Frаncisco Hernandez Jimenez filed his complaint on April 10, 1975, charging Astol Calero Toledo, Superintendent of the Puerto Rico police, with dismissing him from the department without а prior hearing. The complaint also charged Calero and members of the commission that reviewed and upheld Hernandez’s discharge with conspiring to deprive him оf his position for political reasons. Hernandez sought reinstatement and *403 damages. On November 14, 1975, he amended his complaint to include two new defendants, local рoliticians who, he claimed, joined in the conspiracy to deprive him of his post. After some documentary evidence had been submitted but before trial, the district court dismissed the complaint, ruling that res judicata barred the suit against the original defendants and that the addition of new defendants by the amended complaint was time barred. Hernandez appeals from the dismissal of his complaint.
At the time of his dismissal Hernandez was a lieutenant in the Puerto Rico police. On the night of March 18, 1973, while off duty, a vehicle he was driving collided with another automobile. According to the police report of the accident, Hernandez apparently had been drinking and was driving on the wrong side of the road. The passengers got out of their respective cars and argued over the accident for about half an hour. The conversation became heated, and at some point Hernandez shot the occupants of the other car with his service revolver and then fled. One of the victims died from the gunshot wounds; the othеr was seriously injured but survived. Hernandez was tried for attempted murder and second degree murder but was acquitted by a jury, apparently on the ground of self defense.
After an administrative investigation of the shooting incident, Calero on April 17, 1973 sent Hernandez a letter dismissing him from the police force. The letter cited departmental regulations relating to negligent conduct, improper use of firearms, physical abuse of civilians, and illegal behavior and informed Hernandez of his right to appeal the decision to the Investigation, Processing and Appeals Commission. The Commission upheld the dismissal on June 26,1974. Hernandez then sought review of the Commission’s action in the Puerto Rico Superior Court, but his petition was dismissed because the statutory thirty day appeal period had elapsed since the Commission decision. Hernandez appealed the dismissal оf his petition to the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico but was denied certiorari. In his complaint and accompanying affidavits, Hernandez claims that his two victims and the threе eyewitnesses to the shooting were attacking him with steel bars, forcing him to use his gun. He alleges that Calero admitted to him the investigation and discharge were politically mоtivated, as leaders of the Popular Democratic Party, to which Calero belonged, wished to harm Hernandez, a member of the New Progressive Party. He contends thаt after the Commission upheld his discharge, he discovered that Juan Nieves, the stepfather of the boy he killed, brought pressure to bear on Ramon Amaes Rios, the mayor оf Rincon, to punish Hernandez, and that Amaes in turn pressured Calero and the Commission. He alleges that Calero, the Commission members, Nieves and Amaes, all being Popular Demоcrats, conspired to remove him from the force solely because of his political affiliation. He claims to have been unable to include Nieves and Amaes in his original complaint because he was then unaware of their involvement in the conspiracy.
The district court in dismissing the complaint ruled that Calero and the Commissiоn members were all parties to Hernandez’s review petition in the superior court, either directly or through their privies, and that the political discrimination claim brought here could and should have been raised in the previous suit. The court therefore held that res judicata barred this subsequent suit, citing our opinion in
Lovely v. Laliberte,
In
Lovely
we held that principles of res judicata barred a subsequent suit in federal court alleging constitutional deprivations evеn though the constitutional claims were not raised in the prior state court suit.
Id.
*404
at 1263. This was so because “ ‘[a] judgment estops not only as every ground of recovery or defеnse actually presented in the action, but also as to every ground which might have been presented . .
Id.
(citing
Cromwell v. County of Sac,
Because this action is not so barred, it must be remanded for further proceedings. It is clear that somе but not all of the claims stated in the complaint are not time barred as to the original defendants. As the district court ruled, the applicable statute of limitations to this suit is Puerto Rico’s one-year rule for torts.
Ramirez de Arellano v. Alvarez de Choudens,
As for the defendants brought in by the amended complaint, it is open to plaintiff to prove, if he can, that these parties fraudulently concealed from plaintiff their participation in the alleged conspiracy to affirm his dismissal.
2
If so, tolling principles contained in the law of the Commonwealth might indicate that the statute did nоt begin to run until such time when plaintiff should or could have discovered the conspiracy. Alternatively, a principle of federal law might require tolling if fraudulent conceаlment is in fact made out.
See Briley v. California,
The judgment of the district court dismissing the complaint is reversed.
Notes
. We recognize that some courts have spoken of the “last overt act” of a сivil rights conspiracy as the time from which the statute begins to run, e.
g., Crosswhite v. Brown,
. This claim is not open with regard to Calero and the Commission members because their participation in the alleged conspiracy was known to plaintiff.
. On remand plaintiff will also be free to raisе the issue of whether the amended complaint “relates back” to the original complaint so as to place the added defendants in the same position as the others for statute of limitations purposes. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(c); 6 C. Wright & A. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 1498 (1971).
