Appellants Pérez and Lopez were arrested and detained in connection with separate incidents on July 31, 1990, in Santurce, Puerto Rico, and charged with selling cocaine. Both were released on bail after being detained for less than twenty-four hours. Perez was acquitted in August 1991 and the Lopez charges were dismissed “for lack of evidence” in March 1992.
On June 24, 1992, plaintiffs-appellants brought virtually identical civil rights actions under 42 U.S.C. § 1983, with pendent commonwealth law claims, essentially alleging that the cocaine charges were trumped up. Defendants-appellees are various law enforcement officers and officials of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico allegedly involved in arresting and prosecuting appellants. The complaint asserts claims of false arrest, false imprisonment, and malicious prosecution. Appellants further claim that the alleged civil rights infractions were elements of a larger conspiracy against appellants and other businessmen. 1
The Lopez and Pérez actions were assigned to different district judges. Defendants-appellees filed essentially identical motions to dismiss on the ground that the section 1983 claims were time-barred under the applicable one-year limitation borrowed from commonwealth law.
See Lafont-Rivera v. Soler-Zapata,
Appellants first challenge the dismissal order on the ground that the earlier district court ruling denying the motion to dismiss in the Lopez action became the “law of the case” in the consolidated action. Appellants misapprehend the “law of the case” doctrine. Interlocutory orders, including denials of motions to dismiss, remain open to trial court reconsideration, and do not constitute the law of the case.
Union Mut. Life Ins. Co. v. Chrysler Corp.,
Appellants also challenge the merits of the dismissal order. We review Rule 12(b)(6) dismissals under the rubric that all reasonable inferences from properly pleaded facts are to be drawn in appellants’ favor.
The Dartmouth Review v. Dartmouth College,
The district court concluded that the malicious prosecution claim, whether construed as asserting a substantive or a procedural due process violation, was not actionable under section 1983.
Torres,
Neither their appellate brief nor their complaints identify the due process theory un-dergirding appellants’ section 1983 malicious prosecution claim. Nevertheless, the district court’s analysis and application of
Torres,
which stated the controlling law of this circuit at the time this case was decided, seems entirely correct. Since then, moreover, appellants’ position has become even less tenable in light of the Supreme Court’s decision in
Albright v. Oliver,
- U.S. -,
Lastly, the availability of an adequate remedy for malicious prosecution under commonwealth law,
see
P.R.Laws Ann. tit. 31, § 5141 (1991), is fatal to appellants’ procedural due process claim.
Smith v. Massachusetts Dep’t of Correction,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Appellants urge that we treat the alleged conspiracy as a “continuing violation." We need not address this contention. In view of our conclusion that appellants failed to plead an actionable claim for malicious prosecution, their time-barred claims for false arrest and false imprisonment in 1990 cannot he saved by any subsequent termination of their invalid malicious prosecution claims.
See Mack v. Great American Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co.,
. The
Albright
plurality summarized its position at the end of footnote 4, - U.S. at -,
In view of our disposition of this case, it is evident that substantive due process may not furnish the constitutional peg on which to hang such a "tort.”
