“Discovery rule” for beginning of limitations period arises from discovery of the facts, not that somebody said a legal claim exists

Plaintiff filed a § 1983 claim within about 90 days of being informed by the local DA that he could file a civil action over a seizure of his property that happened nearly four years earlier. The “discovery rule” for starting the statute of limitations runs from when one, by reasonable diligence, would know of the facts of a possible claim, not from when the DA mentioned that he could file a civil claim. This claim was barred by the state’s two year limitations statute. Palmer v. City of Harrisburg, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 82978 (M.D. Pa. November 8, 2007)*:

Plaintiff’s argument is without merit. The alleged injuries stem from events that occurred during the course of the criminal proceedings, which took place between March 13, 2002, and November 25, 2003, as discussed above. The alleged injuries and the cause thereof were immediately ascertainable. While it may be true that Plaintiff lacked the knowledge that he could file a civil complaint during the statute of limitations period, his lack of knowledge is irrelevant. See Rendenz, 520 A.2d at 886. Moreover, even if Plaintiff was represented by counsel, his alleged reliance on counsel does not toll the statute of limitations.

Two federal appellate cases where defense counsel was obliged to raise frivolous search issues (issues that I would have personally refused to bring because counsel does not have to do so just because the client insists (but some clients compel appealing issues as a CYA)):

Probable cause was shown by defendant’s neighbor’s affidavit that the defendant had moved rifles from a truck to his house. The police confirmed he was a felon. Issuing state court judge did not abuse discretion in permitting a nighttime search. United States v. Spellicy, 253 Fed. Appx. 147 (2d Cir. 2007)*(unpublished).

Reasonable suspicion for a patdown was present where the officer saw defendant put a gun in his waistband. [The court went on to explain that the defendant was also nervous when confronted, but that is hardly required if the officer actually saw a gun.] United States v. Harris, 253 Fed. Appx. 171 (3d Cir. 2007)* (unpublished).

This entry was posted in Uncategorized. Bookmark the permalink.

Comments are closed.