Robert Treat Rayner, plaintiff below, timely appeals a final summary judgment entered in favor of Irwin International, Inc., d/b/a Aircraft Spruce & Specialty Co. (“Specialty”), on statute of limitations grounds. Appellant argues that his August 25, 2008 amendment adding Specialty as a defendant should be considered timely under the relation back doctrine. The trial court found otherwise. Reviewing the matter de novo, we agree and affirm.
The underlying suit relates to an ultralight aircraft accident on August 18, 2001. Appellant alleged that his powered ultralight was being towed to altitude behind a plane owned by the Quest Air Soaring Center in Lake County, Florida, when the tow plane and/or its operator encountered problems and released the ultralight while it was in an uncontrolled descent — causing the ultralight to crash and Appellant to suffer severe, permanent injuries. Appellant attempted to deploy a parachute installed on the ultralight, but the parachute *819 failed to open in time to aid in the crash. Appellant had ordered the parachute through Specialty, a California-based distributor of aviation parts and pilot supplies owned by James and Elizabeth Irwin.
In May of 2004, Appellant timely filed suit only against Quest Air Soaring Center, Inc. The deadline for pursuing a cause of action sounding in tort under Florida’s four-year statute of limitations was August 18, 2005. § 95.11(3)(e), Fla. Stat. (2009). Shortly before this deadline, Appellant’s trial attorney inquired about Appellant’s acquisition of the parachute, and received a response from James Irwin, the co-owner of Specialty, confirming that Appellant had ordered the parachute through Specialty. Irwin’s July 31, 2005 letter explained that Specialty had placed the order for direct delivery from the manufacturer to Appellant, and that Specialty did not have liability insurance. Irwin encouraged Appellant to bring any claim related to the parachute only against the manufacturer, Ballistic Recovery Systems, Inc., but accurately and correctly identified his company, Specialty, as the distributor.
On August 8, 2005, Appellant, through prior counsel, sought leave to amend his complaint to add the parachute’s manufacturer and distributor. However, the amended complaint incorrectly named another company co-owned by James Irwin as the distributor. The company actually sued was Aircraft-Spruce Advantage, Inc. (“Advantage”), an avionics installation company originally formed in 2003 and wholly-owned by Mark Krueger. After Appellant’s crash, but before Appellant sought to amend his complaint, James Irwin purchased fifty percent of the stock of this company from Krueger. The two businesses operate separately, in different cities, in California.
After the statute of limitations expired, Appellant’s motion for leave to amend was granted. And, ultimately, Advantage — the avionics installer owned by Irwin and Krueger — was served with the suit. Although served after the statute of limitations had run, this suit was deemed timely as to Advantage, because: (1) an amended complaint naming a new party is deemed to have been filed on the date the motion for leave to amend is filed; and (2) it is the filing date — and not the service date— which is controlling for limitations purposes.
See Totura & Co., Inc. v. Williams,
It was years later before Appellant sought leave to amend to add the distributor, Specialty, as a defendant. The trial court allowed Specialty to be added to the suit, but then granted summary judgment in favor of Specialty, finding that it had not been timely sued. This appeal followed.
Appellant is correct that the filing of an amended complaint to correct a misnomer relates back to the filing of the original complaint.
E.g., Cabot v. Clearwater Constr. Co.,
In the instant case, Appellant sought to do more than merely “correct a misnomer,” as asserted in Appellant’s motion to amend. Rather, Appellant sought to bring in an entirely new party years after the statute of limitations expired. The rule
1
which permits the relation back of amended pleadings generally does not apply where a new party is added.
Id.; see also, Patel v. School Bd. of Volusia County,
An exception to this general rule has been created by Florida’s district courts for separate parties with a sufficient “identity of interest,” such that the “addition will not prejudice the new party.”
Arnwine v. Huntington Nat. Bank, N.A,
In this case, the record shows that Specialty (the distributor) was not aware of the suit against Advantage (the avionics installer), until after the statute of limitations had run. Appellant argues that lack of prejudice is demonstrated because Specialty was placed on notice that it might be sued shortly before the statute of limitations expired. As we explained in
Patel:
“[a] claim is not necessarily a lawsuit ... [and it] does not follow that a law suit will always be filed [following notice of a claim].”
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Florida Rule of Civil Procedure 1.190(c) sets forth the relation back doctrine: "When the claim or defense asserted in the amended pleading arose out of the conduct, transaction, or occurrence set forth or attempted to be set forth in the original pleading, the amendment shall relate back to the date of the original pleading.’’
. We also note that Appellant’s failure to join the correct defendant was attributable solely to his own inexcusable neglect, given the undisputed fact that Specialty accurately identified itself as the proper party to sue before the statute of limitations expired.
See Galuppi v. Viele,
