By our opinion in this cause, of November 9, 1955, Rosenfeld v. Continental Building Operating Company, D.C.,
Pursuant to that order, St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Company entered its appearance in this cause, as plaintiff, on November 26,1955. Defendant thereafter filed its motion herein to dismiss, based, principally, upon the ground that the substitution of St. Paul Fire & Marine Insurance Company, as plaintiff, on November 26, 1955, was after the Missouri three-year and five-year *494 statutes of limitations, Sections 516.120 and 516.130 RSMo 1949, V.A.M.S., had run, and that the substitution amounted, in legal effect, to the institution of a new action upon the cause of action, and that it was barred by the limitations of the Missouri statutes mentioned.
Extensive briefs upon the question have been filed by counsel for the parties, all of which I have carefully considered.
It is true, and conceded by counsel for the substituted plaintiff, that if its substitution as plaintiff on November 26, 1955, does amount, in legal effect, to the institution of a new suit, and that if, in legal effect, it does not relate back to the time of the filing of the original suit herein by Rosenfeld, then this action is barred by, at least, the Missouri five-year statute of limitations mentioned, and the motion to dismiss should be sustained, otherwise it should be overruled.
There can be no doubt, and it is not disputed, (1) that this cause of action accrued in Missouri, (2) that the Missouri statute of limitations is applicable.
It is clear from an unbroken line of decisions in Missouri that if a suit is brought by one who has no legal right to maintain it, yet, who has a beneficial interest in the subject matter of the action, the substitution of a proper plaintiff will relate back to the time of filing of the original action by the one without authority to prosecute it, and the intervening running of the statute of limitations will not be held to bar the action by the substituted plaintiff, but, on the other hand, if the original action was brought by an improper plaintiff who had no legal or beneficial interest in the subject matter of the action and later — but after the statute of limitations has run — a proper party plaintiff is substituted, the substitution will be treated as a new action, and the action will be held to be barred by the Missouri statute 'of limitations. Pyle v. University City, Mo.App.,
But the substituted plaintiff points to Rule 15(c) of Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, 28 U.S.C.A., and says that it expressly provides that an “amended pleading”, arising out of the same transaction as set forth in the original pleading, “relates back to the date of the original pleading”, and that such is the effect of the substitution of the present plaintiff herein on November 26, 1955, and that, therefore, this action by the substituted, plaintiff — even though treated, to use Judge Lamm’s picturesque words, “as a fresh suit upon a new cause of action” — is not barred, regardless of the Missouri five-year statute of limitations, for it will not be applied by the Federal courts in these circumstances. In support of this position the substituted plaintiff cites three cases, by the Tenth Circuit. They are American Fidelity & Casualty Co. v. All-American Bus Lines, Inc., 10 Cir.,
However, the Supreme Court of the United States, in several cases — one of them arising on certiorari to the Tenth Circuit, Ragan v. Merchants Transfer, etc., Co.,
We find nothing inconsistent in Rule 15(c), and it will be noted that it deals with “amended pleading” which is something different than “substitution” of a new plaintiff in the sense here presented and dealt with. At all events, this rule was in full effect when the Supreme Court spoke in the Guaranty Trust and Ragan cases, supra.
It follows that we must give to the state statute of limitations the same effect as the courts of Missouri would be required to give to it and that would be, on the facts we have here, to hold that the substitution of the new plaintiff, after the five-year statute had run, did not relate back to the filing of the original complaint by Rosenfeld and that the action is barred by the limitations of the Missouri five-year statute.
There has long been some question about whether the matter of limitations can properly be presented and ruled, in the Federal court, on a motion to dismiss or otherwise than on a plea in bar, but our own Eighth Circuit has held that the question may be properly raised and ruled on such a motion, Bricton v. Woodrough,
The result is that defendant’s motion to dismiss is good as a matter of law, and must be sustained.
It is, therefore, ordered and adjudged by the court that defendant’s motion to dismiss this action be, and it is hereby, sustained, and this action is dismissed, with prejudice.
