Plаintiff-appellant Mitchell Newberger appeals from summary judgment for the defendants. The United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida, George C. Carr, District Judge, granted summary judgment on the ground that appellant did not file his suit within the period of even the most generous statute of limi *1164 tations, which would have allowed four years for bringing the suit. We affirm on this ground, but alsо conclude that appellant’s suit is barred by his failure to exhaust his administrative remedies.
On appeal from summary judgment, we view the facts in the light most favorable to appellant.
See, e.g., Melancon v. Insurance Co. of North America,
In September, 1977, one month after reassuming his deputy duties, Newberger aggravated his back injury. Newberger’s doctor advised him that he could continue to work but should avoid particularly strеnuous duties. He also instructed Newber-ger to undergo a program of physical therapy.
At the beginning of 1978, Grosse offered Newberger the position of Supervisory Deputy United States Marshal in Orlando. Newberger declined, saying he preferred to wait for a possible vacancy in the same position in the Tampa office.
Shortly after this discussion, Newberger began to notice a number of acts of misconduct by his fellow deputies, all of which he reported to his superiors. His superiors, however, told him that they did not regard the reported behavior as serious, and directed him to cease causing dissension. If he reported any further instances of misconduct by other deputies, thеy told him, they would transfer him out of the Tampa office. The supervisors then began to harass Newberger in the hope that he would find his position untenable and choose to resign. Finally, acting on his doctor’s advice, Newberger applied to the United States Civil Service Commission (the Commission) for retirement on the ground of medical disability. Newberger filed this application on May 26, 1978, and went on leave immediately. On July 17, 1978, the Commission granted Newberger’s request. Newberger did not officially leave the Service, however, until August 8, 1978, when he resigned as deputy marshal in order to campaign for sheriff of Hillsborough County.
Newberger' never filed any action with the Civil Service Commission’s Federal Employee Appeals Authority, in spite of the fact that the regulations in effect at the time 1 , 5 C.F.R. 752.203 (1977), authorized actions by employees who suffered from adverse agency action, with judicial review of adverse decisions available under 5 U.S.C. § 702 (1976) and 28 U.S.C. § 1346 (1976). Newberger did, however, file suit in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Florida on August 6, 1982, alleging that defendants had conspirеd, in violation of the First Amendment and of 42 U.S.C. § 1985(1) (1976), to procure his resignation. The court granted *1165 summary judgment on the ground that the plaintiffs time for filing the suit under the four-year Florida statute of limitations for intentional tort actions had expired on May 26,1982, four years after he had submitted his letter of resignation.
Newberger agrees that the governing statute of limitations is the four-yеar statute governing intentional torts. He argues, however, that the limitation period did not expire until August 8, 1982, four years after his resignation became final.
42 U.S.C. § 1985(1) provides a cause of action to a federal officer who is the victim of a conspiracy to prevent him from performing his duties or to injure him in retaliation for performing them. It does nоt, however, provide a statute of limitations for such actions. The First Amendment, of course, does not have an explicit statute of limitations for actions brought under it, either. Accordingly, the federal courts apply the most analogous state statute of limitations to such cases.
See, e.g., Johnson v. Railway Express Agency, Inc.,
We should note that the choice of statutes is not a matter of the federal courts being controlled by state law under the
Erie
doctrine, which applies only to diversity suits; rather it is a matter, as the above discussion indicates, of the courts borrowing state law as an act of federal cоmmon law, so as to fill the interstices of federal law. Similarly, the determination of the time at which a cause of action to enforce a federal right accrues is a federal question.
Cope v. Anderson,
The first issue for us to determine is which of the Florida statutes of limitation is most nearly analogous to the claims appellant has presented. Plaintiff-appellant’s complaint alleged a conspiracy to make his jоb intolerable so that he would choose to resign. It sought an injunction “reinstating the plaintiff to a supervisory or administrative position in the Marshals Service.” It also asked the court to “award the plaintiff damages by him sustained, including but not limited to lost wages, medical expenses, and damages for pain, suffering and other intangible injury ...” Newber-ger Complaint, Final Paragraph.
Five provisions in the Florida statute of limitations arguably are analogous to appellant’s cause of action. Fla. Stat. 95.11(3)(f), which provides a four-year limitation period, covers actions founded on statutory liability — arguably analogous, since appellant’s cause of action arises from a federаl statute. Fla.Stat. 95.11(3)(o) provides a four-year statute of limitations for intentional torts. Fla.Stat. 95.11(3)(p) provides a four-year statute for “any action not specifically provided for in these statutes.” A two-year statute is provided by Fla.Stat. 95.11(4)(c) for “[a]n action to recover wages or overtime or damages or penalties concerning payment of wages or overtime.” Finally, Fla.Stat. 95.11(5)(a) provides a one-year statute of limitation for actions for specific performance of contracts.
Although in some respects appellant’s suit, seeking relief which would put into effect the basic terms of an alleged oral agreement he had with officials of the Ser
*1166
vice, resembles an action founded in contract, we are not convinced that this cause of action is most closely analogous to an action for specific performance of a contract. Appellant’s essential claim is not that appellees breached an agreement, but that they сonspired to injure him in violation of federal law. A stronger case can be made for the application of the two-year statute of limitations for an action to recover wages, given that appellant seeks back pay as a key remedy. This court has previously adopted this statute in employment discrimination cases.
McGhee v. Ogburn,
We conclude that the district court had a sound basis for its decision to apply the four-year statute of limitations. Appellаnt’s action is one for conspiracy. In
Faulk v. Allen,
Even with the benefit of this more generous statute of limitations, the district court concluded that plaintiff still failed to file his action in timely fashion. The district court held that a cause of action for conspiracy accrues at the time thе conspiracy is terminated, either by abandonment or by achievement of its objective. We are unable to find authority to support this proposition. The rule of
Timmins v. Firestone,
Appellant argues that the conspiracy did not achieve its objective until his retirement became effective on August 8, 1978. Before this date, he contends, he could have altered his decision to retire. Assuming this contention to be true, it would not helр appellant. He was always free to attempt to undo his decision to retire. He attempted to do so, in fact, even after his retirement became final, by filing the present action for reinstatement to his former position. The point of the conspiracy alleged by appellant was not to achieve a state where appellant could never again decide to work for the Service; it was to induce him to resign his position. He made this decision on May 26,1978, when he filed his application for disability retirement. After this date, all that remained was for the Civil Service Commission to act on appellant’s application. Appellant has not allеged that the conspirators tried to influence the Commission’s decision, or that they could have done so. The so-called conspirators concluded their involvement, and achieved the only objective they could-have hoped to achieve, when appellant announced his retirement on May 26, 1978. Thus even under the most liberal possible statute of limitations, appellant’s cause of action became barred by the statute of limitations on May 26, 1982, over two months before he filed his suit.
Even if appellant’s action were not barred on limitation grounds, it would be barred by his failure to exhaust his administrative remedies. Appellant alleged that he chose to resign, not of his own free will, but as a result of pressure by his superiors. The Court of Claims, in 1975, said that it is “hornbook law ... that an involuntary resignation constitutes adverse agency action” entitling an aggrieved employee to a review by the Civil Service Commission.
Gratehouse v. United States,
In conclusion, we find that appellant’s cause of action was barred by the statute of limitations, even if hе is given the benefit of the doubt by applying the most liberal possible statute of limitations, as the district court did. His cause of action is also barred by his failure to exhaust his available administrative remedies. The action of the district court in dismissing his suit accordingly must be affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The Civil Service Reform Act of 1978 (CSRA), Pub.L. No. 95-454, 92 Stat. 1111 (1978), which substantially restructured the review system for discharge of civil service employees, went into effect on January 11, 1979. Id.
.
McGhee
v.
Ogburn,
. It does appear that the timing of appellant’s resignation was precipitated by the fact that he became a political candidate in July, 1978, and the Directоr of the Service, a co-defendant in this case, informed him that his candidacy violated Civil Service rules and that he would either have to abandon it or face disciplinary action. The Director’s enforcement of Civil Service regulations, however, could hardly be regarded, under any construction, as a conspiratorial aсt. If anything, the fact that appellant chose to become a candidate for public office before his resignation became final would indicate, contrary to the position he now asserts, that his decision to leave the Service became final prior to the date on which the resignation actually became effective.
