Lead Opinion
Memorandum Decision
T1 Michael D. Wright appeals from the district court's grant of summary judgment in favor of defendants Paradise Turf and Richard Riding (Appellees). We affirm.
1 2 The underlying cause of action' involves a negligence claim stemming from a car accident that occurred on September 26, 2003. Wright filed a complaint against defendants PK Transport and William Dunn (the original defendants) on February 5, 2007, approximately seven months before the controlling four-year statute of limitations expired.
T3 Because the parties had "provided extensive recitations of factual assertions made outside the pleadings," the district court converted Appellees' motion to dismiss to one for summary judgment. See id. R. 12(b); id. R. 56(c), see also Oakwood Vill. LLC w. Albertsons, Inc.,
T4 On appeal, Wright argues that the district court erred in granting summary judgment in favor of Appellees. Wright asserts that the district court "misinterpreted the law" and incorrectly applied the relation-back doctrine in concluding that Wright's addition of Appellees did not relate back to the original complaint. "Summary judgment is appropriate only where there are no genuine issues of material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law." Basic Research, LLC v. Admiral Ins. Co.,
Y5 "[There are limited circumstances when a claim against a new party may relate back to the original complaint. Utah courts have allowed the relation back of amendments to complaints incorporating newly named parties in two types of cases: (1) in so called misnomer cases, and (2) where there is a true identity of interest." Ottens v. McNeil,
(1) the amended pleading alleged only claims that arose out of the conduct, transaction, or occurrence set forth or attempted to be set forth in the original pleading and (2) the added party had received (actual or constructive) notice that it would have been a proper party to the original pleading such that no prejudice would result from preventing the new party from using a statute of limitations defense that otherwise would have been available.
Id. (citations and internal quotation marks omitted).
T6 The first element of the identity of interest analysis-whether Wright's amendment was based on the same core of facts or
I. Notice
T7 In its written ruling granting summary judgment ruling, the district court stated, "According to the Utah Court of Appeals, in a case directly on point, 'relation back in the context of adding parties after the statute of limitations has expired is dependent ... on whether ... the legal positions of the original and proposed party are the same.' " (Quoting Ottens v. McNeil,
T8 The case of Gary Porter Construction v. Fox Construction, Inc.,
T 9 In this case, the district court granted summary judgment based on its determination that the legal positions of Appellees and the original defendants were not the same under the Notice Transfer Test. However, as Wright points out, the court did not address whether Wright provided actual notice to Appellees. We discuss each type of notice in turn.
110 To establish that Appellees received constructive notice under the Notice Transfer Test, Wright must demonstrate that the original defendants and Appellees "share the same interest concerning the litigation, including their legal defenses and positions such that notice of the action against one serves to provide notice of the action to the other." See Oftens,
111 Here, one of the original defendants, Dunn, was involved in the underlying accident while driving a tractor-trailer that belonged to the other original defendant, PK Transport. Dunn was hauling trailers and sod that belonged to Appellees. As was the case in Offtens, Appellees and the original defendants may share a similar defense, such as an assertion that the accident was not the result of Dunn's negligence. However, as between them, Appellees and the original defendants have different, even directly conflicting, legal positions. Dunn has argued that he was the employee of either PK Transport or Appellees on the night of the accident and is entitled to indemnification from his employer. But the district court observed that "PK Transport and [Appellees] have presented conflicting deposition testimony regarding which of the entities requested Mr. Dunn's services in making the trip." Thus, each party's legal position is necessarily different from the other as each maintains that it is not liable because Dunn was not in its employ at the time of the accident. Additionally, the original defendants attempted to allocate fault to Appellees as non-parties in a rule 9 allocation of fault notice to Wright.
Y12 Actual notice for purposes of rule 15(c) requires that, prior to the running of the statute of limitations, the newly added party have notice of the plaintiff's claims and not merely notice of the underlying events. Bee Ottens v. McNeil,
18 Even assuming without deciding that Wright could demonstrate that Dunn was Appellees' agent at some point, Wright has not directed this court to any record evidence that Dunn was Appellees' agent on the day Dunn received noticed of Wright's claims or at any point thereafter. Wright fails to show precisely when this agency-based notice would have developed and what facts indicate that the agency relationship was intact at any time between Dunn's receipt of the original complaint and the expiration of the statute of limitations. And while Wright's complaint alleged that Dunn was an agent of Paradise Turf at the time of the accident, Wright did not allege that Dunn was an agent at any time after Dunn received notice of Wright's claims. Neither did Wright offer evidence of such a relationship in his opposition to summary judgment. Wright also conceded at oral argument that in 2007, when the lawsuit was filed, Dunn was no longer an agent because Paradise Turf had been dissolved and the employer/employee relationship had "long since passed."
1 14 Despite viewing the facts and all reasonable inferences drawn therefrom in the light most favorable to Wright and notwithstanding the absence of an actual-notice analysis by the district court, we cannot conclude that Wright put forth at least "some indication[ ]" that Appellees received actual notice before the statute of limitations had expired. See Gary Porter Constr. v. Fox Constr., Inc.,
II. Wright's Rule 56(f) Motion
115 Wright also requested a continuance under rule 56(f) of the Utah Rules of Civil Procedure, seeking additional time to conduct discovery relating to Appellees. See Utah R. Civ. P. 56(f). Although the district court's written ruling does not explicitly address Wright's rule 56(f) request for additional discovery, the court stated that it was "exercis[ing] its discretion" to determine that "justice requires no further proceedings." Accordingly, we construe the court's treatment of Wright's rule 56(f) motion as a denial and review that decision for an abuse of discretion. See Energy Mgmt. Servs., LLC v. Shaw,
T16 The district court observed that due to Appellees' "absence during the early stages of the proceeding," Appellees "were not present to protect their interests during depositions of parties and other witnesses." The court reasoned that the "shape of the entire proceeding to date may have been different by virtue of [Appellees'] participation, and adding them in the eleventh hour . cannot be anything but prejudicial." We agree. Wright had already conducted years of discovery. Wright had deposed Riding in pursuing his claims against the original defendants. He had obtained or had an opportunity to obtain all information relevant to the relationship between Appellees and the original defendants. Upon receiving PK Transport's answer on August 6, 2007, Wright knew that Paradise Turf may be a necessary party and that PK Transport intended to allocate fault to Paradise Turf. Yet, Wright did not commence litigation or discovery against Appellees for over two years. Indeed, it is telling that during oral argument before this court, counsel for Wright essentially conceded that the decision to amend the complaint to add Appellees after the statute of limitations had expired was not the result of a mistake as to Appellees' identity, but rather part of a "divide and con
{17 For the foregoing reasons, we determine that the district court did not err by granting summary judgment in favor of Ap-pellees. Affirmed.
Notes
. "Because we are reviewing a grant of summary judgment, we view the facts and all reasonable inferences drawn therefrom in the light most favorable to ... the nonmoving party." Magana v. Dave Roth Constr.,
. During the course of litigation, Wright settled his claims against the original defendants and stipulated to an order dismissing the complaint with respect to the original defendants.
. This allocation of fault notice could not have served as actual notice to Appellees for the purposes of this case because the original defendants filed the notice after the statute of limitations had expired.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring):
{18 I concur in the majority opinion. I write only to suggest that the federal approach to the relation-back doctrine with respect to adding parties is both more clear and more rational than the Utah approach. First, the federal doctrine is governed by rule. In contrast, Utah's relation-back doe-trine exists only in caselaw. Nothing in the rule itself puts the practitioner on notice that rule 15(c) applies to an exception not mentioned in the rule.
19 Second, although similar to the Utah approach, the federal approach coexists more comfortably with the principle of fair notice underlying statutes of limitations. See Russell Packard Dev., Inc. v. Carson,
(20 For example, under rule 15(c) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, an amended complaint naming an additional party relates back to the original complaint only it-among other requirements-the new defendant both "(@) received such notice of the action that it will not be prejudiced in defending on the merits; and (i) knew or should have known that the action would have been brought against it, but for a mistake concerning the proper party's identity."
21 And while the federal rule, like Utah's relation-back doctrine, allows a plaintiff to demonstrate notice by showing an identity of interest between the new defendant and an existing defendant, the commonality must relate to the identities of the two entities, and not (as under Utah law) to whether their legal defenses coincide. Compare Cooper v. United States Postal Serv.,
22 For the foregoing reasons, I urge the Supreme Court Advisory Committee on the Rules of Civil Procedure to consider proposing an amendment to Utah rule 15 along the lines of the federal rule-or at least to conform our existing rule to controlling caselaw.
