83 A.D.2d 61 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1981
This is an action to recover damages for libel. In early 1978 the plaintiff, Peter Brock, was the general manager of the Sheraton Plaza Inn in the City of New Rochelle. The individual defendant, William Bua, was the president and a stockholder of the defendant Jaguar Graphics, Inc. Defendant Bua met and spoke with plaintiff concerning a program of local advertising to promote the hotel’s banquet and other facilities. On May 5, 1978 Bua wrote a letter to the senior vice-president for public relations of the Sheraton Corporation upon the letterhead of “Jaguar Graphics, Inc.” and signed it as “President” of Jaguar. The letter alleged that Jaguar had prepared a newspaper advertisement and a brochure, and that Brock had run the newspaper advertisement but had not paid for it and had plagiarized the brochure. The letter claimed that Brock was “a brash, rude discourteous and possibly dishonest young man.”
On July 7, 1978 plaintiff commenced this action by serving defendant Bua with a summons and complaint naming him as the only defendant and charging that the letter of May 5, 1978 was libelous.
On December 18,1979 plaintiff’s motion for leave to add Jaguar Graphics, Inc., as a party defendant and to serve a supplemental summons and amended complaint upon it was granted without opposition. The supplemental summons and amended complaint were served upon the corporation on January 17, 1980. The amended complaint, in substance, reiterated the allegations of libel against defendant Bua, and alleged that the defamation in the letter of May 5,1978 was uttered in connection with the business of the corporate defendant. The answer of Jaguar Graphics, which was served on or about February 19, 1980, denied the material allegations of the complaint and, inter alia, asserted the affirmative defense of the Statute of Limitations.
By notice of motion dated April 22, 1980, defendant Jaguar Graphics moved to dismiss the amended complaint against it upon the ground that plaintiff’s claim was
The appeal of the defendant Jaguar Graphics presents the question of when a claim asserted against a new party in an amended pleading is to be deemed interposed. Discussion of this issue requires a basic understanding of the purposes behind the Statute of Limitations. Those purposes are more fully discussed in Connell v Hayden (83 AD2d 30), but suffice it to say that the salient reason for limiting the time within which an action may be brought concerns the effect of long time delays upon the availability and reliability of evidence and the consequent prejudice to the fair and accurate determination of factual disputes (see 1 Weinstein-Korn-Miller, NY Civ Prac, par 201.01, p 2-7). Statutes of Limitation were devised “to afford protection to defendants against defending stale claims after a reasonable period of time had elapsed during which a person of ordinary diligence would bring an action.” (Flanagan v Mount Eden Gen. Hosp., 24 NY2d 427, 429.) In short, the Statute of Limitations presumes that a proper investigation and preparation of a defense cannot
Special Term relied upon subdivision (e) of CPLR 203 to hold that the date of interposition of plaintiff’s claim against Jaguar Graphics related back to the date that the claim asserted in the original complaint was interposed against defendant Bua. That subdivision had no counterpart in prior practice statutes. It was recommended by the drafters of the CPLR merely “to overcome the effect of Harriss v. Tams” (258 NY 229) and related cases (see Second Preliminary Report of Advisory Commission on Practice and Procedure, 1958, p 51). In the Harriss case the Court of Appeals held that interposition of a claim asserted for the first time in an amended pleading did not relate back to the date of service of the summons for purposes of the Statute of Limitations if it “introduced a cause of action upon a different obligation or liability, and for different conduct from that specified in the original complaint.” (258 NY, at p 243.) Harriss involved only the assertion of a new legal theory against a person already a party and not the addition of a new party. At its core was the view that a defendant need only investigate the underlying facts insofar as they were relevant to the allegations of the cause of action asserted in the original complaint and that an amendment which changed legal theories and was based upon “different” conduct would prejudice a defendant by requiring a belated investigation of other factual circumstances after the expiration of the Statute of Limitations (see 258 NY, at pp 244-245).
By overruling Harriss v Tams (supra), the practical effect of subdivision (e) of CPLR 203 was to necessitate that a defendant now make a comprehensive timely examination of all the facts regarding the transactions, occurrences, or series of transactions or occurrences of which the plaintiff’s complaint gives notice, rather than confining his preparation of a defense to only those facts disclosed in plaintiff’s complaint. If the plaintiff then subsequently sought to amend his complaint to allege new causes of action arising from those transactions or occurrences, the defendant could no longer rely upon the Statute of Limitations but he would be able to prepare a defense to them on
In the case of Shaw v Cock (78 NY 194) it was held that in order for claim interposition against a codefendant to relate back to the date of timely service upon a defendant with whom he is united in interest, the codefendant must have been named in the process previously served upon the defendant. In discussing section 99 of the Code of Procedure of 1848; the predecessor of the unity of interest rule now contained in CPLR 203 (subd [b]), the Court of Appeals there stated, in relevant part (supra, pp 197-198): “It is plain from the language of section ninety-nine that it only applies to defendants who are parties to the action constructively commenced by the delivery of the summons to the sheriff at the time of such delivery, or who' are made parties before the statute has run against the claim upon which the action is brought. The delivery of a summons to the sheriff will not prevent the running of the statute in favor of persons who, although they may be liable upon the obligations upon which the action is brought, are not named as defendants in the summons, and it can make no difference whether the omission was by design or through ignorance, mistake or inadvertence. The commencement of an action against A. upon a cause of action against B. will not arrest the running of the statute against the latter. Where several persons are jointly liable upon contract or otherwise and a suit is brought against a part only of the
Because Jaguar Graphics was first named in a supplemental summons and was not denominated a party defendant in the summons served upon defendant Bua, the rule in Shaw v Cock (supra) would prevent the application of the unity of interest rule in this case. The holding in Shaw rests upon the notion that “fairness” requires potential defendants to be apprised of legal action against them within a fixed and certain period of time after the underlying event or transaction (see Hogan, California’s Unique Doe Defendant Practice: A Fiction Stranger Than Truth, 30 Stanford L Rev 51, 88-89; Ann., 8 ALR2d 6, 112-115).
Shaw v Cock (supra) was decided more than 100 years ago, in 1879, at a time of much greater legal formalism than now prevails. It focused solely upon whether the codefendant’s name appeared upon a summons when that paper was timely served upon the defendant, despite the fact that the codefendant was not served and did not thereby receive actual knowledge that, plaintiff had commenced an action against him until after the expiration of the Statute of Limitations. It is our view that the old mechanistic rule of Shaw v Cock (and its progeny in this
In considering whether the defense of the Statute of Limitations should bar a plaintiff’s claim against a new party, the Federal courts adopted a three-pronged test later codified in subdivision (c) of rule 15 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure (see cases cited in Note: Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 15[c]: Relation Back of Amendments, 57 Minn L Rev 83, 91-93, ns 34-35, and accompanying text; 3 Moore, Federal Practice [2d ed], par 15.15 [4.-1], [4.-2]; cf. Board of Trustees of Common School Dist. No. 2 of Town of Dickinson v Commissioner of Educ. of State of N. Y., 40 AD2d 239, affd 33 NY2d 601; Matter of Ferry v Boniface, 43 AD2d 758). A similar test should be applied in
The third prong requires the plaintiff to show that his failure to join the proper parties at the outset was not due to his own inexcusable neglect (see 3 Moore, Federal Practice [2d ed], par 15.15 [4.-1], p 15-221; Nayer v Robertshaw-Fulton Controls Co., 195 F Supp 704). In so doing the rule recognizes the desirability of commencing an action against all defendants within the period of limitation and it excuses the belated commencement thereof against one or more defendants united in interest with a defendant who was timely served only if the delay in adding the new defendant or defendants is not attributable to the plaintiff. Where the identity of potential defendants who are united in interest is known to the plaintiff he must treat them equally by bringing timely suit against them all, thereby
In addition, the third prong of the foregoing test also involves the subsidiary purpose of the Statute of Limitations as one which puts stale claims to repose, thereby freeing a potential defendant from the fear that his involvement in events of the distant past may be the subject of litigation against him. This aspect of the Statute of Limitations reflects a social policy designed to give security and stability to human affairs and thereby to allow an individual or entity to plan for the future free from old claims and obligations. Thus, where such a potential defendant knows that other persons have been subjected to timely suit arising out of an incident in which his participation was manifest to the aggrieved party, he should quite justifiably be entitled to conclude that the failure to also bring suit against him within the period of limitations means that for whatever reason his trespasses have been forgiven by the plaintiff and that the matter has been laid to rest as far as he is concerned. Conversely, where such a
We now turn to an application of the test enunciated above to the facts of this case. It is clear that the claim against both defendants arises out of the same transaction, namely the preparation of the promotional material and the allegedly libelous letter the defendants sent to plaintiff’s superior when he refused to pay. Defendant Bua is the president of Jaguar Graphics, and although plaintiff commenced this action against him only in his individual capacity, his knowledge of the pendency of the action must be charged to the corporation with whom he is united in interest. The third prong of the test has not been met, however, for the simple reason that the allegedly libelous letter was written on stationery bearing the corporate letterhead and was signed by defendant Bua as “President, Jaguar Graphics, Inc.” Plaintiff cannot possibly have been mistaken as to the identity of the corporation as a proper party to sue (see Ingenito v Bermec Corp., 441 F Supp 525, 553). Plaintiff could and should have commenced this action against Jaguar Graphics within the one-year period specified in CPLR 215 (subd 3).
Accordingly the order under review should be modified. The defense of the Statute of Limitations asserted in the answer of defendant Jaguar Graphics was well taken, its motion for summary judgment dismissing plaintiff’s amended complaint against it should have been granted, that branch of plaintiff’s cross motion seeking to strike its
Mollen, P. J., Hopkins, Weinstein and Thompson, JJ., concur.
Order of the Supreme Court, Westchester County, entered August 19,1980, modified, on the law, (1) by deleting the provisions which denied the motion of Jaguar Graphics, Inc., for summary judgment dismissing the complaint and granted the branch of plaintiff’s cross motion which sought to strike the Statute of Limitations defense pleaded by the corporate defendant, and (2) by substituting therefor provisions granting the motion for summary judgment and denying the aforesaid branch of the cross motion. As so modified, order affirmed, with $50 costs and disbursements to Jaguar Graphics, Inc.
In Trybus v Nipark Realty Corp. (26 AD2d 563) the issue of the applicability of CPLR 203 (subd [e]) to amendments involving new parties arose in connection with a proposed amendment against a third-party defendant. In that case A sued B and, within the period of limitation for A’s main claim, B impleaded C as a third-party defendant, serving him with a third-party complaint and a copy of A’s original complaint against B (see CPLR 1007). After expiration of the period of limitations, A sought to amend his complaint to allege a cause of action against C as well, and the latter raised the Statute of Limitations as a defense. It was argued that under CPLR 203 (subd [e]) the date of the interposition of A’s claim against C should relate back to the date of interposition of his claim against B, but the majority of this court in Trybus held that it did not, stating that: “the claim sought to be asserted in the proposed amended complaint did not relate back to the date of service of the original complaint, pursuant to CPLR 203 (subd. [e]), since the original pleading did not give notice to appellant ‘of the transactions, occurrences, or series of transactions or occurrences, to be proved pursuant to the amended pleading’.” (Trybus v Nipark Realty Corp., supra, p 564; emphasis added.) Mr. Justice Hopkins dissented in Trybus, arguing that C had notice of the transactions to be proved within the time limited for the commencement of an action against him by A. Thereafter, Professor McLaughlin, in his practice commentaries to McKinney’s CPLR (McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 7B, CPLR, C203:11, p 124) suggested, apparently upon the basis of the dissent in Trybus, that, at the least, the date of claim interposition should relate back to the date upon which C was added as a third-party defendant and was served with a copy of A’s original complaint against B, thereby giving notice of the transactions underlying A’s suit. The Appellate Division, Fourth Department, adopted Professor McLaughlin’s reasoning in Lancaster Silo & Block Co. v Northern Propane Gas Co. (75 AD2d 55, 60; contra Knorr v City of Albany, 58 AD2d 904; Ward v Marino, 64 Misc 2d 44, affd 37 AD2d 698). The argument that the relation back of the date of claim interposition provided for in CPLR 203 (subd [e]) should be to the date B added C as a third-party defendant rather than to the date A’s claim was interposed against B, was not specifically considered by either the majority or dissent in Trybus, and we do not propose to pass on it now. We note, however, that while such a construction would be consistent with the purposes of the Statute of Limitations, because on the date C was added as a third-party defendant he received notice of the transactions or occurrences upon which A’s suit was based, the subdivision in question specifically states that the relation back shall be to “the time the claims in the original pleading [A’s complaint against B] were interposed” (CPLR 203, subd [e]; emphasis added). The instant case does not involve third-party practice, but Trybus applies here because it clearly holds that where a new party is added, CPLR 203 (subd [e]) will not permit a relation back to the date the plaintiff’s claims were interposed against the original defendant.