Timothy Wardrop filed suit in an Indiana state court more than seven years ago against Elan Motorsports Technologies Racing Corp., which for reasons that will shortly become clear we’ll call “Elan Corp.” The suit charged breach of a written employment contract (plus an oral commission contract that we can ignore). The defendant removed the case to federal district court under the diversity jurisdiction. The written contract states that the parties are Wardrop and Elan Motorsports Technologies, Inc., which we’ll call “Elan Inc.” It is a separate corporation from Elan Corp. though affiliated with it. Why an enterprise would give two of its corporations so nearly identical names (functionally identical, since “Corp.” and “Inc.” are alternative ways of designating a corporation) is a puzzle we needn’t try to solve.
Elan Corp., the named defendant, filed an answer, and pretrial discovery ensued. Eventually Wardrop (who at some point in this protracted litigation went bankrupt and was succeeded as plaintiff by his trustee in bankruptcy, another detail we can ignore) discovered that his contract was indeed with Elan Inc. and not Elan Corp. He sought leave to amend the complaint to change the defendant to Elan Inc. with relation back to the date of the original complaint, the statute of limitations having meanwhile expired. Relation back is permitted in several circumstances, including when “the party to be brought in by amendment: (i) received such notice of the action that it will not be prejudiced in
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defending on the merits; and (ii) knew or should have known that the action would have been brought against it, but for a mistake concerning the proper party’s identity.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(c)(1)(C). A party who is on notice long before the statute of limitations expires that he is an intended defendant, and who suffers no harm from the failure to have been named as a defendant at the outset, is in the same position as a defendant sued within the statute of limitations. The public policy expressed in a statute of limitations is therefore not undermined by relation back in the circumstances specified in the federal rule. See
Dixon Ticonderoga Co. v. Estate of O’Connor,
Another situation in which relation back is permitted is where the law of the jurisdiction that creates the applicable statute of limitations, which in this case is Indiana, permits relation back. Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(c)(1)(A); Committee Note to 1991 Amendment;
Arendt v. Vetta Sports, Inc.,
The district judge ruled that the proposed amended complaint did not relate back. He quoted from our decision in
Hall v. Norfolk Southern Ry.,
Even if the refusal to allow relation back had been correct (it wasn’t, as we’re about to see), the dismissal of the suit on the ground that the parties had no controversy would have been incorrect. Rule 15(c) is about relation back of amendments; it is not about whether to permit an amendment, which is the subject of Rules 15(a) and (b). Rule 15(a)(2), which governs amendments to pleadings before trial (and there hasn’t been a trial in this case, despite its age), allowed Wardrop to amend his complaint with the district court’s leave; the rule adds that “the court should freely give leave when justice so requires.” Amending the complaint to substitute the alleged contract breaker for the innocent affiliate was entirely proper; whether the amendment would relate back to the date when the original complaint was filed and thus defeat the defense of statute of limitations was a separate question. See
Arthur v. Maersk, Inc.,
It is more common, though slightly irregular, for a district court simply to “deny leave to amend based wholly or partially on [the court’s] belief that any amendment would not relate back.”
Slayton v. American Express Co.,
Inconsistently with his insistence that Elan Inc. is not a party, counsel for Elan Corp. defends the judge’s ruling denying leave to file an amended complaint with relation back even though the only beneficiary of the ruling is Elan Inc. He says that Elan Corp. “makes no argument on behalf of non-party [Elan Inc.],” and then proceeds to argue that the judge was right not to allow Elan Inc. to be added as a defendant, an argument relevant only to that firm.
Actually the judge was wrong about relation back, though it was a forced error because it was after he ruled on Wardrop’s motion to amend the original complaint that the Supreme Court in
Krupski v. Costa Crociere S.p.A.,
— U.S. -,
But the Supreme Court’s decision in
Krupski,
hewing closely to the language of Rule 15(c)(1)(C), has cut the ground out from under the district court’s decision. See also
United States ex rel. Miller v. Bill Harbert Int’l Construction, Inc.,
The fact that the plaintiff was careless in failing to discover his mistake is relevant to a defendant’s claim of prejudice; the longer the delay in amending the complaint was, the likelier the new defendant is to have been placed at a disadvantage in the litigation. But carelessness is no longer a ground independent of prejudice for refusing to allow relation back.
Elan Inc. knew that Wardrop meant to sue it rather than Elan Corp. He meant to sue the party to the employment contract with him and Elan Inc. was that party. The two corporations are pieces of a dizzying array of corporate entities all of which, it seems — or at least Elan Corp. and Elan Inc. — -are managed out of the same office. Elan Inc. is registered in Delaware and has an address and a registered agent in Delaware, as required of a Delaware corporation. But its operations are conducted from the same office in Georgia that houses Elan Corp. Wardrop traveled to that office many times during and in relation to the performance of his contract. His complaint was served on the employee of still another affiliate — but, as it happened, that was the person who “supervised, directed, and monitored” War-drop’s services under his contract with Elan Inc. The person was a de facto employee of Elan Inc. when supervising War-drop’s performance of his contract with that firm. But however we characterize his legal relation to Elan Inc., he had to know, as soon as he received the complaint, that Wardrop meant to sue Elan Inc. rather than Elan Corp. — knew that had it not been for the plaintiffs error, to which the confusing similarity of the corporate names doubtless contributed, Elan Inc. would have been named as the defendant. See
United States ex rel. Miller v. Bill Harbert Int’l Construction, Inc., supra,
Thus one of the two requirements for relation back was satisfied (knowledge by the “real” defendant); but so we think was the other requirement (prejudice), even though the district judge made no finding on whether Elan Inc. was harmed by the delay in Wardrop’s moving to substitute it as a defendant. Prejudice manufactured by a defendant is not a ground for refusing relation back. Cf.
Hafferman v. Westinghouse Electric Corp.,
So the decision of the district court must be reversed with directions to allow the amended complaint, substituting Elan Inc. as defendant with relation back to the date of the original complaint.
The amended complaint differs from the original complaint in other respects as well as the defendant’s name, however, and on remand the district judge will have to consider whether those differences warrant rejection of the amended complaint, as Elan Inc. argues. Granted, the fact that the amended complaint adds new legal theories (as distinct from new claims,
Doe v. Howe Military School,
But there is a new claim in the amended complaint: a claim of quantum meruit, which might allow an award of damages based on the market value of the services that Wardrop rendered to Elan Inc. even if he failed to prove a breach of contract, if he rendered those services with a reasonable expectation of being compensated for them.
Wallace v. Long,
Reversed and Remanded.
