Plaintiff-appellant, Milan Knox, appeals the dismissal of his 42 U.S.C. § 1983 claim, alleging that the district court should not have held him to his own erroneous concession that his claim was time-barred by the statute of limitations. For the reasons stated below, we reverse and remand to the district court.
I.
On October 2, 1987, Knox filed a complaint under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the Cook County Sheriff’s Police Department and Investigator Robert Neapolitan. The complaint alleged defendants acquired a search warrant on August 30, 1982 based on hearsay evidence which lacked independent corroboration and on perjured testimony in violation of Knox’s Fourth Amendment rights. That same day, Knox was arrested and subsequently convicted. He has been in prison since the time of his arrest.
Knox applied for and was granted leave to proceed in forma pauperis, but his motion for appointed counsel was denied. In denying the motion, Judge Leinenweber noted that because the legal issues involved in Knox’s claim were not overly complex and the litigation still in its begin
Defendants-appellees then moved to dismiss, alleging that under the applicable statute of limitations, Knox’s claim was time-barred on its face. In response, Knox filed a motion titled “Motion to Show Cause Why Plaintiff Should Not Be Dismiss (sic).” In that motion, Knox stated he could not claim the benefits of the provisions tolling the limitations period because he was in custody at the time his claim accrued. His own motion concluded “it appears that his [Knox’s] claim is time barred.”
Based on Knox’s concession, Judge Lein-enweber granted defendants-appellees’ motion and dismissed Knox’s claim. Knox appealed to this court where the district court record was forwarded on February 3, 1988. Because Knox had been granted in forma pauperis status below, this court continued that status on appeal. However, on February 5, 1988, Judge Leinenweber issued an order holding that because Knox had conceded the statute of limitations issue, his appeal was not taken in good faith. Judge Leinenweber therefore denied Knox leave to proceed in forma pauperis, but this order was apparently not forwarded separately to this court. On our own motion, we now properly grant Knox leave to proceed in forma pauperis on this appeal.
II.
It is well settled that federal courts apply the state statute of limitations for personal injury claims.
Wilson v. Garcia,
While the Illinois statute of limitations is tolled for actions accruing
while
a person is imprisoned, “[wjhere a plaintiff is imprisoned from the date of his arrest (at which time a deprivation of civil rights occurred), he may bring a § 1983 action within two years after the disability
[i.e.,
imprisonment] is removed.”
Nance v. Lane,
In opposing defendant-appellee’s motion to dismiss, Knox erroneously relied on the seemingly plain language of the Illinois tolling statute and concluded that he could not claim its benefits, apparently unaware of the exception for plaintiffs imprisoned continuously from the time of their arrest. He therefore informed the court that his claim was time-barred. Finding that Knox had conceded the statute of limitations issue, the judge dismissed his § 1983 claim. However, upon execution of the search warrant, Knox was arrested and imprisoned where he has remained ever since. Under these facts, Knox’s claim is deemed to have accrued while he was imprisoned. The statute of limitations is tolled during
On appeal, defendants-appellees do not contend that Knox’s claim is time-barred; they merely contend that he cannot now complain of errors which he induced the court to make. In this Circuit, it “is well-settled law that a party cannot complain of errors which it has committed, invited, induced the court to make, or to which it has consented.”
International Travelers Cheque Co. v. Bankamerica Corp.,
III.
Accordingly we reverse the district court’s dismissal of Knox’s claim and remand for further proceedings.
Notes
. In determining whether to appoint counsel to indigent litigants, a district court should consider 1) the merits of the indigents' claim, 2) their ability to investigate the facts, 3) their need for counsel to cross-examine on issues of credibility, 4) their ability to present their own case, and 5) the complexity of the legal issues involved.
Howland v. Kilquist,
