Doe v. Mississippi Blood Services, Inc.
This text of 704 So. 2d 1016 (Doe v. Mississippi Blood Services, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
T. DOE, Individually, and in Her Capacity as One of the Wrongful Death Beneficiaries of D. Doe
v.
MISSISSIPPI BLOOD SERVICES, INC.
Supreme Court of Mississippi.
*1017 T. Roe Frazer, II, Langston Frazer Sweet & Freese, Jackson, for appellant.
John P. Sneed, Phelps Dunbar, Jackson, Walker W. Jones, III, Jackson, for appellee.
Before PRATHER, P.J., and JAMES L. ROBERTS, Jr. and MILLS, JJ.
MILLS, Justice, for the Court:
¶ 1. This appeal deals solely with the application of Rules 9(h) and 15(c)(2) of the Mississippi Rules of Civil Procedure. From an Order of the Hinds County Circuit Court granting the motion to dismiss and for summary judgment filed by Mississippi Blood Services, Inc., T. Doe appeals.
I.
FACTS
¶ 2. In October of 1983, D. Doe received a blood transfusion while undergoing a hysterectomy at Forrest General Hospital. She was diagnosed with AIDS in September of 1987 and died as a result of the disease on January 1, 1991.
¶ 3. The plaintiff began efforts to determine the true parties to this action on December 27, 1993, when Ginny Y. Kennedy, a paralegal of plaintiff's counsel contacted the United Blood Services of Mississippi office at Forrest General Hospital by telephone. She was told by "a person who answered the phone" that "United Blood Services of Mississippi had been providing blood and blood products to Forrest General Hospital for `many years.' She was not one hundred percent certain whether United Blood Services of Mississippi had provided blood to Forrest General Hospital in 1982 and 1983, but stated that United Blood Services of Mississippi probably did." The plaintiff requested hospital records for the first time on December 28, 1993. This request was cancelled on January 4, 1994.
¶ 4. T. Doe, the daughter of the deceased, filed a wrongful death claim on December 30, 1993, against United Blood Services of Mississippi, American Association of Blood Banks, and John Does 1-50. The parties to this action agree that the applicable statute of limitations would have run on January 1, 1994.
¶ 5. On February 2, 1994, United Blood Services removed the case to federal court and then sought to be dismissed from the action alleging that it did not supply the blood during the questioned time period. On July 8, 1994, T. Doe moved ore tenus to dismiss United and to join Mississippi Blood Services, Inc., a Mississippi corporation. On July 29, 1994, the plaintiff amended her complaint naming Mississippi Blood Services, Inc., and the federal court remanded the case to the Circuit Court of Hinds County.
¶ 6. Upon motion by the defendant, Mississippi Blood Services, Inc., Judge Coleman dismissed the action on December 2, 1994, finding that the "plaintiff did not have MBS listed as a substitute for a John Doe defendant" and that the plaintiff was "not reasonably diligent in obtaining the collector, etc., of the blood."
II.
LAW
A. THE PLAINTIFF FAILED TO PROPERLY SUBSTITUTE MISSISSIPPI BLOOD SERVICES, INC. FOR A FICTITIOUS PARTY.
¶ 7. The plaintiff failed to properly substitute Mississippi Blood Services, Inc. for *1018 a fictitious party. Mississippi Blood Services, Inc. was joined seven months after the three-year statute of limitations expired on the wrongful death cause of action. The appellant asserts that she properly substituted Mississippi Blood Services, Inc. for one of the John Doe defendants thereby enjoying the relation back provisions of Mississippi Rules of Civil Procedure 15(c) and 9(h). However, the record belies this assertion.
¶ 8. On July 8, 1994, the plaintiff moved for the voluntary dismissal of United Blood Services. In the same motion, the plaintiff requested leave to amend her complaint and named Mississippi Blood Services, Inc. The amended complaint simply replaced all references to United Blood Services with Mississippi Blood Services, Inc. All fifty unnamed fictitious defendants remained.
¶ 9. Rule 9(h) sets forth the following requirements for naming fictitious parties:
(h) Fictitious Parties. When a party is ignorant of the name of an opposing party and so alleges in his pleading, the opposing party may be designated by any name, and when his true name is discovered the process and all pleadings and proceedings in the action may be amended by substituting the true name and giving proper notice to the opposing party.
Mississippi Rules of Civil Procedure 9(h). However, if one joins a new party without meeting the requirements set forth in Miss. Rules Civ. Pro. 9(h), the new party must be served prior to the running of the statute of limitations. In this case, the plaintiff merely substituted Mississippi Blood Services, Inc. for a named party, United Blood Services. The complaint filed against Mississippi Blood Services, Inc. was identical to the one filed against United Blood Services with only the names switched. In the amended complaint, the plaintiff continued to name all John Does found in the original complaint.
¶ 10. In Schultz v. Romanace, 906 S.W.2d 393, 395 (Mo. Ct. App. 1995), when faced with an analogous situation, the Missouri Court of Appeals refused to allow the joinder of two new parties after the running of the statute of limitations. On appeal, the plaintiff asserted that the new parties were substitutions for named John Does; however, the plaintiff added the new names "without deleting any fictitious name that was included in the original petition." Missouri found this was merely an attempt to join new parties after the expiration of the statute of limitations. Schultz, 906 S.W.2d at 395-96. In the case sub judice, the plaintiff is also attempting to characterize the joinder of a new party after the running of the statute of limitations as a substitution for a fictitious party. However, as in Schultz, all 50 originally named John Does remain. We find that the plaintiff improperly substituted Mississippi Blood Services, Inc. for United Blood Services, not for a fictitiously named defendant.
B. THE PLAINTIFF FAILED TO EXERCISE REASONABLE DILIGENCE TO ASCERTAIN THE TRUE PARTIES TO THE CAUSE OF ACTION PRIOR TO THE RUNNING OF THE STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS.
¶ 11. In addition to the plaintiff's failure to properly substitute parties, the claim was further properly dismissed due to the plaintiff's failure to timely determine proper parties. This Court, in Womble v. Singing River Hosp., 618 So.2d 1252, 1266-68 (Miss. 1993), fashioned a "reasonable diligence" test to determine the proper substitution of unknown parties. On March 28, 1988, nine (9) days before the running of the applicable statute of limitations, Womble filed a medical malpractice claim naming Singing River Hospital, the hospital's board of trustees, and Singing River Hospital's emergency room physicians and nurses (John Does 1-5) as defendants. Upon discovering the names of the emergency room physicians, the plaintiff substituted the doctors for the John Doe defendants. This Court refused to apply Rule 9(h) stating that:
there were numerous medical records on file at SRH indicating the extent to which Doctors Weatherall, Longmire, and Calhoun had participated in the treatment of Helen Womble. A reasonably diligent inquiry by the appellants into the history of the deceased's medical treatment would have revealed to appellants the identities of the persons they sought to identify categorically
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704 So. 2d 1016, 1997 WL 604244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doe-v-mississippi-blood-services-inc-miss-1997.