An attorney who files suit when the statute of limitations is about to expire must take special care to achieve timely service of process, because a slip-up is fatal. Attorney Stephen R. Leopold filed this suit under the Federal Tort Claims Act at the end of the limitations period yet treated service casually. He did not bother to read Fed.R.Civ.P. 4, which governs service in federal litigation, and relied on his adversary to tell him what he must do. When he got that advice, he tarried in following it. The delay has cost his client the litigation and exposes Leopold to a suit for malpractice.
The complaint was filed on October 12, 1994. Leopold sent the local United States Attorney a “Notice of Lawsuit and Request for Waiver of Service of Summons.” This document may have been designed to take advantage of the service-by-mail provisions in Rule 4, but after the comprehensive 1993 revision of Rule 4 waiver of service does not play a role in litigation against the national government. Under Rule 4(d) waiver of service is an agreement to accept documents by mail, rather than by hand; no one needs to seek such an agreement from the United States, because Rule 4(i) authorizes postal service on the United States in all cases. An Assistant U.S. Attorney sent Leopold a letter stating that the United States would not waive any of its remaining rights to notice; the letter directed counsel’s attention to Rule 4. Presently Leopold hand-delivered a copy of the complaint and summons to the U.S. Attorney’s office, thus complying with Rule 4(i)(l)(A). The next subsection of that rule directs the plaintiff to send “a copy of the summons and of the complaint by registered or certified mail to the Attorney General of the United States at Washington, District of Columbia”. Fed.R.Civ.P. 4(i)(l)(B). Leopold did not do so. On January 31,1995, when 11 of the 120 days allowed for service by Rule 4(m) remained, the Assistant U.S. Attorney reminded Leopold that the Attorney General had not yet been served. Leopold took 17 days to act. On February 16 he mailed a copy of the complaint and summons to “A.G. U.S. Attorney’s Office” in the District of Columbia. Not surprisingly, the U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia returned the documents, observing on February 23 that he had nothing to do with the case. Leopold then took another month to mail the papers to the Attorney General. The district court dismissed the suit under Rule 4(m), concluding that Leopold lacked “good cause” for the delay. Dismissal was without prejudice, but “ ‘[wjithout prejudice’ does not mean “without consequence’. If the case is dismissed and filed anew, the fresh suit must satisfy the statute of limitations.”
Powell v. Starwalt,
Where is the “good cause” that Rule 4(m) requires for belated service? Failure to read a rule is the antithesis of good cause. Ignorance may be an explanation but is not an excuse.
Williams-Guice v. Chicago Board of Education,
Two district judges have accepted this position and excused failure to serve the Attorney General.
Williams v. General Services Administration,
Rules of procedure often recognize the high costs of inflexible application and afford leeway; Rule 4(m) is an example. Although many states require service to be accomplished by the end of the statute of limitations, Rules 3 and 4(m) in combination give plaintiffs who sue under federal law the full period of limitations, plus 120 days, in which to achieve service. See
West v. Conrail,
Rule 4(m) also contains a safety valve: for good cause, a judge may give the plaintiff time beyond 120 days. This does not mean that to miss the time by a little (some 45 days in this case) is irrelevant; the rule establishes a bright line at 120 days, not at 165 days; and “serve the defendant within a reasonable time,” which is how Leopold reads Rule 4(m), is a very different
kind
of norm from “serve the defendant within 120 days.” Rule 4(m) establishes a rule, not a standard. When a statute or rule sets a time limit, even one day’s tardiness can be fatal. See
United States v. Locke,
Appellate review on this issue is deferential,
Bachenski v. Malnati,
A brief word is in order about Rule 4(i)(3), which says that a court “shall allow a reasonable time for service of process under this subdivision for the purpose of curing the failure to serve multiple officers, agencies, or corporations of the United States if the plaintiff has effected service on either the United States attorney or the Attorney General of the United States.” This subparagraph deals with cases in which, under Rule 4(i)(2), the plaintiff must serve federal officers in addition to the U.S. Attorney and the Attorney General; it is accordingly inapplicable today. But that open-ended standard would not keep this suit alive even if it were applicable. After serving the U.S. Attorney, Leopold sat on his hands for months. After the AUSA told him that he still had to serve the Attorney General, Leopold did nothing for 17 days — and then served the U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia. After he learned that this was not right, Leopold waited another month to take the simple step of sending certified mail to the Attorney General. Not by any stretch of the imagination is this “reasonable.”
AFFIRMED.
