Steven Wycoff, an inmate at the Iowa State Penitentiary, appeals the district
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court’s dismissal of his 42 U.S.C. § 1983 complaint. The district court dismissed Wycoff’s complaint after determining that James Menke, a penitentiary official, was immune from suit in this instance. We affirm the district court’s dismissal. But, because we conclude that the Supreme Court’s decision in
Wilson v. Garcia,
— U.S. -,
On November 3, 1975, Wycoff was placed in the Iowa State Penitentiary’s administrative segregation unit. He was released from that unit on August 25, 1977. Over four years later, on December 3, 1981, Wycoff filed the present action asserting that Menke had failed to provide adequate procedural safeguards during his detention in violation of Wycoff’s fourteenth amendment right to due process.
On January 8, 1982, Menke filed a Fed.R. Civ.P. 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss. In this motion, Menke asserted that Iowa’s two-year personal injury statute of limitations, Iowa Code § 614.1(2), barred Wycoff’s claim. On the basis of this court’s January 5, 1982 decision in
Garmon v. Foust,
On April 17, 1985, the Supreme Court announced its decision in
Wilson v. Garcia,
The Supreme Court’s decision in
Wilson
effectively overrules our decision in
Garmon
in which we rejected the application of a state’s personal injury statute of limitations to section 1983 claims in favor of a state’s general “catchall” statute of limitations.
Garmon,
While Wilson’s prospective effect is certain, this court has yet to consider the issue of Wilson’s retroactive application. Before addressing this issue, however, we briefly discuss several preliminary contentions raised by Wycoff. Wycoff first argues that Wilson’s retroactive application need not be reached in this case since Menke has waived any issue with respect to the limitations question. We disagree.
Menke did not raise the Iowa two-year statute of limitations as an affirmative defense in his answer to Wycoff’s complaint.
See
Fed.R.Civ.P. 8(c). While this failure would normally result in the waiver of a limitations defense,
see, e.g., Myers v. John Deere Ltd.,
Wycoff next argues that even if Menke has not waived the limitations issue, his complaint is not, on its face, subject to a statute of limitations defense. In essence, Wycoff contends that certain statements in his complaint, if read liberally, effectively assert either the doctrine of fraudulent concealment or the discovery rule, and thus prevent the complaint from being dismissed on limitations grounds. We again disagree.
Whether fraudulent concealment or the discovery rule may save Wycoff s complaint from dismissal on limitations grounds is governed by state law.
See Wilson,
The face of Wycoff’s complaint makes clear that at all times since his segregation Wycoff has had personal knowledge of the facts necessary to support his claim. These facts include when he was segregated, when he was released, and what type of review procedures were provided during his segregation. Further, Wycoff has long been aware of the legal principles applicable to this type of action.
See generally Wycoff v. Brewer,
Additionally, no assertion of concealment contained in the complaint is even directed at the defendant Menke. Rather, the only assertions are directed at Wycoff’s own lawyers who supposedly had possession of certain documents necessary to “substantiate [his] claim[].” As implicitly (and correctly) recognized by Wycoff himself, these documents, which were included as part of his original complaint, did not disclose a cause of action, the existence of which Wy-coff was otherwise unaware, but rather served only to substantiate a claim already known to Wycoff. Substantiation of a claim is properly the role of pretrial discovery and provides no excuse for Wycoff s failure to file suit until over four years after his segregation ended.
Cf. Schnebly,
Finally, Wycoff contends that this court should not address the limitations issue since Menke failed to assert this issue by cross-appeal. This contention is without merit. Even if
Wilson
had been decided prior to Wycoff’s appeal, Menke would have had no obligation to raise the limitations issue by cross-appeal because
Wilson
simply provides an additional ground on which to affirm the district court in its entirety. When a party seeks neither to modify nor alter a lower court decision “but only to sustain it on grounds other than those relied on by the court below,” no obligation to cross-appeal exists.
Clark v. Mann,
Having rejected Wycoff’s preliminary arguments, we turn to the issue of whether
Wilson
is retroactively applicable to Wycoff s claim. The Supreme Court, in
Chevron Oil Co. v. Huson,
The issue presented to the Supreme Court in
Wilson
had not previously been addressed by that Court. The issue had, however, been addressed in virtually every circuit,
see Garcia v. Wilson,
When Wycoff filed this action, the issue of the applicable statute of limitations had led to confusing and inconsistent results both nationally,
see Garcia,
The second factor to consider under
Chevron
is whether the policies underlying the rule in question will be advanced or retarded by its retroactive application.
Chevron,
The third prong of the
Chevron
test requires us to determine whether the retroactive application of a decision will result in “harsh, injust, or inequitable results.”
Smith,
Wycoff’s claim had fully matured by November 1977, and at that time, all operative facts necessary to support that claim were known to him. Between 1977 and this court’s 1982 decision in Garmon, the law both nationally and within this circuit was contradictory and confusing. Thus, potential plaintiffs such as Wycoff could not reasonably have relied on a limitations period longer than two years in waiting to file their claims. On balance, we conclude that Chevron’s third factor is no bar to the retroactive application of Wilson to Wy-coff’s claim.
We believe Wilson should be applied retroactively to Wycoff’s claim. As a result, Wycoff’s claim is governed by Iowa’s two-year personal injury statute of limitations, Iowa Code § 614.1(2). On the face of Wycoff’s complaint, it is clear that Wy-coff’s claim falls outside this two-year period and as a result is barred.
The district court’s dismissal of Wycoff’s complaint is affirmed.
