Few details of this litigation under the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act matter to this appeal, because the district court did not reach the merits. Instead it dismissed the complaint for want of jurisdiction to the extent that the parent and child seek relief from the school system in West Lake, Indiana. Claims against state officials remain pending, but a partial final judgment under Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(b) has led to this appeal with respect to all other defendants.
S.K. is an autistic teenager. His mother Farzana K. believes that the public schools are not providing an educational program appropriate to S.K’s needs. In 2004 she sought judicial relief. The district court dismissed her suit in December 2004 after concluding that administrative remedies remained open. The final administrative decision was made on June 6, 2005, and the parties agree that Farzana K. had 30 days to seek judicial review. That period comes from Indiana law. The district court held that 20 U.S.C. § 1415(i)(2)(B), which sets 90 days as the window when a state lacks “an explicit time limitation”, does not apply in light of Ind.Code § 4-21.5-5-5, which the judge deemed “explicit” for this purpose. In this court Farzana K. does not contest that ruling; we need not decide whether it is correct.
Farzana K.’s lawyer made the mistake of waiting until late afternoon of the last possible day: July 6, 2005. The Northern District of Indiana accepts electronic filings, and counsel submitted the complaint online. Making a second mistake, counsel used the docket number of the 2004 suit. The computer rejected the filing with the notation that the case had been closed. (This did not, however, prevent the court’s computer from forwarding copies to the school system’s lawyers.) Farzana K.’s lawyer then dispatched paper copies, but
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the courier did not reach the courthouse until the clerk’s office had closed. On July 8 counsel tendered a new complaint, identical to the one the computer had rejected except that the space for a docket number was blank and the word “amended” had been deleted from in front of “complaint.” The district court held that July 8 was too late — that, indeed, counsel’s delay had deprived the court of subject-matter jurisdiction.
We may assume that Indiana’s courts treat both delay and failure to verify as “jurisdictional” failings. Yet whether federal jurisdiction exists is a matter of federal law, and there is no doubt about the source of the district court’s power: 28 U.S.C. § 1331, which authorizes federal courts to entertain claims arising under federal law, including the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act. Timely filing may be a condition to success, but it is not a jurisdictional requirement in federal court. See, e.g.,
Day v.
McDonough,
“Except when otherwise specifically provided by rule or statute, pleadings need not be verified or accompanied by affidavit.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 11(a). This means federal rule or federal statute, because state requirements for pleading do not apply in federal litigation. Rules established under the Rules Enabling Act supersede state norms. See, e.g.,
Walker v. Armco Steel Corp.,
That leaves the 30-day time limit. Plaintiff submits that equitable tolling excuses the delay, but that doctrine deals with situations in which timely filing is not possible despite diligent conduct. See, e.g.,
Cada v. Baxter Healthcare Corp.,
It is hard to see why a court should invoke equitable tolling to supply a litigant with more time to apply for review of an agency’s decision. The period for seeking administrative review, like the time for appealing a decision of the district court, usually is brief because a contest is ongoing. The loser simply notifies the other side (by a petition for review or a notice of appeal) that argument will resume in another forum. A lawyer who misses the time to file a notice of appeal cannot invoke “equitable tolling” to justify the delay. Rules may allow judges to grant extra time. See Fed. R.App. P. 4(a)(5), (6). Once the time as extended under the Rules lapses, however, common-law tolling is unavailable; the existence of rules specifying when (and how far) time may be extended is incompatible with an open-ended power to add extra time on “equitable” grounds. Indeed, the Supreme Court has characterized the time limit for appellate review within a unitary system as “jurisdictional,” e.g.,
Browder v. Director of Corrections,
Because this 30-day time limit has been borrowed from Indiana law, however, whether it is subject to equitable tolling (and, if so, under what circumstances) is a question of state law. Farzana K. does not cite any Indiana decision holding that the period supplied by Ind.Code § 4-21.5-5-5 may be extended via a tolling doctrine; our own research has not turned up any such holding. Instead Indiana’s courts treat this time limit as absolute. See
Warram v. Stanton,
So was this complaint filed on time? It was. Counsel transmitted a complaint electronically on July 6, the 30th day after the state agency’s decision. Litigation in federal court commences with the filing of the complaint, see Fed.R.Civ.P. 3, and the plaintiff then has 120 days to serve copies on each defendant, see Fed.R.Civ.P.4(m). All defendants received copies well inside the 120-day window after filing (indeed, all but the state agency received the complaint electronically on July 6).
Defendants insist that this complaint was not “filed” because a computer rejected it. Counsel certainly could and should have avoided this problem by submitting the complaint as the opening salvo in a fresh case, rather than as a new round in an old ease. (Neither side contests the district court’s decision to dismiss rather than stay the first suit. Dismissal is the norm when state remedies remain to be exhausted. See
Rose v. Lundy,
By refusing to accept complaints (or notices of appeal) for filing, clerks may prevent litigants from satisfying time limits. To prevent this — to ensure that judges rather than administrative staff decide whether a document is adequate — Fed. R. Civ. P. 5(e) was amended in 1993 to require clerks to accept documents tendered for filing. The last sentence of this rule provides: “The clerk shall not refuse to accept for filing any paper presented for that purpose solely because it is not presented in proper form as required by these rules or any local rules or practices.” See also Fed.R.Civ.P. 83(b). The software that operates an e-filing system acts for “the clerk” as far as Rule 5 is concerned; a step forbidden to a person standing at a counter is equally forbidden to an automated agent that acts on the court’s behalf.
Defendants contend that trying to file a complaint in a closed case is not a formal error, so that Rule 5(e) does not apply. Yet the equivalent mistake in filing paper copies is writing the wrong docket number on top of the papers, and that’s an error of form rather than substance. Papers with bad docket numbers, or the wrong size (say, legal rather than letter), or with sections in the wrong order (say, a summary of argument ahead of the statement of facts), all display improper form.
Counsel may have used the old docket number in an effort to avoid paying a second filing fee. That raises the question what happens (for limitations purposes) if a complaint is lodged with the clerk on time, but the fee is not paid until after the period of limitations has expired. We held in
Robinson v. Doe,
Very few appellate decisions other than
Robinson
and
McDowell
have dealt with Rule 5(e).
McClellon v. Lone Star Gas Co.,
Long before Rule 5(e) was amended to limit the clerk’s power to reject documents tendered for filing, the Supreme Court held that a complaint (actually) filed in the wrong court generally satisfies a federal statute of limitations, provided that suit is re-filed in the right court promptly after the misadventure in the wrong forum ends. See
Burnett v. New York Central R.R.,
Counsel tendered a complaint for filing on July 6; it should have been accepted even though its deficiencies required amendment to show that a new suit was being initiated. Because the complaint was timely, and verification is unnecessary, the district court’s judgment is vacated and the case remanded for decision on the merits.
