Appellant Paul R. Hoesterey appeals the district court’s dismissal of his action against the City of Cathedral City and its City Manager, Jack R. Smith (collectively, “the City”). Based on its determination that the statute of limitations’ period had expired, the court below dismissed Hoester-ey’s claim seeking redress pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for the alleged deprivation of his due process rights caused by the City’s terminating his employment without a hearing. On appeal, Hoesterey asserts that the district court erred in calculating the statute of limitations period from the date that Hoesterey received notice of the decision to terminate his employment rath
BACKGROUND
According to the complaint filed in this action, Hoesterey held the position of Assistant City Manager of Cathedral City, a nonprobationary position from which he could be discharged only for cause. Beginning in January, 1985, Smith began to pressure Hoesterey to resign from his position. In October, 1986, Smith increased the pressure, insisting that Hoesterey leave by De-, cember 1 of that year. Smith allegedly secured his goal on November 28, 1986, when, because of coercion, intimidation, and threats that he would receive unfavorable recommendations unless he resigned immediately, Hoesterey involuntarily resigned, effective the last day of the month. He ceased work on November 30, 1986.
On November 30, 1987, Hoesterey filed suit in the Superior Court of the State of California. In his complaint, he asserted that his resignation constituted constructive termination, and that the City’s failure to provide him with a pretermination hearing violated both the United States and the California constitutions. The City subsequently removed the action to the district court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1441. There, on motion of the City, the district court dismissed Hoesterey’s section 1983 claim basеd on its determination that the relevant statute of limitations period had expired. It remanded the remainder of Hoesterey’s claims to California state court.
On appeal from this dismissal, this circuit stated that the one-yeаr statute of limitations established in section 340(3) of the California Civil Procedure Code governed Hoesterey’s section 1983 claim. We noted that if the limitations period were calculated to run from Hoesterey’s last day of employment, rather than from the date of notice of the discharge, the complaint would have been timely filed. 1 We therefore remanded the action for the district court to consider on which of these dates the stаtute of limitations should begin to run. On remand, the district court concluded that the limitations period properly began to run from the date of notification of the discharge. It based this decision on its determination that Hoesterey shоuld have known on that date that he would receive no further review of the notification decision. The district court therefore found its previous dismissal to be proper. Hoesterey appeals this determination. 2
DISCUSSION
We review
de novo
a district court’s grant of a motion to dismiss based on the expiration of the relevant statute of limitations period.
Gibson v. United States,
The time at which the statute of limitations period commences on a section 1983 claim for redress of a failure to grant a pretermination hearing is an issue of first impression in this circuit. While we rely on state law to determine the length of the statute of limitаtions period applicable to such a section 1983 claim,
see Wilson v. Garcia,
Two Supreme Court decisions regаrding the accrual of the limitation period in employment discharge actions direct our inquiry to determine the point at which Hoesterey’s claim began to accrue:
Delaware State College v. Ricks,
In determining which event commenced the running of the statute of limitations periоdj the Supreme Court directed that a court must first “identify precisely the ‘unlawful employment practice’ of which [the plaintiff] complains.”
Ricks,
The Supreme Court extended
Ricks’
holding in
Chardon v. Fernandez,
On the basis of
Ricks,
the Supreme Court rejected their contention. Again, the Court’s conclusion was based on the nature of the practice сhallenged by the plaintiffs as unlawful. The practice challenged in that case, according to the Court, was not the termination of employment, but the decision to terminate employment for political reasons. Thе Court therefore found
Ricks
indistinguishable from the first amendment claim before it because “in each case, the operative decision was made — and notice given — in advance of a designated date on which employment terminated.”
Id.
at 8,
Instead, to trigger the statute of limitations, Hoesterey needed to have received notice, not only of the termination decision, but also that the decision was final and that it would be followed by no further prоcess. To alert Hoesterey to the accrual of his claims, this notice would need to be unequivocal, and communicated in a manner such that no reasonable person could think there might be a retreat or сhange in position prior to the termination of the employment decision. In the absence of such unequivocal notice, it would only be on the last day of employment that Hoesterey could become aware that the decision was final and that no further process could be forthcoming prior to termination. Accordingly, it would be only on this date that the statute of limitations period would begin to run.
Here, construing the allegations of the сomplaint in the light most favorable to Hoesterey, we find insufficient indication that Hoesterey received notice that the termination decision was final and would be accompanied by no further process. On the contrary, the complaint asserts that Hoesterey repeatedly requested that Smith provide him the written notification of termination required for City employees to appeal a termination decision. Nothing in the comрlaint suggests that Hoesterey was informed or should otherwise have known that he would receive neither such notification nor a pretermination hearing. Only when Hoesterey’s employment was actually terminated, on his last day of work, did he know that he would receive no written notice or pretermination hearing. Accordingly, the district court erred in dismissing Hoesterey’s section 1983' claim on statute of limitations grounds.
REVERSED.
Notes
. Hoesterey’s last day of employment was Nоvember 30, 1986. He filed suit on November 30, 1987. Because November 29, 1987 was a Sunday, the filing of the suit on Monday, November 30, 1987, would have been timely if the limitations period was triggered by his last day of employment.
. Hoesterey also argues that the statutе of limitations period should be tolled on equitable grounds due to misrepresentations and threats made to him by Smith. Because we hold that the district judge improperly determined the commencement of the limitations period, we need not reach the issue of equitable estoppel.
