OPINION
This сase came before the Court pursuant to an order directing the parties to appear and show cause why the issues raised in the plaintiffs appeal from a final judgment entered in the Superior Court in favor of the defendant, Robinson Green Beretta Corporation, should not be summarily decided.
After hearing the arguments of counsel and considering the memoranda submitted by the parties, we are of the opinion that cause has not been shown. The issues raised in this appeal will be decided at this time.
On November 6, 1984, plaintiff, Charles E. Hall (Hall), a police officer, fell in a stairwell at the East Providence police station. On October 16, 1987, Hall filed a civil action for negligence in the Superior Court against DeStefano Building Co. and a John Doe Corporation. On May 9, 1989 Hall amended his complaint by adding Insurance Company of North America in place of the previously designated “John Doe” defendant. The amended complaint did not include any “John Doe” designated defendants. In August of 1991, three years and nine months after the limitation pеriod on his claim had expired, Hall, once again, amended his complaint this time to name and include Robinson Green Berretta Corporation (RGB) as a party defendant.
A Superior Court motion justice therеafter granted summary judgment in favor of RGB holding in part that Hall’s failure to- avail himself of the provisions of G.L.1956 § 9-5-20 (permitting the naming of “John Doe” defendants) precluded RGB from being joined in Hall’s second amended complaint. On appeal we reversed in
Hall v. Insurance Company of North America,
Hall now contends that the question of whether he had exercised due diligence was a question of material fact that should have been determined on remand by a trial jury and not by the trial justice. We conclude, however, that he misconstrues the intent and purpose of our earlier order in Hall I as well as our ease law on this subject.
In the earlier Hall I order, we said with regard to the question of whether due diligence had been exercised by Hall:
“We believe that it is a question of fact to determine whether due diligence was exercised. It is, of course, impossible to determine a question of fact on a motion for summary judgment. This question of fact should be determined by a justice of the Superior Court as a preliminary issue preceding the determinаtion of whether the statute of limitations had run prior to the addition of this defendant.”666 A.2d at 806 . (Emphasis added.)
Later, in
Grossi v. Miriam Hosp.,
We decided
Grossi
on the basis of the particular facts present in that case. The facts in
Grossi
did not permit of only one rеasonable inference to be drawn with regard to whether
Grossi
had exercised due diligence in ascertaining the existence and whereabouts of Dr. Lonks. Due diligence, like negligence, is often a mixed question of law and fact.
DeNardo v. Fairmount Foundries Cranston, Inc.,
Thus, Hall I and Grossi establish that it is at times proper for a motion or trial justice to determine “as a preliminary issue” whether a plaintiff has acted with due diligence in discovering the identity of a previously unknown defendant and in joining that defendant as a party, and the court may do so in a separate, evidentiary proceeding preliminary to a consideration of a summary judgment motion.
Our Rule 15 of the Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure (governing the amendment of pleadings) is virtually identical to its federal analogue, Rule 15 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. We have repeatedly stаted that federal-court interpretations of a procedural rule that is substantially similar to one of our own state rules of civil procedure should serve as a guide to the construction of our own rule.
See, e.g., Smith v. Johns-Manville Corp.,
In Wilson, the First Circuit Court noted thаt Rule 15(c)(3) (which is virtually identical to our Rule 15(c)):
“permits an amendment to relate back only where there has been an error made concerning the identity of the proper party and where that party is сhargeable with knowledge of the mistake, but it does not permit relation back where, as here, there is a lack of knowledge of the proper party.”23 F.3d at 563 (quoting Wood,618 F.2d at 1230 ).
Thus, we perceive in a case such as that now before us, where Hall had added RGB as a new party to his pеnding ease and where RGB moved for summary judgment to challenge the amended complaint based upon statute of limitation grounds, that a two-step procedure may be employed by the hearing justice. Prior tо making any final ruling on the motion for summary judgment, the hearing justice may first, as a preliminary factual matter, determine whether the plaintiff, prior to adding the new defendant to his action by amending the complaint, had acted with due diligence in discovering the identity of the previously unknown defendant. The question of whether a statute of limitations has run against a plaintiff’s claim is, of course, a *670 question of law, but in deciding that question of law, it is often necessary for the motion or trial justice to first find preliminаry facts before deciding a question of law. If the hearing justice should find that due diligence had not been exercised, that finding, in itself, can serve as sufficient basis upon which to deny relation back of the amended сomplaint and to later grant summary judgment as a matter of law in favor of the newly added party. If, on the other hand, the hearing justice should find that the facts suggest that due diligence had been exercised in discovering the identity of the previously unknown defendant (or as John Doe designated defendant), the hearing justice, must then before upholding the amended complaint and permitting its relation back to the date of the filing of the оriginal complaint, take up and determine two additional factors when passing upon the motion for summary judgment. Those two factors set out in Rules 15 and 4 of the Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure would be (1) whether within 120 days after the commencement of the plaintiffs action the added party had received such notice of the filing of the action so as not to have been prejudiced in maintaining a defense on thе merits, (2) whether within that 120 day period the party knew or should have known that but for the plaintiffs mistake concerning his or her identity, he or she would have been named a party in the original complaint.
In this case, upon our remand to the motion justice for his determination of the preliminary due diligence factual issue, he found:
“This Court concludes * * * that the word ‘diligent’ cannot be used to describe the efforts of this plaintiff after commеncing suit with the identification of a John Doe to learn the identity of that John Doe. ‘Feeble’ is more apt. * * * The plaintiff can’t pretend to suggest to the Court that there was no architect on the job. He can’t рretend to claim that the engagement of that architect was not a matter of public record. He can’t contend to the Court that something was wrong or missing in the records of City Hall as a result of the signal from thе city solicitor. He certainly can’t pretend to be ignorant of the fact that there had to be disclosure in the public media of the dedication of the newly-renovated police department. * * * Evеn the simplest site visit by the plaintiff or a representative of the plaintiff to the place where the plaintiff claims to have been injured would have brought the plaintiff or his representative into plain view of the dedicatory plaque. And the plaintiffs search would have been at an end.”
In light of that clear finding, the motion justice then properly proceeded to consider and grant the defendant’s summary judgment motiоn. It is clear from his decision that the evidence Hall presented to him at the remand hearing utterly failed to show that Hall had exercised any reasonable degree of due diligence in attempting to learn of the participation of RGB in the design of the stairwell in question for a period in excess of three years after the statute of limitations on his claim against RGB had already expired. Our review of the recоrd reveals no basis for us to conclude that the Superior Court erred in making that preliminary factual determination and in then granting RGB’s motion for summary judgment.
Accordingly, for all the foregoing reasons, the appeal is denied and dismissed. The final judgment appealed from is affirmed. The papers in this case are remanded to the Superior Court.
