Isaias Tessema v. Catherine Ann Moulthrop

CourtCourt of Appeals of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 30, 2025
Docket0865244
StatusPublished

This text of Isaias Tessema v. Catherine Ann Moulthrop (Isaias Tessema v. Catherine Ann Moulthrop) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Isaias Tessema v. Catherine Ann Moulthrop, (Va. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA

Present: Judges O’Brien, Ortiz and Friedman PUBLISHED

Argued by videoconference

ISAIAS TESSEMA OPINION BY v. Record No. 0865-24-4 JUDGE DANIEL E. ORTIZ SEPTEMBER 30, 2025 CATHERINE ANN MOULTHROP

FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF FAIRFAX COUNTY David Bernhard, Judge1

John S. Koehler (Christopher M. Di Riso; Kenneth LaDuca; Kenneth A. Koppelman; The Law Office of James Steele, PLLC; Price Benowitz, LLP, on briefs), for appellant.

(Alicia L. Summers; Desmond L. Rice; Ramika D. Stephens & Associates, on brief), for appellee.

James L. Hoyle (Robert E. Worst; Kalbaugh, Pfund & Messersmith, P.C., on briefs), for Erie Insurance Company.

A voluntary nonsuit is a “powerful tactical weapon” in a plaintiff’s arsenal. Temple v.

Mary Washington Hosp., Inc., 288 Va. 134, 140 (2014). But it does not allow a plaintiff to keep

one foot on the boat and one foot on the dock. Whether by amendment or nonsuit, a plaintiff

seeking to cure a misnomer must satisfy the protective preconditions of Code § 8.01-6. Isaias

Tessema cannot show that, as required by § 8.01-6, Catherine Ann Moulthrop or her agent

received notice of the institution of the action within the statute of limitations. Tessema’s

refiled complaint therefore cannot relate back to the date of his first filing, so the statute of

limitations bars his claim. For that reason, we affirm the circuit court’s judgment.

1 Judge David Bernhard presided over the proceedings below. Now a member of this Court, Judge Bernhard took no part in this decision. BACKGROUND

On April 15, 2017, Catherine Ann Moulthrop and Isaias Tessema were involved in a

vehicle-bicycle collision. Moulthrop was the driver, and Tessema was the cyclist. On June 15,

2017, State Farm responded to a claim inquiry from Tessema. The letter to Tessema’s counsel

identified “Catherine A. Moulthrop” as “[o]ur insured,” and said, “We have carefully considered

the facts of this accident. Based on our investigation, we do not believe our insured was legally

liable for your damages. In the absence of legal liability, we could not be justified in making

settlement. Therefore, we must deny payment of this claim.”

Two years later and just shy of the statute of limitations, Tessema filed a complaint on

April 9, 2019, against “Katherine A. Illingworth AKA Katherine A. Multhrop.” Then, on

January 2, 2020, Tessema served the complaint on Illingworth, née Moulthrop—a woman living

in Colorado with no connection to the accident. The next day, Illingworth notified Tessema’s

counsel that she was not the correct party in the suit. So, Tessema moved the Fairfax Circuit

Court for leave to amend his complaint and correct a misnomer under Code § 8.01-6. In his

motion, Tessema claimed that State Farm was on notice of the claim since 2017. Notably absent

from the motion and supporting affidavit, however, is any claim or evidence informing the court

that Moulthrop or State Farm had notice of the institution of Tessema’s action. But, by order

entered February 5, 2020, the court granted the motion, deemed Tessema’s amended complaint

filed as of February 5, 2020, and related the amended complaint back to the original filing date.

“Katherine A. Illingworth AKA Katherine A. Multhrop” was dismissed from the case.2

Tessema then served Catherine Ann Moulthrop with the amended complaint around July

20, 2020. Moulthrop filed a plea in bar, arguing that Tessema’s motion to amend and the court’s

2 Catherine Ann Moulthrop was not given notice of this motion or hearing and therefore did not respond or appear. -2- February 2020 order incorrectly concluded that there was a misnomer, that the complaint should

not relate back to the first filing, and that the statute of limitations barred Tessema’s claim. But,

before the court could hear the motion, Tessema nonsuited the case.

Tessema filed a new action against Moulthrop on December 10, 2021. Moulthrop was

served on October 29, 2022. She filed another plea in bar, again arguing that the naming mistake

was a misjoinder, not a misnomer, and that the statute of limitations barred Tessema’s claim.

Tessema also served Erie Insurance, the uninsured carrier, with the complaint on December 27,

2022. Moulthrop and Erie Insurance then filed a joint memorandum in support of the plea in bar,

adding arguments challenging the February 2020 order amending and relating back Tessema’s

complaint.

After argument on the motion, the circuit court issued a letter opinion and final order.

The court first found that it was not bound by the February 2020 order from another judge on the

court despite Tessema’s intervening nonsuit. Because it was unclear from the record whether the

requirements of Code § 8.01-6 were met, and Moulthrop was denied an opportunity to be heard

on the motion because of the nonsuit, the court held that the prior order was voidable error; it

could thus revisit the issue raised in Moulthrop’s most recent plea in bar.

The court then ruled for Moulthrop. First, it found that the naming mistake was a

misnomer rather than a misjoinder. It reasoned that “[s]o long as the intended entity to be

identified in an automobile accident is the driver and the complaint sufficiently alleges the driver

solely committed the tort, any mistake in name is a misnomer.” The complaint “identified the

correct entity . . . —the driver—and alleged all tortious activities were against that single entity,”

and there was enough specificity in the complaint to conclude that Tessema intended to bring the

action against that driver. That said, the court held that Tessema’s nonsuit to correct the

misnomer was “not a shelter from” the protective preconditions of § 8.01-6(i)-(iv).

-3- Analyzing § 8.01-6(ii), the court found that an “identity of interest” exists between all

insurance companies and their insureds, such that notice to State Farm here could generally be

imputed to Moulthrop. But Tessema could not show timely notice to State Farm of the

institution of the action within the statute of limitations that could be imputed to Moulthrop. The

court also found that, under § 8.01-6(iii), the delayed notice to Moulthrop would prejudice her in

defending the merits of the claim. As a result, Tessema’s amendment correcting the misnomer

did not relate back to the filing of the original complaint under § 8.01-6, and the statute of

limitations barred Tessema’s claim. The court sustained Moulthrop’s plea in bar and dismissed

Tessema’s complaint with prejudice.3

Tessema appeals.

STANDARD OF REVIEW

“A plea in bar asserts a single issue, which, if proved, creates a bar to a plaintiff’s

recovery.” Cornell v. Benedict, 301 Va. 342, 349 (2022) (quoting Massenburg v. City of

Petersburg, 298 Va. 212, 216 (2019)). “[W]hen a trial court hears no evidence on a matter

raised in a plea in bar, ‘the trial court, and the appellate court upon review, must rely solely upon

the pleadings in resolving the issue presented.’” Our Lady of Peace, Inc. v. Morgan, 297 Va.

832, 850 n.8 (2019) (quoting Tomlin v. McKenzie, 251 Va. 478, 480 (1996)); cf. Cornell, 301 Va.

at 349 (“[I]f evidence is presented ore tenus, the circuit court’s factual findings ‘are accorded the

weight of a jury finding and will not be disturbed on appeal unless they are plainly wrong or

without evidentiary support.’” (quoting Massenburg, 298 Va. at 216)). And “[w]hen the plea in

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