OPINION AND ORDER
This is аn action for recovery of damages suffered in an employment related activity. Federal jurisdiction is based on diversity of citizenship. Defendants Becton Dickinson & Co. S. A., American Cyanamid Co. (ACC), *1151 Sandoz Inc. and Colors and Chemicals Division of Sandoz Inc. (Sandoz) 1 have filed motions for summary judgment alleging that the actions of certain plaintiffs are time barred. Codefendants ACC and San-doz specifically claim that the actions of all plaintiffs are time barred since the amended pleading substituting them for John Doe defendants cannot relate back to the filing date of the original complaint. Sandoz further alleges that the complaint fails to state a cause of action agаinst it for it only sold one shipment of dye on a date in which one of the two injured workers had already ceased working while the other worked for only a short time thereafter.
Ana M. Santiago and Petra Báez, the two injured workers, have claimed that as part of their employment in Peg Bandage, Inc. they were intoxicated with a dye used in the manufacture of band-aids. Ana M. Santiago workéd with Peg Bandage, Inc. and its alleged predecessor, Paulis Silk Co. and Ace Bandage, Inc., from September 1971 to February 1974 while Petra Báez worked in this factory from November 1971 to May 1975. They commenced administrative proceedings pursuant to Puerto Rico’s Workmen’s Accident Compеnsation Act (PRWACA), P.R.Laws Am. Tit. 11, Sec. 1 et seq. The administrative decision as to Santiago became final on September 1977 and as to Báez on October 5, 1977.
The original complaint filed on August 24, 1978 included unknown defendants as the manufacturers of the harmful dye. On August 20,1979, in response to an interrogatory sent by plaintiffs on February 1979 requesting the names of the manufacturers of the dye, codefendant Becton Dickinson & Co. (the parent corporation of Peg Bandage Inc.) answered that from February 1973 to May 1974 Peg Bandage Inc. used a dye obtained from ACC and that on March 1975 they received a shipment of dye from San-doz. The complaint was amended on September 26, 1979 to substitute the unnamed defendants for ACC and Sandoz. These moved for summary judgment in December 1980 and accompanied sworn statements admitting that they sold the dye but asserting that it was manufactured by Young Aniline Works, Inc.
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in Baltimore, Maryland and that they had not received notice of the complaint until November 1979. All defendants joined in seeking dismissal of the claims of all non-PRWACA beneficiariеs who were of legal age one year before the complaint was filed and of the conjugal partnership of Petra Báez and Casimiro Rodríguez on the ground that the administrative proceeding provided by PRWACA only tolled the statute of limitations for the beneficiaries, and, since no worker had died as a result of the employment accident, only the two injured workers could be considered beneficiaries. Plaintiffs have opposed these motions urging that the allegations in the original complaint are sufficient to include the seller of the dye as a John Doe defendant and that the action is not time barred as to the minors since the statute of limitations for this type of action does not commence until they reach legal age. This being a diversity case, we must review applicable statutes and case law of Puerto Rico on matters related to time limitations.
Erie Railroad Co. v. Tompkins,
The Supreme Court of Puerto Rico has often held that the matter of extinctive prescriptiоn is a substantive, not procedural, question, governed by the Civil Code of Puerto Rico (Civil Code); Articles 1830 to 1875,
P.R.Laws Ann.,
Tit. 31, Secs. 5241-5305.
Febo Ortega v. Superior Court,
On the matter of whether the amendment substituting codefendants ACC and Sandoz for John Doe and Richard Roe should relate back to the original complaint, it is clear that if it does not the action by all plaintiffs would be time barred as to them since more than a year elapsed between the final PRWACA decisiоn and the filing of the amended pleading. ACC and Sandoz rely on the decisions of many Circuits
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which have applied the criteria of Rule 15(c), Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, requiring that the claim or defense contained in the amendment derive from the occurrence set forth in the original pleading and that the party to be brought hаve received adequate notice of the complaint and knew or should have known that, but for a mistake in designation, the action would have been brought against him. Our Circuit, however, has adopted a different position in determining which rule is applicable when
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jurisdiction hinges on diversity. In
Marshall v. Mulrenin,
The notes on Rule 15.5 indicate that it does not refer to unknown persons or entities but rather to defendants whose identity is known but whose name at the moment of filing the complaint is unknown to plaintiffs. In
Fuentes v. District Court,
73 PRR 893 (1952), plaintiff included as John Does all other heirs who may have existed but who were unknown. The Supreme Court of Puerto Rico there said: “If the original complaint is legally sufficiеnt and a defendant is joined under a fictitious name inasmuch as his identity but not his specific name is known, the complaint may subsequently be amended.”
Id.,
at 916. The Court concluded that defendant did not know whether other heirs existed so as to permit the relation back effect of the rule. In
Ortiz v. Municipal Government,
94 PRR 449 (1967) the Court, following the criteria adopted by California courts,
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stated: “[wjhere a complaint attempts to set forth a cause of action against a defendant designated by a fictitious name and his true name is thereafter discovered and substituted by amendment, he is considered a party to the action from the filing of the original complaint, and that is the date to be considеred for determining any contention on extinctive prescription.... ”
Id.,
at 455. It concluded that a determination as to the effective date of defendant’s substitution for John Doe brings into play both Rules 15.5 and 13.3.
Id.,
at 454. This means that an amendment identifying a John Doe defendant will relate back only if the claim asserted against him arises out of the same occurrence set forth in the original pleading.
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The Court, after examining the allegations of the original complaint, concluded
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that, absent a deliberate concealment of an indispensable party or an intentional lack of diligence on plaintiff’s part, the allegations showed the intention of substituting the insurаnce company for the John Doe defendant and thus the statute of limitations was interrupted on the date the original complaint was filed. The approach of California courts also favors a liberal interpretation of the allegations setting forth a claim against John Doe defendants and the relation baсk effect of a later substitution. In
Marasco v. Wadsworth,
The original complaint attempts to state a claim against all the defendants, whether sued by true or fictitious names.. . . In this respect, plaintiff need do no more than set forth or attеmpt to set forth a cause of action against such defendants ... plaintiffs complaint stated a claim with at least as much particularity as the state of the case law and the applicable statutes would allow. . . . (Citations omitted.)145 Cal.Rptr. at 846 ,578 P.2d at 93 .
The Court distinguished a previous case where there was “absolutely no attempt by the pleader to assert a claim against a fictitious defendant.” Id. See annotation 85 A.L.R.3d p. 130.
We must determine then if the allegations of the original complaint against the John Doe defendants revealed the intention of bringing suit against the seller of the dye as well as against the manufacturer since the date the original complaint was filed. There has beеn no showing by defendants that plaintiffs knew the name of the seller or manufacturer and deliberately withheld it or that they were not diligent in substituting when they learned the true name. Although plaintiffs did not incorporate the exact wording of Rule 15.5, PRRCP, in their allegations on the lack of knowledge of these defendants’ names, a review of the entire original complaint shows that when they filed it they knew that there existed entities that produced, distributed and sold the dye to their employer whose names at that time were unknown to them. The allegations, considered in their entirety,
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assert with sufficient detail duties and responsibilities that may well correspond to the seller of an inherently dangеrous product.
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These allegations are geared to the position taken by the courts of Puerto Rico, on considerations of public policy, concerning the imposition of strict liability on those who introduce a dangerous product in the market and profit by it,
Mendoza v. Cervecería Corona, Inc.,
97 PRR 487 (1969); see:
Montero v. American Motors Corp.,
For the reasons stated, the complaints filed by Carmen Martínez аnd Etanislao Núñez, parents of Ana M. Santiago, and by Casimiro Rodriguez and the conjugal partnership of Petra Báez and Casimiro Rodríguez as well as by all those plaintiffs who were of legal age one year before the complaints were filed are hereby DISMISSED.
Since plaintiffs Carmen Ada Torres, Ricardo Torres, Ivette Torres, Vilmа Rodríguez and J. Rodríguez Báez appear in the complaint as the “children” of injured workers Ana M. Santiago and Petra Báez as parents of these plaintiffs, shall present, within thirty days after notice of this Order, certified copies of their birth certificates in order to establish their alleged minority. Failure to do so shall result in dismissal of their claims, without prejudice.
The action against Sandoz Inc. filed by Ana M. Santiago is also DISMISSED since she did not dispute the sworn statements asserting that Sandoz did not sell any dye to the factory where she worked during her period of employment. Although the contact that Petra Báez, the other injured worker, may have had, if any, with the chemical sold by Sandoz was for a short three or four week period, defendants have not, placed the Court in a position to undisputedly hold that the short exposure caused no injury whatsoever.
Partial judgments shall be entered. Upon entry of the same, those parties whose claims have been dismissed shall be excluded from all future documents filеd.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. This defendant has by sworn statement affirmed that Colors and Chemicals is an unincorporated division of Sandoz Inc. We consider both as Sandoz Inc. for all purposes of this complaint including the summons and notice requirements.
. This corporation was never joined as a party.
.
Anderson v. Allstate Ins. Co.,
. “Where the name of a defendant is not known to the plaintiff, he shall so state in the complaint designating him by any name in the proceeding and upon learning his real name, he shall make amendment in the pleading or proceeding.” P.R.Laws Ann., Tit. 32 Ap. II R. 15.5. The 1979 amendments do not alter its substance. See: P.R.Laws Ann., Tit. 32 AP III R. 15.4.
. Rule 15.5 is derived from Section 474 Code of Civil Procedure, California.
. Rule 13.3: “Whenever the claim or defense asserted in the amended pleading arose out of the conduct, transaction, or occurrence set forth in the original pleading, the amendment relates back to the date of the original pleading....” P.R.Laws Ann., Tit. 32 Ap. III R. 13.3.
. In one of the allegations John Doe and Richard Roe are referred to as manufacturers.
. For purpose of this analysis we must assume that the dye was inherently dangerous and that it caused plaintiffs’ injuries since none of the defendants have produced any document or sworn statement that would cast doubt on the veracity of these allegations.
. The allegations include an action based on negligence as well as one of strict liability based on an implied warranty. We need not determine at this moment the precise standard of care Puerto Rico requires of a distributor or seller of a harmful product.
