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Step 3

Filing Your Case

You file the complaint, pay the fee or apply for IFP, and get summons issued. This is where your case begins.

Who moves: Plaintiff (you)
Who responds: No opponent yet

What happens at this stage

You file three things with the federal district court clerk:

  1. Your complaint — the document that tells the court what happened, who did it, and why it violates the Constitution
  2. Civil cover sheet — a standardized form (JS 44) with basic case information
  3. Filing fee ($405) or IFP application — if you can’t afford the fee, you apply to proceed in forma pauperis under 28 U.S.C. § 1915

Once the clerk accepts your filing, you get a case number and a judge assignment. Your case exists.

The complaint

Your complaint is your foundation. Everything in your case flows from it. If a fact isn’t in the complaint, it doesn’t exist yet. If a claim isn’t stated, you can’t pursue it.

Under the pleading standard set by Ashcroft v. Iqbal and Bell Atlantic v. Twombly, your complaint must contain:

  • Factual allegations — specific facts about what happened, not conclusions or labels
  • Each defendant named — with their role described (who they are, what they did)
  • Each constitutional violation identified — which amendment, how the facts establish the violation
  • A plausible claim — the facts, accepted as true, must make the claim more than merely possible

“The defendant violated my rights” is a conclusion. “Officer Markham arrested Plaintiff without probable cause after Plaintiff criticized his surveillance” is a factual allegation. The first gets stripped out. The second survives.

Common mistakes

  • Conclusory allegations — stating legal conclusions instead of facts. The court will ignore them.
  • Missing defendants — every person who participated in the violation must be named. You can’t sue “the police department” under § 1983 — sue the individual officers and the municipality.
  • Wrong court — venue matters. Generally, you file where the violation occurred (28 U.S.C. § 1391).
  • Shotgun pleading — dumping every fact into every claim instead of organizing by count. Courts hate this.

In forma pauperis (IFP)

If you can’t afford the $405 filing fee, you can file a motion to proceed IFP with a financial affidavit.

But IFP is not just free filing. It also triggers early screening under 28 U.S.C. § 1915, which means the court can dismiss your complaint before the defendants are even served.

Read In Forma Pauperis: The IFP Trap in a § 1983 Case before you file. That article covers:

  • what IFP gets you
  • what screening it triggers
  • why weak complaints often die there
  • how the three-strikes rule works

Summons

After filing, the clerk issues a summons for each defendant. This is the formal notice that tells the defendant they’ve been sued and must respond. You’ll need the summons for service of process — the next step.

Timeline

  • Statute of limitations: varies by state (§ 1983 borrows the state’s personal injury statute of limitations). In Texas, it’s 2 years. In many states, it’s 2-3 years. Miss it and your case is dead.
  • Accrual: the clock usually starts when you knew or should have known about the violation — typically the date of the incident.
  • Tolling: some circumstances pause the clock (minority, mental incapacity, defendant concealment). Don’t count on this without research.

What to expect

Filing feels like the hardest part until you get to discovery. But the complaint is the most important document in your case. Spend the time getting it right. Read it as if you’re the judge seeing it for the first time with no context. Does it make sense? Are the facts specific? Can you follow the story?

If the answer is no, rewrite it before you file. You’ll likely get one chance to amend if your complaint is deficient — but some judges won’t grant leave to amend at all. File it right the first time.

Cost

  • Filing fee: $405 (or IFP application — no prepayment, but it triggers screening)
  • PACER access: $0.10/page (capped at $3.00/document, free if under $30/quarter). Install the RECAP browser extension ↗ — it automatically saves every PACER document you view to the free CourtListener ↗ archive, and lets you access documents others have already saved. You’ll save money and help make court records accessible to everyone.

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