Answer
The defendant's formal response to your complaint — admitting, denying, or claiming ignorance of each allegation.
What It Is
An answer is the defendant’s formal written response to your complaint. Under Federal Rule 8, the answer must respond to each allegation by:
- Admitting it
- Denying it
- Stating insufficient knowledge to admit or deny (which functions as a denial)
The answer must also assert any affirmative defenses — legal reasons the defendant shouldn’t be liable even if your allegations are true. In § 1983 cases, the most common affirmative defense is qualified immunity.
Timing
- 21 days after service of the complaint (or 60 days if the defendant waived formal service)
- If the defendant filed a motion to dismiss and it was denied, 14 days after the court’s order
What to Look For
Admissions
Anything the defendant admits is established — you don’t need to prove it at trial. Read the answer carefully and note each admission.
Non-Denial Denials
Government lawyers are masters of non-answers:
- “Defendant lacks sufficient knowledge to admit or deny” — about events the officer personally participated in. That’s suspicious.
- “The document speaks for itself” — a dodge, not an answer.
- “Denied as stated” — vague and potentially improper.
If the answer contains improper denials, you can move to strike under Rule 12(f) or raise it at trial.
Affirmative Defenses
The answer will list affirmative defenses. Common ones in § 1983:
- Qualified immunity
- Failure to state a claim
- Statute of limitations
- Failure to exhaust (for prisoner cases)
- Good faith
- Comparative/contributory fault
These tell you what the defendant plans to argue. Prepare accordingly.
Counterclaims
The defendant can assert counterclaims against you in the answer. This is rare in § 1983 cases but not unheard of — cities occasionally countersue for property damage or other costs.
Key Rules
- Rule 8(b) — Defenses; admissions and denials
- Rule 8(c) — Affirmative defenses
- Rule 12(a) — Time to answer