Garza v. Burnett
Annotate this CaseIn April 2002, Ogden City Police Officer Troy Burnett and another officer searched Plaintiff's motel room and found drugs and a firearm. Plaintiff pled guilty to two federal offenses, but the court of appeals overturned Plaintiff's conviction, concluding that the search violated the Fourth Amendment. Plaintiff subsequently brought a claim under 42 U.S.C. 1983 against Burnett in federal court based on the unreasonable search. Under the Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals' decisions at the time Plaintiff filed his complaint, approximately two years remained in the limitations period before his claim would become time-barred. A U.S. Supreme Court decision four days after the filing, however, overturned the Tenth Circuit's decisions and rendered Plaintiff's complaint approximately ten months late. The district court granted summary judgment to Burnett, concluding that, as a result of the U.S. Supreme Court's decision, Plaintiff's claim was time-barred and Plaintiff was not entitled to equitable tolling. The Tenth Circuit Court of Appeals subsequently certified a question to the Utah Supreme Court, which answered by holding that under Utah law, an intervening change in controlling law that extinguishes a previously timely cause of action does merit equitable tolling of the statute of limitations.
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