Case Information
*3 Before MARCUS and BLACK, Circuit Judges, and COHEN, [*] District Judge.
BLACK, Circuit Judge:
In this сonsolidated appeal, Toni and Shaun Foudy challenge the district court’s dismissals on statute of limitations grounds of their lawsuits against the Indian River County Sheriff’s Office, the City of Port St. Lucie, the City of Fort Pierce, and numerous related individuals brought under the Driver’s Privacy Protection Act, 18 U.S.C. §§ 2721–2725 (the DPPA), and 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The Foudys assert the district court erred when it (1) applied an occurrence rule of accrual to their § 1983 claims, (2) refused to apply еquitable tolling to their DPPA claims, and (3) refused to relate their amended complaints back to their initial complaint filed on December 31, 2012. After review and with the benefit of oral argument, we affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
The Florida Department of Highway Safety and Motor Vehicles (DHSMV)
maintains a Driver and Vehicle Information Database (DAVID). DAVID contains
Florida drivers’ personal information including photographs, social security
numbers, prior and current mailing addresses, and other similar data.
See Foudy v.
Miami-Dade Cty.
,
On December 31, 2012, the Foudys filed suit in the Southern District of Florida agаinst the St. Lucie County Sheriff’s Office, the Indian River County Sheriff’s Office, and various unnamed entities, individuals, DHSMV employees, and Florida law enforcement personnel. The Cities of Port St. Lucie and Fort Pierce and their respective employees were added in an amended complaint on March 7, 2014. The Foudys charged all defendants with violating the DPPA. See 18 U.S.C. § 2724 (“A person who knowingly obtains, discloses or uses personal information, from a motor vehicle record, for a purpose not permitted under this chapter shall be liable to the individual to whom the information pertains, who may bring a civil action in a United States district court.”). The Foudys brought their claims directly under the DPPA as well as under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 in conjunction with the DPPA. On August 1, 2014, Judge Martinez, concerned the complaint constituted a mere “shotgun pleading,” entered an order severing the Foudys’ claims against the separate defendants. It was not readily apparent, the court observed, how the various claims constituted the same transaction. See F ED . R. C IV . P. 20(a)(2)(A). The order dismissed all defendants except the first named defendant and granted the Foudys two weeks to refile separate actions against the dismissed parties. It specifically provided the newly-severed actions, when refiled, would be considered continuаtions of the prior action for statute of limitations purposes. The Foudys refiled thirteen separate actions within the allotted time.
Three of those suits form the basis of this consolidated appeal. Each complaint was filed August 15, 2014: one against the City of Port St. Lucie and certain related individuals (the Port St. Lucie Case); one against the Indian River County Sheriff’s Office and related individuals (the Indian River Case); and onе against the City of Fort Pierce and related individuals (the Fort Pierce Case). On January 16, 2015, Judge Rosenberg, presiding over the refiled cases, entered three identical paperless orders dismissing the Foudys’ complaints in each case. The orders asserted the Foudys did not clearly demonstrate their claims against the various defendants arose out the same transaction, and adopted the reasoning оf Judge Martinez’s August 2014 dismissal. They stated Judge Martinez’s order had “required Plaintiffs to show, if Plaintiffs proceeded against multiple defendants, how the conduct of the Defendants constituted the same transaction for the purposes of joinder.” The Foudys not having done so, the court dismissed each case without prejudice, but did not provide for tolling of the statute of limitations as Judge Martinez’s order had done. The Foudys were given fiftеen days to refile separate actions against appropriate defendants and expressly state in any complaint naming multiple defendants how such parties’ conduct constituted the same transaction for the purposes of joinder. By the morning of February 2, 2015, the Foudys had not refiled. The district court entered paperless orders closing each case, stating the Foudys could reopеn the cases only by filing a motion explaining their failure to comply with court orders and an amended complaint meeting the requirements of the January 16 order. Later that same day, the Foudys filed motions to reopen in each case, attaching their amended complaints. The Foudys provided no explanation as to how the claims against the defendants arose out of the same transaction. The next day, the district court denied each of the motions, noting the Foudys had failed to explain how joinder was permissible, as the court had ordered them to do. It gave the Foudys the opportunity to refile a motion responsive to the court’s joinder concerns. On February 18, 2015, the Foudys did so, and the court reopened the Indian River Case on June 3, 2015, the Port St. Lucie Case on June 11, 2015, and the Fort Pierce Case оn June 19, 2015.
In each suit, the defendants moved to dismiss, asserting the Foudys’ claims were barred by the statute of limitations. The court issued two sets of nearly identical orders [1] on July 27 and 28, 2015 and September 9, 2015, which together held the occurrence rule applied to the Foudys’ DPPA and § 1983 claims; thus, the statute of limitations began to run on the date the alleged violations occurred and not when they were discovered. The district court detеrmined the effective dates of the refiled complaints were March 5, 2015 with respect to the St. Lucie Case, June 23, 2015 with respect to the Indian River Case, and March 12, 2015 with respect to the Fort Pierce Case. [2] In each instance, the Foudys had alleged no violations less than four years prior to such dates. Accordingly, all of the Foudys’ claims were time-barred, and the district court entered judgment in favor of the dеfendants and closed the cases.
On appeal, the Foudys initially argued the district court erred when it applied
the occurrence rule to both the DPPA claims and the § 1983 claims. After the
parties had submitted their briefs, however, a panel of this Court held the
occurrence rule applies to DPPA claims in the separate case of
Foudy v. Miami-
Dade County
.
See Foudy
,
II. STANDARDS OF REVIEW
We review a district court’s interpretation and application of a statute of
limitations de novo.
Harrison v. Dig. Health Plan
,
We review a district court’s decision to dismiss a case for failure to comply
with an order of the court for an abuse of discretion.
See Gratton v. Great Am.
Commc’ns
,
III. DISCUSSION
Though the DPPA contains its own cause of action, it does not provide its
own statute of limitations. The applicable statute of limitations on DPPA claims is
found in 28 U.S.C. § 1658. Section 1658(a) applies to all causes of action arising
under federal statutes enacted after December 1, 1990 that do not otherwise set
forth a specific limitations period. 28 U.S.C. § 1658(a) (“[A] civil action arising
under an Act of Congress enacted after the date of the enactment of this section
may not be commenced later than 4 years after the cause of action accrues.”). As
noted above, we recently held that a DPPA violation “accrues” within the meaning
of § 1658(a) when the violation occurs.
Foudy
,
A. Accrual of § 1983 Claim
We have held that the DPPA, though it sets forth its own express right and
remedy, is also actionable under § 1983.
Collier v. Dickinson
,
It is true that in many contexts, our cases have held § 1983 claims are
governed by a discovery rule, such that the statute of limitations begins to run on a
claim when “the facts which wоuld support a cause of action are apparent or
should be apparent to a person with a reasonably prudent regard for his rights.”
Rozar v. Mullis
,
Section 1983 cases in which we have invoked the discovery rule have
typically involved constitutional or general civil rights claims.
See Chappell v.
Rich
,
On the other hand, when a § 1983 claim arises under a federal statute
enacted after December 1, 1990, and the underlying statute does not provide its
own limitations period, the limitations period set forth in § 1658—not the forum
state personal injury statute—governs.
See Jones v. R. R. Donnelley & Sons Co.
,
It is only logical that the occurrence rule applicable to the DPPA’s statute of
limitations would travel with it in § 1983 cаses. As the Supreme Court has
recognized, “the accrual date of a § 1983 cause of action is a question of federal
law.”
Wallace
,
In the present case, any other conclusion would be anomalous. It would be
incongruous to confer upon the Foudys’ § 1983 claim, entirely dependent as it is
upon the DPPA, a more generous accrual rule than the underlying DPPA claim
itself. To paraphrase
Baker v. Birmingham Board of Education
, “[w]ere it not for
the [DPPA, the Foudys’] complaint would fail to state a claim under § 1983.”
Baker
,
Finally, our holding supports the policies underlying all limitations
provisions; namely, “repose, elimination of stale claims, and certainty about a
plaintiff’s opportunity for recovery and a defendant’s potential liabilities.”
Gabelli
v. SEC
,
Accordingly, we hold that a § 1983 claim based solely on the DPPA accrues at the same time as one brought under the underlying statute itself: upon the occurrence of the alleged violation.
B. Equitable Tolling
Despite our holding in Foudy v. Miami-Dade County , the Foudys insist their direct DPPA claims are not time-barred because although the causes of action accrued at the time of the alleged violations, the limitations period has bеen equitably tolled. Equitable tolling by concealment is established either through “affirmative actions by the defendant constituting concealment” or “where the wrong is of such a character as to be self-concealing.” Hill v. Texaco, Inc. , 825 F.2d 333, 335 & n.2 (11th Cir. 1987). The Foudys do not allege affirmative concealment by the Appellees; indeed, they appear to have received their data access audit promptly upon request. Instead, they contend the DPPA violations were self-concealing.
The alleged DAVID accesses cannot be categorized as self-concealing
wrongs. We stated as much, albeit in dicta, in
Foudy v. Miami-Dade County
.
See
Foudy
,
The Foudys claim the district court erred when it dismissed their actions for misjoinder on January 16, 2015, contending the district court misread Judge Martinez’s severance order as requiring an explanation of any joinder of multiple defendants. As a result, they assert their complaints should relate back to date of the first complaint filed on December 31, 2012. See F ED . R. C IV . P. 15(c).
The district court may have misconstrued Judge Martinez’s order as
requiring the Foudys to explain why joinder was appropriate when they refiled
their amended complaints on August 15, 2014. We would extend no deference to
the court’s interpretаtion of that order were it necessary to decide the issue.
Alley
v. U.S. Dep’t of Health & Human Servs.
,
Federal courts possess an inherent power to dismiss a complaint for failure
to comply with a court order.
Goforth v. Owens
,
“Dismissal of a complaint, without prejudice, does not allоw a later
complaint to be filed outside the statute of limitations.”
Bost v. Fed. Express
Corp.
,
IV. CONCLUSION
The statute of limitations began to run on the Foudys’ claims when the alleged DPPA violations occurred. The Foudys have failed to present any theory that would entitle their claims to be treated as filed within the limitations period. Accordingly, their actions are time-barred, and the judgments of the district court are
AFFIRMED.
Notes
[*] Honorable Mark Howard Cohen, United States District Judge for the Northern District of Georgia, sitting by designation.
[1] In each of the three consolidated cases, each of the district courts orders are materially identical, down to the language used in the orders. Unless otherwise stated, then, references to reasoning or action of the district court pertain to all three consolidated cases. Initially, the district court found the § 1983 claims to be governed by a discovery rule and thus not necessarily time-barred, but revised its reasoning and conclusion in the September 9 orders.
[2] No party challenges the district court’s determination of these dates.
[3] The
Hobson
court’s elucidation of the concept is helpful:
An example of [a self-concealing wrong] would be a scheme in
which deception or misrepresentation affected the behavior of
another, where that change in behavior enabled the would-be
defendant to carry out his scheme—as where a person knowingly
sells a fake vase as a real antique. In that instance, the statute
would toll until the buyer discovered or should have discovered the
deception.
Hobson
,
