Plaintiff herein appeals from a district court order granting defendants’ motion to dismiss its claim as untimely under Rule 12(b)(6) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Because we find that plaintiffs claim alleging the deprivation of its constitutionally protected property rights in violation of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments of the United States Constitution under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983, 1985, and 1988 is untimely under the applicable statute of limitations, we affirm the district court’s order granting defendants’ motion to dismiss.
I.
In 1962, the Planning Board of Puerto Rico (“the Planning Board”) approved a development plan reserving for future use a 128-acre lot (“the Vistamar Property”) owned by Vistamar, Inc. (“plaintiff’ or “Vistamar”). The Planning Board’s alleged purpose in freezing the property was to construct the Torrecillas Expressway (“the Expressway”). ■
In 1969, the Expressway not having been built, Vistamar filed a civil rights suit in the United States District Court for the District of Puerto Rico against defendants’ official predecessors. 1 Vistamar argued that defendants’ reservation, freezing, and subsequent inaction with regard to the Vis-tamar Property was tantamount to an inverse condemnation.
On March 14, 1974, the district court issued a judgment approving the terms of a stipulation in which the parties agreed to the sale of the Vistamar Property for $1,718,789.00, with the court noting that the stipulation “dispose[d] of the case on its merits.”
Vistamar v. Vázquez,
The Vistamar Property was never developed and the Expressway was never built. No other land was ever expropriated pursuant to the Expressway project. Beginning in 1984, and as recently as 2003,
In November 2002, mindful that a thirty-year statute of limitations for real property disputes 2 would soon mature, plaintiff initiated an investigation of government records and archives, as a result of which Vistamar learned that when the government acquired the Vistamar Property by stipulation in 1974, it had no intention of building the Expressway.
In January 2003, plaintiff informed defendants of its belief that the Vistamar Property had been acquired under false pretenses and again attempted to repurchase the Vistamar Property. Defendants’ failure to respond prompted plaintiff to allege that defendants condoned, endorsed, and adopted their predecessors’ actions, rendering them liable for all wrongdoing alleged by plaintiff.
On February 26, 2003, Vistamar filed a complaint in the United States District Court for the District of Puerto Rico, accusing defendants of treating plaintiff differently from similarly situated property owners through the discriminatory application of eminent domain. Vistamar claimed that defendants’ actions constituted a taking without compensation in violation of the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments’ equal protection and substantive and procedural due process guarantees, and asserted damages under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1983, 1985, and 1988 in excess of $40,000,000 to compensate for its lost profits, business credibility, and the expenses required to remain a viable concern while attempting to defend its property rights.
The district court granted defendants’ motion to dismiss pursuant to Rule 12(b)(6). This appeal followed.
II.
The district court did not reach the merits of Vistamar’s civil rights claims because it dismissed the case as untimely under the statute of limitations. Plaintiff now seeks review of two issues: 1) whether the instant action is time-barred; and 2) whether the doctrines of equitable tolling or equitable estoppel are applicable to the instant case. Defendants raise res judica-ta as an alternative affirmative defense, but because we find that plaintiffs claim is time-barred, we need not consider it.
We review the district court’s grant of defendants’ motion to dismiss
de novo. Badillo-Santiago v. Naveira-Merly,
A.
Section 1983 creates a private right of action for violations of federally protected rights. Because it has no statute of limitations provision, § 1983 claims “borrow[ ] the appropriate state law governing limitations unless contrary to federal law.”
Poy v. Boutselis,
The parties do not dispute — and it is well-established in this circuit — that the relevant statute of limitations for civil rights claims in Puerto Rico is one year, in
What they do dispute is the date when the one-year limitations period began to accrue. Vistamar maintains that the district court erred when it dismissed the claim as untimely. Defendants argue— and the district court agreed — that the claim was filed almost 30 years late.
We have held that “[although the limitations period is determined by state law, the date of accrual is a federal law question.”
Carreras-Rosa v. Alves-Cruz,
In determining the commencement of accrual, “[t]he first step ... is to identify the actual injury of which the plaintiff complains.”
Guzmán-Rivera v. Rivera-Cruz,
Plaintiff insists that the injury suffered was not the loss of its land, but rather the taking of the land under false pretenses, an injury which it did not discover — or have reason to discover — until November 2002. Defendants argue that the relevant injury was the appropriation of the Vistamar Property, which occurred in 1974. We have long held that “[i]n a § 1983 case concerning the unlawful taking of property, the statute of limitations begins to run on the date of the wrongful appropriation.”
Altair Corp. v. Pesquera de Busquets,
We have unambiguously rejected this contention — that the claim does not accrue until the plaintiff knows of both the injury and the discriminatory animus — in the employment discrimination context.
Morris v. Gov’t Dev. Bank of Puerto Rico,
We have not previously addressed this “suspended animation” theory with regard to takings claims, but we now find our analysis in the employment context to be persuasive with regard to unlawful takings as well. In
Morris,
we held that a plaintiff in a § 1983 action “need not know all the facts that support his claim in order for countdown to commence.”
Id.
at 750. We reasoned that the principle reasons for enforcing statutes of limitations — to protect defendants “from the burden of defending claims arising from [actions] which are long past, while, concominantly, protecting [plaintiffs] who act celeritously to enforce their perceptible rights” — would
Having rejected plaintiffs suggestion that the actual injury occurred only upon discovery of animus, we still find it necessary to determine when the plaintiff knew or had reason to know of the injury:
Rodríguez-García v. Municipality of Caguas,
The injury occurred in 1974 when ownership of the Vistamar Property was transferred from plaintiff to defendants under false pretenses, but Vistamar did not discover the absence of a legitimate public purpose until 2002, when it initiated an investigation. If Vistamar was an unwilling participant in the 1974 settlement but for the government’s legitimate public purpose, it could have undertaken an investigation of government records at that time. But even if, as Vistamar claims, it did not have reason to know of the injury in 1974, it surely did shortly thereafter. After defendants purchased the Vistamar Property for more than $1.7 million,
[it] was abandoned and was never used for any purpose, it was never fenced, no improvements were made ... [it was] infested with rats and mosquitoes, invaded by squatters, becoming a shambles with burnt and stripped automobiles. No other land was ever expropriated for the construction of the Torrecillas Expressway nor was this project ever buil[t] or even star[t]ed to be built.
Brief for Appellant at 7. Plaintiff should have been on notice that an investigation of some kind was warranted when the Vistamar property was completely abandoned and no other parcel of land was frozen in the entire thirty-mile stretch where the Expressway was to have been constructed. Further, it seems that Vista-mar was, in fact, on notice. In 1984, Vista-mar’s attorney wrote to the then-Secretary of the Department of Transportation and Public Works “stating that the Torrecillas Expressway was not going to be built, and demanding the right to repurchase the property.” Id. at 7-8. Vistamar maintains that its knowledge in 1984 has no bearing on what it had reason to suspect about defendants’ 1974 intentions because the government may legally change its plans regarding the use of real property. We do not find this argument to be persuasive. If Vistamar had enough information in 1984 to allege that there never would be an Expressway, it certainly had reason to wonder whether there ever had been legitimate plans to build one. Although plaintiff might not have known it with certainty until November 2002, there was more than enough cause for suspicion in the intervening period to support our conclusion that Vistamar had “reason to know” of the injury by 1984, at the latest.
B.
Plaintiff next contends that the doctrine of equitable tolling or equitable estoppel applies in this case. The two doctrines are distinct, and we will consider them separately. Bení
tez-Pons v. Commonwealth of Puerto Rico,
Equitable tolling is available “in exceptional circumstances” to extend the statute of limitations.
Neverson v. Farquharson,
We have left open the question of whether the equitable tolling of § 1983
Plaintiffs do not allege ignorance of the statute of limitations, and so do not meet the threshold requirement for equitable tolling under federal law. As for wrongful concealment, the district court found plaintiffs claim insufficient under the heightened pleading requirement of Rule 9(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure,
3
and we agree. In
Ramirez Morales v. Rosa Viera,
we held that there could be no equitable tolling on grounds of concealment where none of the defendants “actually prevented or discouraged” plaintiffs from investigating the relevant files before the end of the limitations period.
Of fundamental importance in this case is the principle that “[ejquitable tolling is unavailable where a party fails to exercise reasonable diligence.”
Benítez-Pons,
C.
Equitable estoppel is a distinct, but closely related doctrine.
Kelley v. National Labor Relations Board,
III.
For the foregoing reasons, we find that the district court properly dismissed plaintiffs § 1983 claim as time-barred.
Affirmed.
Notes
. The defendants in this case are Fernando Fagundo-Fagundo, Secretary of the Department of Transportation and Public Works of Puerto Rico, his wife and their conjugal partnership; Angel David Rodríguez-Quiñones, President of the Planning Board of Puerto Rico, his wife and their conjugal partnership; and Juan Vaquer-Castrodad, Executive Director of the Land Administration of Puerto Rico, his wife and their conjugal partnership. Because the defendants in the 1969 case were the official predecessors of those in the instant case, we refer to all defendants in both cases collectively as "defendants.”
. Section 1863 of the Puerto Rico Civil Code, 31 L.P.R.A. § 5293, provides as follows:
Real actions with regard to real property prescribe after thirty (30) years.
This provision is understood without prejudice to the prescriptions relating to the acquisition of ownership or of property rights by prescription.
. Rule 9(b) demands that, "[i]n all averments of fraud or mistake, the circumstances constituting fraud or mistake shall be stated with particularity.'' Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(b).
