This appeal in an action brought under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 raises the question of what statute of limitations applies in Puerto Rico to a commonwealth employee’s claim to have been discharged in violation of constitutional rights. Because we believe the district court misapplied the tolling provisions of the relevant statute, we reverse its judgment in favor of plaintiff and order the suit dismissed.
Matilde R. Ramirez de Arellano filed her complaint on November 15, 1974, charging Jose A. Alvarez de Choudens, Secretary of Health for Puerto Rico, and various other officials with conspiring to alter her employment status from permanent to probationary for political reasons and in violation of due process. She also charged the officials with infringing her constitutional rights by subsequently discharging her from her post. Defendants raised the statute of limitations as an affirmative defense in their answer. After a bench trial, the district cоurt on March 25, 1977 entered judgment for all the defendants except Alvarez de Choudens, ordered the reinstatement of Ramirez de Arellano in the Puerto Rico Civil Service, denied damages, but ordered the payment of $5,000 attorneys’ fees to Ramirez de Arellano. Alvarez de Choud-ens appeals from the judgment for reinstatement and attorneys’ fees. The judgment has been stayed pending appeal.
Plaintiff was appointed to a permanent position as an executive in the Puerto Rico Department of Health on December 1,1972. In order to avoid the probationary period required for such appointments by Puerto Rico law, the Department obtained a ruling from the Commonwealth’s Office of Personnel that plaintiff could be credited with time worked in a previous position where she had served under contract rather than as a regular civil service employee. On January 1, 1973, defеndant became Secretary of Health. On February 6 he requested a ruling from the Office of Personnel as to the legality of the waiver of plaintiff’s probationary period, and on April 6 was advised that the credit was improper and should be disallowed. An official in the Department wrote plaintiff on April 13, informing her of her change in status and placing her on probation until November 30. Plaintiff filed an appeal of that decision with the Commonwealth’s Personnel Board on May 4. The Board on the basis of written submissions but without holding a face-to-face hearing upheld the change in plaintiff’s status in a decision issued Junе 27. No direct judicial review of the Board’s action was available. P.R.Laws Ann. tit. 3, § 646(a)(6).
Apparently in anticipation of adverse action, plaintiff on September 6, 1973, filed suit in the superior court seeking a writ of mandamus compelling the department not to dismiss her. On November 16 she was informed her services werе unsatisfactory and she would not be hired permanently. She appealed that decision to the Personnel Board on November 26. The Personnel Board dismissed the appeal on February 12, 1974, and plaintiff obtained a voluntary dismissal of her suit in the superior court on May 21. The complaint in the present suit was filed in federal district court on November 15, 1974.
The district court ruled that plaintiff had not made out a claim of political harassment and dismissed her suit against all the defendants except Alvarez de Choudens. It held that her dismissal by itself was proper, inasmuch as a probationary employee had no constitutionally cognizable property interest in his employment; accordingly her only claim for relief rested on the change in her tenure status on April 13, 1973. Although the federal suit was brought more than a year after this event, the court ruled that her mandamus suit in the superior court had tolled the statute of limitations. On the mеrits, the court ruled that the Commonwealth’s failure to accord plaintiff a hearing before the change in her status *318 violated the fourteenth amendment. The court ordered plaintiff’s reinstatement in the Department of Health but refused to award damages in view of what it found to be defendant’s good faith thrоughout the dispute. It taxed the Commonwealth with $5,000 in attorneys’ fees, however, because of what it found to be the “obdurate obstinacy” with which Alvarez de Choudens had defended the suit.
In
Graffals v. Garcia,
On the first of the two above questions— the duration of the applicable limitations period — the district judge who acted in the present case agreed with his colleague in
Graffals
(whom we, in turn, had affirmed) that one year was the proper limit.
1
Hоwever, plaintiff-appellee, in urging us to support the judgment in her favor, argues that under Puerto Rican law a three-year statute of limitations is appropriate. If so, there would be no need to confront the troublesome tolling issue,
infra.
Since it is important to settle the matter and since the possibility оf a three-year statute was not raised in
Graffals, see
Federal courts ordinarily look to the period of limitations applicable to the most closely analogous state cause of action to determine when a § 1983 suit is time bаrred.
Johnson v. Railway Express Agency, Inc.,
We faсe a more difficult question when it comes to the tolling issue. Here the district judge who decided the instant case is at odds with his colleague who ruled in Graf-fals. The tolling of the one year period provided by § 5298(2) is governed by P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 31, § 5303, which states:
“Prescription of actions is interrupted by their institution before the courts, by extrajudicial claim of the creditor, and by any act of acknowledgment of the debt by the debtor.”
In interpreting the phrase “their institution before the courts,” the district judge in
Graffals v. Garcia, supra,
ruled
“that said action
be the one exercised, not another one that is more or less analogous.”
But the district judge here, although aware of our decision in Graffals, was persuaded to interpret § 5303 differently. Believing that the combined common and civil law system of Puerto Rico requires a more flexible approach than that of the Spanish Civil Code, the judge hеld that the institution of any action between the same parties that constituted a diligent pursuit of the right claimed in the later action would come within § 5303 and would therefore toll the statute of limitations. The court held, in particular, that an action of mandamus in the Commonwealth court to gain reinstatement cоnstituted a diligent pursuit of the constitutional right sought in plaintiff’s § 1983 suit and accordingly tolled the statute of limitations.
Although as an ordinary matter the interpretation of local law pertaining to a statute of limitations by the district court sitting in that jurisdiction is entitled to great deference from a reviewing court, see
Runyon v. McCrary,
To the extent the district court grounded its ruling on its sense of developments in the common rather than civil law, it is important to note that in the American common law generally, prior judicial actions do not toll the statute of limitations, no matter how close their relationship to the one at bar.
See, e. g., UAW v. Hoosier Cardinal Corp.,
In sum, the rule advanced by the court below not only lacks any direct support in Commonwealth precedent and conflicts with an earlier district court interpretation, but is contrary to settled principles prevalent elsewhere in the United States. Moreover, the more specific Spanish civil law interpretation is also to the contrary. In light of these factors, we are unwilling to depart from the interpretation of § 5303 announced in Graffals, viz., that to toll the statute, the action must be the case at bar, and not merely a somewhat related action arising from the same facts. Because the mandamus action brought by plaintiff in the Commonwealth courts did not toll the one year statute of limitations, her claim was time barred and should have been dismissed.
Although our determination of the statute of limitations issue is dispositive of this suit, several rulings of the district court on the merits of plaintiff’s due process claim require comment. The district court grounded its decision that plaintiff had not received her procedural rights on an assumption that notice and a hearing were constitutional prerequisites before any adverse personnel action could be taken against her. Supreme Court precedent and decisions of this court, however, suggest rather strongly that in employee discharge cases, a hearing held
after
the removal of the employee satisfies the due process clause.
Arnett v. Kennedy,
The decision of the district court is reversed.
Notes
. Both judges are permanent members of the district court of Puerto Rico and, of course, members of the bar of Puerto Rico.
. The other threе-year statute of limitations cited to us, P.R.Laws Ann. tit. 29, § 246d, applies only to causes of action under Puerto Rico’s minimum wage law.
. An exception to this rule exists for prior actions that bar the bringing of a subsequent suit during their pendency.
See
54 C.J.S.
Limitations of Actions
§ 247. The filing of plaintiffs mandamus suit, however, could not have acted as a bar to a simultanеous proceeding in federal court. See
General Atomic Co. v. Felter,
. One federal court, although conceding that state law did not provide a rule allowing related actions to toll a § 1983 suit, has suggested that federal policies underlying § 1983 might require the fashioning of a federal tolling rule to that effect.
See Mizell v. North Broward Hospital Dist.,
. The district court ruled that the letter gave plaintiff inadequate notice to permit her to take advantage of the Personnel Board proceeding. It is difficult to understand the basis for this ruling, unless the district court believed that something equivalent to a fully reasoned judicial opinion as to plaintiff’s rights and responsibilities was necessary to meet the notice requirement. The letter indicated that plaintiff had lоst her tenure because her service under contract had been improperly credited toward the mandatory probation period. She was put on notice that in order to regain her status, she had to demonstrate either that her position did not require a probationary period or that her prior work under contract should have been credited toward this period. Nothing more was required.
