Appellants, quondam employees of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, sued their erstwhile agency head, the Ombudsman, under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 (1982).
1
They complained that their ouster was politically motivated and hence infracted their constitutiоnal rights.
See generally Vazquez Rios v. Hernandez Colon,
During our first encounter with this litigation, we agreed with the district court that, absent special circumstances, plaintiffs’ claims were time-barred.
See Rivera-Gomez v. de Castro,
On remand, plaintiffs filed a second amended complaint. After de Castro answered, the district court convened an evi-dentiаry hearing. The parties agreed to restrict the hearing “to the issue of equitable estoppel” and thereby put the limitations question to rest. 2 Rivera-Gomez v. de Castro, No. 87-0065 (RLA), slip op. at 3 (D.P.R. June 19, 1989) (hereinafter “D.Ct. Op”).
The court heard considerable testimony, rеceived documentary evidence, and took the matter under advisement. Thereafter, in a comprehensive rescript replete with factual findings, the court concluded that the proof was “not sufficient to support plaintiffs’ allegations of equitable estop-pel.” Id. at 16. Accordingly, the case was dismissed.
I
We begin by addressing the procedural posture in which these appeals arise. When the district court ordered the estop-pel issue tried in advance, it did not indicate the source of its power to do so. At first blush, it would appear that the order reflected the provisions of Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(d):
Preliminary Hearings. The defenses specifically enumerated (l)-(7) in [Rule 12(b) ], whether made in a pleading or by motion, and the motion for judgment mentioned in [Rule 12(c) ] shall be heard and determined before trial on application of any party, unless the court orders that the hearing and determination thereof be deferred until the trial.
Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(d). In our judgment, Rule 12(d) is perhaps too infrequently invoked and too often overlooked. In a proper case, it can be an excellent device for conserving time, expense, and scarce judicial resources by targeting early resolution of threshold issues.
Despite Rule 12(d)’s reference to an adversary “application,” we are confident that a federal district court has the authority to set a preliminary evidentiary hearing sua sponte when, as in this сase, the balance of practical and equitable considerations so dictates.
Cf., e.g.,
Fed.R.Civ.P. 42(b) (empowering district court to order separate trial “of any claim ... or of any separate issue” in furtherance of convenience, to avoid prejudice, and/or to promote economy);
Aoude v. Mobil Oil Corp.,
While we find these cases unpersuasive and think that, in this instance, the district court acted wisely and within its discretion in utilizing Rule 12(d), we need not definitively resolve the issue of whether, and under what circumstances, Rule 12(d) can be utilized as a vehicle for prevenient testing of the sufficiency of a limitations defense. Because appellants nеither objected on this ground below nor assigned error to the procedural arrangement in their appellate brief, any shortcoming was waived.
See, e.g., Reilly v. United States,
*3
II
The merits of the district court’s determination need not occupy us for long. Both the basic factual scenario and the general nature of the conduct which plaintiffs attributed to defendant were sketched in our earlier opinion,
Rivera-Gomez,
It is settled that parties relying on an estoppel have the burden of proving it.
Clauson v. Smith,
The district court concluded that appellants were several bricks short of the required load. It found, on the one hand, that defendant’s conduct was not blameworthy: the Ombudsman “did not deceitfully misguide [aрpellants] in any way whatsoever,” D.Ct.Op. at 8, but was himself a victim in that he “was never aware of the entire [panoply of relevant] facts.” Id. at 16. On the other hand', plaintiffs’ delay in suing “was not reasonable.” Id. at 8. Their conviction that, although cashiered, they might be rehired, was not attributable to the Ombudsman’s machinations, but “was entirely of their own making.” Id. at 10. In short, there was no detrimental reliance: “plaintiffs were not ignorant of the facts.” Id. at 16.
Having combed the nisi prius roll, we see nоthing which would justify reversal. The controversy was factbound. The evidence was conflicted. On some points, there were flat contradictions; on others, there were inconsistencies. At a number of evi-dentiary crossroads, the trier had the option of choosing between opposing inferences. It was the district court’s duty to address these matters and find the facts. And the court did so, clearly, authoritatively, and with adequate record support.
In a casе like this one — where the judge ascertains the facts and where, substantively and procedurally, the correct rules of law were applied — we review the findings only for clear error.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a) (when matter tried to the bench, “[findings of fact shall not be set aside unless clearly erroneous, and due regard shall be given to the opportunity of the trial court to judge of the credibility of the witnesses”). The rule has widespread applicability, governing findings about what an actor intended,
Reliance Steel Products Co. v. National Fire Ins. Co.,
We could at this juncture launch a thoroughgoing recapitulation of the proof, but *4 aligning the nuts and bolts of so fact-specific a case would serve no рrecedential end. The district court canvassed matters carefully and made meticulously detailed findings. It relied heavily on credibility determinations. The judge thought that the Ombudsman was “entirely credible.” D.Ct.Op. at 7. In contrast, he concluded thаt “[plaintiffs’ self-serving and subjective characterizations of defendant’s actions have little, if any, basis in fact.” Id. at 10. That being so, the ball game is virtually over. Defendant’s testimony was neither severely impeached nor inherently improbable. Once credited, it supported the district court’s rationale almost single-handedly.
Then, too, other evidence bulwarked this testimony. The dismissal letters were cate-goric in their terms. The principal plaintiffs (Rivera-Gomez, Garcia, Bernardini), regardless of what they said at trial, did not act in early 1986 as if they expected the Ombudsman to reemploy them. We have paid particularly close attention to appellants’ refrain that the district court “must have overlooked” no less than seven critical, undisputed facts. We understand the lyrics, but the music is off key. Viewing the referenced exhibits and evidence in context, it is more likely, we think, that the district court simply declined to attach de-cretory significance to these items, individually or collectively. In a bench trial where the judge makes reasonably detailed findings of fact on the pertinent issues, he need not specifically enumerate and reject all of the data he considers inadequate, irrelevant, unreliable, unimportant, or non-dispositive.
In sum, based on an antiseptic appellate record, we are in a perilously poor position to second-guess a deсision resting largely on credibility evaluations by a judge who saw and heard the witnesses.
See Anderson v. City of Bessemer City,
If the district court’s account of the evidence is plausible in light of the record viewed in its entirety, the court of appeals may not reverse it even though convinced that had it been sitting as the trier of fact, it would have weighed the evidence differently. Where there are two permissible views of the evidence, the factfinder’s choice between them cannot be clearly erroneous.
Id.
at 574-75,
Ill
We need go no further. 3 The district court’s findings are satisfactorily supported by the evidence and free from legal error. Plaintiffs’ complaint was out оf time, ergo, appropriately dismissed.
Affirmed.
Notes
. For practical purposes, we treat de Castro, the Ombudsman, as the sole defendant and sole appellee.
See Rivera-Gomez
v.
de Castro,
. We remarked originally that plaintiffs' equitable tolling argument spoke to two potentially distinct legal theories, equitable estoppel and fraudulent concealment.
Rivera-Gomez,
. Whether application of plaintiffs’ equitable tolling theory presents a question of federal as opposed to Puerto Rico law, a matter left open in our original opinion,
see Rivera-Gomez,
