Plaintiffs Hector Guzman Rivera (“Guzman”) and family members appeal a district court judgment dismissing Guzman’s civil rights action against various present and former officials of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico as time-barred. We vacate the summary judgment entered by the district court and remand for further proceedings.
I
BACKGROUND
On Christmas Eve, 1987, the manager of a Domino’s Pizza establishment in Carolina, Puerto Rico, was shot and killed during an armed robbery. Eyewitnesses identified-Guzman as the perpetrator. Guzman, who was living in New York at the time, was extradited, tried, convicted, and sentenced to 119 years’ imprisonment. In the wake of the conviction, Guzman’s father, Hector Guzman Fernandez, instigated an independent investigation which yielded an “informant” who claimed to have provided the weapon used in the robbery and to know the identity of the real culprit. Guzman’s father, proof in hand, set out on August 21, 1989, to secure his son’s exoneration.
During the fall of 1989 and the spring of 1990, Guzman’s father repeatedly corresponded and met with defendants-appellees Hector Rivera Cruz, Secretary of Justice, and either Luis Feliciano Carreras, Director of the Prosecutor’s Office, or his successor, Pedro Gerónimo Goyco (collectively, the defendants). During an investigation conducted by the Civil Rights Division of the Puerto Rico Justice Department in March 1990, an eyewitness recanted her identification; the informant confirmed that Guzman was not the killer and identified the real perpetrator; and Guzman’s mother attested that her son was in New York at the time of the murder.
The mounting evidence of Guzman’s innocence notwithstanding, even after the Civil Rights Division issued its own investigative report concluding that Guzman had not committed the murder, the Director of the Prosecutor’s Office refused to authorize Guzman’s release. Indeed, at a meeting in April 1990 Guzman’s father was informed that the Prosecutor’s Office would take no corrective action regarding Guzman until the actual perpetrator had been taken into custody.
At or about June 15, 1990, Guzman filed a motion for new trial with the San Juan Superior Court and served the Secretary of Justice with a motion for release. Before the Secretary of Justice acted on the motion for release, the Governor of Puerto Rico, in response to a request from Guzman’s father, directed Guzman’s release on June 15, 1990.
Guzman instituted the present action on June 14, 1991. Defendants countered with a motion to dismiss, see Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), asserting prosecutorial immunity and the statute of limitations. The district court later entered summary judgment for all defendants-appellees, see Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b), 56, on the ground that the action was time-barred under the applicable one-year statute of limitations. On appeal, Guzman argues that summary judgment was improvidently granted on the limitations defense because a trialworthy issue existed as to the date on which the section 1983 claim accrued. We agree.
II
DISCUSSION
We review a grant of summary judgment
de novo,
employing the same criteria incumbent upon the district court in the first instance.
Velez-Gomez v. SMA Life Assur. Co.,
Although it is clear that the one-year personal injury limitation applies to the present action,
see, e.g., Lafont-Rivera v. Soler-Zapata,
The Supreme Court recently clarified the circumstances in which section 1983 can be used to redress alleged constitutional deprivations sounding in malicious prosecution, false imprisonment, and false arrest, by outlining the federal accrual analysis applicable to claims akin to the present:
[I]n order to recover for damages for allegedly unconstitutional conviction or imprisonment, or for other harm caused by actions whose unlawfulness would render a conviction or sentence invalid, a § 1983 plaintiff must prove that the conviction or sentence has been reversed on direct appeal, expunged by executive order, declared invalid by a state tribunal authorized to make such determination, or called into question by a federal court’s issuance of a writ of habeas corpus.
Hi H« H* H* sf* H*
[Accordingly,] a § 1983 cause of action for damages attributable to an unconstitutional conviction or sentence does not accrue until the conviction or sentence has been invalidated.
Heck,
— U.S. at-,
It is clear from the summary judgment record that Guzman was released from prison on June 15, 1990, less than one year prior to the filing of the instant action. Therefore, if the conviction was “reversed[,] ... expunged ... [or] held invalid,”
id.,
by competent executive or judicial action
2
not earlier than
June 14, 1990, an actionable section 1983 claim “for harm caused by actions whose unlawfulness would render [his] conviction or sentence invalid,”
id.,
would not be
*6
time-barred. The summary judgment proceedings included in the appellate record do not enable a determination as to whether, and if so, when, Guzman’s conviction was undone. Consequently, as the accrual issue cannot be resolved on the present record, summary judgment was premature.
See, e.g., Greenburg v. Puerto Rico Maritime Shipping Auth.,
Ill
CONCLUSION
The district court judgment must be vacated. The case shall be remanded to permit the district court to determine whether Guzman’s conviction was ever invalidated as required under
Heck. See Heck,
— U.S. at -,
The district court judgment is vacated the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion; costs to appellants.
Notes
. Guzman relies on a fragment of dicta from
Maslauskas v. United States,
. Guzman's brief on appeal represents that his release was prompted by the intervention of the Governor of Puerto Rico. However, the official record of the Puerto Rico Administration of Corrections indicates that Guzman was released on bond June 15, 1990, after his motion for new trial had been granted. The record does not disclose whether a new trial has ever been conducted, nor whether any governmental action has been taken to expunge or invalidate the conviction.
