Lead Opinion
James L. McCune appeals from the district court’s judgment dismissing McCune’s complaint in its entirety. For the following reasons, we affirm the district court’s judgment in part, vacate the district court’s judgment in part, and remand this case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I.
Appellant James L. McCune was employed as a Grand Rapids Parks Patrol Officer from August of 1978 through the latter part of 1980. The Grand Rapids Police Department and the Grand Rapids Parks Department supervised appellant’s work as a parks patrol officer. Apparently, appellee the City of Grand Rapids maintains both departments.
At the request of appellee Francis Pierce, a police officer who was acting deputy chief of police or acting chief of police for appellee the City of Grand Rapids at all times relevant to the instant case, McCune agreed to act as an undercover officer to investigate burglaries, armed robberies, and transactions in illegal controlled substances. In the course of his duties as an undercover officer, appellant regularly reported to Pierce concerning the extent of drug activity appellant observed. Also, in the course of his duties as an undercover officer, appellant on one occasion gave Pierce $1200 cash which was appellant’s share in one of the robberies with which he was subsequently charged. Appellant understood that the cash proceeds would be used as evidence against the robbers. Finally, in the course of his duties as an undercover officer appellant kept a detailed notebook from which he reported to Pierce.
In April of 1981, officers employed by the City of Walker, Michigan, the Kent County Sheriff’s Department, and the City of Grand Rapids arrested McCune in the city of Walker. Appellant was charged with approximately seven counts of armed robbery, conspiracy to commit armed robbery, and breaking and entering. Appellee Pierce was present when appellant was arrested. Pierce made no attempt to stop the arrest or to inform the arresting officers that appellant’s activity giving rise to the charges was done in furtherance of appellant’s duties as an undercover officer.
Appellee Gerald Steele who was a police officer and acting deputy chief of police at all times relevant to the instant case came into possession of McCune’s notebook which detailed his undercover activities. Steele hid the notebook to prevent the exculpatory evidence contained therein from being produced.
After McCune’s arrest in April of 1981, he was incarcerated in the Kent County Jail. Appellant posted bond on May 22, 1981, and subsequently fled Michigan in fear of his life. Appellant turned himself in to the Federal Bureau of Investigation (F.B.I.) on March 22, 1982. Thereafter, he was incarcerated until on or about February 11,1983. All charges against appellant were dropped on September 12, 1983.
On June 17, 1985, McCune filed a complaint in the United States District Court for the Western District of Michigan. The complaint alleges that appellees the City of
McCune filed this timely appeal. This court must decide whether the district court erred in dismissing appellant’s complaint in its entirety for failure to comply with the statute of limitations.
II.
In Wilson v. Garcia,
The more critical question for the purposes of this appeal concerns when appellant’s section 1983 cause of action accrued. Although Wilson held that state law provides the statute of limitations in section 1983 actions, it also reaffirmed that federal law and not state law is relevant for the purpose of characterizing a section 1983 claim. Wilson,
Appellant contends that the actions of appellees resulted in appellant’s wrongful arrest, wrongful incarceration, wrongful criminal prosecution, and wrongful suppression of exculpatory evidence. He argues that these wrongful actions constitute a continuing tort. Appellant claims, therefore, that his section 1983 cause of action did not accrue until the continuing wrongful conduct ceased.
This court has not addressed the question of what constitutes a continuing tort in the context of section 1983 actions. Other jurisdictions, however, have addressed this question. In Ward v. Caulk,
In Singleton v. City of New York,
Moreover, in Compton v. Ide,
Applying these standards to the existing facts, appellant’s argument that the actions of appellees constitute a continuing tort must fail. Under Sandutch, appellant’s claim of wrongful continued incarceration constitutes an ill effect from his false arrest. Moreover, under Singleton, the false arrest, malicious prosecution, and wrongful suppression of exculpatory evidence constitute discrete wrongs (i.e., separate torts with separate elements), and they will not be viewed by this court as a continuing violation. Finally, under Compton the existence of a conspiracy does not postpone accrual of appellant’s separate claims.
Appellant’s first contention, that he was wrongfully arrested, is tantamount to a claim of false arrest. When the claim is for false arrest, a section 1983 cause of action accrues on the date the arrest was made. Sandutch,
In reaching our conclusion, we have considered whether appellant’s incarceration tolled the statute of limitations. The Supreme Court has held that state tolling rules govern section 1983 causes of action except when they are inconsistent with the federal policy underlying section 1983. Board of Regents v. Tomanio,
[F]alse arrest consists of an unlawful and total detention or restraint on one’s freedom of locomotion, imposed by force or threats.... A false arrest is one means of committing a false imprisonment, but a false imprisonment may be committed without an arrest, and a distinction has been drawn between the two in that a false arrest must be committed under assumption of legal authority whereas a false imprisonment may be committed without any pretense of legal authority_ False arrest is synonymous with false imprisonment where one confines another purporting to act by authority of law which does not in fact exist.
35 C.J.S. False Imprisonment §§ 1-2 at 621-24 & n. 5 (1960) (some footnotes omitted). Thus, for the purposes of this case, false arrest is synonomous with false imprisonment. Nevertheless, in light of the complaint as a whole, we have construed appellant’s second contention, that the actions of appellees resulted in appellant’s wrongful incarceration, to mean wrongful continued incarceration. As we have noted, appellant’s wrongful continued incarceration constitutes an ill effect from the original false arrest. Sandutch,
Appellant’s third claim is for malicious prosecution. In Dunn, this court held that favorable termination of the prior (i.e., underlying) criminal proceeding marks the point at which a section 1983 claim for malicious prosecution accrues. Dunn,
Finally, appellant’s fourth claim is for wrongful suppression of exculpatory evidence. Because the underlying criminal proceeding terminated in appellant’s favor, he has not been injured by the act of wrongful suppression of exculpatory evidence. Therefore, appellant has failed to state an independent claim based on this act of suppression. Of course, the wrongful suppression of exculpatory evidence may be relevant to appellant’s claim of malicious prosecution.
For the foregoing reasons, the district court’s judgment is AFFIRMED in part, VACATED in part, and this case is REMANDED to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
. Because this is an appeal from the dismissal of the complaint, appellant’s allegations are accepted as true.
. We note that neither the appellant in Compton nor appellant in the instant case alleged a violation of 42 U.S.C. § 1985.
. In a recent unpublished opinion, this court has also held that a claim of false arrest in a section 1983 cause of action accrues on the date the arrest was made. Davis v. Shelby County, Tennessee,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring in result only.
I think the court is clearly correct on the malicious prosecution issue and, since by keeping this claim alive we give the plaintiff his day in court on this strange episode, I am willing to concur in the result. I am concerned about other aspects of this decision, however, including questions implicitly raised but not answered.
Although the parties to this appeal do not discuss it, the root of the problem presented lies in the undefined overlap between state common law tort actions and federal civil rights actions brought pursuant to the provisions of 42 U.S.C. § 1983. Ever since the Supreme Court made clear in Monroe v. Pape,
It is clear, as the court points out in this case, that whatever may be this plaintiff’s cause of action and whenever it may have accrued the period of limitations is three years. What is not clear, however, is just what is his cause of action.
Prior to Wilson v. Garcia, when statute of limitations questions arose in the context of section 1983 litigation, this circuit allowed the plaintiff's complaint to be parsed. Each identifiable separate wrong alleged in the complaint would be judged by its own most analogous state statute of limitations. Thus, for example, an excessive force claim might be analogized to a state assault and battery claim and assigned a three-year statute of limitations, while the companion false arrest claim might be subject to the state’s one-year false imprisonment statute. However, now that each wrong alleged in the section 1983 action is subject to the same limitations period, it is no longer as clear as it once may have seemed that all related wrongdoing should not now be considered as one cause of action. This is particularly true in the context of a case such as this where it cannot be demonstrated that any wrong was committed until this plaintiff was in some way vindicated of the state criminal charges. Where the claim of one implicated in a state's criminal justice system is that he is innocent, and that innocence is what makes the state action wrongful, it makes little sense to require a federal suit to be filed until innocence or its equivalent is established by the termination of the state procedures in a manner favorable to the state criminal defendant. More so than in Michigan, this would be particularly true in a state such as Ohio where this court has concluded that the statute of limitations for section 1983 actions is one year. See Mulligan v. Hazard, 777 F.2d 340 (6th Cir.1985), cert. denied,
I would suggest that the rule the court applies in this case simply will not suffice. If the vindication of a defendant in a state criminal proceeding is a necessary ingredient to his ability to establish a section 1983 claim, then none of the claims that are dependent on vindication should accrue until vindication occurs.
On the other hand, if the claims, though they are a part of what might be viewed as a related series of events, have a basis not dependent on vindication, then the cause of action should accrue when the event occurs. For example, if police use excessive force in making an arrest, a section 1983 claim will lie that is independent of the guilt or innocence of the party arrested and the statute should start to run from the day of the beating for that particular claim.
We are already on record in this circuit that a section 1983 action will not lie where resolution of the claim involves a collateral attack on a state court conviction, and that, in such a circumstance, a plaintiff must first seek habeas relief. Hadley v. Werner,
Another alternative arises when money damages are the object of a section 1983 suit. We might have to go back and revisit our decision in Hadley v. Werner. Hadley was bottomed on Preiser v. Rodriguez,
As I stated at the outset, no great harm is done to this plaintiff since he gets another bite at the apple. Furthermore, his claim is not really that he committed no crimes but, rather, that he was “authorized” to do so. Thus, his claim sounds less in innocence than it does in desertion by the police officers who allegedly put him up to it. Thus, this may not be a good example of a true “vindication” case. In any event, this court will have to address at another day the implications of Hadley, Jones, and this decision.
