MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
The complaint alleges a deprivation of civil rights under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and a violation of the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment by the defendants acting under color of state law. The defendants assert that the cause of action brought under section 1983 is barred by the applicable statute of limitations and that the independent cause of action asserted under the fourteenth amendment fails to state a claim upon which relief may be granted.
Jurisdiction is invoked under title 28 United States Code, sections 1331 (federal question) and 1343 (civil rights).
The complaint alleges that the plaintiff had been a special officer of the City of Belfast Police Department and a security guard employed at the Waldo County General Hospital since April 11, 1974. On November 5, 1975 he was commissioned a reserve police officer of the City of Belfast Police Department. In February, 1976 the defendant James H. Murphy, Belfast City Manager, directed the chief of police to obtain plaintiff’s resignation as a reserve police officer, because some Belfast citizens had expressed distrust of the plaintiff, who had been the subject of a Belfast police investigation in 1974 concerning a stolen snowplow.
The plaintiff resigned his commission as a reserve police officer on or about February 4, 1976, based on alleged assurances of the chief of police that the resignation would not affect plaintiff’s status as a special officer. Thereafter, the defendant Murphy informed plaintiff’s supervisor, Waldo County General Hospital Administrator Arthur S. Upton, that the plaintiff had resigned as a reserve officer because he had been found in possession of a stolen snowplow. Defendant Murphy also notified the hospital that the plaintiff’s status as a special officer would be revoked. At the request of the defendant Murphy, Upton submitted a written request that the plaintiff be relieved of his duties as a special officer assigned to the hospital effective February 9, 1976. Upton also notified the plaintiff that his services at the hospital were terminated effective February 9, 1976.
The plaintiff contends that the revocation of his appointment as a special officer and the resulting loss of his employment as a security guard at the hospital were based solely on the representations made by Murphy to Upton and that at no time was the plaintiff afforded an opportunity to contest the allegations of wrongdoing. In addition, plaintiff claims that the representations made by Murphy concerning the stolen snowplow have affected plaintiff’s ability to obtain other work in the Belfast area.
Although the complaint does not specify what constitutionally protected interests of the plaintiff may be implicated, it describes a discharge from employment under cir
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cumstances which defamed and stigmatized plaintiff, infringing upon his liberty interest in his reputation.
See, e.g., Owen v. City of Independence,
The complaint does not allege an unconstitutional discharge from public employment.
A public employee has a constitutionally protected interest in continued employment where he has a reasonable expectation, arising out of state statute, rules or the contract, that he will continue to be employed.... Thus, ordinarily, one who can be removed only for ‘cause’ has a constitutionally protected ‘property’ interest, while one whose job is held ‘at will’ does not.
Perkins v. Board of Directors of S.A.D. No. 13,
The public office of special police officer is the creature of title 14 M.R.S.A. section 2362 (1978); it empowered the plaintiff to perform certain police functions as a security guard for the hospital by which he was employed. Plaintiff does not allege that the office of special police officer constituted public “employment” by the City of Belfast and neither the hospital nor any person associated with the hospital is a party defendant. There is no allegation that the hospital is affiliated in any way with the City of Belfast. The complaint alleges that “at all times ... plaintiff Small served under and was directly responsible to the administration of the Waldo County Hospital and had no further relationship with the City of Belfast.” Complaint at ¶ 5. The complaint further alleges that Small was discharged by the hospital administrator and not by the city manager. Complaint at ¶ 14. Instead, the complaint merely alleges that the conduct of the city manager, consisting of defamatory comments, precipitated the termination of plaintiff’s employment as a security guard.
I
CONSTITUTIONAL CAUSE OF ACTION INDEPENDENT OF § 1983
In
Bivens v. Six Unknown Named Federal Narcotics Agents,
The
Kostka
court so ruled notwithstanding full awareness that two earlier Supreme Court decisions
1
then barred relief under section 1983. Later, in
Monell v. Department of Social Services,
More recently the Supreme Court has allowed
Bivens
actions against
federal
officials.
See Carlson v. Green,
Green
held that the availability of relief under the Federal Tort Claims Act did not preclude a
Bivens
action, because a
Bivens
action: (1) serves as a more effective deterrent,
id.
at 21 n.6,
Although the First Circuit Court of Appeals has not considered the availability of a
Bivens
action against state officials since
Kostka
and
Monell
were decided, the district courts in the first circuit which have done so have uniformly applied
Kostka,
noting that
Monell
may have altered the reasoning in
Kostka,
but not its result.
See Devasto v. Faherty,
There appears little doubt that Kostka controls the present case.
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APPLICABLE STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS
Since section 1983 does not itself prescribe a limitations period, the court must determine the most analogous state cause of action and borrow the limitations period prescribed by state law.
Board of Regents v. Tomanio,
Determination of the applicable state statute of limitations requires consideration of four questions: (1) the nature of the federal cause of action ...; (2) the analogous state causes of action; (3) the state statutes of limitations for those causes of action; and (4) which of the state statutes of limitations is the most appropriate under federal law....
Burns v. Sullivan,
The plaintiff urges the borrowing of the six-year limitations period generally applicable to civil actions brought under Maine law, which states in pertinent part: “All civil actions shall be commenced within 6 years after the cause of action accrues and not afterwards ... except as otherwise specifically provided.” 14 M.R.S.A. § 752 (1980). The defendants would apply: (1) 14 M.R.S.A. § 753 (1980) [two-year period in actions for libel and slander]; (2) 14 M.R. S.A. § 8110 [two-year period in actions against governmental entity or its employees under Maine Tort Claims Act]; (3) 5 M.R.S.A. § 4613(2)(C) (1979) [two-year period in actions brought under the Maine Human Rights Act]; or (4) Maine Rule of Civil Procedure 80B(b) [30-day period in suits for direct review of administrative action].
Under the analysis in
Burns v. Sullivan, supra,
it is first necessary to consider the “nature of the federal cause of action.”
The due process claim is predicated on the alleged defamatory conduct of the city manager, which resulted in plaintiffs discharge by the Waldo County General Hospital and damaged “his standing and associations in the community,”
There is a two-year limitations period in defamation actions under Maine law. 14 M.R.S.A. § 753. Section 753 specifically governs most intentional torts affecting personal, as distinguished from property, interests, including slander and libel.
5
The First Circuit, in selecting state limitations periods for application in section 1983 actions based on infringements of constitutionally protected nonproperty interests, has borrowed limitations periods applicable to tort actions or actions for injuries to the person.
See Walden, III, Inc. v. State of Rhode Island,
Other courts of appeals have applied tort or personal-injury limitations periods for section 1983 claims.
6
See, e.g., Hines v.
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Board of Education,
The plaintiff insists that 14 M.R.S.A. § 752, the six-year statute of limitations made applicable to civil actions generally, “except as otherwise specifically provided,” controls, citing the unpublished opinion in
Dow v. Board of Directors of S.A.D. No. 5,
Civ. No. 76-14-P (D.Me. August 9, 1977). In
Dow,
a section 1983 action based on the dismissal of a contract teacher without hearing or compliance with statutory dismissal procedures, Chief Judge Gignoux borrowed the general six-year limitations period from 14 M.R.S.A. § 752, citing
Curran v. Portland Superintending School Committee,
Curran
was a section 1983 action for sex discrimination in employment. The Court there applied the two-year limitations period prescribed by 5 M.R.S.A. § 4613(2)(C), governing actions for unlawful discrimination brought under the Maine Human Rights Act, because the Maine Human Rights Act created the right “obviously [bearing] the ‘closest resemblance’ to the federal cause of action asserted by the plaintiff.”
In section 1983 actions more closely resembling state causes of action or remedies
*768
having their own limitations period, the First Circuit has not applied the more general state statutes of limitations.
See Holden v. Commission Against Discrimination,
The present constitutional claim is based on alleged defamatory conduct which resulted in a termination of employment, arguably entitling plaintiff to a name-clearing hearing, but not to reinstatement. The conduct complained of in
Dow
was in the nature of an infringement upon the property interest of the plaintiff in continued public employment and bears little resemblance either to the intentional torts dealt with in 14 M.R.S.A. § 753 or to any other state cause of action or remedy for which a specific limitations period is prescribed. Therefore,
Dow
appropriately applied the six-year, catch-all limitations period prescribed in 14 M.R.S.A. § 752.
Cf. Curran
v.
Portland Superintending School Committee,
The clear analogy between the present federal cause of action and a state action for defamation makes the six-year, catch-all limitations period inappropriate in these circumstances. Although there may be distinctions between the federal and state causes of action, the search is for “the most
analogous
state law” action, which need not be “exactly on point.”
See Hussey v. Sullivan,
It is necessary to consider whether borrowing the two-year limitations period from section 753 would be “inconsistent with the federal policy underlying the [federal] cause of action under consideration.”
Johnson v. Railway Express Agency,
The Supreme Court has said that “[i]n borrowing a state period of limitations for application to a federal cause of action a federal court is relying on the state’s wisdom in setting a limit ... on the prosecution of a closely analogous claim.”
Johnson v. Railway Express Agency, Inc.,
Thus, in the judgment of most legislatures and courts, there comes a point at which the delay of a plaintiff in asserting a claim is sufficiently likely either to impair the accuracy of the fact-finding process or to upset settled expectations that a substantive claim will be barred without respect to whether it is meritorious.
Board of Regents v. Tomanio,
The application of the two-year limitations period borrowed from section 753 to the present section 1983 action contravenes no federal policy. In
Garmon v. Foust,
In
Board of Regents v. Tomanio,
[T]wo of the principal policies embodied in § 1983 [are] deterrence and compensation. Neither of these policies is significantly affected by this rule of limitations since plaintiffs can still readily enforce their claims thereby recovering compensation and fostering deterrence simply by commencing their actions in three years.
Uniformity has also been cited as a federal policy which sometimes necessitates the displacement of an otherwise applicable state rule of law. The need for uniformity, while paramount under some federal statutory schemes, has not been held to warrant the displacement of state statutes of limitations for civil rights actions.
Id.
at 488-89,
Where relief is sought under section 1983 in the first instance in order to present both federal and state law claims in federal court, there is yet less reason to except the claimant from the limitations period applicable to the most closely analogous state law claim. Unlike the situation in
Tomanio,
where the delay in filing in the federal court may have been due in part to the pendency in state court of a suit based on a related claim, the plaintiff here apparently “slept on [his] rights,”
see
The borrowing of the two-year limitations period applicable in defamation actions under Maine common law, the most “analogous [state] cause of action,”
see
III
ACCRUAL OF THE CAUSE OF ACTION
The point at which a cause of action under section 1983 accrues is determined by federal law,
Rivera Fernandez v. Chardon,
Whether the alleged wrong consisted of defamatory conduct by the city manager, the termination of plaintiff’s employment, or the failure to afford plaintiff a name-clearing hearing, it clearly appears from the complaint that all critical events underlying the section 1983 claim occurred during February, 1976, well over four years before the filing of the complaint on August 25,1980, well after the expiration of the applicable two-year period of limitations.
IV
CONCLUSION
Although the section 1983 action is time barred, a Bivens-type action does not lie, since the section 1983 is considered to have been “available” during the two-year limitations period.
Ward v. Caulk,
The separate Bivens-type cause of action asserted by plaintiff is DISMISSED.
The due process claim brought under section 1983 is barred under the applicable two-year period of limitations borrowed from 14 M.R.S.A. § 753, and is therefore DISMISSED.
The pendant state law claim for defamation is likewise DISMISSED.
7
See United Mine Workers v. Gibbs,
Notes
.
See, e.g., Monroe v. Pape,
. The Devasto court observed that
Monell itself suggests the continued vitality of the holding in Kostka: ‘Rather than constitutionalize a cause of action against local government that Congress intended to create in 1871, the better course is to confess error and set the record straight, as the Court does today’,436 U.S. at 713 ,98 S.Ct. at 2047 . (Powell, J., concurring.)
. Although the plaintiff was not employed by the city, his appointment as a
special
officer, and its subsequent revocation, were acts of the city and its officials. Nevertheless, the complaint does not assert, nor do the factual allegations point to, the existence of any procedural requirements for the discretionary revocation of the appointment of a special officer by city officials.
Cf. Erdelyi v. O’Brien,
[W]hen a plaintiff under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 supplies facts to support his claim we do not think that Conley [v. Gibson,355 U.S. 41 ,78 S.Ct. 99 ,2 L.Ed.2d 80 (1957) ] imposes a duty on the courts to conjure up unpleaded facts that might turn a frivolous claim of unconstitutional official action into a substantial one.... [W]hen a complaint omits facts that, if they existed would clearly dominate the case, it seems fair to assume that those facts do not exist.
O’Brien v. DiGrazia,
Of course, a constitutionally protected
liberty
interest may exist where serious injury to reputation is inflicted in the course of a change in employment status, even where that status was
*766
changeable at will.
See Beitzell v. Jeffrey,
. The complaint describes the due process violation as follows: “At no time either prior to or subsequent to the action taken by defendant was plaintiff Small afforded the opportunity to clear his name and/or contest any allegations of wrongdoing----” Complaint, at ¶ 15.
. Section 753 limits “actions for assault and battery and for false imprisonment, slander, libel, and malpractice of physicians____” 14 M.R.S.A. § 753.
. District courts in other circuits differ in their choice of state limitations periods for similar section 1983 claims sounding in defamation.
Compare Duggan v. Town of Ocean City,
In
Hines
and
deMarrais,
both section 1983 actions alleging defamation in connection with a discharge from public employment, the courts looked to the most analogous state cause of action and borrowed the one-year limitations periods applicable to slander actions.
Accord Morey v. Independent School District,
In a similar section 1983 action, the
Duggan
court declined to apply the one-year limitations period applicable to state defamation actions.
See
Although the Maine Constitution contains due process and equal protection provisions,
Me.Const.
art. I, § 6-A, it prescribes no limitations period. Indeed, in
Mclver, supra,
the Maryland federal district court could find no provision in the laws of other states similar to Article 23.
. Although any state court action for defamation which plaintiff may seek to bring in state court might be deemed barred under 14 M.R.S.A. § 753 as well, the limitations period expired prior to the filing of the complaint in the present action. The unproductive pursuit of these claims in federal court had nothing to do with the expiration of the limitations period barring access to the courts of the State.
Compare Rheaume v. Texas Dept. of Public Safety,
