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Pitts v. United States

Court: Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
Date filed: 1997-04-08
Citations: 109 F.3d 832
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4 Citing Cases

                  UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                      FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                           

No. 96-1410

              W. DOUGLAS PITTS AND GLORIA MARTINEZ,

                     Plaintiffs - Appellants,

                                v.

                UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ET AL.,

                     Defendants - Appellees.

                                           

           APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

                 FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO

        [Hon. Carmen Consuelo Cerezo, U.S. District Judge]
                                                                   

                                           

                              Before

                     Torruella, Chief Judge,
                                                     

                  Coffin, Senior Circuit Judge,
                                                        

                 and DiClerico,* District Judge.
                                                         

                                           

     Lisa  R. Daugherty,  with whom  Thomas E.  Scott and  Davis,
                                                                           
Scott, Weber & Edwards were on brief for appellants.
                                
     Robert  D.  Kamenshine,  Attorney,  Appellate  Staff,  Civil
                                     
Division,  Department  of Justice,  with  whom  Frank W.  Hunger,
                                                                          
Assistant   Attorney  General,   Guillermo  Gil,   United  States
                                                         
Attorney, and Barbara L.  Herwig, Attorney, Appellate Staff, were
                                          
on brief for appellees.

                                           

                          April 8, 1997
                                           
                    
                              

*  Of the District of New Hampshire, sitting by designation.


          TORRUELLA, Chief Judge.   Plaintiffs-appellants    were
                    TORRUELLA, Chief Judge. 
                                          

mistakenly  arrested by  federal drug  enforcement agents  at the

airport in San Juan, P.R. in  April 1993.  They filed actions for

tort damages  against four individual federal  agents pursuant to

Bivens  v.  Six Unknown  Named Agents  of  the Federal  Bureau of
                                                                           

Narcotics,  403 U.S.  388 (1971),  and against the  United States
                   

under the Federal Tort Claims Act ("FTCA"), 28 U.S.C.    1346(b),

2671 et seq.  On February  13, 1996, the district court dismissed
                      

plaintiffs-appellants' complaint  in its entirety  as time-barred

under  the  applicable  federal   and  Puerto  Rico  statutes  of

limitations.  We affirm. 

                            BACKGROUND
                                      BACKGROUND

          On  April 21,  1993,  appellants W.  Douglas Pitts  and

Gloria Mart nez  were approached by defendant  Jefferson Moran, a

plain-clothed  Drug  Enforcement  Agency ("DEA")  agent,  in  the

airport in San  Juan and  informed that they  were under  arrest.

Three  other DEA  agents  surrounded them,  handcuffed them,  and

transported  them   to  DEA  headquarters.     Only  after  being

fingerprinted  and  photographed,   appellants  claim,  did   co-

defendant DEA  agent Edward Hern ndez  inform them of  the reason

for  their arrest.  Apparently two  witnesses identified Pitts as

the man who had given them a package of heroin  earlier that day.

Pitts was questioned and his briefcase was searched; Mart nez was

allegedly   strip-searched.     Appellants  were   released  from

detention   approximately  six  hours   after  being  arrested.  

Appellants'  complaint  alleged  that  they  were  physically and

                               -2-


verbally abused and sought damages on a number of legal grounds.1

Because  the issue on appeal is whether the suit was time-barred,

however, we review the details concerning the timing and contents

of  communications between  appellants and  governmental agencies

after the incident just described.

          The mistaken  arrest occurred on  April 23, 1993.   The

complaint was filed in district  court on November 23, 1994.   On

July  19, 1993, however, appellants' counsel sent a letter to the

DEA stating  appellants' intent  to pursue  a claim  "against the

United  States" arising  from  the  actions  of DEA  agents,  and

requesting damages and "an apology from your  office as well as a

reprimand  of the agents involved."   A response  letter from the

DEA dated  August 6, 1993  stated that  the appellants' July  19,

1993  letter did not  satisfy the  procedural requirements  for a

claim against the United States under the FTCA. 

          On August  18, 1993, appellants' counsel  sent a second

letter to the DEA, followed by a third letter on August 30, 1993,

which  repeated  the  appellants'  intention to  pursue  a  claim

against the  government, stated that counsel  had been authorized

to   represent  the  appellants,  and  provided  the  appellants'

signatures.  The DEA replied to appellants' August 18 letter in a

letter dated September  9, 1993, stating that appellants' July 19

and  August 18 letters also failed to satisfy the requirements of

                    
                              

1    Plaintiffs'  complaint  alleged:  assault,   battery,  false
imprisonment,  intentional  infliction  of   emotional  distress,
invasion  of privacy,  unconstitutional  search and  seizure, and
negligence.

                               -3-


a  "claim"  under the  FTCA.   Appellants'  counsel replied  by a

letter  of September 15, 1993 stating that it was the appellants'

view that the  August 18  letter did indeed  constitute a  proper

claim under the FTCA.  Finally, the DEA sent a  letter on January

4,  1994  denying the  claim against  the  United States  made in

appellants' July 19, 1993 letter, and noting that the denial "may

be appealed" to a federal district court within six months.  More

than six months elapsed between January  4, 1994 and the date the

complaint was filed, November 23, 1994.2  

          The  district  court granted  the appellees'  motion to

dismiss the complaint  as untimely under both  Puerto Rico's one-

year  statute of  limitations  (with regard  to  the tort  claims

against  the  officers)  and  the  FTCA's  six-month  statute  of

limitations  that runs from  the time  of the  final denial  of a

claim by the pertinent governmental agency.  These letters are at

the heart of this appeal because the appellants contend: (1) that

Puerto  Rico's  one-year statute  of limitations  governing their

Bivens   action  was  tolled   under  the   "extrajudicial  claim
                

exception"  by their letter of August 18, 1993, and did not begin

running at least until the  Government's denial letter of January

4, 1994;   and (2) that the requirement under  the FTCA that they

file suit against the  government within six months of  the final
                    
                              

2   In addition, beginning  in November 1993,  the plaintiffs and
the  DEA exchanged  correspondence regarding  appellants' request
for the names and identities of the DEA agents involved under the
Freedom of Information Act,  a series of letters  that culminated
in a  letter of  April  10, 1995  from the  DEA formally  denying
appellants' request for information concerning the identities  of
the unknown agents.

                               -4-


denial of their  claim does  not render their  November 23,  1994

complaint time-barred  because the  government's January  4, 1994

denial letter did not trigger the six-month limitations period.

                            DISCUSSION
                                      DISCUSSION

I.   Claims Against the Agents
          I.   Claims Against the Agents

          Appellants  do not dispute the settled proposition that

their claims against Mor n, Hern ndez, and  two other unknown DEA

agents  are   subject  to  Puerto  Rico's   one-year  statute  of

limitations governing,  inter alia,  personal injury torts.   See
                                                                           

P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 31    5298(2) (1991); cf. Ram rez Morales  v.
                                                                       

Rosa Viera,  815 F.2d 2, 4  (1st Cir. 1987).   Rather, they argue
                    

that  the period, which would  have barred their  suit from being

brought after April 21,  1994, was tolled  under the Puerto  Rico

tolling statute's  extrajudicial claim provision.   See P.R. Laws
                                                                 

Ann. tit. 31   5303 (1991).3  Specifically, they argue that under

the   Puerto  Rico   Supreme   Court's   interpretation  of   the

extrajudicial claim  provision, their  claim was tolled  from the

time  of their  August  18,  1993  letter  to  the  DEA  (stating

appellants' "intent  to submit a claim against  the United States

government" and requesting  a "reprimand" of the  officers) to at

least January  4,  1994,  the  date of  the  government's  letter

purportedly denying the  claim, at which point, under Puerto Rico

law,  the one-year period would  have been restarted  at zero and

                    
                              

3  Section 5303 provides: "Prescription of actions is interrupted
by their institution before the courts, by extrajudicial claim of
the creditor,  and by any  act of acknowledgment  of debt by  the
debtor."

                               -5-


would have begun to run anew.  See Rodr guez Narv ez v.  Nazario,
                                                                          

895 F.2d 38, 45 (1st Cir. 1990).

          The  problem  with appellants'  argument is  that their

August 18 letter -- like the other letters they sent to the DEA -

-  did  not  identify  any  legal  claim against  the  individual

officers,  and therefore  cannot  be deemed  to  have tolled  the

statute  of  limitations as  to  the suit  against  the officers.

Puerto  Rico   Supreme  Court  decisions  applying   the  tolling

provision  of section  5303 indicate  that one  of the  necessary

requirements  of  an  extrajudicial  claim for  the  purposes  of

tolling is the  requirement of "identity."   See Galib-Frangie v.
                                                                        

El Vocero de Puerto Rico, 95 JTS 71 at 922  (P.R. 1995); see also
                                                                           

Kery v. American Airlines, Inc., 931 F. Supp. 947, 951-53 (D.P.R.
                                         

1995) (summarizing  Puerto Rico  Supreme Court interpretation  of

section 5303).   The  identity requirement  means  that the  same

right  and the same relief affected by the statute of limitations

must appear in the extrajudicial claim.  See Nazario, 895 F.2d at
                                                              

44; Kery, 931 F. Supp. at  954.  To satisfy this requirement, the
                  

extrajudicial  claim  must be  made  against the  same  debtor or

passive subject of the right in question, and not against a third

party.    Nazario,  895 F.2d  at  44  (citing  Velilla v.  Pueblo
                                                                           

Supermarkets, Inc., 111 P.R.R. 732, 734-35 (P.R. 1981)).    
                            

Appellants' August  18 letter,  addressed to the  associate chief

counsel of the DEA, states an intent to make a "claim against the

United   States  government"  and   also  requests   an  official

"reprimand" of the  officers involved.   It does  not assert  any

                               -6-


legal  claims  directly  against   the  officers.    The  letter,

therefore, fails to  satisfy the requirement of  identity for the

purposes of the extrajudicial claim doctrine.  Appellants, citing

the Galib-Frangie  decision, argue  that the Puerto  Rico Supreme
                           

Court has  recently ruled  that the extrajudicial  claim doctrine

should  be applied  liberally.   We  are  not persuaded  by  this

argument, because  nowhere in  the Galib-Frangie opinion,  or, to
                                                          

our  knowledge, in any other  recent decision of  the Puerto Rico

Supreme  Court, is  there any  support for  a departure  from the

well-established rule that  an extrajudicial  claim must  request

the same type of  relief against the same defendants.4   In fact,

in Galib-Frangie, the case relied on by the appellants, the court
                          

iterated that  the identity requirement is  a necessary condition

of an extrajudicial claim under section 5303.   Galib-Frangie, 95
                                                                       

JTS  71 at 922.   Moreover, the learned  commentary on this civil

code provision suggests that an extrajudicial claim must serve as

a  notice or demand to the  "passive subject of said right," here

the  DEA agents.   See Nazario,  895 F.2d at  44 (quoting Spanish
                                        

civil  code commentator  Diez Picazo).5   The DEA  agents plainly
                    
                              

4  In the  case of Zambrana-Maldonado v. Commonwealth,  92 JTS 12
                                                               
(P.R.  1992), for  example,  the court  stated specifically  that
extrajudicial  claims must  be read  in their  totality and  in a
liberal  fashion,  and  yet also  held  that  the  claim must  be
received by the same debtor of  the right who is the defendant in
the subsequent lawsuit.  Id. at 9171-74.
                                      

5  According to Diez Picazo:

          In  principle, claim  stands  for  demand  or
          notice.   That is: it is an act for which the
          holder of a substantive right,  addresses the
          passive subject of said right, demanding that

                               -7-


could  not  be  apprised  of  a  damages  suit  against  them  as

individuals by a  letter stating  an intention to  bring a  claim

against the government.

          In  the  alternative,  appellants  argue  that  summary

judgment was improper because a question of  material fact exists

as  to whether the individual  DEA agents received  copies of, or

were otherwise informed  of, the  letters.   This argument  fails

because, even assuming  they received copies of the  letters, the

content of  the letters would  not put them  on notice as  to the

possibility of being sued individually for damages.

          These  considerations  lead  us  to  conclude that  the

district court  properly applied Puerto  Rico law in  finding the

suit against the DEA agents to be time-barred.

II.  The Claim under the FTCA
          II.  The Claim under the FTCA

          FTCA claimants  must file suit in  federal court within

six  months of the date on which  the federal agency to which the

claim  has been addressed mails  notice of final  denial of their

claim.   See 28 U.S.C.   2401(b).   Here, it is not disputed that
                      

the DEA sent  a letter on January 4, 1994  to appellants' counsel

stating that,  in response to  appellants' July 19,  1993 letter,

"[t]o the  extent that this  correspondence can  be construed  as
                    
                              

          he adopt  the required conduct.   The  claim,
          then, is a pretension in a technical sense.

Nazario, 895 F.2d  at 44 (quoting Diez Picazo).   We note as well
                 
that  the commentary  of Diez  Picazo, unfavorable  to appellants
here,  was cited as an authority regarding the requirements of an
extrajudicial  claim  in  the Galib-Frangie  decision,  the  very
                                                     
decision appellants  argue harkens a change  in the extrajudicial
claim doctrine.  See Galib-Frangie, 95 JTS 71 at 923.
                                            

                               -8-


claim  [sic] against the United States of America pursuant to the

Federal Tort Claims Act  (FTCA), 28 U.S.C.    2671 et seq.,  such
                                                                    

claim is denied."  Appellants filed their suit  under the FTCA in

November 1994, more than  six months after the DEA  denial letter

was mailed,  and thus their FTCA  claim was properly found  to be

time-barred.

          On appeal, two meritless arguments have been proffered.

The first is that the  January 4 letter cannot be deemed  a final

denial  because  it  did  not  specifically  address  appellants'

August 18, 1993 letter.   We find, however, that the  language of

the letter  was unambiguous  in denying appellants'  claim, which

was  made in  both the  July  19, 1993  and the  August 18,  1993

letters.6

          Second,  appellants  argue  that the  January  4 letter

failed to  satisfy regulations governing  the content of  an FTCA

claim denial letter, see 28 C.F.R.    14.9(a), because it did not
                                  

state  that the  claimant  may "file  suit"  in a  United  States

District Court within six months.7  We are unmoved by appellants'

                    
                              

6    The August  18  letter was  merely  a follow-up  letter that
repeated the allegations and  claims made in the July  19 letter,
and only added the signatures of appellants Pitts and Mart nez.

7  The regulation  at 28 C.F.R.   14.9(a) provides,  in pertinent
part:

          The notification of final  denial . . . shall
          include a statement that, if  the claimant is
          dissatisfied  with the agency  action, he may
          file  suit  in an  appropriate  U.S. District
          Court  not later  than six  months after  the
          date of mailing of the notification.

                               -9-


argument  that the  DEA's failure  to use  the words  "file suit"

created any confusion.   We  find that the  DEA's statement  that

"[t]his  denial may be appealed to  the appropriate United States

District  Court within  six months  of this  letter,"   while not

using  the  words  "may  file  suit,"  adequately  satisfied  the

requirements of regulation 14.9(a) by giving sufficient notice of

the  six-month limitations  period applicable  to their  right to

file suit in district court.  Cf.  Hatchell v. United States, 776
                                                                      

F.2d  244, 245-46  (9th Cir.  1985) ("We  decline to  require any

specific  verbal  formulation  to  ensure   compliance  with  the

regulations governing denial of claims.").

                            CONCLUSION
                                      CONCLUSION

          For the  reasons stated  in this opinion,  the district

court's grant of summary judgment to the defendants is affirmed.
                                                                         

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