This аppeal stems from a traffic accident that occurred in Boston, Massachusetts. It illustrates once again the dangers that lurk when busy trial courts, struggling to manage crowded dockets, do- not turn square corners. The tale follows.
I
On March 15, 1996, a motor vehicle operated by plaintiff-appellant Shannon Ro-gan collided with a trolley car operated under the auspices of the Massachusetts Bay Transportation Authority (the MBTA). The MBTA has its own police force, see Act of July 18, 1968, ch. 664, 1968 Mass. Acts 547 (creating a separate police force to function within the MBTA’s territorial authority and investing its officers with powers equivalent to those of municipal police officers), and that complement shares jurisdiction over certain matters with the Boston Police Department (the BPD). In this instance, officers from both entities converged on the accident scene. Pursuant to departmental policy, the BPD officers, John McDonough and Robert Colburn, relinquished control of the investigation to them MBTA counterparts.
Displeased with the results of the investigation, Rogan sued Thomas Menino (Mayor of Boston), Paul Evans (Boston’s police commissioner), Dennis DiMarzio *77 (Boston’s chief of operations), and the two responding officers in federal district court. 1 Her complaint limned a plethora of claims — but Rogan voluntarily discontinued most оf them, and only one remnant is relevant here. Invoking 42 U.S.C. § 1983, Rogan asserted that the five City of Boston/BPD defendants, jointly and severally, hindered her access to the courts vis-á-vis her accident-related claim for personal injuries and property damage. The defendants were hable, Rogan theorized, because by abdicating responsibility for investigation of the accident they had aided and abetted the MBTA’s attempts to cover up the trolley driver’s negligence. McDonough’s and Colburn’s supposed liability rested on their refusal to take control of the investigation, whereas the other defendants’ supposed liability related to their roles in promulgating and enforсing a policy of relinquishing jurisdiction over accidents involving MBTA carriers to MBTA police.
The district court disposed of these claims in two stages. First, acting on the defendants’ motion, see Fed.R.Civ.P. 12(b)(6), it dismissed all claims against Menino, Evans, and DiMarzio in their individual capacities. 2 Nearly a year later, at the final pretrial conference, the cоurt, acting on its own initiative, brought closure to the suit by entering summary judgment in favor of Evans and DiMarzio in their official capacities and in favor of McDon-ough and Colburn. Rogan now appeals both the dismissal of her individual-capacity claims against Evans and DiMarzio and the subsequent entry of a sua sponte summary judgment. We address each aspect of her appeal in turn.
II
It is axiomatic that the liability of persons sued in their individual capacities under section 1983 must be gauged in terms of their own actions.
See Malley v. Briggs,
We agree with the district court that the instant complaint encompasses no set of facts that entitles Rogan to relief against either Evans or DiMarzio, individually. Charitably construed, the complaint
*78
predicates liability on the theory that BPD personnel collogued with MBTA personnel to cоnceal the negligence of the trolley car driver, thus inhibiting Rogan’s right to sue the MBTA for damages. Yet, the complaint does not allege (or even insinuate) that either Evans or DiMarzio directly participated in the actions that purportedly violated Rogan’s rights. Rather, the complaint suggests some sort of supervisory liability. To state a cognizable claim on that basis, Rogan needed to depict a scenario that would permit a fact-based inference that Evans and DiMarzio were guilty of “conduct that amounted] to condonation or tacit authorization” of wrongdoing.
Camilo-Robles II,
On aрpeal, Rogan attempts to confess and avoid. She admits the lack of any averments suggesting notice, but asks us to infer from Evans’s and DiMarzio’s awareness of the transfer policy a corresponding awareness of the allegedly unconstitutional execution of that policy. The inference is much too strained. The BPD’s poliсy of ceding jurisdiction to the MBTA is undoubtedly constitutional on its face — after all, there is no constitutional prohibition against organizational schemes that lodge self-investigative powers within a government agency,
cf. Withrow v. Larkin,
We have said enough on this score. Since Rogan failed to plead any facts sufficient to support an inference that Evans and DiMarzio had notice that MBTA police officers were wielding investigative powers in a way that threatened to deprive accident victims of their civil rights, she failed to state a claim for deliberate indifference against these defendants, individually.
See Gooley v. Mobil Oil Corp.,
Ill
When it jettisoned the claims brought against Evans and DiMarzio in their individual capacities, the district court kept alive Rogan’s official-capacity claims against these same defendants, treating those as claims against the City of Boston.
See Brandon v. Holt,
At the final pretrial conference, see Fed. R.Civ.P. 16, the court demanded thаt Ro-gan marshal all the evidence at her disposal to defeat summary judgment. She attempted to comply with this directive, but the court found her proffer inadequate. Declaring that no reasonable jury could find for Rogan on the adduced evidence, the court, acting sua sponte, entered summary judgment in the defendants’ favor on *79 all remaining claims. Rogan assigns error.
It is apodictic that trial courts have the power to grant summary judgment sua sponte.
See Berkovitz v. HBO, Inc.,
Inasmuch as the lower court made its sua sponte ruling at the final pretrial conference, with discovery complete (or nearly so), the first condition рrecedent clearly was satisfied here. It is more problematic whether the court fulfilled the second condition. On one hand, the docket sheet reflects that no outstanding motion to dismiss or motion for summary judgment was extant when the court acted; the transcript of the penultimate pretrial conference intimates no warning of the court’s intention to consider terminating the case at the final pretrial conference; nothing in the procedural order entered by the court preliminary to the final pretrial conference directed the parties to prepare for a hearing on dispositive motions; and there is no other recоrd of a written notice that dis-positive motions would be entertained at that conference. On the other hand, the defendants have proffered a statement, signed by the district judge pursuant to Fed. R.App. P. 10(c), which indicates that the court had in fact notified the parties during an unreported chambers conference (presumably held in connection with the penultimate pretrial conference) that “pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 16, [it might] dismiss any or all of the defendants” at the final pretrial conference. Moreover, the defendants submitted several affidavits on the day before the final pretrial conference, presumably in anticipation that the court would consider terminating the case then and there.
This Rule 10(c) statement arrives on our doorstep in a peculiar manner. In haec verba, Rule 10(c) permits only an appellant, not an appellee, to prepare a statement summarizing what transpired at an unreported proceeding. 3 Here, the appellees preparеd the statement, served it on the appellant, and convinced the district court, over the appellant’s objection, to approve it. On that basis, the statement’s legitimacy might well have been open to question had Rogan asked this court, by motion or in her appellate brief, to strike it. Because Rogan has not mountеd such a protest in this venue, we treat any doubts about the statement’s provenance as waived, and we leave for another day the intriguing question whether Rule *80 10(c)’s reference to “the appellant” must be construed literally.
Apart from this procedural obstacle, the statement commands our respect. If Rule 10(c) is to bе more than a hollow promise, a court of appeals must accept a district court’s reconstruction of what transpired at an unrecorded conference or similar proceeding unless some basis exists for believing that the trial court’s account is patently unreasonable or deliberately false.
See United States v. Keskey,
Even so, the mere announcement that the court might dismiss the defendants at the final pretrial conference falls well short of the
specific
notice to which parties are entitled under Fed.R.Civ.P. 56. In the first place, Rule 56 obliges the moving party to inform the nonmovant of the grounds for the motion by “identifying those portions of the ‘pleadings,' depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the аffidavits, if any,’ which it believes demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of material fact.”
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
In the second place, once the mov-ant articulates his ratiоnale for
brevis
disposition and submits the documentation (if any) on which he relies, Rule 56(c) in terms entitles the summary judgment target to no less than ten days within which to prepare a defense to the motion. This requirement persists even when the trial court aspires to grant summary judgment on its own initiative.
See Stella,
That the district court acted under the auspices of Fed.R.Civ.P. 16 provides no cover. To be sure, Rule 16 permits a court to dispose of marginal claims or issues that do not warrant a full-dress trial.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 16(c)(1) (authorizing district courts to “take appropriate action, with respect to ... the elimination of frivolous claims or defenses” at pretrial conferences). Nevertheless, when the district court employs summary judgment as the vehicle for the elimination of such detritus, Rule 16 does not trump the procedural prophylaxis of Rule 56.
See Stella,
IV
We need go no further. The district court properly dismissed the claims that Rogan brought against Evans and DiMar-zio, individually, and to that extent we affirm the judgment below. However, despite our repeated calls for caution in the use of sua spоnte summary judgments,
see, e.g., Leyva,
Affirmed in part, vacated in part, and remanded. All parties to bear thеir own costs.
Notes
. Rogan’s complaint also named as defendants the MBTA and several MBTA employees. Her claims against these defendants have been dismissed by stipulation (apparently in connection with a negotiated settlement) and we make no further mention of them.
. Rogan subsequently amended her complaint and dropped her official-capacity claims against Mayor Menino. She does not now contest the district court's dismissal of her individual-capacity claims against the Mayor, and we have no occasion to consider this ruling.
. The rule states:
If the transcript of a hearing or trial is unavailable, the appellant may prepare a statement of the evidence or proceedings from the best available means, including the appellant’s recollection. The statement must be served on the appellee, who may serve objections or proposed amendments within 10 days after being served. The statement and any objections or proposed amendments must then be submitted to the district court for settlement and approval. As settled and approved, the statement must be included by the district clerk in the record on appeal.
Fed. R.App. P. 10(c).
. The appellees insist that, whatever procedural irregularities may have occurred, we should sustain the judgment because Rogan lacks the ammunition nеcessary to deflect summary judgment. That assessment may be true — but it is beside the point at this juncture. The issue here is one of process and fundamental fairness, not one of substance. See Leyva, 171 F.3dat719.
. We anticipate that the court, among other things, will address Rogan’s motion to compel further answers to interrogatories (which it denied as moot after it had granted summary judgment sua sponte).
