This appeal requires us to consider the claims of two dairy farmers, each convicted of milk adulteration, who, along with their wives, now assert that the relevant Puerto Rico regulatory agency’s decision to cancel their milk production quotas deprived them of valuable property in violation of the Takings Clause of the U.S. Constitution. ■ U.S. Const. amend. V, XIV. We *425 find no merit to these claims and affirm the decision of the district court.
I. Facts
Víctor González-Álvarez (“González”) and his wife Carmen Echevarría-Vélez (“Echevarría”) owned a dairy farm in Are-cibo, Puerto Rico licensed by the Milk Industry Regulation Office (“ORIL,” in Spanish) through the Puerto Rico Department of Agriculture, pursuant to P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 5, § 1101, et seq. (2005). Luis Alfonso-Delgado (“Alfonso”) and his wife Lydia Mora-Delgado (“Mora”) also owned a dairy farm in Hatillo, Puerto Rico subject to the same licensing and regulatory regime. In separate incidents, Gonzá-lez and Alfonso were convicted of adulterating the milk they sold in an attempt to increase the volume they produced.
After their convictions, appellants Gon-zález and Alfonso lost their licenses to produce milk after ORIL administrative proceedings. They do not now contest this decision. However, ORIL also cancelled appellants’ milk quotas. Under Puerto Rico’s regulations of the dairy industry, dairy farmers’ milk production is limited to the total quota which they have purchased from ORIL. A quota is “the amount of milk quarts that the Administrator of the Milk Industry Regulation Office assigns to be produced every fourteen (14) days by cattlemen, in accordance to the market needs.” Milk Industry Quota Transaction Registry, Law Number 301 of Sept. 1, 2000, Art. 1(c) (“Law 301”). After years of purchasing milk quotas through ORIL, by 2002 González and Echevarria had accumulated quotas authorizing them to produce up to 25,000 liters of milk every two weeks. Likewise, Alfonso and Mora had purchased milk quotas from ORIL authorizing them to produce up to 18,600 liters of milk every two weeks. Appellants contend that these quotas were their personal property and that they could not be taken from them without just compensation.
Appellants assert that the milk quotas are currently sold at a rate of at least $32.00 per liter. Therefore, appellants González and Echevarria estimate that they are owed not less than $800,000, which they claim to be the fair market value of their quotas. Similarly, appellants Alfonso and Mora seek compensation of not less than $595,000 for their cancelled quotas.
II. Analysis
The district court did not reach the merits of the federal constitutional takings claims raised by either set of appellants. In the case of Alfonso and his wife, it found that their claims were time barred with regard to all defendants. In the case of González and his wife, the district court found that the claims against certain defendants were barred by the statute of limitations and that the remaining defendants were entitled to qualified immunity. Thus, appellants now seek review of two main issues: (1) whether the instant actions were filed within the relevant statute of limitations; and (2) whether defendants are entitled to qualified immunity. Because we agree with the district court that the claims of both sets of plaintiffs-appellants are precluded by the statute of limitations or qualified immunity, we affirm the decisions of the district court.
A. Statute of Limitations
Both sets of appellants dispute the district court’s findings that some or all of their claims are time-barred. Pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983, we apply the forum state’s statute of limitations period for personal injury actions.
See Rivera-Muriente v. Agosto-Alicea,
On April 7, 2000, appellant Alfonso was convicted of milk adulteration to increase the volume of milk produced, and on July 12, 2000, Carlos Cabán-Nieves (“Cabán”), then Administrator of ORIL, issued an administrative ruling that revoked Alfonso’s milk production license and quotas. Alfonso did not appeal this ruling, and on March 23, 2001, defendant Juan R. Pedró-Gordián (“Pedro”), the new Administrator of ORIL, sent Alfonso a letter informing him that the July 2000 ruling would be implemented March 29, 2001. However, in the meantime, Alfonso had mistakenly been granted a new license, and on May 30, 2001, he filed a case with ORIL alleging that Pedro had no right to suspend his license, which ORIL denied in October 2001. Alfonso also appealed this case to the Puerto Rico Appeals Court, which upheld the ORIL decision. Alfonso Delgado v. Pedró-Gordián, No. KLRA20020447 (T.C.A. Aug. 20, 2002). Meanwhile, on May 14, 2002, Pedro mailed a letter to Alfonso notifying him that the cancellation would become effective June 5, 2002. Alfonso and his wife Mora filed the complaint in the instant case on July 7, 2003.
Appellant González was also convicted in 2000 of milk adulteration to increase the volume of milk produced, and on December 21, 2001, ORIL Administrator Pedro issued an administrative ruling revoking González’s milk production license and quotas. González appealed this ruling to the Puerto Rico Court of Appeals,
Milk Quality Program of the Milk Industry Regulation Office v. González-Álvarez,
No. KLRA0200084,
In a § 1983 claim, the statute of limitations generally begins to run “when the plaintiff ‘knows or has reason to know of the injury which is the basis for the claim.’ ”
Rodríguez-García v. Municipality of Caguas,
Both sets of appellants argue that the statute of limitations could not begin to run until the date on which the milk manufacturing plant actually discontinued picking up appellants’ milk.
1
However, after the quotas were cancelled by ORIL, appellants were simply waiting for the decision to be enforced. In this case, a quota is simply the right to sell a given amount of milk. Assuming that that legal right is “property,” when ORIL issued its decision cancelling appellants’ quotas, appellants were already deprived of the property at issue, and the statute of limitations began to run as of that date.
Cf. Suitum,
For the same reasons, we find that the statute of limitations began to run for the claims brought by González and his wife on December 21, 2001, when ORIL issued its *428 administrative decision revoking Gonzá-lez’s license. 3 This action filed November 5, 2003 would then clearly be beyond the one-year statute of limitations. However, in this case, the district court found — and it is unchallenged by any party — that the statute of limitations was tolled as to defendant Pedro, in his personal capacity, and his wife, Lizet Quinones, by an action filed by González in bankruptcy court in the interim. 4 Thus, the instant federal action was timely filed against them.
Appellants argue that González’s bankruptcy court complaint should have also tolled the statute of limitations with respect to Secretary of Agriculture Rivero Cubano and his wife. We disagree. Appellants argue that because Rivero Cubano was included in his official capacity as a defendant in the bankruptcy complaint, the statute of limitations was tolled for actions against him in his personal capacity as well. Whereas González and his wife named appellee Pedro in his personal capacity, they chose to name appellee Rivero Cubano only in his official capacity as Secretary of Agriculture. Furthermore, the portion of the complaint that alleges possible 42 U.S.C. § 1983 allegations refers only to appellee Pedro. In general, “defendants sued only in their official capacities in the original complaint cannot be expected to be on notice of the very different issues raised by claims against them in their personal capacities.”
Rodríguez-García,
Another argument implicit in appellants’ claims is that, although appellants were aware that the milk quotas were cancelled, it was not until much later that they discovered that ORIL did not plan to pay them just compensation. We find this argument entirely unconvincing. Although there may be cases in which a person could reasonably be uncertain about whether they were going to receive compensation for their taken property, this is not such a case. Appellants were well aware that the cancellation of their milk quotas was a direct result of their milk adulteration, and as such, they could not have reasonably expected compensation, where no mention of compensation was made. Had the government planned on compensating appellants for their quotas, it would have said so.
See Hair v. United States,
Finally, both sets of appellants argue that even if the statute of limitations
*429
began to run on the dates determined by the district court with respect to the claims brought by Alfonso and González, the same cannot be said of their wives’ claims, because they were not provided notice of the cancellation of their husbands’ licenses and the milk quotas. However, we find that, under Puerto Rico law, separate notice is not required to both the husband and wife in a conjugal partnership.
Cf Blas v. Hospital Guadalupe,
B. Qualiñed Immunity
Having already concluded that all other claims in this consolidated appeal are time barred, we now consider appellants González’s and Echevarria’s claims against defendants Pedro and his wife, who assert the defense of qualified immunity.
7
“For a plaintiff to overcome a qualified immunity defense, he must show [1] that his allegations, if true, establish a constitutional violation; [2] that the right was clearly established; and [3] that a reasonable official would have known that his actions violated the constitutional right at issue.”
Mihos v. Swift,
In the opinion from which this appeal arises, the district court essentially skipped over the first inquiry in order to reach the subsequent queries, which it found decisive. The court reasoned that “even assuming arguendo, that constitutional rights were violated, ... it was objectively] reasonable for Pedro to believe that his actions did not violate these clearly established rights.” 8 González-Álvarez v. Rivero Cubano, No. 03-2193, slip op. at 7 (D.P.R. July 23, 2004). Although we recognize the logic of this approach, the court’s election to forego deciding whether the cancellation of the milk quotas constituted an unconstitutional taking, and instead to dismiss the claims based on the failure to demonstrate that whatever *430 rights may have been violated were “clearly established,” runs contrary the analysis required by the Supreme Court.
“A court required to rule upon the qualified immunity issue must consider ... this threshold question: Taken in the light most favorable to the party asserting the injury, do the facts alleged show the officer’s conduct violated a constitutional right? This must be the initial inquiry.”
Saucier v. Katz,
In the course of determining whether a constitutional right was violated on the premises alleged, a court might find it necessary to set forth principles which will become the basis for a holding that a right is clearly established. This is the process for the law’s elaboration from case to case, and it is one reason for our insisting upon turning to the existence or nonexistence of a constitutional right as the first inquiry. The law might be deprived of this explanation were a court simply to skip ahead to the question whether the law clearly established that the officer’s conduct was unlawful in the circumstances of the case.
Id. The district court — by “assuming ar-guendo ” that a constitutional violation had occurred — was able to dismiss the cases without deciding whether the cancellation of appellants’ milk quotas did in fact constitute an unconstitutional taking of their property. The problem with this methodology is that the law will be no clearer when future similarly situated plaintiffs bring the same claim. This unending state of ambiguity, which potentially allows the bad man (in this context, a government official) to walk the line time and time again, is precisely what the Supreme Court instructs us to avoid.
Thus, we must now consider whether appellants’ allegations, if true,- establish a constitutional violation.
See Mihos,
Appellants’ claim is perhaps more aptly described as a claim that the Puerto Rican government deprived them of their personal property without due process of law. In this vein, appellants argue that this sanction was not mandated, or even permissible, under Puerto Rico law. Presumably, appellants have avoided describing their argument in these terms because they have already raised this argument in the Puerto Rico courts. They are now collaterally estopped from relitigating these issues in federal court.
9
The Puerto
*431
Rico Court of Appeals rejected appellant Gonzalez’s claim that ORIL lacked the authority to cancel his milk quotas, and found no evidence that the cancellation was arbitrary, illegal or an abuse of discretion.
González-Álvarez,-
No. KLRA0200084,
For these reasons, we find that even assuming all allegations by appellants are true, defendant Pedro did not violate appellants’ constitutional rights. Thus, Pedro is entitled to qualified immunity, and the district court correctly dismissed appellants’ claims on that basis.
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, the decision of the district court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
Notes
. Appellants cite to a number of cases that miss the mark. In support of their theory, plaintiffs cite to
Lawson v. Shelby County,
Ramos
v.
Román,
. Appellants' later challenges to the cancellation of the quotas do not toll the statute of limitations. Under Puerto Rico law, in order for tolling to occur, the remedies sought in both suits must be identical.
See Torres v. Superintendent of Police,
. In the 'bankruptcy complaint he filed on November 1, 2002, González himself admits that in the December 21, 2001 resolution, "ORIL stated that they were to cancel debt- or’s milk production quota.” The evidence indicates that upon receipt of the December 21, 2001 ORIL resolution, González had reason to know, and did in fact subjectively believe, that ORIL was cancelling his milk quotas and that he would not be compensated for any portion of their estimated $800,000 value.
. The action in bankruptcy court tolled the statute of limitations from the date of its filing on November 1, 2002, until it was dismissed for lack of jurisdiction on November 5, 2003.
. We note here that even if these claims were timely filed they would still fail under the qualified immunity analysis described below.
. We also consider that it is not entirely clear whether the wives can be said to have a property interest in the quotas. While generally in Puerto Rico all marital property is owned by the conjugal partnership, only individuals with a license can own milk production quotas, and, in this case, only González and Alfonso have such a license; their wives do not.
. The claims against the wives in this case, including Pedro's wife Lizet Quiñones, are derivative of the claims against their husbands. The claim against Lizet Quinones, therefore, cannot survive once we determine that her husband, who committed the alleged violation of appellants’ rights, is entitled to qualified immunity.
.We note that the district court used the same approach to assert qualified immunity in Alfonso-Delgado v. Rivero Cubano, No. 03-1625, slip op. at 6 (D.P.R. Aug. 5, 2004). In that case, the court also concluded that "even assuming arguendo, that constitutional rights were violated, summary judgment should be granted on qualified immunity grounds.” Id. For the reasons we will explain with regard to the district court’s opinion in González-Alvarez, No. 03-2193, slip op. at 7, we reject this approach. However, we will not belabor the point, since none of the claims made by Alfonso and his wife were brought within the statute of limitations.
. “The [Puerto Rico Supreme] Court has also found Article 1204 to encompass the doctrine of
collateral estoppel,
holding that when a fact essential to the prior judgment is actually litigated and determined by a valid and final judgment, the determination is conclusive in subsequent litigation among the parties.”
F&lix Davis v. Vieques Air Link,
. The Puerto Rico Court of Appeals' decision in
Alfonso Delgado,
No. KLRA20020447, reinforces our understanding of the court's reasoning in
González-Alvarez,
No. KLRA0200084,
