Harvard Scientific Corporation (“HSC”) and its founder Jackie R. See claimed to be developing a new product to treat male and female sexual dysfunction. Dr. See touted HSC’s soon-to-be success in creating this product in a series of press releases and securities filings. This attracted an investment by RK Company (“RK”). Unfortunately, HSC’s claims of success were not true, and following a bench trial, the court found Dr. See violated federal and state securities laws, state deceptive practices law, and committed common law fraud. Dr. See appeals the judgment, and argues that RK Company is not the real party in interest, that the magistrate judge’s findings are clearly erroneous, and that the district court abused its discretion in admitting deposition testimony at trial. Dr. See also objects to the awarding of prejudgment interest and the calculation of attorneys’ fees to RK. We reject these arguments. Dr. See has waived any argument based on the real party in interest defense, the findings of liability were more than adequately supported, and there was no abuse of discretion in the awarding of prejudgment interest and attorneys’ fees. Dr. See has failed to include the transcript of the relevant motion hearing that led to the admitting of the deposition testimony, so we dismiss that claim as well. For these reasons, we affirm the court’s judgment.
I. BACKGROUND
Though there are a myriad of characters, family relations, and employees involved in this litigation and discussed in the briefs; we only recount those facts that are relevant to our analysis. In 1994, Dr. Jackie See founded HSC, a bio-pharmaceutical development company. Dr. See was HSC’s founder, largest shareholder, and served at various points on its board of directors, executive committee and management committee. He was also the director of research and development and intellectual property holder of lypohilized liposome prostaglandin E-l (“LLPGE-1”), the male sexual dysfunction product that HSC hoped to bring to the market.
To obtain approval to begin clinical trials and test LLPGE-1 on humans, the United States Food and Drug Administration (“FDA”) required HSC to submit an Investigational New Drug (“IND”) application. In an October 1997 meeting between Dr. See and the FDA, the FDA learned that HSC had falsified the findings of a study included in its IND application and told HSC that it must cease further clinical studies until an audit was completed. Despite this meeting and deepening investigations by the FDA throughout 1997 and 1998, HSC released various press releases touting its alleged successes. In November 1997, HSC claimed it had “accelerated its progress” towards the completion of clinical trials. In May 1998, HSC announced that a female dysfunction product was moving forward with its male product. *849 In June 1998, HSC released a statement that it had received notification from the FDA that it was free to initiate Phase II clinical trials, and in a separate release, announced it had developed a topically applied sexual dysfunction product. When these statements were released, the FDA clinical hold was still in effect and FDA investigations continued to increase. No clinical trials were moving forward on any products.
In addition to these press releases, HSC filed various forms with the United States Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”). In March 1998, for the fiscal year ending December 31, 1997, HSC stated that the Phase I trials of LLPGE-1 showed possible benefits of therapy and that HSC was in substantial compliance with all laws dming its October 1997 meeting with the FDA. In a March 1998 filing, for the fiscal quarter ending March 31, 1998, HSC announced plans for its female sexual dysfunction product using LLPGE1. Dr. See’s actual or electronic signature was on both filings.
In June 1998, Barbara Berry, who worked for HSC as its secretary and chief operating officer, was asked by Thomas Waite, HSC’s then-chief executive officer, to approach her father, Robert Krilich, about whether he would be interested in investing in HSC. Berry forwarded a solicitation letter to her brother, Robert Krilich, Jr., so that he could send information to their father, who was in prison at the time. 1 Krilich received her letter, as well as HSC’s SEC filings and press releases. In June and July of 1998, Krilich’s investment vehicle, RK Company, purchased 166,667 shares of stock from HSC for $500,000. RK was unable to resell this stock.
In 1999, following a press release acknowledging a May 18,1999 warning letter from the FDA, HSC stopped operations and went bankrupt. On June 25,1999, RK filed suit against HSC and a variety of HSC’s employees, including Dr. See, for inducing RK to buy HSC stock through its misleading and false press releases, SEC filings, and reports. Following protracted litigation, Dr. See remained the last defendant and the parties agreed to a bench trial and consented to proceeding before a magistrate judge, see 28 U.S.C. § 636(c). The court found for RK on all claims, and Dr. See appeals.
II. ANALYSIS
A. “Real Party in Interest” Argument Waived
Dr. See strenuously challenges RK’s identity, calling it an unlawful “beast” which does not own the claim and could not have brought this suit. 2 In the midst of trial, after Krilich testified that “RK Company” was the name under which he did business, Dr. See investigated RK’s identity on an Illinois public records website and discovered that RK was not a legally registered corporation. The next day, Dr. See brought a motion for judg *850 ment as a matter of law, claiming that RK was not the party alleged in the complaint. He claims that RK is an unlawful “common law” trust created for tax evasion purposes, and as such, the trust is the “real party in interest” and any action needed to be brought by its trustee.
Rule 17(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure requires that “an action must be prosecuted in the name of the real party in interest.” The “real party in interest” is the person who possesses the right or interest to be enforced through litigation, and the purpose of this procedural rule is to protect the defendant against a subsequent action by the party actually entitled to recover. Fed.R.Civ.P. 17(a) advisory comm.’s note (2009);
see also Rawoof v. Texor Petroleum Co., Inc.,
The court may not dismiss an action for failure to prosecute in the name of the real party in interest until, after an objection, a reasonable time has been allowed for the real party in interest to ratify, join, or be substituted into the action. After ratification, joinder, or substitution, the action proceeds as if it had been originally commenced by the real party in interest.
Fed.R.Civ.P. 17(a)(3). The allowance of a reasonable time for the correct party to step into the plaintiffs role suggests that an “objection will be raised when such joinder is practical and convenient.”
Gogolin & Stelter v. Karn’s Auto Imports, Inc.,
Dr. See acknowledges that the defense that RK was not the real party in interest is subject to waiver, Appellant’s Br. at 31, but insists that his motion was timely because he filed it as soon as he discovered that RK was not duly incorporated. Dr. See claims he had no reason to doubt RK’s legal status and that he was blindsided by the realization that RK was not the registered corporation he believed it to be. Dr. See misunderstands what it means to be “timely.” Over seven years passed between RK’s complaint and the bench trial. Dr. See could have, as he did
*851
the evening of Krilich’s testimony, uncovered this information by a simple search of Illinois’s public records. He could also have filed discovery requests about the authenticity of RK’s identity and incorporation. He did not, and his mid-trial objection was far too late.
See, e.g., Gogolin & Stelter,
Moreover, had Dr. See earlier objected to RK’s position as the plaintiff, the only consequence would have been for Krilich to ratify the commencement of the action, or to be joined or substituted as the plaintiff. Krilich has testified that he did business as “RK Company.” If RK and Krilich are one and the same, there would have been no reason for the court to have dismissed the suit without giving Krilich the opportunity to formally substitute his name for that of RK. And, a timely objection during the early stages of litigation would have uncovered any truth to, and allowed the parties to determine the relevance of, Dr. See’s claim that RK was an unlawful common law trust set up for tax evasion purposes. 3 Dr. See waived the defense that RK was not the “real party in interest” by failing to object during the more than seven years between the complaint and the beginning of trial.
B. Standing Argument Waived
Dr. See’s constitutional and prudential standing arguments also lack merit. Because the real party in interest rule is only concerned with whether an action can be maintained in the plaintiffs name, it is similar to, but distinct from, constitutional or prudential standing limitations.
Rawoof,
In addition to jurisdictional limits on standing, there are prudential limitations on a federal court’s power to hear cases. One well-established prudential limitation on justiciability is the principle that the named plaintiff cannot sue in federal court to assert the rights of a third party.
Nocula v. UGS Corp.,
C. The Evidence Was Sufficient
After a bench trial, the district court made findings of fact supporting its conclusion of liability against Dr. See and entered judgment in favor of RK. Picking and choosing elements from the various securities laws in question, Dr. See challenges the court’s findings that Dr. See had an intent to defraud, that RK relied on material facts, and that Dr. See was a person with control over HSC. We review Dr. See’s sufficiency of the evidence challenge under a clearly erroneous standard, Fed.R.Civ.P. 52(a), and will not second-guess a district court’s resolution of conflicting evidence or credibility determinations.
Anderson v. City of Bessemer City,
Dr. See supports his challenge by insisting that his version of the relevant events is true. He asserts that the district court “became confused and flustered” by Dr. See’s testimony and that key facts were “not understood” by the court. We disagree and find the evidence is more than sufficient to support the district court’s findings. Documentary and testimonial evidence established that the press releases included false statements and material omissions, such as HSC’s claims that the FDA had authorized clinical studies when it had actually suspended them and HSC’s intention to ship its products globally when there were no immediate plans to do so. Krilich and his son testified that Krilich read the SEC filings and press releases and relied on them. Several witnesses, including former employees of HSC, testified as to Dr. See’s role in the company, his approval of press releases, his knowledge of the information in the SEC filings, and his signature that accompanied those SEC filings.
Most importantly, the court repeatedly described Dr. See’s testimony as not credible. At times, direct evidence contradicted Dr. See’s testimony, such as when Dr. See testified that HSC had conducted clinical human trials and was confronted with his deposition testimony in which he had admitted that no human trials had been conducted. The district court described other testimony as “so unbelievable” as to be incredible on its face, such as Dr. See’s insistence that he read and approved the first and third paragraph of a press release but missed the second paragraph entirely. Dr. See points to no evidence that unequivocally supports his version of events,
Bullard v. Sercon Corp.,
D. Challenge to Gorgy’s Deposition Testimony Fails Since Ruling Was Not Provided
Dr. See next appeals the court’s decision to admit Medhat Gorgy’s deposition testimony in evidence. Gorgy was the president of a company that provided contract, manufacturing, and analytical services for biotech and pharmaceutical companies. HSC hired Gorgy to, among other tasks, review and prepare submissions of the IND application to the FDA. Dr. See claims that the court, “for reasons unknown,” amended the pretrial order to ad *853 mit Gorgy’s deposition. The reasons are unknown, however, because Dr. See failed to order the transcript of the motion proceedings and include it in the record. Beyond the phrase “for the reasons stated on the record” on the minute docket entry, we have no evidence of the court’s reasoning.
Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 10(b)(2) provides that “if the appellant intends to urge on appeal that a finding or conclusion is unsupported by the evidence or is contrary to the evidence, the appellant must include in the record a transcript of all evidence relevant to that finding or conclusion.” Fed. R.App. P. 10(b)(2). This failure to produce the transcript makes it impossible for us to determine whether there was a reasonable basis for the district court’s decision to admit Gorgy’s deposition testimony.
Woods v. Thieret,
E. Prejudgment Interest and Award of Attorneys’ Fees Was Reasonable
Dr. See’s final two arguments challenge the district court’s decision to award prejudgment interest and attorneys’ fees to RK, both of which we review for an abuse of discretion.
Serafinn v. Local 722, Int’l Bhd. of Teamsters, Chauffeurs, Warehousemen & Helpers of Am.,
We similarly find that the district court did not abuse its discretion in awarding RK attorneys’ fees. An award of attorneys’ fees will only be reversed if “it cannot be rationally supported by the record.”
Cintas Corp. v. Perry,
III. CONCLUSION
We Affirm the magistrate judge’s decision.
Notes
. Throughout this opinion, we refer to Robert Krilich as Krilich and his son as Krilich, Jr.
. Dr. See also makes a cursory argument that RK lacked the capacity to sue, and claims that a capacity to sue defense cannot be waived. The Federal Rules of Civil Procedure however, clearly state that capacity to sue must be raised in a specific denial in an appropriate pleading or amendment. Fed.R.Civ.P. 9(a);
see Wagner Furniture Interiors, Inc. v. Kemner's Georgetown Manor, Inc.,
. In response to questions about RK, Krilich testified that his business entity was set up by a man named in the transcripts as "Edward Bartolli,” who he claimed was a Harvard University professor. During the course of litigation, Dr. See submitted no evidence or discovery requests on this matter, and we express no opinion as to the legitimacy of RK as an investment vehicle.
