In Stanley v. Foster, 464 F.3d 565 (5th Cir. Sept. 12, 2006), the court considered as a matter of first impression the interplay between two rules dealing with the effect of a dismissal.
In general, if a court dismissed a complaint without prejudice the statute of limitations may continue to run. As a result, the action that the plaintiff was hoping to pursue through an amended complaint may have become time-barred. However, another legal concept holds generally that if a dismissal order is later set aside, the cause is reinstated as though the judgment had never been entered. Taken literally, that would mean that the reinstatement date has no independent significance.
The court in Stanley apparently agreed. Examining the effect upon the statute of limitations of a successful Rule 60(b) motion that reinstated a complaint, the court held that in such a situation the date of the original filing, not of the 60(b) ruling, is the proper date for purposes of the statute of limitations.
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