a civil suit in Nassau County Superior Court under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the City of Long Beach and Officers Nolan, Milo, and Ellert, alleging excessive force by them, аnd recklessness on the part of the City in allowing its officers to assault Pearl. In their pretrial depositions for the civil case, the officers again gave their account of the episode. In 1972, with the third criminal trial impending, Pearl and his mother chose to settle their civil suit. At the settlement hearing, Pearl's mother made it clear that the sole reason she agreed to settle was that the prosecutor had indicated that the criminal charges would be dropped if Pearl settled. Pearl's attorney advised that it would be an uphill battle to convince a jury in the civil trial and the impending criminal trial that four police officers were lying on the stand. Pearl also believed that his witnesses were intimidated by the police and failed to fully support his defense. Pearl and his mother agreed to settle the civil case for $30,000, an amount that did not cover his medical bills and the fees and expenses of his criminal defense. The individual police officers and the City were released with respect to "all actions and claims arising out of the incident which occurred on August 9, 1967." The City paid the $30,000.
Milo's recantation. In June 1999, Milo, one of the officers involved in the 1967 episode, submitted a sworn statement to the Nassau County District Attorney, stating that the officers' testimony in the Pearl case was fabrication. He confessed that he "never saw Pearl throw a punch or kick any of the police officers involved," and that "Nolan laid out the story as to what the reports should say."
In a second affidavit given in May 2000, Milo recounted the extent of brutality within the Long Beach Police Department: "[T]here existed a pattern of brutality [within the Department] in which not all police officers participated but in which all acquiesced"; "[b]eatings by senior officers, especially the detectives to extract confessions were common place"; he recalled other instances of suspects being beaten and that it was "nothing out of the ordinary, just standard operating procedure"; and "[b]lackjacks, clubs and rubber hoses and telephone books were all part of our `unofficial' equipment."
He also stated: "When we were sued by Mr. Pearl we insisted that the City hire as our attorney Leon Stern. He was most familiar with the facts of the case as he was allowed to be present in the Grand Jury room while the Pearl case was being present[ed]. In fact, he gave us detailed accounts of each civilian witness'[s] testimony so that we could adjust our presentation.... [H]e was `one of the boys' while an Assistant District Attorney and understood the way we operated." Milo also stated that he left the Long Beach Police Department and transferred to the Long Beach Fire Department.
Pearl's current lawsuit. Milo's first affidavit prompted Pearl to institute the instant lawsuit on January 19, 2000, asserting federal causes of action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and RICO, 18 U.S.C. § 1961 et seq., claims under the Fourth, Fifth, Eighth, and Fourteenth Amendments, and state law claims. The defendants are Nolan and Milo, the two officers still living who participated in the episode, Whitman, who testified against Pearl, the City, and the Long Beach Police Department. Pearl seeks to revive claims arguably extinguished by the 1972 settlement, such as his excessive force claim against the individual officers, and also seeks to assert, purportedly for the first time, claims that he alleges became known to him only in 1999. The latter include: section 1983 claims against the officers for conspiracy to cover-up, against the City for failure to protect, and against the City based on the Supreme Court's decision in Monell v. Department of Social Services,
Judge Wexler granted Defendants' 12(b)(6) motion, dismissing Pearl's Complaint on statute of limitations grounds. This appeal followed.
Discussion
In section 1983 actions, the applicable limitations period is found in the "general or residual [state] statute [of limitations] for personal injury actions," Owens v. Okure,
Federal law determines when a section 1983 cause of action accrues, Heard v. Sheahan,
The Supreme Court has instructed that in section 1983 actions, we borrow not only a state's limitations period but also its "tolling rules," Board of Regents v. Tomanio,
The first matter — the scope of borrowed tolling rules — is the easier of the two. Tomanio noted that New York hаs by statute codified "a number of the tolling rules developed at common law,"
The second matter — the overlap between accrual and tolling based on fraudulent concealment — is more troublesome, in part because of the varying uses of terminology. The taxonomy of tolling, in the context of avoiding a statute of limitations, includes at least three phrases: equitable tolling, fraudulent cоncealment of a cause of action, and equitable estoppel. The initial difficulty encountered in trying to compare accrual, governed by federal law, with tolling, governed by state law, is that the reported decisions of the federal and state courts do not always mean the same thing by their use of these phrases, and phrases to which some judges ascribe different meanings are used interchangeably by other judges.
In the Seventh Circuit, Judge Posner has identified two "tolling doctrines": "equitable estoppel" and "equitable tolling." Cada v. Baxter Healthcare Corp.,
Our Court has used "equitable tolling" to mean fraudulent concealment of a cause of action that has "in some sense accrued earlier," see Pinaud,
New York appears to use the label "equitable estoppel" to cover both the circumstances "where the defendant conceals from the plaintiff the fact that he has a cause of action [and] where the plaintiff is aware of his cause of action, but the defendant induces him to forego suit until after the period of limitations has expired." Joseph M. McLaughlin, Practice Commentaries, N.Y. C.P.L.R. C201:6, at 63 (McKinney 1990). See Simcuski v. Saeli,
Bearing in mind this variety of terminology, we discern a split of authority as to whether tolling based on fraudulent concealment should be governed by statе or federal law. Compare Emrich v. Touche Ross & Co.,
In our Circuit, Keating appears to regard concealment as a tolling rule to which borrowed state law applies,6 see Keating,
Whether concealment of a cause of action postpones accrual of a cause of action and is therefore a matter of federal law or whether, in New York, where it is an example of equitable estoppel, it is one of the state "tolling rules" we are to borrow in section 1983 actions (which seеms the more likely alternative after Keating), the analysis of Pearl's claims is unaffected, because, as discussed below, his current claims are barred whether the issue is viewed as one of delayed accrual or tolling. And the outcome is unaffected no matter which of the tolling concepts is applicable. Because Pearl casts his argument in terms of "equitable tolling," by which he means fraudulent concealment of a cause of action, we will use that phrase in discussing all aspects of his contention.
In the pending case, we clearly borrow New York's rule of tolling during infancy, see N.Y. C.P.L.R. § 208 (McKinney 1990), and therefore the statute of limitations ran on Pearl's section 1983 claims on September 29, 1971, three years after his eighteenth birthday. Citing primarily federal case law,7 Pearl invokes the doctrine of equitable tolling and contends that the limitations period has been tolled because the police officers who testified against him lied about the 1967 episode, giving a false version that Officer Nolan had concocted for them. Brief for Appellant at 26-36.
The tolling issue arises in this case in an unusual context. Unlike typical tolling cases in which the plaintiff contends that fraudulent concealment prevented him, even in the exercise of due diligence, from acquiring sufficient awareness of a cause of action to permit the timely filing of a lawsuit, see, e.g., Simcuski,
In considering the doctrine of equitable tolling in the context of a prior lawsuit allegedly concluded disadvantageously because of fraud, we find no pertinent New York decision. Although we have not previously encountered such circumstances, our own case law provides useful guidance. In applying the doctrine of equitable tolling, we have made an important distinction between fraudulent concealment of the existence of a cause of action and fraudulent concealment of faсts that, if known, would enhance a plaintiff's ability to prevail as to a cause of action of which the plaintiff was previously aware. See Paige v. Police Department of Schenectady,
Although we have broadly stated, as Pearl notes, that we will apply the equitable tolling doctrine "as a matter of fairness" where a plaintiff has been "prevented in some extraordinary way from exercising his rights," Miller v. International Telephone & Telegraph Corp.,
Claims against the police officers. Thus understood, the doctrine of equitable tolling, as Pearl calls it, or equitable estoppel, as New York calls it, does not permit Pearl to sue the individual police officers at this late date. Pearl was obviously aware of his cause of action for police brutality at the time of the 1967 episode and not only cоuld have sued the officers, but did so. Even if we assume that the alleged fraud of the officers in concocting a false account of the episode would provide a basis for setting aside the 1972 settlement of Pearl's state court civil suit, see Griffith,
Although Bell v. City of Milwaukee,
Also supеrficially similar but ultimately distinguishable is Yeadon v. New York City Transit Authority,
Witness misperception may have seemed particularly plausible to the arrestees because the cramped conditions of New York City subways invite erroneous perception of "sexual abuse," offensive rubbing, and "jostling," movement of the hand toward a pocket or purse of another, the two crimes of which every plaintiff was accused. Because plaintiffs may not have had any information to arouse suspicion about the basis for their arrests, their causes of action would not have begun to run until they acquired that information ....
Id. at 210 (citing Sandutch v. Muroski,
Pearl endeavors to obtain the benefit of equitable tolling by alleging a conspiracy among the police officers to present false testimony against him and contending that, even though he knew the true facts of the 1967 episode, he did not know until receiving the Milo affidavit that he had a cause of action against the officers for conspiracy to cover up their misconduct. In Dory v. Ryan,
Dory does not aid Pearl. Although Dory knew all along what he claimed thе true facts were concerning his lack of criminal culpability and must have thought at the time of trial that the police officer and the recanting witness were lying, he had no basis for knowing that their false testimony resulted from a conspiracy between the prosecutor and the police officer. By contrast, Pearl makes no allegation that the allegedly false testimony presented against him resulted from a conspiracy between, on the one hand, the testifying police officers and, on the other hand, any other official about whose involvement he was unaware. Indeed, Milo's affidavit precludes such a possibility; he avers that the plan to present false testimony originated with Officer Nolan, one of the police officers Pearl contends testified falsely.
Nor can Pearl now assert a previously concealed cause of action by pointing to a conspiracy among the four police officers who testified against him. Knowing what he contends the true facts were, he had reason to believe they were lying, and, because their versions were identical, it was a reasonable inference that the officers had agreed to present their allegedly false versions. We have previously ruled that accrual of a cause of action based on specific acts of which a plaintiff was aware cannot be postponed, nor can a limitations period be tolled, simply by alleging that the acts were taken pursuant to a conspiracy. See Pinaud,
Pearl cannot validly claim concealment of his causes of action against the policе officers, whether based on section 1983, RICO, or state law.
Claims against the City of Long Beach. Pearl's awareness of his causes of action against the police officers also precludes application of equitable tolling (or equitable estoppel) to most of his claims against the City of Long Beach. Aware of the injuries that the officers inflicted upon him, he was similarly aware of his currently alleged state law causes of action against the City based on respondeat superior and alleged negligent training and supervision of the officers. Complaint, Claims 10, 11. The one cause of action now alleged of which Pearl was not aware until he received the second Milo affidavit is what he labels his "Monell Claim": that his injuries resulted from a municipal policy of failing to "control police officers engaged in the excessive and unjustified use of force" аnd maintaining a "police code of silence wherein police officers regularly coverup police use of excessive and unjustified force by telling false and incomplete stories ... in sworn testimony ...." Complaint, Claim 4. In that affidavit Milo stated that there existed in the Long Beach Police Department "a pattern of brutality in which not all police officers participated but in which all acquiesced." Although not explicitly alleging a policy of encouraging false testimony, Milo's statement that "you learned quickly to look the other way and not to open your mouth" adequately supports the allegation of the Complaint that the City's policy included providing false testimony.
At the outset of our consideration of tolling with respect to this claim of a municipal policy, we note that thе "municipal policy" cause of action that Pearl alleges was not recognized until 1978 when the Supreme Court decided Monell. The Court there slightly modified the insulation of municipalities from suits under section 1983, see Monroe v. Pape,
It is a fair question whether a cause of action can be said to be concealed for purposes of equitable tolling when it did not exist at the time the plaintiff's injuries werе inflicted or when the limitation period for redressing those injuries expired. We acknowledge, however, that there is some force to Pearl's contention that, notwithstanding the date when Monell was decided, he should benefit from equitable tolling if he can demonstrate that the defendants prevented him from advancing the claim that was ultimately upheld in Monell. But for the defendants' concealment, he contends, he could have been the first to establish the Monell rule.
As with so much of Pearl's argument, the surface attractiveness of his position disappears upon closer examination of the case law that has developed concerning the doctrine of equitable tolling or estoppel to plead a limitations defense. New York has made it clear that, in the absence of a fiduciary relationship between the wrongdoer and the victim, an estoppel barring a limitations defense will not arise unless there has been "active fraudulent concealment" by the wrongdoer. Riley v. State,
Pearl has made no showing that the City of Long Beach actively concealed from him the existence of a municipal policy concerning either police brutality or false testimony concerning such misconduct. If he aspired to anticipate Monell, due diligence required him at least to use the generous provisions of federal discovery rules to obtain information concerning other episodes similar to his that might have sufficed to suрport a claim of a municipal policy.8 In the absence of such inquiry, he cannot point to any misrepresentation by City officials that amounts to "active fraudulent concealment" of what might have become a pioneering Monell cause of action. Pearl's allegations of false testimony by the police officers bear at most on thwarting successful pursuit of his claims concerning the episode in which he was involved; the officers were not asked about and did not misrepresent with respect to municipal policy or custom.
Conclusion
In the face of the unusual circumstance of a former police officer coming forward to recant his own prior testimony and to admit that he and other officers lied in an attempt to convict David Pearl and to deny him a fair civil recovery for his serious injuries, we take no pleasure in ruling that the statute of limitations remains an insuperable obstacle to his effort to obtain adequate compensation for the brutality inflicted upon him 35 years ago. But we are obliged to uphold the policies animating the applicable statute of limitations, see Johnson v. Railway Express Agency, Inc.,
The absence of an available judicial remedy, however, does not necessarily mean that David Pearl has no recourse. Courts are not the only forum for redress of grievances. Our ruling today does not prevent the City of Long Beach from making such inquiry as it deems appropriate into the circumstances that led to Pearl's loss of sight in one eye, and providing whatever compensation it concludes is warranted.
The judgment of the District Court is affirmed.
Notes:
Notes
A four-year statute of limitations is applicable to claims brought under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act ("RICO"), 18 U.S.C. § 1961et seq. See Agency Holding Corp. v. Malley-Duff & Associates, Inc.,
It is arguable that because section 1983 is to "be read against the background of tort liability" for purposes of holding a defendant responsible "for the natural consequences of his actions,"Monroe v. Pape,
The significance of fraudulent concealment to a plaintiff's entitlement to sue was recognized by the Supreme Court as early as 1874, when the Court ruled that in an equitable action based on fraud, "where the ignorance of the fraud has been produced by affirmative acts of the guilty part in concealing the facts from the other, the statute [of limitations] will not bar relief" if suit is promptly brought after discovery of the fraudBailey v. Glover,
It is not clear whether Judge Posner views "fraudulent concealment" as postponing accrual only in fraud cases, to which he explicitly refers, or in any case in which a defendant conceals a cause of action
Other circumstances noted in the Third Circuit to warrant equitable tolling are "where the plaintiff in some extraordinary way has been preventеd from asserting his or her rights" and "where the plaintiff has timely asserted his or her rights mistakenly in the wrong forum."Oshiver,
Keating first stated the federal rule concerning concealment that postpones the accrual of a cause of action and then, "[b]orrowing" the state tolling rule, noted that the state had "adopted the same equitable estoppel doctrine." Keating,
The Appellant also citesMcCabe v. Gelfand,
InYeadon, where the District Court permitting tolling of a limitations period because of concealment of a Monell claim, the Court found that the defendants "dodged discovery requests that would have disclosed the false arrest scheme," and "repeatedly represented to plaintiffs that complaining witnesses had initiated the arrests, and that the witnesses would appear in court to prosecute," which the Court determined "kept [the plaintiffs] from discovering the pattern of which those arrests were a part." Yeadon,
