Lead Opinion
OPINION
Ghulam Nasim appeals from the district court’s dismissal of his complaint against the Warden of the Maryland House of Correction and certain other prison officials as untimely. Because it is not apparent from the face of Nasim’s complaint that it was not filed within the prescribed statute of limitations period, we reverse.
I.
Proceeding pro se, Nasim filed a complaint and application to proceed informa pauperis in the District of Maryland on September 17, 1993, alleging violations of 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983 and 1985. The complaint alleged that Nasim was confined at the Maryland House of Correction in Jessup, Maryland, from April, 1983 until November 15, 1989, during which time he was denied “needed treatment for stroke and spinal disk disease” and “suffered several attacks of relapse from stroke, lung disease, eye disease and skin lesions” because of asbestos exposure. The complaint further alleged that “[i]n first half of 1988 and second half of 1989” Nasim observed asbestos “fall
On October 5, 1993, without directing service upon the defendants, the district court granted Nasim leave to proceed in forma pauperis but then dismissed his complaint with prejudice as untimely.
II.
The district court dismissed Nasim’s complaint pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1915(d), which “allows the courts to dismiss an in forma pauperis complaint ‘if satisfied that the action is frivolous or malicious.’ ” Denton v. Hernandez, — U.S. -, -,
Of course, this does not mean that a district court’s discretion to grant a § 1915(d) dismissal is unbridled, or that such discretion is not subjeсt to appellate review. A complaint is properly dismissed pursuant to § 1915(d) as factually frivolous only if its factual allegations are “fantastic,” “delusional,” or otherwise “clearly baseless,” and as legally frivolous only if its claims are based on an “indisputably meritless legal theory.” Neitzke,
This is illustrated by our recent analysis in Adams. There, the plaintiff, a prisoner who had been assigned to “single-cell housing,” alleged that prison officials “retaliated” against him by (1) refusing to transfer him to protective custody, (2) denying him minimum custody status, (3) failing to schedule a parole eligibility date and hearing, and (4) barring his access to the griеvance process. Adams,
The analysis employed in Adams is precisely what is required when an appellate court must determine whether a district judge abused his discretion in dismissing a complaint pursuant to § 1915(d) because its factual allegations were “clearly baseless” or because it was based on an “indisputably meritless legal theory.” Neither of these grounds, however, рrovides the basis for dismissal here; nor could they. Comparison between this case and Adams is instructive. First, Nasim’s claim, unlike that in Adams, is not that prison officials “retaliated” against him,
Thus, Nasim’s complaint, unlike that in Adams, does not contain factual allegations that are on their face “nonsensical,” “clearly baseless,” or wholly conelusory. Nor does the complaint here, again unlike that in Adams, lack “even an arguable basis in law.” Rather, Nasim’s legal theory — that prison officials deliberately exposed him to toxic substances — has been specifically recognized by the Supreme Court as stating a cause of action under, the Eighth Amendment. See Helling, — U.S. at-,
At one time it was unclear whether, pursuant to § 1915(d), a district court could dismiss a complaint on the basis of a waivable affirmative defense,
In Holsey, the district court properly acknowledged that “[generally, it is the duty of the defendant to plead affirmative defenses, and the court cannot raise such defenses sua sponte,” but concluded “that given the competing policy considerations reflected in § 1915(d) ... such defenses should be considered by a court sua sponte, in certain limited circumstances....” Holsey,
This Court has not had an occasion, other than Todd, to discuss in a published opinion a district court’s sua sponte § 1915(d) dismissal on affirmative defense grounds.
[T]he policy underlying Rule 8(e), affording the plaintiff adequate notice of unanticipated defenses, is not violated when the plaintiff’s in forma pauperis complaint itself sets out facts plainly demonstrating the affirmative defense.
Id. at 1476 (emphasis added).
Cognizant of the competing policy considerations inherent in § 1915(d) and Rule 8(c), in recent years every federal appellate court to address the question appears to have similarly concluded that even if a complaint is neither factually nor legally baseless, а sua sponte § 1915(d) dismissal can be justified if “it is clear from the face of a complaint filed in forma pauperis that the claims asserted are barred by the applicable statute of limitations -” Gartrell v. Gaylor,
Thus, prior to the filing of any defensive pleading asserting limitations, a district court only has discretion to grant a § 1915(d) dismissal on that ground when the limitations bar is clear from the face of the complaint. See, e.g., Moore,
III.
The parties аgree that the relevant statute of limitations is Maryland’s, general three-year statute of limitations for civil actions, see Wilson v. Garcia,
A medical condition need not be diagnosed as such for an action on that condition to accrue, nor need a plaintiff fully understand the legal consequences of his or her condition. United States v. Kubrick,
The district court understood that in order for Nasim’s causé of action to have accrued, Nasim must have been aware of his injuries. However, it is unclear whether the court further understood' that in order for the cause of action to have accrued, Nasim must also have been aware of the probable cause of those injuries. The court found that Na-sim “at the latest, should have known of his injury when he personally observed the asbestos being removed in 1989” (emphasis added). The court did not make any finding as to when Nasim knew or should have known of the probable 'cause of his injuries. Thus, there is no finding by the district court that the complaint was not filed within three years from the date on which Nasim’s claims accrued, i.e., within three years from the date on which he knew or should have known of the probable cause of his injury.
Nor is this clear from the face of the complaint. Of course, nowhere in his complaint did Nasim state when he became aware of the causal connection between asbestos and his injuries. He does allege that from 1983 to 1989 he was denied treatment for “stroke and spinal disk disease” and “suffered several attacks of relapse from strоke, lung disease, eye disease and skin lesions from asbestos exposure_” He further alleges that in the “first half of. 1988 and second half of 1989,” without “notice, information ... wa[r]ning or protection,” asbestos fell “from ceiling into [his] cage,” that he reported this to “doctors, nurses and warden” but nothing was done to protect him or the other prisoners, and that he “suffered permanent medical and psychological injuries” because he was forced “to inhale cancer causing asbestos chemicals, maliciously and secretly dumped upon [him] during 1988-1989, without any warning or protection....”
Thus, the complaint makes clear that by 1989, Nasim knew (1), he had been exposed to asbestos, (2) asbestos exposure posed a heаlth risk, and (3) he was suffering from various health problems. To conclude from these bare facts, derived from his pro se complaint, that contemporaneously Nasim knew or should have known that the asbestos was also the probable cause of his health problems, or that he somehow failed to exercise the requisite due diligence in discovering the cause of those problems, assumes too much.
Indeed, according to his complaint Nasim was in bad health prior to 1988, requiring treatment and medication for a stroke and “spinal disk disease.” Thus, it would not have been unreasonable for Nasim initially to fail to recognize asbestos as the probable cause of his 1989 health problems. This is particularly true in view of the fаct that asbestos injuries are typically latent in nature, not manifesting themselves until several years after exposure. See Taurel v. Central Gulf Lines, Inc.,
The case law supports this conclusion. In Portis v. United States,
In Kubrick, on the other hand, the Supreme Court held that the statute of limitations had run and that the plaintiffs complaint was therefore untimely. There, the plaintiff was treated for an infection with neomycin in 1968, and six weeks later he experienced a ringing sensation in his ears and some loss of hearing. In January, 1969, a physician informed the plaintiff that it was “highly possible” that his hearing loss was caused by the neomycin. In June, 1971, the plaintiff was told by another physician that the neomycin in fact caused his injury and should not have been administered. The plaintiff filed suit in 1972. The lower courts held that “even though a plaintiff is aware of his injury and of the defendant’s responsibility for it, the statute of limitations does not run where the plaintiff shows that ‘in the exercise of due diligencе he did not know, nor should he have known, facts which would have alerted a reasonable person to the possibility that the treatment was improper.’ ” Kubrick, 444 U.S. at' 116,
Indeed, there is nothing in Nasim’s complaint indicating when he knew that asbestos was the probable, or even the possible, cause of his various health problems. It was not until after the complaint was dismissed, when Nasim filed his motion for reconsideration, that the date on which he allegedly discovered that asbestos was the probable cause of his injuries — October, 1991 — became apparent. A general awareness that asbestos poses certain unidentified health risks, as evidenced here by Nasim’s complaints to prisоn officials, does not warrant the conclusion, at least at this preliminary stage, that Nasim “possessed sufficient information that he knew, or should have known,” Townley,
Finally, we note that in the only case that we have found in which a similar fact situation has arisen in the context of a sua sponte § 1915(d) dismissal, the Fifth Circuit reached the same conclusion. See Phillips v. Purdy,
We are unable to determine from the state of the record, since the case was dismissed without an evidentiary hearing, if the allegations in the complaint are true. Dismissal was improper under the circumstances. If the plaintiff is able to show a satisfactory reason why he did not learn until 1976 that his tuberculosis condition was brought about by his confinement in the Dade County Jail, the period of limitations may not have begun to run until that time.:.. We are likewise unable to decide without the benefit of the record of an evidentiary hearing that suit was properly dismissed under 28 U.S.C. § 1915(d) pertaining to frivolous or malicious actions.
Id. at 140-41 (citations omitted).
The same rationale requires reversаl here. The district court abused its discretion in sua sponte dismissing Nasim’s complaint pursuant to § 1915(d).
REVERSED.
Notes
. Contrary to suggestions in the dissenting opinion, the district court did not (1) "conclude” that "the complaint on its face revealed that Nasim knew or should have known of his injury and its cause at the time asbestos was being removed in 1989;” Dissent at 1481 (emphasis.in dissent), or (2) "conclude” that "on its face the complaint demonstrates that it was not timely filed.” Id. at 1481. Indeed, nowhere in its opinion does the district court mention, let alone apply, what we have held to be the relevant legal standard, i.e., whether it was apparent from the face of the complaint that limitations barred the claims. For the reasons set forth within, we believe the district-court could not have concluded this from the face of the complaint, which inter alia did not include any allegatiоns as to Nasim's medical training. It is for this reason that our holding in Todd v. Baskerville,
. For this reason, of course, it does not merit the special ''skepticism” such claims of retaliation are accorded.
. In Denton, the Supreme Court cautioned:
An in forma pauperis complaint may not be dismissed ... simply because the court finds the plaintiff's allegations unlikely. Some improbable allegations might properly be disposed of on summary judgment, but to dismiss them as frivolous without any factual development is to disregard the age-old insight that many allegations might be "strange, but true; for truth is always strange, Stranger than fiction.”
- U.S. at-,
. See Peterson v. Air Line Pilots Ass'n, Int’l,
. In White v. Gregory, one reason for the magistrate judge’s recommendation that the complaint be dismissed under § 1915(d) was that the defendants were public officials absolutely immune from suit.
.This rule is consistent with the well-established principle that an affirmative defense can also provide the basis for dismissal under Fed. R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), “but only if [that defense] clearly appears on the face of the complaint." Richmond, Fredericksburg & Potomac R. Co. v. Forst,
. A few courts have even held that the review of a district court order dismissing a complaint pursuant to § 1915(d) on affirmative defense grounds is ‘‘plenary,” Johnson v. Rodriguez,
. The Supreme Court made it clear in Boag that, when making a determination under § 1915(d), as in other situations, a pro se complaint must be construed "liberally."
. Although appellees contend that such a result would be inconsistent with the purpose of the statute of limitations to protect defendants from stale claims, there is no indication that Nasim had reason to suspect asbestos as the probable cause of his injuries any time prior to 1991 or that he failed to exercise reasonable diligence in making that discovery. Indeed, the purpose of the “discovery" rule is to afford plaintiffs a reasonable opportunity to discover the critical facts with respect to an injury and its cause. Townley v. Norfolk & Western Ry. Co.,
. Significantly, the district court in Portis had apparently based its holding that limitations had run, at least in part, on the fact that the infant plaintiff's mother “must have known’and understood that a hearing injury could result” from treatment with neomycin because she was "a graduate nurse and such a possible effect ... is ‘a medical hornbook diagnosis.’ " Id. at 672 n. 6. On appeal, we reversed, finding this fact of no consequence. Id. Similarly, that Nasim was apparently trained as a physician in India is of little consequence here, particularly in view of the fact that his medical training was nowhere alleged in his complaint.
. Although it is now clear that a plaintiff can state a claim under the Eighth Amendment by alleging that prisоn officials have, with deliberate indifference, exposed her to toxic substances that will likely pose an unreasonable risk to her future health, without alleging any present injury, see Helling,-U.S. at ——,
Dissenting Opinion
During the period from April 1983 to November 1989, Ghulam M. Nasim was incar7 cerated in the Maryland-House of Correction in Jessup, Maryland. Nasim was a trainеd doctor who had practiced medicine and surgery in England for four years and thereafter in Towson, Maryland, for several years before his conviction. Nasim claims that during his incarceration he was exposed to asbestos which allegedly caused him physical harm (relapse from stroke, lung disease, eye disease, and skin lesions) and psychological harm.
In September 1993, almost four years after his transfer from the Maryland House of Correction to a federal prison, Nasim filed this action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against the warden of the .Maryland House of Correction and others involved in the asbestos removal for deliberately subjecting him to asbestos and causing him injury. He petitioned the district court to proceеd in forma pauperis under 28 U.S.C. § 1915. The district court concluded that Nasim was in fact indigent but decided, under 28 U.S.C. § 1915(d), to dismiss the action without requiring service of the complaint on the defendants because the complaint on its face revealed that Nasim knew or should have known of his injury and its cause at the time the asbestos was being removed in 1989.
the facts advanced by Nasim did not relieve him of the “burden of timely filing his action.”
For the reasons that follow, I would affirm the district court’s judgment.
Section 1915(d), which is part of the scheme permitting indigents to proceed in forma pauperis, provides that the district court “may dismiss the case ... if satisfied that the action is frivolous.” 28 U.S.C. § 1915(d) (emphasis added). The discretion given to the district court is a necessary adjunct to the privilege of proceeding without the payment of fees and costs, so that the privilege does not become an avenue for abuse of the judicial system. See Adams v. Rice,
The district court in this case concluded that Nasim’s complaint, accepting the allegations as true, is nevertheless baseless because on its face the complaint demonstrates that it was not timely filed. See Todd v. Baskerville,
In his complaint, Nasim alleged that during his incarceration at the Maryland House of Correction from April 1983 to November 1989 he “suffered several attacks of relapse from stroke, lung disease, eye disease, and skin lesion from asbestos exposure.” He
The complaint thus reveals that during the 1989 period Nasim (1) knew that asbestos was “dumped” into his prison cell and that he was exposed to it; (2) knew that asbestos was a health hazard and dangerous; (3) complained to nurses, doctors, and prison authorities about the exposure; (4) witnessed other persons who he believed were seriously injured by asbestos; and (5) suffered physical and psychological injuries. It is incomprehensible to me how we could not conclude from the facts contained in Nasim’s complaint that Nasim “possessed sufficient information that he knew, or should have known, [in 1989] that he had been injured” by the asbestos. Townley v. Norfolk & Western Ry. Co.,
While I am fully satisfied that the district court ruled correctly, such a conclusion is not necessary for us to uphold the court’s determination under the deferential standard of review that we are compelled to apply. To show proper deference to the district court, as Congress required us to do in enacting 28 U.S.C. § 1915(d), we need only conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion. See Adams,
The majority opinion seeks to write around this standard of review by creating an exception for those situations where the plaintiffs complaint is dismissed because an affirmative defense appears on the face of the complaint as opposed to dismissals for simply failing to allege an element of the cause of action. Indeed, the majority uses this distinction to leap from “substantial deference” to “examining] carefully” the district court’s decision. There is, however, no basis in the law for this distinction. The test set forth in § 1915(d) is aimed at any frivolous complaint and does not distinguish between complaints that are frivolous for different reasons. The statute provides that the district court may dismiss “frivоlous” cases, and the Supreme Court has explained that “frivolous” means clearly baseless as to factual allegations or indisputably meritless as to legal theory. See 28 U.S.C. § 1915(d); Neitzke,
Moreover, to adopt the liberal standard espoused by the majority would frustrate the very purpose intended by Congress in giving district courts the discretion to sift out frivolous claims and would unnecessarily call upon the resources of two levels of the court system to dispose of eases which Congress believed could easily and expeditiously be resolved at the first.
I would affirm the judgment of the district court. Accordingly, I dissent.
In particular, the district court referred to the second paragraph of Nasim's complaint where Nasim alleged:
Plaintiff and other inmate witnessed and observed on several occasions when Asbestos crew secretly entered into the F-Building during night hours and neither prison staff nor the contractor gave any protection, warning or respirator to the Plaintiff or any other inmate at the F-Building during this entire period [in 1989],
