MEMORANDUM OPINION
This case begins in a Taiwanese rags-to-riehes tale. Yung-Ching (Y.C.) Wang was bom in 1917 into a tea-farming family so poor that he could not afford to attend high school. By his death in 2008, he was his country’s second wealthiest person — a plastics tycoon worth an estimated $6.8 billion.
But, as is often true on both sides of the Pacific: more money, more problems. Y.C. died without a known will, and his heirs— belonging to three “Families” — have since been locked in an international struggle for his assets. This case is one chapter of that saga. Winston Wen-Young Wong, Y.C.’s son from his Second Family, filed this suit in 2010 in the name of Plaintiff Yueh-Lan Wang, Y.C.’s wife from his First Family. Operating under a power-of-attomey from Yueh-Lan, who was herself childless, Winston brought her claims seeking assets held by Defendants as part of her marital share under Taiwanese law. Yueh-Lan has since died, and the Executors of her estate now seek to take over and revise the Complaint. As the Court ultimately concludes that this is permissible and that some of Defendants’ objections to the contrary should be reserved for later briefing, it will grant the Executors’ Motion to do so.
I. Background
Because the core question at this stage is whether the Executors’ proposed Second Amended Complaint could survive a motion to dismiss, the Court draws its facts from that pleading and accepts them as true. See Ashcroft v. Iqbal,
A teen bride, Yueh-Lan was married to Y.C. for 72 years — about the average life expectancy of a newborn today. See ECF No. 37-8 (Proposed Second Amended Complaint), ¶ 1. (As many individuals in this case share the same last name, the Court refers to them by their first names for sake of convenience and not as a mark of disrespect.) Over the course of their long union, Y.C. founded several companies, most notably the Formosa Plastics Group, which is “one of Taiwan’s biggest and most profitable manufacturing conglomerates with annual sales of over $60 billion and operations in five countries.” Id., ¶ 17. These ventures made him the second wealthiest person in Taiwan by 2006 with a conservative estimated net worth of around $6.8 billion. Id., ¶ 18.
Two years later, in 2008, Y.C. died in New Jersey without a known will. Id., ¶ 16. Because he had distributed his riches around the world, his estate in Taiwan eventually identified less than $2 billion in assets for disbursement to his heirs. Id., ¶ 18. Complicating matters further still, during his long marriage to Yueh-Lan (his “First Family”), Y.C. created other families by fathering children with two other women — .Wang Yang Chiao and Pao Chu (P.C.) Lee. Id., ¶26. While he and Yueh-Lan had no offspring, his relationship with Wang Yang Chiao resulted in the birth of five children known as the “Second Family,” and his relationship with P.C. Lee produced another four known as the “Third Family.” Id.
Perhaps not surprisingly given such fecundity, Y.C.’s intestate death has spawned a good deal of international litigation among his three families, this action being one example. It was first filed on October 14, 2010, by Dr. Winston Wen-Young Wong, a member of the Second Family and Y.C.’s eldest son, who asserted that he was acting through a valid power-of-attomey in bringing the suit on Yueh-Lan’s behalf. See ECF No. 1 (Complaint). Yueh-Lan’s claims sought property allegedly transferred by Y.C. to Defendants during the five years prior to his death on the ground that Taiwanese law would entitle her to recover these assets as part of her 50% spousal share upon his passing. Wang ex rel. Wong v. New Mighty U.S. Trust (Wang I),
Defendants moved to dismiss these claims on numerous grounds, and this Court granted that entreaty. Wang I,
Plaintiff appealed this ruling, but Yueh-Lan died shortly thereafter, Wang II, 843 F.3d at at 489. The D.C. Circuit thus had to hold the case in abeyance for years while the Taiwanese courts determined who should act as the executors of her will because Yueh-Lan had named Winston as her sole heir but failed to appoint an executor. Id.; see SAC, ¶ 14. Eventually, Chen-Teh Shu, Dong-Xung Dai, and Robert Shi were chosen by the courts, and the three men moved to substitute themselves as Yueh-Lan’s personal representatives under the appropriate Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure while the case was still pending at the D.C. Circuit. Wang II, 843 F.3d at at 489. Before ruling on that motion, though, the D.C. Circuit again stayed the case after the Supreme Court granted
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certiorari in Americold Realty Trust v. Conagra Foods, Inc., — U.S. -,
Based on the decision in Americold, the D.C. Circuit eventually reversed this Court’s dismissal of Yueh-Lan’s complaint after holding that the citizenship of a traditional trust like New Mighty Trust depends only on the trustee’s citizenship, not the beneficiaries’, as this Court had ruled. Id. at 489-96. As a result, diversity was not lacking. Id. The Circuit, at the same time, also granted the Executors’ substitution motion “without prejudice to the defendants’ ability to renew in district court those arguments they ha[d] pressed before” it about Winston’s potentially defective POA and the consequences flowing therefrom. Id. at 496.
Now back in this Court, Plaintiff Executors filed the current Motion for Leave to File a Second Amended Complaint and for Other Relief. See ECF No. 37. Defendants have opposed, contending that the proposed new Complaint remains defective for myriad reasons. The matter is now ripe.
II. Legal Standard
A plaintiff may amend her complaint once as a matter of course within 21 days of serving it or within 21 days of the filing of a responsive pleading. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(a)(1). Otherwise, she must seek consent from the defendant or leave from the court. The latter permission “should [be] freely give[n] ... when justice so requires.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 15(a)(2). In deciding whether to grant leave to file an amended complaint, courts may consider “undue delay, bad faith or dilatory motive on the part of the movant, repeated failure to cure deficiencies by amendments previously allowed, undue prejudice to the opposing party by virtue of allowance of the amendment, futility of amendment, etc.” Foman v. Davis,
It is clear, however, that amendment should not be permitted if it would be futile. Foman,
III. Analysis
Defendants oppose Plaintiff Executors’ Second Amended Complaint on a congeries of grounds that primarily fall under the rubric of either futility or bad faith. The Court addresses the futility-related arguments first and then turns to the much easier question of whether the Executors have demonstrated any bad faith in seeking amendment here. It next considers whether the SAC, having survived these arguments, relates back to the date of the filing of the original Complaint or is instead barred by statutes of limitations. Finally, the Court takes up Defendants’ more focused arguments that New Mighty Foundation (a beneficiary of the trust) and New Mighty Trust should be dismissed from any surviving action for reasons particular to them.
A. Futility
Most of Defendants’ objections to the SAC are in essence futility arguments. In other words, they contend that the pleading “would not survive a motion to dismiss,” and thus leave to file should not be granted. Interbank Funding,
1. Ratification by Executors
Defendants loose most of their arrows on a single target: the Power of Attorney that Winston used to initiate this action on Yueh-Lan’s behalf back in 2010. According to them, the POA did not authorize him to commence a legal action in her name because the mandate had facial defects, it lacked an express authorization to bring suit in her name, and Yueh-Lan became incompetent prior to this action’s filing. See Opp. at 12-13. Defendants claim that the Court, as a result, lacks jurisdiction to hear a case that was a legal nullity since its inception. Id. at 14-15. Because the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure cannot expand this Court’s jurisdiction, moreover, Defendants further contend that this Court cannot swap in the Executors under those Rules to cure that defect now. RL The Court disagrees. Any alleged problem with Winston’s POA did not present an insurmountable jurisdictional hurdle.
At the outset of its analysis, the Court sets aside two issues. First, it need not rule on the lengthy affidavits on Taiwanese law that each party submits about the POA’s scope and validity. It instead assumes for purposes of this Motion that Defendants are correct that the POA was ineffective. Second, the Court does not rehash whether, if the case survives, the Executors are Yueh-Lan’s proper substitutes under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 25. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 25(a)(1) (“If a party dies and the claim is not extinguished, the court may order substitution of the proper party.”). The D.C. Circuit has already found that the Executors would be the parties in a proper action under the appellate version of this rule. That ship has rightly sailed.
The Circuit nevertheless expressly reserved the nub of the parties’ dispute on this score for this Court’s consideration on remand. Wang II,
The Court now concludes that it was not. Federal courts have long been reluctant to allow a party to be trapped into forfeiting a potentially legitimate claim based on the sort of honest defect or incidental mistake that Defendants seek to exploit here. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 17(a), in fact, was amended in 1966 to reflect this modern trend toward leniency when an honest and reasonable mistake as to the personal representative has been made at the outset of a case. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 17 advisory committee notes on 1966 amendment (mentioning “action may be filed in the name of John Doe (a fictitious person), as personal representative” of another, “in the hope that at a later time ... the real name of the real personal representative” is substituted); see also Fed. R. Civ. P. 9(a)(1)(B) (setting pleading requirements for “a party’s authority to sue or be sued in a representative capacity”). This is especially true where, as in this action, the proper party in interest — Yueh-Lan and her Executors — seeks to cure such an innocent defect by later ratifying the action and where the mistake caused no prejudice to Defendants. See, e.g., Link Aviation, Inc. v. Downs,
Contrary to Defendants’ contention, there is no jurisdictional obstacle to this course of action. The matter of a person’s capacity or authority to sue on behalf of someone else who indisputably has standing to bring the asserted claims does not raise a jurisdictional problem at all. See Davis v. Lifetime Capital, Inc.,
A recent case out of the Fifth Circuit illustrates why. In Rideau v. Keller Independent School District,
Other courts have likewise distinguished authority-to-sue issues from questions of jurisdictional standing. See, e.g., Esposito v. United States.,
There is similarly no jurisdictional wall to scale here. Just as in Rideau, it is undisputed that the named plaintiff — i.e., Yueh-Lan— had standing to bring her spousal-related claims. After all, “economic harm” is the “bread-and-butter injury for private-law causes of action in which constitutional standing is rarely an issue.” Rideau,
Defendants, moreover, point to no case holding that a defective power-of-attomey creates an incurable jurisdictional problem when the plaintiff, who indisputably did have
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standing, later ratified the action. Rather, even where a case has been brought in the name of a corporate debtor without proper authorization, federal bankruptcy courts routinely deny efforts by these debtors to dismiss such suits where the person with proper authorization has later taken actions to ratify it. See, e.g., Hager v. Gibson,
Defendants, rather, rely on cases readily distinguishable from the scenario presented by this case. See, e.g., Opp. at 16 (citing Zurich Ins. Co. v. Logitrans, Inc.,
More critically, the D.C. Circuit eschewed Ionian Trader’s overly rigid approach three years later in Link Aviation,
Assured, then, of its jurisdiction, this Court is also satisfied that Plaintiff Executors should now be allowed to ratify this action. Under Rule 17(a)(3), a 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.” This Rule “reflects the general policy of the drafters of the federal rules that the choice of a party at the pleading stage ought not have to be made at the risk of a final dismissal of the action should it later appear that there had been an error.” 6A Wright & Miller, § 1555. Ratification by the correct party is thus justified where necessary “as the result of an understandable mistake.” Wieburg v. GTE Sw. Inc.,
This case falls squarely within these exemplars. Both parties provide lengthy affidavits by prominent Taiwanese law experts opining on the validity or invalidity of Winston’s POA. See EOF No. 38-25 (Declaration of Yeong-Chin Su); EOF No. 39-1 (Declaration of Tsung-Fu Chen). This Court, after reviewing these, would be hard pressed to choose a clear winner in that debate. Likewise, there was no court ruling that Yueh-Lan was incompetent in 2010 when this case was brought or that Winston’s POA was thus no longer valid.
Allowing ratification by her Executors now that the statute of limitations has run on these claims, as a result, amply serves “Rule 17(a)(3)’s intended purpose: the avoid[ance of] forfeiture and injustice when an understandable mistake has been made.” Rideau,
The Court will therefore deny Defendants’ effort to vitiate the filing of the SAC on the ground that the original suit was a legal nullity.
2. Joinder
Defendants next contend that substituting the Executors is not enough; instead, they believe, the SAC cannot survive because Rule 19 requires more actors to be added to this litigation. To recap, the present parties are Plaintiff Executors and Defendants New Mighty Foundation, New Mighty Trust, and Clearbridge. See SAC, ¶22. Executors are domiciled in Taiwan for diversity purposes, see Smith v. Sperling,
Before separately considering whether the absence of P.C. Lee or the Grantors warrants this drastic remedy, the Court first sets out the relevant required-joinder principles.
a. Dismissal under Rules 12(b)(7) & 19
Rule 12(b)(7) provides that a complaint may be dismissed for “failure to join a party under Rule 19.” Courts are generally reluctant to grant Rule 12(b)(7) motions, and “dismissal is warranted only when the defect is serious.” 5C Wright & Miller, § 1359. While “the court must accept the complaint’s allegations as true,” it “may also consider matters outside the pleadings” in ruling on such a motion. Ali v. Carnegie Inst. of Wash.,
Rule 19, in turn, “establishes a two-step procedure for determining whether an action must be dismissed because of the absence of a party needed for a just adjudication.” Cherokee Nation of Okla. v. Babbitt,
First, Rule 19(a)(1) makes joinder of absent parties “necessary” if:
(A) in that person’s absence, the court cannot accord complete relief among existing parties; or
(B) that person claims an interest relating to the subject of the action and is so situated that disposing of the action in the person’s absence may:
(i) as a practical matter impair or impede the person’s ability to protect the interest; or
(ii) leave an existing party subject to a substantial risk of incurring double, multiple, or otherwise inconsistent obligations because of the interest.
As Defendants do not contend that “complete relief’ is impossible, the focus is on whether P.C. Lee’s or the Grantors’ interests might be impaired in them absence or whether an existing party might endure a substantial risk of inconsistent obligations. See Opp. at 30-36.
Second, the Court examines whether those absent parties are “indispensable.” This inquiry begins by asking if the necessary but absent party cannot in fact be added — for instance, if joinder would destroy diversity. See, e.g., Provident Tradesmens Bank & Trust Co. v. Patterson,
(1) the extent to which a judgment rendered in the person’s absence might prejudice that person or the existing parties;
(2) the extent to which any prejudice could be lessened or avoided by: (A) protective provisions in the judgment;
(B) shaping the relief; or (C) other measures;
(3) whether a judgment rendered in the person’s absence would be adequate; and
(4) whether the plaintiff would have an adequate remedy if the action were dismissed for nonjoinder.
Id. “The decision whether to dismiss (i&, the decision whether the person missing is ‘indispensable’) must be based on factors varying with the different cases, some such factors being substantive, some procedural, some compelling by themselves, and some subject to balancing against opposing interests.” Provident Tradesmens Bank,
b. P.C. Lee
Defendants first argue that the absence of P.C. Lee, the Third Family matriarch, requires dismissal. See Opp. at 31. Some further exposition is helpful here. Despite the SAC’s allegations that Yueh-Lan was Y.C.’s sole legal spouse, see SAC, ¶¶ 25-27, Defendants contend that the High Court of Taiwan in 2015 confirmed that P.C. Lee was a lawful wife under Taiwanese law. See ECF No. 38-4 (Declaration of Pao Chu Lee), Exh. A (Civil Judgment of High Court of Taiwan) at 2 (“Pao-chu LEE is hereby confirmed to be the living spouse of Yung-Ching Wang.”). Because this action “seekfs] to recover the property purportedly transferred to Defendants from the Marital Estate,” SAC, ¶ 2, Defendants assert that P.C. Lee, too, is entitled to her marital share. Her joinder, however — presumably as a plaintiff (although Defendants do not so specify)— would allegedly be impossible as she was a dual American-Taiwanese citizen domiciled in Taiwan when the case commenced, rendering her “stateless” for diversity purposes and unable to bring suit here. See Opp. at 34; see also Core VCT Pic v. Hensley,
*23 The Court finds no reason to do so. Even if P.C. Lee is a lawful wife under Taiwanese law, dismissal does not necessarily follow.
First, looking at the two Rule 19(a)(1)(B) prongs, Defendants have not carried their burden to show that P.C. Lee’s share of the marital estate is in jeopardy. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 19(a)(l)(B)(i). Courts do not always require all heirs to participate in actions to recover estate property. In Jiménez v. Rodríguez-Pagán,
Critically, Defendants present no argument that Taiwanese marital-property rights or causes of action are arranged in such a way that Yueh-Lan’s loss would affect P.C. Lee’s own legal interests in the marital estate. See, e.g., Morrison v. New Orleans Pub. Serv. Inc.,
The Court also dispenses with Defendants’ fear that a judgment favorable to Plaintiffs might be based on the faulty “premise that Yueh-Lan is the sole spouse entitled to the entire spousal share,” a holding that would “ ‘eonflict[ ]’ ” with P.C. Lee’s marital rights. See Opp. at 32 (emphases added) (quoting Wach v. Byrne, Goldenberg & Hamilton, PLLC,
Second, Defendants also present little reason to believe that they will be subject to duplicative or inconsistent obligations. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 19(a)(l)(B)(ii). The question here is whether P.C. Lee would later create a
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“substantial risk” that Defendants incur multiple liabilities. W. Md. Ry.,
Even passing Rule 19(a), the Rule 19(b) factors also do not counsel dismissal. In considering those factors, the Court assumes that P.C. Lee is indeed necessary and that she should still be treated as a “stateless” American-Taiwanese national domiciled in Taiwan (despite her relinquishing her American citizenship in 2013). See Lee Deck, ¶ 26. It also bears in mind that Rule 19(b) “calls for practically-oriented consideration of the competing interests at stake.” Cloverleaf Standardbred Owners Ass’n, Inc. v. Nat’l Bank of Wash.,
The factors again may be summarized as prejudice, remedy, adequacy, and the effects of dismissal. The first “overlaps considerably with the Rule 19(a) analysis,” which points to little or no prejudice to P.C. Lee or existing parties. Capitol Med. Ctr., LLC v. Amerigroup Md., Inc.,
Because P.C. Lee is neither necessary nor indispensable, the Court rejects Defendants’ effort to obtain dismissal based on her absence.
c. Grantors
The final extras Defendants wish to add to this cast are the Grantors (or, settlors) of New Mighty Trust. See Opp. at 35. Those Grantors originally held numerous assets— principally, shares of two of Y.C.’s companies — before transferring them into New Mighty Trust, See SAC, ¶¶ 46-50. Because the Grantors are British Virgin Islands citizens, adding these entities as defendants would defeat diversity (between them and *25 the Executors, as both are foreign citizens) and lead to dismissal. See Opp. at 36.
It is not clear, first, why prior owners of the disputed assets are required parties. Whereas P.C. Lee claimed a spousal interest in the marital estate, Defendants fail to explain what live interest the Grantors maintain in property that is no longer theirs. See Sax v. Sax,
Even if the Grantors were necessary, the Court would not dismiss the suit. First, Defendants do not explain why the Court would not add the Grantors as additional plaintiffs as opposed to defendants — thus preserving diversity by keeping foreign citizens on the same side of the controversy. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 19(a)(2) (“A person who refuses to join as a plaintiff may be made either a defendant or, in a proper case, an involuntary plaintiff.”). Indeed, the Executors assert that the Grantors might assert some cause of action against Defendants to recover “the same [assets]” that Plaintiffs now seek. See Opp. at 36 (quoting Wach,
The Court thus finds that Defendants’ Rule 19 objections do not render the filing of the SAC a futile endeavor.
3. Forum non Conveniens
Defendants next ask this Court to exercise its “sound discretion” to dismiss the case because this forum is inconvenient to the litigation. See Opp. at 37-43. After considering their reasons on this score, however, the Court finds them currently wanting.
Defendants’ primary argument in favor of dismissal on forum non conveniens grounds relies on the fact that Clearbridge, a D.C. limited-liability corporation, has delegated its trustee duties to Trust Managers who are located in Taiwan. Id. at 37. Because Winston and Plaintiff Executors are also Taiwanese residents, Defendants contend that the island is plainly an adequate alternative forum for the litigation. Id. at 38. They further point out that a similar action brought in New Jersey by Plaintiffs was already dismissed on FNC grounds, and private and public factors counsel in favor of litigating this dispute in Taiwan because the case revolves around the application of Taiwanese spousal law and most of the evidence is located there. Id. at 38-40.
Defendants, however, overlook a key variable in asking for an FNC dismissal. “Courts apply a two-step test to determine whether a case may be dismissed under the
forum non conveniens
doctrine when the only alternative forum is in a foreign country.” Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co. v. Thyssen Min. Const. of Canada, Ltd.,
But Defendants have not carried their burden to prove that an alternative
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forum is actually, not just theoretically, available. Fireman’s Fund,
This alone dooms their
forum non conve-niens
argument for now. See Fireman’s Fund,
The Court will therefore deny a dismissal of this case on FNC grounds at this point. It is not clear that the Taiwanese courts would permit this litigation to proceed there, nor is it plain that Defendants would not assert that the course of this case has given rise to new limitations defenses. See Stromberg v. Marriott Int’l, Inc.,
4. Failure to State a Claim
Defendants’ final futility argument is that the SAC should not be filed because it fails to state a claim. In this regard, too, Defendants overreach at this stage in the litigation. Their arguments either come up short or are more properly reserved for future briefing.
Their first quarrel with the well-drafted, 35-page SAC is that it allegedly does not meet the standard for information-and-belief pleading or contains fatally implausible allegations. Defendants point in particular to the SAC’s assertion that Yueh-Lan was the “sole lawful spouse” of Y.C. who was “shorted” in her marital property upon his death, that Y.C. held a beneficial ownership of the shares eventually transferred to New Mighty Trust, and that Y.C. did so to reduce Yueh-Laris alleged spousal share. See Opp. at 24. In addition, they take issue with the SAC’s statement that the value of Y.C.’s estate was greater than that reflected in the amount that was paid to Yueh-Lan as her spousal share. Id. at 25.
This sort of factual nitpicking, though, is misplaced in an opposition to a motion to amend, and probably even in a
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future motion to dismiss. Whether or not Plaintiff Executors’ contentions are eventually borne out by the evidence, they are not facially implausible by any stretch of the imagination, nor are they unsupported — as Defendants contend — by appropriate factual allegations in the SAC. All that is required for a claim to be facially plausible is that the SAC provide “factual content that allows the court to draw the reasonable inference that the defendant is liable for the misconduct alleged.” Iqbal,
On this score, even Defendants recognize that at least one Taiwanese court arguably appears to have held it accurate that Yueh-Lan was indeed the sole “legal” spouse. See Opp. at 24. Even had it not, the fact that P.C. Lee might also be a spouse would not make implausible Yueh-Lan’s claim to her fair spousal portion from Defendants’ coffers; at most, it would merely reduce her remedy as she would have to share her recovery with any other wives. The SAC’s factual rendition in this regard is thus plausible. Likewise, the SAC adequately supports its allegation that the amount Yueh-Lan received in the Taiwanese probate matter was not in line with the estimation of Y.C.’s wealth prior to his death by pointing to a credible 2006 publication on his net worth. See SAC, ¶ 18. In short, none of these factual averments is unsupported or implausible, and, even if they were, their absence alone would not be fatal to the SAC.
This sort of largely factual dispute, once again, is not something appropriately resolved in response to a motion seeking leave to amend a complaint. S.S. Silberblatt, Inc. v. E. Harlem Pilot Block Bldg. 1 Hous. Dev. Fund Co.,
A similar fate befalls Defendants’ next set of salvos, which focuses on the elements of the various Taiwanese legal claims asserted in the SAC, arguing that each count fails to assert some required element to state a claim. See Opp. at 26-28. For instance, they argue that one count is defective because the Taiwanese law at issue provides relief only against the disposing spouse, rather than third parties like Defendants. Id. at 26. They point, in support, to a lengthy expert declaration provided by a Taiwanese law professor. Id. Not surprisingly, Plaintiff Executors’ similarly credentialed expert on Taiwanese law urges that quite the opposite is true in his own declaration. See Reply at 5. Neither party, however, supports these conclusions in their briefing. This sort of difficult legal dispute is simply not ripe for resolution based on such passing reference in an opposition to a motion to amend; yet again, it is better reserved for more comprehensive and refined briefing in a future motion. See 6 Wright & Miller, § 1487 (“If a proposed amendment is not clearly futile, then denial of leave to amend is improper.”) (collecting cases).
Finally, the Court has some difficulty following many of Defendants’ other objections that fall under this heading. An illustrative example is the contention that Count Two fails to support a plausible inference that Y.C. transferred this marital property with the specific intent to reduce Yueh-Lan’s spousal share because the SAC only alleges that Y.C. “directed,” “caused” and/or “permitted” transfers that were intended to reduce Yueh-Lan’s share. See Opp. at 26. If Defendant does decide to pursue dismissal in the future, such cavils will require further explication to prevail.
Because the remaining attacks on the SAC’s D.C.-law counts are dependent on the problematic arguments above, the Court concludes that Defendants have not shown that the SAC is so infirm that filing is not warranted.
B. Bad Faith
Defendants next shift gears and argue that leave to amend should be denied because Plaintiff Executors are proceeding in bad faith. See Opp. at 21-23 (citing Foman, 371
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U.S. at 182,
As to Defendants’ first two arguments, the Court agrees with Plaintiff Executors that the SAC does nothing more than restate the D.C. Circuit’s language that New Mighty Trust is a “nominal” party to this litigation, See Wang,
Last, but not least, the Court finds no reasoned basis to conclude that the SAC’s refined theories of its claims are improper. Although Plaintiffs First Amended Complaint indicated that the financial transfers to Defendants had been made without Y.C.’s knowledge, discovery in a separate action in Bermuda has since uncovered evidence that Y.C. may in fact have been aware of the shares being placed in the Trust prior to his death. See EOF No. 39-2 (Declaration by Daniel Weinberger), ¶¶ 46-61. Not only that, but Defendant Clearbridge is well aware that its client and a member of its Board, Susan Wang, attested to his knowledge in a sworn affidavit based on her personal conversations with her father. Id., ¶ 46; Wang Deck, ¶ 2. Defendants thus appear to do the same thing they accuse Plaintiff Executors of — namely, seeking to say one thing in one forum, while alleging the opposite in another. See, e.g., Opp. at 25 (asserting no basis for “rote recitation" in SAC that Y.C. knew of the transfer). The Court will not reward such behavior on Defendants’ part. Rather, Plaintiff Executors are free to pursue their own refined theory of Yueh-Lan’s original claims, irrespective of the theories that Winston might choose to pursue in his own litigation in another forum.
One last point bears mentioning here. The new version of the facts added to the SAC about Y.C.’s knowledge of the transfers is an understandable revision at this point in the litigation. Indeed, these are just the sort of recently discovered facts that courts allow plaintiffs to add to an amended complaint. Compare Wimm v. Jack Eckerd Corp.,
As a result, the Court will deny Defendants’ objections to the SAC to the extent that they rely on allegations of bad faith.
C. Relation Back under Rule 15(c)
Having determined that the SAC should be filed over the objections raised by Defendants, one final issue flagged by both parties must also be resolved: whether that pleading should now relate back to the filing date of the original Complaint. See Hartley v. Wil-
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fert,
The Court .easily concludes that relation back to the filing of the original Complaint on October 14, 2010, is appropriate here. “Rule 15(c) ... governs when an amended pleading ‘relates back’ to the date of a timely filed original pleading and is thus itself timely even though it was filed outside an applicable statute of limitations." Krupski v. Costa Crociere S.p.A.,
The careful reader will notice that this Rule does not quite fit this case. While Rule 15(c) does not expressly mention what is required when substitutions are made to plaintiffs, rather than defendants, the Advisory Committee Notes to its Amendment in 1966 states:
The relation back of amendments changing plaintiffs is not expressly treated in revised Rule 15(c) since the problem is generally easier. Again the chief consideration of policy is that of the statute of limitations, and the attitude taken in revised Rule 15(c) toward change of defendants extends by analogy to amendments changing plaintiffs.
Some federal courts thus apply the same factors to amendments substituting plaintiffs as this rule prescribes for defendants, asking whether “‘the defendant knew or should have known that it would be called on to defend against claims asserted by the newly-added plaintiff,’ unless ‘the defendant would be unfairly prejudiced in maintaining a defense against the newly-added plaintiff.’” Plubell v. Merck & Co.,
This slight difference matters not for this case. As should be obvious, relation back under either standard is unlikely to be denied in a situation such as the one presented here — ie., where Executors merely step into the shoes of a deceased Plaintiff under Rule 25 and then must ratify the action under Rule 17 because of some potential defect with the initial surrogate’s capacity to sue. The Court, in fact, is skeptical that these facts even raise concerns with the relation-back principle set out in Rule 15(c)(1)(B) — instead of the more general one provided by Rule 16(c)(1)(A), which looks only at the consistency in the claims — because the Executors step wholly into the shoes of Yueh-Lan.
Out of an abundance of caution, however, the Court will engage in a full analysis. As to the first consideration, the SAC asserts almost exactly the same causes of action found in the original Complaint. All of its claims arise out of the same conduct that has been at the heart of this litigation from the start— namely, whether transfers of Y.C.’s assets made to Defendants in the five years prior to his death denied Yueh-Lan her forced spousal share under Taiwanese law. See ECF No. 38-2 (Red-Line Comparison of original Complaint and SAC). Defendants also knew of these claims from the outset, and Yueh-
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Lan’s Executors step into precisely the same shoes that she once wore. Defendants thus never had any right of “repose” from these claims inasmuch as they have been defending against them this whole time. Rendall-Speranza v. Nassim,
No discovery, in fact, has even taken place yet in this litigation, and any alteration in the factual theories from the original Complaint seem largely due to evidence Defendants turned over in similar litigation elsewhere. Plaintiff Executors’ need to revise their factual rendition to reflect this newly revealed evidence, then, should hardly come as surprise to Defendants, who had such information in their possession this whole time. If anything, they got a head start on what would surely have been a necessary amendment to the First Amended Complaint after discovery in this case divulged those same facts.
The Court thus readily concludes that the SAC relates back to the filing of the original Complaint in 2010.
D. Dismissal of New Mighty Foundation & New Mighty Trust
Having disposed of the major arguments asserted by Defendants against the SAC, a few stragglers remain. Defendants first provide two brief reasons that New Mighty Foundation (the beneficiary) should be dis missed — viz., because it was not properly served and because the SAC fails to state a claim against it. Defendants then contend that New Mighty Trust should also be dismissed from the suit under the principle of judicial estoppel. The Court rejects each of these contentions in turn.
1. New Mighty Foundation’s Service of Process
Defendants’ first position is that one member of their ranks, New Mighty Foundation, was improperly served and thus should be dismissed from the action. See Opp. at 43. In response to such a motion, “[t]he party on whose behalf service is made has the burden of establishing its validity when challenged; to do so, he must demonstrate that the procedure employed satisfied the requirements of the relevant portions of Rule 4 [of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure] and any other applicable provision of law.” Light v. Wolf,
Rule 4(h) provides, in part, that a plaintiff may serve a corporation by “following state law for serving a summons in an action brought in courts of general jurisdiction in the state where the district court is located or where service is made.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 4(e)(1) (incorporated by reference in Fed. R. Civ. P. 4(h)(1)(A)). District law states, in turn:
In an action against a foreign corporation doing business in the District, process may be served on the agent of the corporation or person conducting its business, or, when he is absent and can not be found, by leaving a copy at the principal place of business in the District, or, where there is no such place of business, by leaving a copy at the place of business or residence of the agent in the District, and that service is effectual to bring the corporation before the court.
D.C. Code § 13-334(a); see Gonzalez v. Internacional De Elevadores, S.A.,
The Executors, however, have at least made out a
prima facie
ease that the individual served — John C. Wannen — was a “person conducting [New Mighty Foundation’s] business.” Mot. at 27. Defendants New Mighty Foundation, New Mighty Trust, and Clearbridge all share the same address (down to the office-suite number) in Washington. See ECF No. 3 (Affidavits of Service) at 4, 6, 8. On February 9, 2011, Plaintiffs’ process server headed over to that office and left copies of the Summons and Complaint with Wannen, who appears to be the registered agent of Clearbridge, which acts as trustee for the Trust. Id. at 8. At that time, Wannen also accepted service on behalf of the Foundation. Id. at 4. Plaintiffs then filed affidavits describing these efforts. See Roland,
Defendants do not offer enough evidence to convince the Court that this service was faulty. They only submit a declaration that states that Wannen was not a “registered agent,” “officer,” or “managing or general agent” of the Foundation, or an agent otherwise “authorized to receive service of process on behalf of NMF.” ECF No. 88-13 (Declaration of Stephen K. Vetter), ¶ 5. Nowhere, however, does the declaration actually pin down his role — that is, Defendants are silent as to his actual affiliation with the Foundation and whether he conducts any of its business. Rather, from what the Court can tell, Wannen and the Foundation do not occupy entirely separate spheres. The Foundation’s tax forms bear his signature as the preparer, while his tax-preparation company shares the same exact address as Defendants. See NMF Form 990-PF at 13; see also Kozusko Decl., ¶ 4 (mentioning also that Wannen holds a 50% interest in Clearbridge).
Absent evidence that clarifies Wannen’s relationship with New Mighty Foundation, the Court will not require Plaintiffs to engage in a further “cat-and-mouse game” with Defendants’ various entities and their agents. Ali v. Mid-Atl. Settlement Servs., Inc.,
2. Statement of Claim Against New Mighty Foundation
Defendants next point out that the SAC’s only allegations against the Foundation are that it received “gratuitous distributions” of cash from the Trust that were “authorized and/or directed” by Clearbridge. See Opp. at 44 (citing SAC, ¶ 57). Yet this is not accurate. The reference to the Foundation in the SAC incorporates the allegations made throughout the pleading that these transfers were done at the direction of Y.C. in the five years prior to his death to deny Yueh-Lan her fair marital share. See SAC, ¶ 57.
To the extent that Defendants also mean to challenge the pleading under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 8, as indicated through a single supportive citation in their pleading, the Court finds their contention wanting. See Opp. at 44-45 (citing Toumazou v. Turkish Rep. of N. Cyprus,
The Court will, accordingly, deny Defendants’ effort to dismiss the Foundation from the action as this point.
3. Judicial Estoppel
In their final shot, Defendants posit that the SAC’s counts against the Trust should be dismissed based on representations that Plaintiff Executors made before the *32 D.C. Circuit about the Trust’s status as a “nominal party” to this litigation. See Opp. at 46.
As previously explained, though, the Executors have merely restated in the SAC that the Trust is a nominal party to this suit. This is consistent with what they argued on appeal on the jurisdictional question and with what the Circuit adopted in its opinion on that issue. Wang,
The Court, in short, finds no indication that Plaintiff Executors are trying to get away with the “improper use of judicial machinery” in this case. See Konstantinidis v. Chen,
If Defendants nevertheless wish to pursue the dismissal of the Trust based on the legal implications of the Circuit’s decision, they are free to do so in a future motion. The Court reserves judgment on that question for now.
IV. Conclusion
For the reasons explained above, the Court concludes that no barriers exist to the filing of Plaintiff Executors’ Second Amended Complaint. The Court thus grants their Motion in full. A contemporaneous Order so stating, and amending the caption of the case, shall issue this day.
