OPINION
This сivil action is presently before the Court on objections of the Plaintiff and Defendant Windsor Minerals, Inc. (hereinafter Windsor) to the Magistrate’s report and recommendations as to the Motions for Summary Judgment of Defendant Omya, Inc. (hereinafter Omya) and Defendant Windsor. The Magistrate recommended that Defendant Omya’s Motion for Summary Judgment be granted, and that Defendant Windsor’s be denied. The issue, pared down to its simplest form, is whether Plaintiff’s claims against these two Defendants are time barred.
A brief chronology of the pleadings is necessary to an understanding of the ques
On November 1, 1979, an amended complaint was filed substituting Betty Westfall, in her capacity as administratrix of her husband’s estate, as named Plaintiff, and adding Metropolitan Talc Company, Inc. аnd Pfizer, Inc. as Defendants. Like the original complaint, the first amended complaint included three counts against “John Doe Corporation.” Shortly thereafter, on November 17, 1979, Mrs. Westfall died and a second amended complaint was filed by the Westfalls’ son, David Howard Westfall, in his capacity as administrator of the estates of his parents, as named Plaintiff in the action.
On May 24, 1982, Plaintiff again moved to amend his complaint. This motion was granted on June 14, 1982, and on June 18, 1982 the third amended complaint added Defendants Windsor Minerals, Inc. and Omya, Inc., and eliminated all references to “John Doe Corporation.”
As the first of many arguments, both Windsor and Omya assert that the Rhode Island wrongful death statute in force at the time of Mr. Westfall’s death applies to bar Plaintiff’s action agаinst them. Mr. Westfall died on July 10, 1979. At that time, the last sentence of R.I.Gen.Laws § 10-7-2 read, in pertinent part: “Provided, that every such action shall be commenced within two (2) years after the death of such person[.]” R.I.Gen.Laws § 10-7-2 (1969 Reenactment). Windsor and Omya were added as Defendants in this action on June 18, 1982, more than two years after Mr. Westfall’s death.
On May 12, 1981, before the two-year statutory period had run on Plaintiff’s cause of action, R.I.Gen.Laws § 10-7-2 was amended, changing the limitations period from two years to three years. See 1980 R.I.Pub.Laws ch. 198, § 1. Plaintiff contends that this amendment applies retroactively, permitting the filing of an action up to three years after a decedent’s death. If Plaintiff’s contention were to prevail, no further inquiry would be necessary since Windsor and Omya were added as Dеfendants within three years of Mr. Westfall’s death. Based on Rhode Island law, however, this Court finds that the May 12, 1981 amendment to the wrongful death statute cannot be applied retroactively.
The general rule applicable to all statutes of limitations with regard to the issue of retroactivity is “well-settled in Rhode Island.”
Skaba v. Capasso,
Furthermore, the law in Rhode Island is equally clear with respect to the statute of limitations for wrongful death actions. As summarized by the First Circuit in
Cadieux v. International Telephone & Telegraph Corp.,
the Rhode Island Supreme Court has consistently refused to read exceptions into the statute of limitations, reasoning that the time limit is a condition on the existence of a legislatively created cause of action unknown to the common law and therefore not subject to judicial alteration or expansion. Short v. Flynn [118 R.I. 441 ],374 A.2d 787 (R.I.1977); Nascimento v. Phillips Petroleum Co.,115 R.I. 395 ,346 A.2d 657 (1975); Tillinghast v. Reed,70 R.I. 259 ,38 A.2d 782 (1944).
Id. at 144. The First Circuit’s analysis is undoubtedly сorrect in light of a Rhode Island Supreme Court memorandum decision one year later in which the court cited Short v. Flynn, and Tillinghast v. Reed, stating:
we are of the opinion that in a wrongful death action, the two year period within which the action must be brought constitutes a condition of limitation upon the created right itself and not merely a limitation affecting the remedy. The statute permits of no exception to this requirement.
Santelle v. Miriam Hospital,
Turning to the 1981 amendment then, it is first necessary to examine the language used in order to determine whether by “express terms” or “necessary implication” it was intended to apply retroactively. R.I.General Laws § 10-7-2, as amended on May 12, 1981, reads thus:
Action by executor or administrator— Persons benefited — Commencement of action — Minimum recovery — Every such action shall be brought by and in the name of the executor or administrator of such deceased person, whether appointed or qualified within or without the state, and the amount recovered in every such action shall one-half (½) thereof go to the husband or widow, and one-half (½) thereof to the children of the deceased, and if there be no children the whole shall go to the husband or widow, and if there be no husband or widow, to the next of kin, in the proportion provided by law in relation to the distribution of personal property left by persons dying intestate. Provided, that every such action shall be commenced within three (3) years after the death of such person; and provided, further, whenever any person or corporation is found liable under 10-7-1 to 10-7-4, inclusive, he or it shall be liable in damages in the sum of not less than twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000).
1980 R.I.Pub.Laws ch. 198, § 1.
Clearly, there is no express language in this amended version of the statute to make it retroactive. Plaintiff argues, however, that the statute necessarily implies retroactive application. The thrust of Plaintiff’s argument is that because the amendment does not use words such as “after the cause of action
shall
accrue,” or “after such person
shall
die,” it should not be held to apply prospectively only. In support of this proposition, Plaintiff cites
Fiske v. Briggs,
At issue in
Fiske
was whether the statute of limitations for an action of debt upon a judgment was retroactive. The statute provided that such actions shall be commenced and sued “within twenty years, next after the cause of said action.”
In
Rotchford,
a newly enacted statute of limitations for personal injury actions provided that “[A]ctions of the case for injuries to the person shall be commenced and sued within two years next after the cause of action
shall accrue,
and not after.” (emphasis added)
Plaintiff also relies on
Twomey,
in which the 1971 amendment to the statute of limitations affecting injuries to the person was in question. In
Twomey,
the trial justice had held that the 1971 amendmеnt, which enlarged the two-year limitation period to three years, did not apply retroactively.
Id.
While Plaintiff’s argument that the 1981 amendment does not use such words as “after the cause of action shall accrue” and hence should apply retroactively is an appealing one, it fails to take into account the important distinction that the Rhode Island Supreme Court has consistently madе between wrongful death actions and causes of action that were known at common law. The causes of action at issue in
Fiske
(action of debt on a judgment),
Rotchford
(personal injury), and
Twomey
(personal injury) were not created by statute, but were known at common law. In fact, the court in
Twomey
pointed out this distinction in a footnote, indicating that had the cause of action been created by statute, it would have presented an entirely different issue than that before the court.
See
In
Tillinghast v. Reed,
Plaintiff next argues that the 1982 amendment to the wrongful death statute, expressly made retroactive by the legislature, applies under the circumstances here alleged. The 1982 amendment provides:
“It is further provided, ..., that in respect to any death caused by any wrongful act, neglect or default which could not in the exercise of reasonable diligence be discoverable within three (3) years after the death of such person, an action hereunder shall be commenced within three (3) years of the time that the wrongful act, neglect or default should, in the exercise of reasonable diligence, have been discoverable.”
1982 R.I.Pub.Laws ch. 435, § 1. Section 2 of the amendment provided that it would take effect upon passage (May 21,1982) and would apply to all wrongful death actions for which the wrongful act, neglect or default became discoverable after a date three (3) years prior to the effective date of the amendment. 1982 R.I.Pub.Laws ch. 435, § 2.
Plaintiff asserts that his cause of action against Windsor and Omya became discoverаble during April of 1982. On May 24, 1982, Plaintiff sought to amend his complaint in order to add Windsor and Omya as defendants in this action. Therefore, Plaintiff argues, discovery was made within the period of retroactivity established by the 1982 amendment, and suit was brought within three years thereafter.
The Magistrate below considered this argument, but recommended that the 1982 amendment would be unconstitutional as applied in this case. He based his report on
William Danzer & Co. v. Gulf & Ship Island R.R.,
This Court finds it unnecessary to reach the constitutionality of the 1982 amendment, either in generаl, or as applied to the facts of this particular case, in that the Plaintiffs reliance on the discovery rule with respect to Defendants Windsor and Omya is misplaced. The “discovery” referred to in the 1982 amendment to the wrongful death act is the discovery of a wrongful act, neglect or default which caused a death, and not the discovery of a particular defendant.
See generally Wilkinson v. Harrington,
Plaintiff’s penultimate argument is that by naming a John Doe Corporation in his original complaint, pursuant to R.I.Gen. Laws § 9-5-20, he tollеd the statute of limitations. Section 9-5-20 provides as follows:
Whenever the name of any defendant or respondent is not known to the plaintiff, the summons and other process may issue against him by a fictitious name, or by such description as the plaintiff or complainant may select; and if duly served, it shall not be abated for that cause, but may be amended with or without terms as the court may order.
Defendant Windsor argues that the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure do not authorize “John Doe” pleadings, but instead require this Court to look to the provisions of Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(c) to determine whether the amendment adding Windsor and Omya meets the conditions necessary to relate back to the original complaint. Rule 15(c) provides:
Whenever the claim or defense asserted in thе amended pleading arose out of the conduct, transaction, or occurrence set forth or attempted to be set forth in the original pleading, the amendment relates back to the date of the original pleading. An amendment changing the party against whom a claim is asserted relates back if the foregoing provision is satisfied and, within the period provided by law for commencing the action against him, the party to be brought in by amendment (1) has received such notice of the institution of the action that he will not be prejudiced in maintaining his defense on the merits, and (2) knew or should have known that, but for a mistake concerning the identity of the proper party, the action would have been brought against him.
The majority of circuits that have considered this issue undoubtedly support Windsor’s contention.
See, e.g., Britt v. Arvanitis,
In Marshall, the First Circuit considered a conflict between a Massachusetts statute permitting liberal amendments as to parties and pleadings and Fed.R.Civ.P. 15(c). The Massachusetts statute at that time provided as follows:
The court may, at any time before final judgment, except as otherwise provided, allow amendments introducing a necessary party or changing the form of the action, and may allow any other amendment in matter of form or substance in any process, pleading or proceeding, which may enable the plaintiff to sustain the action for the cause for which it was intended to be brought, or enable the defendant to make a legal defence.
Mass.Gen.Laws Ann. ch. 231, § 51.
3
The
Marshall
court determined that this was not a conflict between two strictly procedural rules, in which case the Supreme Court’s ruling in
Hanna v. Plumer,
In
Santiago v. Becton Dickinson & Co., S.A.,
The facts at issue in
Santiago
are strikingly similar to those involved in this action. In
Santiago,
two injured workers claimed to have been intoxicated during the course of their employment by a dye used in the manufacture of band-aids.
Id.
at 1151. Likewise, Plaintiff in the action before this Court alleges that Mr. Westfall contracted pleural mesothelioma at his place of employment as a result of talc used in the manufacture of rubber products. In both cases, plaintiffs identified unknown defendants in their original complaints as the manufacturers of the harmful products that allegedly caused their injuries. Plaintiffs later amended thеir complaints, identifying two manufacturers by name after the statutes of limitations had run. In
Santiago,
the manufacturers submitted affidavits that they received no notice of the action until after the statute had run.
Id.
Similarly, in
Marshall,
plaintiffs amended their complaint to add “new and unnotified defendants after the statute had run[,]” after having named the wrong defendants in their original complaint.
Defendant Windsor points out that the statutes at issue in
Marshall, Santiago,
and the case at bar each contain slightly different terms and provisions. The Massachusetts statute is conceivably the broadest, liberally allowing amendments as to parties, process and pleadings at any time before final judgment. The Puerto Rico statute, like the Rhode Island statute, however, relates solely to the naming of John Doe defendants in an original complaint and the later substitution of actual names. The major distinguishing feature of Ri.Gen. Laws § 9-5-20 is the requirement that a defendant must be “duly served” before the amended complaint will be deemed to relate back to the date of the original complaint. Windsor argues that because of this requirement § 9-5-20 is not a pure tolling statute. All three statutes, however, have been construed as providing a means by which plaintiffs may toll the statute of limitations where a defendant’s name is unknown at thе time the original complaint is filed.
See Santiago,
Defendant Omya argues that even if R.I.Gen.Laws § 9-5-20 applies in a federal diversity suit, Plaintiff’s reliance on it in this action is misplaced. Omya contends that § 9-5-20 does not apply where the defendant is an unknown person or entity, but only where the plaintiff knows the defendant’s identity but does not know his name at the time of filing the complaint. Omya does not cite any case law in support of this position.
In
Santiago,
the court pointed out that the notes relating to Puerto Rico Rule of Civil Procedure 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.”
a corporation duly organized and existing under the laws of a state other than Rhode Island with the necessary minimum contacts within the State of Rhode Island to be subject to the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court. At all times relevant hereto Defendant John Doe Corporation manufactured and/or distributed tale to Uniroyal, Inc. for usage in its plant in Providence, Rhode Island.
This Court is satisfied that such a description is sufficient to show that the Defendant John Doe Corporation was not a person or an entity entirely unknown to Plaintiff. As noted
supra,
the plaintiffs in
Santiago
initially described defendant manufacturers in a similar fashion, and the court there found that “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
In support of the Magistrate’s recommendation, Defendant Omya next argues that if R.I.Gen.Laws § 9-5-20 applies, Plaintiff’s complaint against it should nonetheless be dismissed because the original complaint and subsequent amendments refer to only one John Doe Corporation. Omya contends that § 9-5-20 requires a fictitious designation for each separate defendant whose name is not known, therefore Plaintiff can substitute only Dеfendant Windsor for the John Doe Corporation in the complaint. The Magistrate accepted this argument and recommended that Omya’s motion for summary judgment be granted and that Windsor’s be denied. Understandably, Windsor argues with vigor against this result.
Section 9-5-20 does not set forth any particular language that must be used in a complaint filed pursuant to its provisions. In
Sousa v. Casey,
In construing § 9-5-20, this Court must first look to the intent of the Rhode Island legislature.
Berthiaume v. School Committee of the City of Woonsocket,
In addition to examining the language, nature and object of § 9-5-20, this Court must also “adhere to the canon that statutes should not be construed to achieve meaningless or absurd results.
See In re Crepeau-Cross,
Perhaps the more prudent course for all plaintiffs under these circumstances would be to insert the words “et al” аfter “John Doe Corporation” in their original and subsequent amended complaints. The purposeful liberalization of pleadings and procedure that has occurred on both a state and federal level, however, and the unambiguous Rhode Island law of statutory construction strongly militate against such a triumph of form over substance. As stated by the Rhode Island Supreme Court in
Wilkinson v. Harrington,
Finally, this Court must consider whether Plaintiff has complied with the requirement of § 9-5-20 that fictitiously named defendants be “duly served.” In Sousa v. Casey, the Rhode Island Supreme Court discussed this prerequisite as follows:
Section 9-5-20 further provides that the “summons and other process” must be duly served and that it may be amended with or without terms as the court may order. However, there is nothing in our statute which says that the service must be made within the statute of limitations. Service must be made within a reasonable time after a complaint has been filed, absent a showing by the plaintiff that such delay was excusable. See Caprio v. Fanning & Doorley Constr. Co.,104 R.I. 197 , 199-200,243 A.2d 738 , 740 (1968).
In the circumstances of this case we cannot say that plaintiff issued process within a reasonable time after she filed her complaint . .. more than a year had elapsed from the time she filed her complaint to the time she issued process. Nor can we say that plaintiff has presented evidence which would justify rendering the aforesaid delay excusable.
Id.
at 200,
More recently, the Rhode Island Supreme Court had occasion to apply this standard in
Curtis v. Diversified Chemicals,
In this case plaintiffs presented no evidence to justify the delays except for the testimony that their attorney desired to serve all defendants at the same time. Even this excuse does not explain the amount of time plaintiffs took to obtain the names of registered agents or the addresses of some of the defendants. Obviously, much of this information was readily available to plaintiffs. Telephone calls to the Secretary of State’s office would have easily and quickly yielded thenames and addresses of registered agents of all domestic corporations and those registered to do business in the state. Additionally, plaintiffs themselves had set forth the addresses of some of the out-of-state defendants in one of their complaints and, under Rule 4(e)(2), could have served process on those defendants by mail without having first obtained the court’s permission... . Basing our analysis on the facility with which names and addresses could have been obtained and service effectuated as well as the evidence presented below, we cannot say that the Superior Court justice was clearly wrong in finding that the delays were unreasonable. Neither can we say that he was clearly wrong in rejecting as inexcusable plaintiffs’ explanation for the delays.
Id. at 749.
Plaintiff argues that all of these cases involved situations where the identities and names of the defendants were known to the plaintiffs. This analysis is accurate, with the exception of the facts in
Curtis,
where plaintiff sued “John Does I-VII.” The distinction is unimportant, however, in light of the fact that the
Curtis
court did not consider the difficulty in ascertaining the identity of a John Doe defendant, nor did the plaintiff raise it as a possible reason to excuse her delays in service in that case. This Court accepts Plaintiff’s contention that a “reasonable time” within which a known defendant should be served under Rule 4 of the Rhode Island Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure, is not necessarily the same as a “reasonable time” within which an unknown defendant should be served pursuant to § 9-5-20. With these principles in mind, the Court must now determine whether Plaintiff’s delay in serving Omya and Windsor was unreasonable, and if so, whether Plaintiff has “presented evidence which would justify rendering the aforesaid delay excusable.”
Caprio,
Plaintiff commenced this lawsuit on May 24, 1979. Defendants Windsor and Omya were not served with process until June, 1982, more than three years after the filing of the original complaint. This Court finds that such a delay in service is patently unreasonable. Bearing in mind that efforts to ascertain the identity of John Doe defendants would justify a somewhat greater delay than otherwise, the crucial question nonetheless is whether Plaintiff has justified rendering an approximately three-year delay in service excusable.
Defendants Omya and Windsor assert that Plaintiff did not undertake any discovery until August of 1981. Indeed, more than two years had elapsed from the time the original complaint was filed when Plaintiff served its first sets of interrogatories on Defendants Whittaker, Clark & Daniels, Pfizer, and Metropolitan Talc Company in August, 1981. In one of his memoranda, Plaintiff states in passing that “[d]iscovery was ongoing throughout 1980 and 1981.” What discovery was ongoing in 1980, however, is impossible to discern. Plaintiff has submitted no affidavits or evidence in support of this contention, and no further explanation of what discovery took place in 1980 appears in the memoranda filed in this action. All other accounts by Plaintiff of the difficulties encountered in the discovery process begin with the August 1981 interrogatories.
Plaintiff has set forth in great detail the problems that arose in trying to identify the type and origin of the talc that allegedly caused Mr. Westfall’s mesothelioma. Only after filing Motions to Compel did Plaintiff begin to receive documents and responses to interrogatories from Defendants Whittaker, Pfizer and Metropolitan. This discovery led to the realization that Uniroyal had used three types of talc at its Providence plant— Italian, Montana and Vermont. Further discovery “began to point toward Vermont talc as the likely source of his asbestos-contaminated talc exposure” and “a geologist was consulted in April, 1982 to determine the location of the Vermont mines operating and producing talc during the 1940s and 1950s.” (Plaintiff’s Memorandum in Opposition to Motions of Defendants Windsor
This Court is aware that, unlike the plaintiff in Curtis, Plaintiff in this action had to do more than simply ascertain the names of registered agents in Rhode Island for known corporate defendants. Furthermore, Plaintiffs’ proffered excuse of troublеsome' and intricate discovery procedures is a more reasonable one than that rejected in Curtis, a desire to serve all defendants simultaneously. The Court appreciates the complexity of the discovery that was necessary in this action. Plaintiff’s dissertation on discovery difficulties, however, does not offer a reason for waiting more than two years to even begin discovery. Clearly, discovery was the key to identifying the unknown suppliers of talc to Uniroyal. Astute and painstaking discovery eventually revealed 1) that a producer of Vermont talc was possibly liable to Plaintiff, and 2) who the producers of Vermont talc were during Plaintiff’s period of employment. There is ample reason to believe that if Plaintiff had begun discovery еarlier in the course of this litigation, the approximately three-year delay in serving Windsor and Omya would not have occurred.
This Court is compelled to find that the delay in serving Defendants Windsor and Omya was unreasonable. The problems Plaintiff had to surmount in the discovery process do not justify waiting more than two years after filing a lawsuit to engage in any discovery whatsoever, and consequently cannot justify a three-year delay in service of process. Therefore, Defendants Windsor and Omya were not “duly served” as required by § 9-5-20, and their Motions for Summary Judgment are hereby granted.
Notes
. Although the plaintiff’s action in
Twomey
was barred by the statute of limitations in effect when it was commenced, the court ultimately sustained plaintiff’s appeal on the basis of a 1973 amendment to the statute.
. Plaintiff submits that the cases of
Menna v. Mathewson,
Plaintiffs argument that the 1981 and 1982 amendments to the wrongful death statute should be subject to the same reasoning is, at first blush, persuasive. This Court is not convinced, however, that it is free to disregard the more recent pronouncements of the Rhode Island Supreme Court in Nascimento and Dempsey, and the First Circuit in Cadieux, specifically relating to the wrongful death statute.
. This statute has since been codified in Mass.R.Civ.P. 15(c), permitting an even more liberal amendment practice. The court in
Cove1 v. Safetech, Inc.,
Although the remainder of Mass.R.Civ.P. 15 is substantially identical to Fed.R.Civ.P. 15, the Reporters’ Notes to Mass.R.Civ.P. 15(c) confirm that “Massachusetts practice is more liberal than Federal Rule 15(c) in allowing amendments adding or substituting party defendants after expiration of the period of limitations,” 43A Mass.Gen.L.Ann. at 171. The decision to reaffirm the longstanding Massachusetts rule in what was otherwise substantially a verbatim adoption of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure manifests a deliberate choice by the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court and indicates the strength of the Commonwealth’s substantive interest in the matter .. . Indeed, in contrast with the predecessor statute, Mass.Gen.L. c. 231, § 51, which declared that the court “may allow” an amendment adding a transactionally related defendant to relate back, Mass.R.Civ.P. 15(c) is in form categorical, saying simply that “the amendment (including an amendment changing a party) relates back to the original pleading.”
Id. at 429-30.
. Puerto Rico Rule of Civil Procedure 15.5 provides that “[w]here 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 App. II R. 15.5.
