Wilner v. White, No. 2003-CA-01733-COA (MS 7/13/2004)

Decision Date13 July 2004
Docket NumberNo. 2003-CA-01733-COA.,2003-CA-01733-COA.
PartiesIRIS M. WILNER, APPELLANT v. M. NEIL WHITE, M.D., AND GULF COAST OB/GYN, P.A., APPELLEES.
CourtMississippi Supreme Court

BEFORE SOUTHWICK, P.J., MYERS AND CHANDLER, JJ.

SOUTHWICK, P.J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1. A motion for summary judgment was filed by a defendant doctor and his clinic who had been added as parties by an amended complaint. The motion was granted on the basis that the amendment was made after the expiration of the period of limitations. The plaintiff appeals. We find that the trial judge correctly interpreted the controlling law. We affirm.

¶2. Iris M. Wilner was admitted to Singing River Hospital for a diagnostic laparoscopy on January 27, 1997. Immediately after the procedure, she noticed pain, weakness, and numbness in her left leg. The condition continued and she was diagnosed with compression neuropathy. On February 12, 1998, Wilner filed suit naming as defendants Singing River Hospital System, a nurse, and John Does 1-4. Wilner took Dr. M. Neil White's deposition on August 12, 1998. Dr. White worked with Gulf Coast OB/GYN, P.A.

¶3. On January 27, 1999, Wilner filed an amended complaint, without leave of court, naming four additional defendants. On that day, she also filed a motion for leave to amend. Among those who were newly named as defendants were Dr. White and Gulf Coast OB/GYN. Two other parties who were named in the new pleadings are not involved in this appeal. On August 20, 1999, Wilner noticed a hearing on her motion for leave to amend. The circuit court denied the motion and dismissed the amended complaint. On appeal, we reversed and ordered that on remand the amendment be allowed. Wilner v. White, 788 So. 2d 822 (Miss. Ct. App. 2001). On remand, the complaint was amended. White and Gulf Coast OB/GYN's new motion for summary judgment based on the applicable statute of limitations was then granted. The circuit court found that the amended complaint did not relate back to the original complaint and granted the motion.

DISCUSSION

1. First appeal

¶4. The reach of this Court's decision in the first appeal is one of the central disputes now on the second appeal. The initial appeal was from the trial judge's denial of Wilner's motion to amend in order to name White and Gulf Coast OB/GYN as defendants. We relied on the court rule that even though a "party may amend his pleading only by leave of court or upon written consent of the adverse party; leave shall be freely given when justice so requires." M.R.C.P. 15(a), quoted in Wilner, 788 So. 2d at 824. Only in exceptional circumstances should an amendment be refused, such as when actual prejudice to the opposing party would occur or due to futility of the amendment. Id. The Court then addressed only the prejudice issue, and stated that nothing in the record revealed "any undue prejudice caused by the allowance of Wilner's amended complaint." Id.

¶5. This is the point in our prior opinion that becomes the fulcrum on which application of the "law of the case" doctrine turns for today's issues. That doctrine prevents altering the earlier-determined legal principles at the time of later proceedings in the same case.

The doctrine of the law of the case is similar to that of former adjudication, relates entirely to questions of law, and is confined in its operation to subsequent proceedings in the case. Whatever is once established as the controlling legal rule of decision, between the same parties in the same case, continues to be the law of the case, so long as there is a similarity of facts. This principle expresses the practice of courts generally to refuse to reopen what has previously been decided. It is founded on public policy and the interests of orderly and consistent judicial procedure.

Florida Gas Exploration Co. v. Searcy, 385 So. 2d 1293, 1295 (Miss. 1980), quoting Mississippi College v. May, 241 Miss. 359, 366, 128 So. 2d 557 (1961). When an appellate court considers a second appeal in a case that it previously reviewed, its prior holdings usually are not to be changed. Exceptions include obvious and significant errors that create an injustice, which could include intervening changes in the law. Florida Gas, 385 So. 2d at 1295.

¶6. Our prior holding solely determined that the trial judge erred by denying an amendment to a complaint, since such amendments should be freely permitted. We held that "under the `freely given where justice so requires' standard, Wilner should have been allowed to amend her complaint and to test her claim on the merits since even the few facts given appear to present a proper subject for relief." Wilner, 788 So. 2d at 824.

¶7. The dissent in the first appeal also viewed the Court's holding as limited to the issue of whether an amendment should have been allowed. In that limitation, the dissent argued that we erred. The dissent stated that failure on the first appeal to consider the issue of the controlling statute of limitations could make the remand an "empty act."

Without this relation back [of the amendment], the claim against these defendants was barred by the statute of limitations by the time they could have properly been made parties. To permit them to be added as defendants under those circumstances would be an empty act.

The trial court was economizing limited judicial resources by simply denying the right to amend rather than permitting the amendment, only to subsequently dismiss these defendants when they inevitably raised the defense of the statute of limitations.

Wilner, 788 So. 2d at 826 (McMillin, C.J., dissenting).

¶8. It is true that the majority referred to "futility" as a reason not to permit an amendment, but the Court never analyzed whether this amendment would fit that category. Wilner, 788 So. 2d at 824. The only issue explicitly resolved in the initial appeal was whether the rule requiring liberality in amendments to complaints had been violated. Only Rule 15(a) on permitting amendments to be made was discussed. The separate issue of whether a different subsection of the rule permits the amendment to "relate back" was not referenced. As we will show, the analysis of whether an amendment relates back is no perfunctory matter such that its answer can be reasonably implied in the first appeal's ruling on the policy of liberal amendments.

¶9. If there is anything in our 2001 decision that was an implied holding as to the effectiveness of Wilner's amendment, and we do not need to decide whether there was, it might be seen in the last sentence of the Court's opinion that the "motion to amend was filed within the statutory time allowed and should have been granted." Wilner, 788 So. 2d at 824. What has become clear since our first opinion is that filing a motion for leave to amend within the statute of limitations period is not enough. We will later examine the Supreme Court's holding to that effect. Curry v. Turner, 832 So. 2d 508 (Miss. 2002). Thus, even if we did implicitly conclude that Wilner's amendment would allow a trial on the merits, later superior authority has overridden such a conclusion. "Law of the case" does not save any contrary earlier determination by us.

¶10. We therefore conclude that the law of the case doctrine has no application to the basis on which the trial judge ruled after the remand. Whether the trial judge erred in the ruling is a different matter. We turn to that now.

2. "Relation back" of amendment

¶11. After the amendment was allowed on remand, Dr. White and Gulf Coast OB/GYN argued they were not fictitious parties under Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 9(h), that they were known to Wilner as possible defendants so there was no mistake as to their identity under Rule 15(c), and that the statute of limitations had expired. The trial judge agreed and granted judgment.

¶12. Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 15(a) states that a party may amend a pleading before a response is served or within thirty days of its being served. Wilner did not do so. What the first appeal resolved was that she was entitled to an amendment later sought because of language in the same rule that "leave shall be freely given when justice so requires." M.R.C.P. 15(a).

¶13. On remand and now on appeal, the central issue is whether the amendment "related back" so as to avoid any statute of limitations problem in the joinder of new parties. A specific but subsequent part of the same Rule 15 on granting amendments sets the requirements.

Relation Back of Amendments. Whenever the claim or defense asserted in the 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 Rule 4(h) for service of the summons and complaint, the party to be brought in by amendment:

(1) has received such notice of the institution of the action that the party will not be prejudiced in maintaining the party's 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 the party. An amendment pursuant to Rule 9(h) is not an amendment changing the party against whom a claim is asserted and such amendment relates back to the date of the original pleading.

M.R.C.P. 15(c).

¶14. An initial question is the date on which to consider an amendment to be effective. Wilner filed the motion for leave to amend and an actual amendment on the last day of the limitation period, which was two years from the...

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