         IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF MISSISSIPPI

                                NO. 2015-CA-00243-COA

ROBERT HAMMONS, JR.                                                          APPELLANT

v.

C. WADE NAVARRE, II, INDIVIDUALLY AND                                         APPELLEES
D/B/A NAVARRE FABRICATION, INC.,
NAVARRE FABRICATION, INC., VELCON
FILTERS, LLC, KNAPPCO CORPORATION
AND WILDEN PUMP AND ENGINEERING, LLC

DATE OF JUDGMENT:                           12/31/2014
TRIAL JUDGE:                                HON. MARGARET CAREY-MCCRAY
COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                  LEFLORE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANT:                    WAYNE E. FERRELL JR.
                                            ADRIENNE P. FRASCOGNA
ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLEES:                    W. SCOTT WELCH III
                                            CHARLES G. COPELAND
                                            JAMES R. MOORE JR.
                                            MICHAEL C. GATLING
                                            TIMOTHY J. STERLING
                                            MARC A. BIGGERS
                                            RICHARD L. KIMMEL
NATURE OF THE CASE:                         CIVIL - PERSONAL INJURY
TRIAL COURT DISPOSITION:                    GRANTED SUMMARY JUDGMENT FOR
                                            APPELLEES
DISPOSITION:                                AFFIRMED - 04/18/2017
MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
MANDATE ISSUED:

       EN BANC.

       WILSON, J., FOR THE COURT:

¶1.    This case involves products liability claims arising out of a helicopter crash near

Eupora. The helicopter’s pilot, Robert Hammons Jr., suffered severe injuries in the crash.

Hammons initially filed suit against the manufacturer of the fuel used in the helicopter, Scott
Petroleum, alleging that the fuel was defective and contaminated when it was sold and left

the control of Scott Petroleum. Hammons’s original complaint also purported to name as

defendants fictitious parties, “Defendants A-P.” However, the complaint did not articulate

any alleged wrongful conduct of these fictitious parties. Rather, the original complaint stated

that the fictitious parties’ “liability to [Hammons was] unknown at [that] time.”

¶2.    Approximately six months after the expiration of the applicable three-year statute of

limitations, see Miss. Code Ann. § 15-1-49 (Rev. 2012), Hammons attempted to amend his

complaint to substitute real defendants for the fictitious parties. Hammons alleged that these

new defendants manufactured or fabricated the fuel truck used to refuel the helicopter and

the fuel tank, fuel pump, and fuel filter on the truck. Hammons alleged, for the first time,

that the helicopter’s fuel was contaminated as a result of defects in the truck and/or its

component parts. The newly added defendants moved for summary judgment, arguing that

their attempted substitution did not comply with Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 9(h),

as interpreted by our Supreme Court in Veal v. J.P. Morgan Tr. Co. N.A., 955 So. 2d 843,

845-47 (¶¶8-15) (Miss. 2007). Therefore, the new defendants argued, Hammons’s claims

against them did not relate back to the date of his original complaint, which meant that the

statute of limitations had expired as to those claims. The circuit court agreed and granted

summary judgment for the defendants. We also agree and affirm.

                        FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶3.    On October 25, 2009, Hammons was piloting a helicopter spraying herbicides on



                                              2
timber fields near Eupora when the helicopter’s engine failed, causing it to crash. Hammons

was severely injured and is now paralyzed from the waist down.

¶4.    On May 26, 2011, the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) adopted and

published its final report on the accident.1 The NTSB found that the probable cause of the

crash was a loss of engine power due to fuel contamination. The NTSB report stated:

       A postaccident examination of the helicopter’s fuel system revealed a brown
       contaminate, of a density greater than jet fuel. . . . Examination of the dual use
       truck that was used to service the helicopter with fuel and herbicide revealed
       that the fuel filter between the Jet-A fuel tank and the fuel delivery hose was
       also contaminated. A common trough that ran along the top of the fuel truck
       provided an area where any over flow of water used to fill the truck’s herbicide
       tank could be introduced into the truck’s Jet-A fuel tank through gaps in the
       fuel tank’s cap seal.

The “dual use truck” was owned and operated by Hammons’s employer, Provine Helicopter.

The NTSB report goes on to state:

       A 500-gallon fuel tank was located a the foreword end of the truck, while a
       tank for mixing water and spray chemical was located at the aft end. A
       common trough ran along the top portion of both tanks, which would retain
       any over-fill of water or fuel, and was drained through two small holes at the
       forward end. Examination of the cap for the fuel tank revealed that the o-ring
       seal and the fuel vent were deteriorated, and that the seals were not continuous.

       The fuel tank was configured in a way that fuel was taken directly from the

       1
         The dissent suggests that there is some uncertainty “as to when Hammons had
access to the NTSB report.” Post at (¶57). As discussed below, Hammons’s attorney
submitted an affidavit in the circuit court that states in part: “[T]he final report was not
adopted until May 26, 2011 . . . . The NTSB did not release any of the information until May
26, 2011[.]” Hammons’s counsel states only that the report was not received by him until
April 6, 2012, when, as discussed below, counsel for Scott Petroleum sent him a copy.
Hammons’s briefs on appeal make similar statements. The record does not reveal any
dispute that the report was publicly available on May 26, 2011.

                                               3
       lowest point in the tank, and pumped through a filter to the fuel filler hose. No
       standpipe was present at the bottom of the tank that would have prevented any
       collected water from entering the fuel filter, and no pressure gauges or sensors
       were installed up or downstream of the filter.

       The truck-based fuel tank was checked for the presence of water using a water
       finding paste applied to a dip stick. A small amount of water was detected.
       The fuel filter between the tank and the delivery hose was removed and
       examined. The filter element appeared “bulged” and water was present in the
       filter. The brown contaminant was present throughout the paper folds of the
       fuel filter, and was collected along its interior.

¶5.    On December 27, 2011, Hammons filed an eleven-page complaint in the circuit court.

Scott Petroleum, which supplied fuel to Provine Helicopter, was the only named defendant.

Hammons alleged that the fuel supplied by Scott Petroleum “was defective and unreasonably

dangerous.” Hammons further alleged that there was no “substantial change in [the fuel’s]

condition from the time the fuel left the places of manufacture and/or processing until the

time of the accident.” Rather, Hammons alleged, the fuel was already in a “defective

condition” when it was “sold” and “left the control of Scott Petroleum.” The complaint did

not allege or articulate any wrongful conduct by any other entity, known or unknown.

¶6.    Hammons’s complaint also purported to name unknown “Defendants A-P.” As to

these defendants, the complaint stated, in its entirety:

       Defendants, A-P, are corporations or persons whose true identities and
       addresses are unknown at this time and whose liability to the Plaintiff is
       unknown at this time. Plaintiff will amend his Complaint and include the true
       names and addresses of the Defendants A-P once their identities are learned
       and once their liabilities are ascertained.

¶7.    Scott Petroleum was served on March 8, 2012. On April 6, 2012, counsel for Scott



                                              4
Petroleum provided counsel for Hammons with a copy of the NTSB report. Counsel’s cover

letter stated in part:

       Based on this report, it appears that if fuel contamination existed, that fuel
       contamination originated in the field service truck owned by Provine
       Helicopter which refueled the subject helicopter several times the day of the
       incident. Consequently, pursuant to this correspondence, we hereby request
       that you dismiss this matter with prejudice as to [Scott Petroleum].

       Obviously, Scott Petroleum can have no liability for the failure of Provine
       Helicopter to maintain its service truck.

Scott Petroleum subsequently answered the complaint and filed a motion for summary

judgment that attached the NTSB report as an exhibit.

¶8.    On April 8, 2013, Hammons filed a motion for leave to file an amended complaint.

On April 17, 2013, the court entered an agreed order granting Hammons’s motion. On April

30, 2013, Hammons filed a twenty-six page amended complaint that purported to identify

Defendants A through F from the original complaint as follows: Metal Craft Inc.; Wade C.

Navarre and Navarre Fabrication (collectively, “Navarre”); Velcon Filters LLC; Knappco

Corporation; and “Wilden.”2 The amended complaint alleged that Metal Craft and Navarre

manufactured the fuel truck and fuel compartments used to fuel the helicopter; the amended

complaint further alleged, for the first time, that the truck and compartments were defective.

The amended complaint alleged that Velcon Filters manufactured a fuel filter on the fuel

truck; the amended complaint further alleged, for the first time, that the filter was defective.

The amended complaint alleged that Knappco manufactured the lid on the fuel truck’s fuel

       2
           “Wilden” subsequently identified itself as Wilden Pump and Engineering LLC.

                                               5
tank; the amended complaint further alleged, for the first time, that the lid was defective.

Finally, the amended complaint alleged that Wilden manufactured the fuel truck’s pump; the

amended complaint further alleged, for the first time, that the pump was defective.

¶9.    Navarre, Velcon Filters, Knappco, and Wilden all filed motions to dismiss and/or for

summary judgment. They argued that Hammons’s claims against them were barred by the

statute of limitations because the original complaint did not properly identify them as

fictitious parties pursuant to Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 9(h) and, therefore, the

amended complaint’s allegations against them did not relate back to the date of the original

complaint. Knappco and Wilden also argued that the claims against them should be

dismissed due to insufficient service of process.3 It does not appear that Metal Craft was

ever served, and it never entered an appearance.

¶10.   In response to the defendants’ motions, Hammons’s attorney submitted an affidavit

that stated in part:

               I was associated on or about February 9, 2011. I was asked to
       investigate and prosecute a claim, if one existed, against those individuals or
       entities responsible for the accident on October 25, 2009.

              . . . I immediately began to research and investigate the accident but was
       prohibited from making any meaningful investigation whatsoever because of
       the inability to inspect and test the fuel and the fueling equipment. I was not
       provided with a description of most of the products involved in the fueling
       operation; the names and addresses of manufacturers of the parts; or each

       3
         The circuit court did not address these issues because it dismissed all claims against
Knappco and Wilden based on the statute of limitations. Knappco and Wilden raise these
issues again on appeal as alternative grounds for affirmance. We need not address these
issues since we hold that Hammons’s claims are barred by the statute of limitations.

                                              6
       party’s roll in the refueling procedure until January of 2013. The NTSB
       investigator filed his supplemental report on May 26, 2011, and for the first
       time mentioned potential problems with the fuel supply devices. . . .

              . . . The NTSB did not release any of the information until May 26,
       2011, and the fuel equipment used by Provine Helicopter was not made
       available to the Plaintiff until approximately January of 2013 . . . . Only after
       suit was filed and after Scott Petroleum partially responded to discovery
       requests was it revealed that [Metal Craft, Navarre, Velcon Filters, Knappco,
       and Wilden] were potentially additionally responsible for the October 25, 2009
       accident . . . .

             I did not receive . . . the responses to Freedom of Information requests
       [from the NTSB/FAA] until April of 2013. A copy of my Freedom of
       lnformation request letter dated March 6, 2013, is attached hereto . . . .

¶11.   The circuit court subsequently held a hearing on the defendants’ motions to dismiss

or for summary judgment and entered an opinion and order granting summary judgment in

favor of Navarre, Velcon Filters, Knappco, and Wilden. The court certified its order as final

pursuant to Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 54(b).

                                        ANALYSIS

¶12.   A motion for summary judgment “shall be rendered forthwith if . . . there is no

genuine issue as to any material fact and . . . the moving party is entitled to judgment as a

matter of law.” M.R.C.P. 56(c). We review an order granting or denying summary judgment

de novo. Peoples Bank of Biloxi v. McAdams, 171 So. 3d 505, 508 (¶10) (Miss. 2015).

When we consider issues of law, such as statutes of limitations, we also apply a de novo

standard of review. Id. Finally, the “application of the Mississippi Rules of Civil Procedure

in this case is a question of law,” which we also review de novo. Veal, 955 So. 2d at 845



                                              7
(¶6). We are “bound to follow the plain and ordinary meanings of the Rules of Civil

Procedure.” Id.

¶13.   In this case, the circuit court properly applied clear and controlling Mississippi

Supreme Court precedent in determining that the attempted substitution of Navarre, Velcon

Filters, Knappco, and Wilden failed to comply with Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 9(h).

Indeed, Hammons attempted to utilize Rule 9(h) in precisely the manner that the Supreme

Court held was improper in Veal, 955 So. 2d at 845-47 (¶¶8-15). Because these defendants

were not properly added pursuant to Rule 9(h), the claims against them do not relate back to

the original complaint and are barred by the statute of limitations.

       I.     Rule 9(h)

¶14.   Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 9(h) provides:

       When a party is ignorant of the name of an opposing party and so alleges in his
       pleading, the opposing party may be designated by any name, and when his
       true name is discovered the process and all pleadings and proceedings in the
       action may be amended by substituting the true name and giving proper notice
       to the opposing party.

(Emphasis added). Thus, a plaintiff may file a complaint alleging that “fictitious parties” are

liable for his injuries. When a plaintiff makes proper use of Rule 9(h), the substitution of a

defendant’s true name for a fictitious name relates back to the date of the original complaint.

M.R.C.P. 15(c)(2).

              A.     Veal

¶15.   In Veal, the Supreme Court provided clear and specific guidance as to the meaning



                                              8
of Rule 9(h). The Court’s discussion of the issue is directly applicable to the present case:

       [W]here a plaintiff wishes to file suit against a defendant whose name is not
       known, the suit may be filed by providing the defendant a fictitious name.
       Rule 9(h) is not intended to serve as an insurance policy to plaintiffs who wish
       to protect themselves in case they discover new defendants in the course of
       litigation. Rule 9(h) authorizes the plaintiff to deviate in only one respect from
       the requirements of the Mississippi Rules of Civil Procedure in bringing a
       claim. That is, the plaintiff is allowed to use a fictitious name, rather than the
       true name of the defendant. In other words, the purpose of Rule 9(h) is to
       allow a plaintiff to proceed with a lawsuit where the plaintiff knows and can
       articulate the wrongful conduct of, and claims against, the fictitious party, but
       simply does not know that party’s name.

               Rule 9(h) does not say that a plaintiff may include a fictitious party
       because the plaintiff suspects that there might be someone out there who
       might have engaged in conduct which might be actionable. For instance, if the
       plaintiff knew that a nurse was assisting a doctor with a procedure and that the
       nurse engaged in negligent conduct, the plaintiff is not prevented from
       proceeding with litigation against the nurse simply because the plaintiff does
       not know the name of the nurse. The plaintiff may sue “Nurse X” and upon
       learning the nurse’s name, substitute it for the fictitious party under Rule 9(h).

                However, where a plaintiff suspects that there might have been others
       involved in the procedure who might have been negligent, but is, at the time
       suit is filed, unaware of who they are or what negligent act they are alleged to
       have committed, the plaintiff may not include a fictitious party in the
       complaint. This Court has previously stated that “the purpose of Rule 9(h) is
       to provide a mechanism to bring in responsible parties, known, but
       unidentified, who can only be ascertained through the use of judicial
       mechanisms such as discovery.”

Veal, 955 So. 2d at 845-46 (¶¶9-11) (emphasis in original) (quoting Ralph Walker Inc. v.

Gallagher, 926 So. 2d 890, 896-97 (¶10) (Miss. 2006)); accord D.P. Holmes Trucking LLC

v. Butler, 94 So. 3d 248, 253-54 (¶¶15-16) (Miss. 2012) (quoting Veal, 955 So. 2d at 846

(¶¶10-11)); Price v. Clark, 21 So. 3d 509, 525-26 (¶43) (Miss. 2009) (“[A]t the time the



                                               9
original complaint was filed, Price neither knew the identities of the parties, nor was she

aware of any facts giving rise to any cause of action against such unknown individual or

corporate entity; therefore, the trial court did not err in finding that Price’s substitution did

not comport with the purpose of Rule 9(h).” (emphasis added)); Long v. Mem’l Hosp. at

Gulfport, 969 So. 2d 35, 42 (¶21) (Miss. 2007) (“One of the benefits of Rule 9(h) is to allow

a plaintiff, who is aware of his cause of action against a defendant but ignorant of the

defendant’s identity, to name a fictitious party as a defendant in order to use the court’s

resources to discover her true identity.” (emphasis added) (citing Veal, 955 So. 2d at 845-

46)); Miller ex rel. Miller v. Engelhard Corp., 95 So. 3d 740, 743 (¶8) (Miss. Ct. App. 2012);

1 Jeffrey Jackson et al., Mississippi Civil Procedure § 6:12 (2016) (“The key [to Rule 9(h)]

is that the plaintiff, though ignorant of the identity of the responsible party, must have know

at the time she sued the John Doe defendant that she had a claim. As the [S]upreme [C]ourt

sensibly noted in Veal . . . Rule 9(h) is not an ‘an insurance policy to plaintiffs who wish to

protect themselves in case they discover new defendants in the course of litigation.’ The

plaintiff who sues a John Doe defendant, unaware of what claims she might have against

unknown parties, cannot—after the period of limitations has run—use Rule 9(h) to avoid the

legitimate impact of limitations.”).

¶16.   In Veal, the Supreme Court also applied this discussion of Rule 9(h) in a manner that

bears directly on the present case. In that case, the plaintiff filed a wrongful-death complaint

alleging negligence and other claims against a nursing home’s administrator and licensee, as



                                               10
well as ten “John Does” and ten more “Unidentified Entities.” Veal, 955 So. 2d at 844 (¶2).

With respect to the fictitious entities, the original complaint alleged as follows:

       Said Defendants are named pursuant to [Rule] 9(h), insofar as their acts and/or
       omissions were negligent and/or otherwise tortious with respect to the care and
       treatment of, or in the staffing, supervision, administration and direction of the
       care and treatment of, [the deceased] during her residency at AUTUMN
       LEAVES NURSING HOME. Alternatively, said Defendants are liable for the
       negligent and/or otherwise tortious acts and/or omissions of others with respect
       to the care and treatment of [the deceased] during her residency at AUTUMN
       LEAVES NURSING HOME.

Id. at 846 (¶13).

¶17.   As the Supreme Court explained, “[t]hese general allegations provide[d] no indication

that Veal was aware of the existence of any of the additional defendants added” in her

subsequent amended complaint. Id. at (¶14). Rather, “Veal simply attempted to substitute

newly discovered defendants for the previously named fictitious parties.” Id. In her

amended complaint, “Veal not only added new allegations against the[] ‘substituted’

defendants, but also included new facts in support of [her] allegations.” Id. (emphasis

added). Veal alleged, for the first time, that these new defendants—various corporate

entities, lenders, and bondholders—were negligent in their “operation, oversight, and/or

control” of the nursing home. Id. Veal also added a new “eight-page factual summary”

detailing her new allegations against these defendants and their alleged liability based on new

theories, such as “lender liability.” Id. at 846-47 (¶14). Having compared the original

complaint to the amended complaint, the Supreme Court held that “[b]ecause these

substituted defendants were not fictitious parties, they could not have been simply substituted

                                              11
in accordance with the provisions of Rule 9(h).” Id. at 847 (¶15).

¶18.   Veal’s discussion and analysis fits this case to a “T.” In the original complaint in the

present case, Hammons did not even pretend to know of the existence of any other parties

whose wrongful conduct might have contributed to his injuries. The complaint expressly

purports to name fictitious parties as placeholders for unknown entities “whose true identities

[were] unknown . . . and whose liability to [Hammons was] unknown” but might be

“ascertained” sometime later. (Emphasis added). The original eleven-page complaint says

absolutely nothing about what these entities supposedly did or the basis of their alleged

liability to Hammons. To assert claims against new defendants, Hammons’s amended

complaint had to expand to twenty-six pages.

¶19.   Hammons’s original complaint alleged only that Scott Petroleum supplied defective

fuel—and, indeed, specifically alleged that there was no substantial change in the condition

of the fuel between the time it left Scott Petroleum’s control and the time of the crash. The

original complaint does not allege or articulate any other wrongful conduct by any other

party, known or unknown. In contrast, the amended complaint includes allegations that the

fuel truck and its fuel compartments, fuel filters, fuel pump, and fuel tank lid were all

defective and caused the fuel to become contaminated after it left Scott Petroleum’s control.

Hammons’s original complaint does not include even the slightest suggestion of these claims.

Under these circumstances, Navarre, Velcon Filters, Knappco, and Wilden “were not

fictitious parties”—they were altogether new parties—and “they could not have been simply



                                              12
substituted in accordance with the provisions of Rule 9(h).” Veal, 955 So. 2d at 847 (¶15).

¶20.   The dissent offers no persuasive basis for distinguishing Veal. The dissent says that

the plaintiff in Veal “attempted to assert entirely new theories of liability,” whereas

Hammons supposedly “continued to assert a products-liability claim for faulty fuel found in

his original complaint . . . and maintains that theory of liability, though more detailed, against

the appellees.” Post at (¶¶46, 48). But Hammons’s amended complaint is not a more refined

version of the original complaint. The amended complaint is a vastly expanded lawsuit with

allegations of defects in new and different products (not just “faulty fuel”) that directly

contradict the sole theory of the original complaint.4 This is no different from the plaintiff

in Veal, who “continued” to allege the same injuries due to the same negligent care at the

same nursing facility in a “more detailed” amended complaint that sought to blame new

parties for the alleged negligent care and injuries.

¶21.   The dissent also notes that Veal involved a “second amendment to [the] original

complaint” and that in this case Hammons was granted leave to file his amended complaint,

which was his first amendment. Post at (¶46).5 But the dissent does not say why either fact

matters. As Veal explains, “leave of court is not required” for a proper substitution pursuant


       4
        As noted above, the original complaint specifically alleged that “[t]he engine fuel
provided by Defendant, Scott Petroleum, was expected to and did reach Plaintiff . . . without
substantial change in [its] condition from the time the fuel left the places of manufacture
and/or processing until the time of the accident on October 25, 2009.”
       5
         Hammons was granted leave to file an amended complaint before any of the
appellees had been made parties to the lawsuit. It is hardly surprising that Scott Petroleum,
the only defendant then in the case, agreed to add alternative potentially liable parties.

                                               13
to Rule 9(h). Veal, 955 So. 2d at 846 (¶12). This distinction is irrelevant.

¶22.   The dissent also seems to imply that Veal is somehow a lesser precedent because the

plaintiff in that case raised a different issue in her interlocutory appeal. Post at (¶46).

However, Veal clearly held that the new defendants in that case were not properly substituted

under Rule 9(h). Veal, 955 So. 2d at 847 (¶15). This holding was essential to the Court’s

affirmance of the order dismissing those defendants. Id. at 845 (¶8).6

¶23.   Finally, the dissent claims that this decision will “essentially wipe out Rule 9(h)” and

force “plaintiffs to risk sanctions under both [Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 11] and

the [Litigation Accountability Act].” Post at (¶50). This simply is not the case. To begin

with, there is nothing new in this opinion. It is a straightforward application of a clearly and

deliberately written Mississippi Supreme Court opinion. Moreover, Veal only required

Hammons to assert claims based on defects in the fuel truck and its components prior to the

running of the statute of limitations. He could have asserted those claims against fictitious

parties and discovered their true names later. There is no dispute that Scott Petroleum sent

Hammons a copy of the NTSB report, which Hammons admits pointed to issues with the fuel

truck and its components, six months before the statute of limitations expired. This

report—which the NTSB had published almost a year earlier, before Hammons filed his

       6
          The Supreme Court specifically stated: “In addressing the question presented, we
must first determine whether ‘John Does 1 through 10,’ and ‘Unidentified Entities 1 through
10’ were truly ‘fictitious parties,’ so as to come under the purview of Rule 9(h). This, in
turn, requires that we examine whether [the added defendants] are legitimate substitutions
for the fictitious parties named in the complaint, or instead, are new parties brought into the
litigation.” Veal, 955 So. 2d at 845 (¶8) (emphasis added).

                                              14
original complaint—gave Hammons all the information that he needed to comply with Veal.

¶24.   Paragraph 3 of Hammons’s original complaint (reprinted above) could be cut-and-

pasted into in any complaint in any tort case. Veal holds such boilerplate does not satisfy

Rule 9(h)—that the original complaint must at least “articulate the wrongful conduct of, and

claims against, the fictitious party.” Veal, 955 So. 2d at 845-46 (¶9). The dissent’s argument

to the contrary would permit any tort plaintiff to create his own “discovery rule” and toll the

statute of limitations simply by cutting-and-pasting the above-quoted paragraph. That result

would be contrary to the Supreme Court’s holding and opinion in Veal and, as discussed

infra, the Court’s interpretation of the applicable statute of limitations.

¶25.   The bottom line is that we are bound to follow the Supreme Court’s holdings and its

clear discussion and application of Rule 9(h) in Veal. In the circuit court, Hammons’s

counsel acknowledged this. The circuit judge specifically asked him whether he was asking

her “to ignore” what the Supreme Court had held in Veal. Counsel candidly answered, “I

don’t think you can ignore the Supreme Court. I think maybe the thing . . . to do is . . . . I

would like to take this to the Supreme Court. So maybe you should grant their motions to

dismiss . . . or [for] summary judgment – and let us go to the Supreme Court . . . .” We

cannot ignore the Supreme Court either. Hammons’s argument that Veal was wrong and

should be reconsidered must be presented to that Court.

              B.      The “Womble Line”

¶26.   The dissent says that, rather than following Veal, it is following “the Womble line of



                                              15
cases,” which supposedly consists of Womble v. Singing River Hospital, 618 So. 2d 1252

(Miss. 1993), Doe v. Mississippi Blood Services Inc., 704 So. 2d 1016 (Miss. 1997), and

Rawson v. Jones, 816 So. 2d 367 (Miss. 2001). However, nothing in those cases requires or

permits us to ignore the Supreme Court’s more recent and directly on-point ruling and

analysis in Veal.

¶27.   In Womble, citing a California case and an Alabama case, the Court stated,

       It is a principle of general application . . . that ignorance of the opposing party
       for fictitious party practice extends beyond mere lack of knowledge of the
       opposing party’s name. Even if the plaintiff knows the true name of the
       person, he is still ignorant of his name if he lacks knowledge of the facts
       giving him a cause of action against that person.

Womble, 618 So. 2d at 1267. However, in the two sentences immediately following, the

Court also stated: “Womble admits that no fair construction of the pleadings would lead to

the conclusion that Dr. Calhoun was identified [in the original complaint], even as a John

Doe. For that reason this rule cannot save the action against him[.]” Id. Thus, even in

Womble, the Supreme Court held a plaintiff cannot proceed under Rule 9(h) if the original

complaint fails to articulate any identifying wrongful conduct by the later-named party. That

is what Hammons did in this case.

¶28.   In Doe, the Supreme Court held that the plaintiff failed to satisfy Rule 9(h) because

she improperly substituted a new defendant for a defendant that she misidentified in the

original complaint; she did not substitute the new defendant for a fictitious defendant. Doe,

704 So. 2d at 1017-18 (¶¶7-10) (“[T]he amended complaint simply replaced all references



                                               16
to United Blood Services with Mississippi Blood Services, Inc.”). The Court also held that

the plaintiff failed to satisfy Rule 9(h) because she did not exercise reasonable diligence to

learn the identity of the new defendant. Id. at 1018-19 (¶¶11-14). Thus, the Court affirmed

the circuit court’s granting of summary judgment based on the statute of limitations. Id. at

1019 (¶¶15-17). Doe does not repeat the above-quoted passage from Womble.

¶29.   Finally, in Rawson, a medical malpractice case, the Supreme Court held that the

plaintiff could not substitute a doctor under Rule 9(h) because she had all of the facts that she

needed to assert a claim against the doctor shortly after the alleged malpractice and well

before she filed suit. See generally Rawson, 816 So. 2d at 369-71 (¶¶5-12). The Court

repeated the above-quoted passage from Womble, see id. at 369 (¶7), but again, the Court

held that the plaintiff failed to satisfy Rule 9(h)’s requirements and that the statute of

limitations had run as a result. See id. at 371 (¶12).

¶30.   In summary, two of the opinions in the so-called Womble line contain language that,

read in isolation, lends support to the dissent’s argument. However, in each of these cases,

the Supreme Court ultimately held that the plaintiff failed to satisfy the requirements of Rule

9(h). The dissent cites no decision of the Mississippi Supreme Court—or any other court

applying Mississippi law—that has permitted an amendment pursuant to Rule 9(h) on facts

comparable to the present case. In contrast, the Supreme Court’s more recent opinion in Veal

interpreted and applied Rule 9(h) to facts that clearly parallel the instant case. A fair reading




                                               17
of Veal inescapably leads to the conclusion that it controls the outcome here.7

       II.    The Statute of Limitations

¶31.   Hammons’s claims are subject to the three-year “catch-all” statute of limitations.

Miss. Code Ann. § 15-1-49. His amended complaint asserting claims against Navarre,

Velcon Filters, Knappco, and Wilden was filed more than three years and six months after

the helicopter crash. Therefore, those claims are time-barred unless they relate back to the

date of the original complaint. “An amendment pursuant to Rule 9(h) . . . relates back to the

date of the original [complaint],” M.R.C.P. 15(c)(2), but only if it is a proper substitution for

a fictitious party within the meaning of the Rule. Veal, 955 So. 2d at 847 (¶15). Because

Hammons did not comply with Rule 9(h), his claims against Navarre, Velcon Filters,

Knappco, and Wilden do not relate back to the date of the original complaint.8

¶32.   Hammons makes an alternative argument that his claims against these entities did not

accrue until he discovered their identities and their alleged wrongful conduct. This argument

is contrary to the language of the applicable statute of limitations and Supreme Court



       7
         Like the circuit court, we conclude that “Defendants A-F” were not true fictitious
parties and that the appellees were not legitimately substituted under Rule 9(h). See Veal,
955 So. 2d at 845 (¶8). A plaintiff seeking to take advantage of Rule 9(h) must also show
that he “exercised reasonable diligence” to ascertain the identities of fictitious parties. See
Doe, 704 So. 2d at 1019 (¶13). “[T]his court will give great deference to [a] lower court[’s]
finding that [a] plaintiff [did or] did not exercise reasonable diligence.” Id. In this case, the
circuit court did not make findings on this issue because it was unnecessary for the court to
reach the issue. We also need not address the issue.
       8
        Hammons does not argue that the claims relate back pursuant to the general rules
applicable to new parties added by amendment. M.R.C.P. 15(c)(1)–(2).

                                               18
precedent interpreting the statute. Section 15-1-49(2) provides that “[i]n actions . . . which

involve latent injury or disease, the cause of action does not accrue until the plaintiff has

discovered, or by reasonable diligence should have discovered, the injury.” (Emphasis

added). This case does not involve a “latent injury or disease.” Hammons’s injury was

known to him immediately.

¶33.   The Mississippi Supreme Court has addressed this issue directly. The Court started

with the observation that “[n]ot all discovery rules are created equal.” Angle v. Koppers Inc.,

42 So. 3d 1, 5 (¶9) (Miss. 2010) (quoting Caves v. Yarbrough, 991 So. 2d 142, 154 (¶48)

(Miss. 2008)) (alteration omitted). Therefore, “[i]n analyzing what the plaintiff must

discover in order to trigger the running of the statute of limitations, we ordinarily are guided

by the wording of a statute’s discovery provision.” Id. In Angle, the Supreme Court held that

based on “the plain language” of section 15-1-49, a cause of action subject to the catch-all

statute of limitations “accrue[s] upon discovery of the injury, not discovery of the injury and

its cause.” Id.; see also id. at 7 (¶18) (“No provision of Section 15-1-49 provides that a

plaintiff must have knowledge of the cause of the injury before the cause of action accrues,

initiating the running of the statute of limitations.”). Therefore, Hammons’s claims all

accrued on the date of his injury, which means that claims he asserted three years and six

months later were barred by the statute of limitations.

¶34.   Hammons’s final argument is that the statute of limitations was tolled by Mississippi

Code Annotated section 15-1-63 (Rev. 2012), which states:



                                              19
       If, after any cause of action has accrued in this state, the person against whom
       it has accrued be absent from and reside out of the state, the time of his
       absence shall not be taken as any part of the time limited for the
       commencement of the action, after he shall return.

Our Supreme Court has interpreted this tolling provision

       to require that a plaintiff seeking to benefit from it must have been unable to
       effect service on the defendant for the period which it is claimed that the
       statute is tolled. That is, the defendant must have left the state and not be
       amenable to service under a long-arm statute or other means, because for
       example, his whereabouts are unknown. The period of time that the
       defendant’s whereabouts are unknown is deducted from the period of the
       statute which would otherwise have run, in effect, adding that time to the
       statute of limitations. However, the statute of limitations is not tolled where
       the plaintiff knew or should have known of the defendant’s whereabouts. The
       burden of proof that the defendant was absent and not amenable to service is
       on the plaintiff.

Sullivan v. Trustmark Nat’l Bank, 653 So. 2d 930, 931-32 (Miss. 1995) (emphasis added).

¶35.   There is no evidence that Navarre, Velcon Filters, Knappco, or Wilden was not

“amenable to service under a long-arm statute or other means” at any time during the

limitations period. In fact, Hammons served or attempted service on all of them soon after

he filed his amended complaint. The tolling provision in section 15-1-63 has never been

applied to a defendant who was amenable to service of process simply because, as Hammons

claims here, the defendant’s alleged wrongful conduct was not known to the plaintiff.

Rather, as Sullivan indicates, the statute of limitations is tolled because—and only if—the

defendant has removed himself from the State and the reach of service of process.

¶36.   Hammons’s argument that the statute applies whenever a plaintiff is unaware of a

defendant’s alleged wrongful conduct would discriminate against nonresident defendants

                                             20
despite their amenability to service of process. There is no authority to support his

interpretation of the statute, which would raise a serious constitutional question under the

U.S. Supreme Court’s Commerce Clause cases. See Bendix Autolite v. Midwesco Enters.

Inc., 486 U.S. 888, 894 (1988) (holding that an Ohio tolling provision violated the Commerce

Clause and could not be justified “as a means of protecting . . . residents from corporations

who become liable for acts done within the State but later withdraw from the jurisdiction, for

it [was] conceded . . . that the Ohio long-arm statute would have permitted service on [the

defendant] throughout the period of limitations”). Hammons submitted no evidence

sufficient to meet his burden of proof that these defendants were not amenable to service

during the limitations period. Accordingly, the applicable statute of limitations was not

tolled pursuant to section 15-1-63.

                                      CONCLUSION

¶37.   The amended complaint’s attempt to assert claims against Navarre, Velcon Filters,

Knappco, and Wilden was not a legitimate substitution of fictitious parties pursuant to Rule

9(h). Therefore, Hammons’s claims against those entities do not relate back to the date of

his original complaint and are barred by the applicable statute of limitations. The Supreme

Court’s opinion in Veal is on point and permits no other conclusion. Therefore, we affirm

the order of the circuit court granting the appellees’ motions for summary judgment.

¶38. THE JUDGMENT OF THE LEFLORE COUNTY CIRCUIT COURT IS
AFFIRMED. ALL COSTS OF THIS APPEAL ARE ASSESSED TO THE
APPELLANT.



                                             21
     GRIFFIS, P.J., CARLTON AND FAIR, JJ., CONCUR. BARNES, J.,
CONCURS IN PART AND IN THE RESULT WITHOUT SEPARATE WRITTEN
OPINION. GREENLEE, J., DISSENTS WITH SEPARATE WRITTEN OPINION,
JOINED BY LEE, C.J., IRVING, P.J., ISHEE AND WESTBROOKS, JJ.

       GREENLEE, J., DISSENTING:

¶39.   I respectfully dissent.

¶40.   The question before us is whether the circuit court was correct in finding that the

substituted defendants in Hammons’s amended complaint did not relate back to the original

complaint so that the statute of limitations had run on those defendants.

¶41.   Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 9(h) states:

       When a party is ignorant of the name of an opposing party and so alleges in his
       pleading, the opposing party may be designated by any name, and when his
       true name is discovered the process and all pleadings and proceedings in the
       action may be amended by substituting the true name and giving proper notice
       to the opposing party.

Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 15(c)(2) states that “[a]n 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.”

       I.     Standard for Fictitious-Party Practice

¶42.   The majority utilizes the fictitious-party-practice standard and analysis focused on

ignorance of just the names of the responsible parties. The use of fictitious names in a

complaint for unidentified parties pursuant to Rule 9(h) has been interpreted differently. The

majority relies on, and the lower court utilized, the interpretation found in Veal v. J.P.

Morgan Trust Co. N.A., 955 So. 2d 843, 845-46 (¶¶9-10) (Miss. 2007).


                                             22
¶43.   Hammons asserts that the interpretation found in a line of cases under Womble v.

Singing River Hospital, 618 So. 2d 1252, 1267 (Miss. 1993) (declined to follow on unrelated

grounds by Sparks v. Kim, 701 So. 2d 1113, 1115 (¶7) (Miss. 1997)), should control. A

review shows that the most utilized interpretation in our jurisdiction for the posture of the

case before us is from Womble, Rawson v. Jones, 816 So. 2d 367, 369 (¶¶7-8) (Miss. 2001),

and Doe v. Miss. Blood Services Inc., 704 So. 2d 1016, 1018-19 (¶¶11-14) (Miss. 1997). See

Price v. Clark, 21 So. 3d 509, 526 (¶¶44-45) (Miss. 2009); Davenport v. Hertz Equip. Rental

Corp., 187 So. 3d 194, 199 (¶14) (Miss. Ct. App. 2016); Turnage v. McConnell Tech., No.

16-60291, 2016 WL 7209719, at *2 (5th Cir. Dec. 12, 2016); Pruitt v. Invacare Corp., No.

2:13CV293-TSL-JCG, 2014 WL 5465342, at *5 (S.D. Miss. Oct. 28, 2014); Scoggins v.

Boston Scientific Corp., No. 2:08CV032-P-A, 2008 WL 1821498, at **2-3 (N.D. Miss. Apr.

22, 2008).

¶44.   Using the Womble-Doe analysis, the Mississippi Supreme Court has interpreted Rule

9(h) and given a very clear standard for whether a party is “ignorant” of the “names” of other

parties. In Rawson, the Supreme Court stated:

       The central inquiry in the case now before us is whether Jones was “ignorant”
       of the names of Dr. Rawson and The Newborn Group within the meaning of
       Rule 9(h). We addressed this issue in Womble v. Singing River Hosp., 618 So.
       2d 1252 (Miss. 1993), where we stated:

              It is a principle of general application, though, that ignorance of
              the opposing party for fictitious party practice extends beyond
              mere lack of knowledge of the opposing party’s name. Even if
              the plaintiff knows the true name of the person, he is still
              ignorant of his name if he lacks knowledge of the facts giving

                                              23
              him a cause of action against that person.

       Id. at 1267 (emphasis added). This language, however, does not give potential
       plaintiffs permission to sit on their rights. We extrapolated on Womble in Doe
       v. Mississippi Blood Servs. Inc., 704 So. 2d 1016 (Miss.1997), and held the
       relation back privilege afforded under Rule 9 requires a plaintiff to actually
       exercise a reasonably-diligent inquiry into the identities of the fictitious
       part[ies]. Id. at 1019. The purpose of Rule 9(h) is to provide a mechanism to
       bring in known, but unidentified, responsible parties who may only be
       ascertained through the use of judicial mechanisms such as discovery. Id.

       In Doe, we cited with approval our Womble holding that due to the reasonable
       availability of numerous medical records on file at the hospital “a reasonably
       diligent inquiry by the appellants into the history of the deceased’s medical
       treatment would have revealed to appellants the identities of the persons they
       sought to identify categorically.” Id. at 1018 (citing Womble, 618 So. 2d at
       1267). Such is the case here.

Rawson, 816 So. 2d at 369 (¶¶7-8).

¶45.   The Veal standard, as applied by the circuit court in its opinion, holds that Hammons

must know and be able to articulate the wrongful conduct of the unascertained parties and

lack only knowledge of their names, citing to Veal, 955 So. 2d at 845-46 (¶¶9-10). The

appellees rely on the Veal case for arguing that they were not unascertained parties within

the meaning of Rule 9(h). The opinion in Veal did not overrule Womble, Rawson, or Doe (the

“Womble” line of cases), nor did it mention them.

¶46.   In review of Veal, I find it distinguishable from the Womble line. In Veal, the issue

on appeal was “whether Rule 9(h) require[d] leave of the court before a fictitious party may

be substituted” pursuant to Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 21. Veal, 955 So. 2d at 845

(¶6). The court found that it did not. It also went further than the issues raised on appeal and



                                              24
found that Veal’s amendment did not properly substitute fictitious parties. Id. In Veal, the

original defendants were a nursing home’s administrator and licensee, ten “John Does,” ten

“Unidentified Entities,” and two corporations alleged to be in control of the nursing home.

Id. at 844 (¶2). The original complaint alleged “negligence, medical malpractice, malice

and/or gross negligence, fraud, statutory survival, and statutory wrongful death claims against

all of the defendants.” Id. The amendment attempted to assert liability against banking

corporations, trusts, and their trustees theorizing that they exercised control over the

corporations that controlled the nursing home and other original defendants. Further, the

appellant in Veal attempted to assert entirely new theories of liability in the second

amendment to his original complaint.

¶47.   Veal’s facts reveal an obvious fishing expedition in search of good defendants against

whom liability could be asserted. In Veal, the plaintiffs attempted an amendment to sue the

nation’s largest bank, and world’s third largest by assets, in a nursing-home-wrongful-death

case. In the case before us, Hammons’s original complaint asserted that the fuel was

defective.

¶48.   Here, Hammons moved for leave of court, which was granted to file the only

amendment, and the issue on appeal is whether the parties at issue were unidentified under

Rule 9(h). Hammons’s amended complaint continued to assert a products-liability claim for

faulty fuel found in his original complaint (“The fuel pumped into the aircraft in question

was defective and unreasonably dangerous.”) and maintains that theory of liability, though



                                              25
more detailed, against the appellees. Also, here, leave of court was granted, and this was

Hammons’s only amendment to his original complaint.

¶49.   Notwithstanding those distinguishing characteristics of Veal, the Womble line’s

interpretation of Rule 9(h) is the appropriate course of action being more clearly in line with

the facts and proceedings below. The interpretation within the Womble line of cases more

closely applies herein as the substitution of newly identified parties under 9(h) arose under

the same conduct, transaction, or occurrence found in the original complaint, as is

contemplated under 15(c). The Womble line holds “that ignorance of the opposing party for

fictitious party practice extends beyond mere lack of knowledge of the opposing party’s

name. Even if the plaintiff knows the true name of the person, he is ignorant of his name if

he lacks knowledge of the facts giving him a cause of action against the person.” Womble,

618 So. 2d at 1267. The Mississippi Supreme Court, as well as this Court, has continued to

acknowledge the Womble interpretation post-Veal. See Price, 21 So. 3d at 526 (¶¶44-45);

Davenport, 187 So. 3d at 199 (¶14). Even our federal courts have recognized the

Womble-Rawson-Doe standard as the prevailing law. See Turnage, 2016 WL 7209719, at *2;

Pruitt, 2014 WL 5465342, at *5; Scoggins, 2008 WL 1821498, at **2-3; Essary v. Walmart

Stores Inc., No. 199CV338SA, 2000 WL 33907699, at *3 (N.D. Miss. Sept. 19, 2000).

¶50.   The majority’s analysis relies solely on Veal’s standard and logic as controlling

precedent. The majority’s analysis does not consider what the practical effects of such a

holding would be to what appears to be a clear meaning of Rule 9(h) and 15(c). It



                                              26
furthermore does not apply the standard and logic afforded by the Womble-Rawson-Doe line

of cases. The majority’s reasoning would place similarly situated counsel in a quandary, in

particular with Mississippi Rule of Civil Procedure 11 as well as the Litigation

Accountability Act (LAA), Miss. Code Ann. §§ 11-55-1 to -15 (Rev. 2012). The result of the

majority’s decision would be to essentially wipe out Rule 9(h) and use of fictitious parties

as anticipated by the Mississippi Rules of Civil Procedure. By its decision on one case, the

majority has moved us toward abolishing use of fictitious parties in pleadings without a

lengthy advisory process used to amend the civil rules. Thus, the majority tells plaintiffs to

risk sanctions under both Rule 11 and the LAA by literally guessing as to defendants’

liabilities without being afforded a reasonable opportunity to discover their true liabilities,

let alone their true names, so that the plaintiffs maybe will guess rightly as to what caused

their injuries.

¶51.   The standard articulated in Womble, Rawson, and Doe, et al., contains a more

compelling logic applicable to the proceedings in the case before us. Furthermore, it

comports with the language of Rules 9(h) and 15(c)(2). Absent a direct overruling, our job

is to utilize the Supreme Court’s precedent that best fits the facts and issues before us.

¶52.   In response to our reliance on Womble, Rawson, and Doe, the majority first says that

we are misguided because the plaintiff did not “win” in any of those cases. We do not rely

on precedent based on the prevailing party, but based on the law that it sets forth. But see

Scoggins, 2008 WL 1821498, at **3-4 (finding that plaintiff had properly substituted



                                              27
fictitious parties pursuant to Rule 9(h)).

¶53.   Next, the majority notes that Veal was more recently decided than the Womble-

Rawson-Doe line. Our research found Veal cited seven times. Those cases differ from the

case at hand, and none cites Veal for the standard used by the majority’s opinion that Rule

9(h) allows “a plaintiff to proceed with a lawsuit where the plaintiff knows and can articulate

the wrongful conduct of, and claims against, the fictitious party, but simply does not know

that party’s name.” Veal, 955 So. 2d at 845-46 (¶9); see Meeks v. Hologic Inc., 179 So. 3d

1127, 1132 (¶¶17-18) (Miss. 2015) (discussed Rules 15 and 21, not Rule 9(h)); Heflin v.

Merrill, 154 So. 3d 857, 867, n.25 (Miss. 2014) (discussed Mississippi Rule of Civil

Procedure 10(a), not Rule 9(h)); Lone Star Indus. Inc. v. McGraw, 90 So. 3d 564, 568 (¶¶13-

16) (Miss. 2012) (must obtain leave of court to amend to substitute defendants); Lone Star

Indus. Inc. v. McGraw, 2010-IA-01005-SCT (¶¶12-15, 26) (Miss. Feb. 2, 2012) (decision

withdrawn and superseded on rehearing); D.P. Holmes Trucking LLC v. Butler, 94 So. 3d

248, 253 (¶¶15-16) (Miss. 2012) (plaintiff named employer individually and not employer

officially and, in attempting to add employer in official capacity as fictitious party, plaintiff

did not remove any fictitiously named party); Long v. Mem’l Hosp. at Gulfport, 969 So. 2d

35, 42 (¶21) (Miss. 2007) (trial court should not have dismissed entire action when there

were still two fictitiously named defendants that were parties to the action); Miller ex rel.

Miller v. Engelhard Corp., 95 So. 3d 740, 743 (¶¶7-11) (Miss. Ct. App. 2012) (plaintiff did

not remove any fictitiously named parties as part of substitution). The only case in which the



                                               28
Veal standard adopted by the majority has previously been applied is Veal itself.

¶54.   The majority argues for Veal’s “more recent” approach; however, it is still noted that

the Womble standard is the prevailing standard. This Court recently reiterated and applied

the Womble standard, subject to a reasonable-diligence test:

       Davenport cites Womble v. Singing River Hospital, 618 So. 2d 1252 (Miss.
       1993) (overruled on other grounds), where the Mississippi Supreme Court
       established that:

              it is a principle of general application that ignorance of the
              opposing party for fictitious party practice extends beyond mere
              lack of knowledge of the opposing party’s name. Even if the
              plaintiff knows the true name of the person, he is still ignorant
              of his name if he lacks knowledge of the facts giving him a
              cause of action against that person.

       Id. at 1267. However, we note that our supreme “court has also acknowledged
       a reasonable-diligence test to be applied when substituting unknown parties
       pursuant to Rule 9(h).” Bedford Health Props., LLC v. Estate of Williams ex
       rel. Hawthorne, 946 So. 2d 335, 342 (¶13) (Miss. 2006).

Davenport, 187 So. 3d at 199 (¶14). The only other court, of any jurisdiction, to more

recently apply either standard is the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, when it

utilized the Womble-Rawson-Doe standard. See Turnage, 2016 WL 7209719, at *2

(“Mississippi law allows relation back when a named defendant is substituted for a John Doe

defendant but only if the plaintiff conducted a reasonably diligent inquiry into the identity

of the fictitious party.” (citation and quotation marks omitted)) (quoting Doe, 704 So. 2d at

1019 (¶13)). Turnage goes on to note that “[t]he Mississippi Supreme Court also made a

distinction in Doe between parties who could only be identified with the help of judicial



                                             29
discovery and those whom a plaintiff could identify through his or her own investigation.”

Id. (citing Doe, 704 So. 2d at 1019 (¶14)).

       II.    Reasonably Diligent Inquiry

¶55.   The majority discusses when the report by the NTSB was published, which is of

limited use in a Veal analysis but fundamental to the reasonably-diligent-inquiry test of the

Womble-Doe-Rawson analysis. Based on our review of the record, the trial court did not

reach the issue of whether Hammons conducted a reasonably diligent inquiry into the

identities of the unascertained parties. We note that Rawson and Doe establish that Hammons

must still conduct a reasonably diligent inquiry into the identities of the unascertained parties

in order to benefit from Rule 9(h). Rawson, 816 So. 2d at 369 (¶7) (citing Doe, 704 So. 2d

at 1019 (¶13)). Therefore the issue as to whether Hammons conducted a reasonably diligent

inquiry into the identities of the unascertained parties was not properly before the court, but

if our decision was based on the Womble-Doe-Rawson caselaw, such analysis by the trial

court must still be done.

¶56.   Doe states that “Womble clearly applies a requirement that the plaintiff exercise a

reasonably diligent inquiry.” Doe, 704 So. 2d at 1019 (¶12). Further:

       The relation back privilege provided for fictitious parties under Rule 15(c)(2)
       requires the plaintiff to actually exercise a reasonably diligent inquiry into the
       identity of the fictitious party. The trial court’s review of whether the plaintiff
       exercised a reasonably diligent inquiry is to be strict. Upon review of the trial
       court’s findings, this court will give great deference to the lower court finding
       that the plaintiff did not exercise reasonable diligence. Mississippi already
       enjoys one of the nation’s longest general statute of limitations. This need not
       be judicially expanded to allow non-diligent plaintiffs the opportunities to

                                               30
       sleep on their rights indefinitely.

       The purpose of Rule 9(h) is to provide a mechanism to bring in responsible
       parties, known, but unidentified, who can only be ascertained through the use
       of judicial mechanisms such as discovery. It is not designed to allow tardy
       plaintiffs to sleep on their rights for seven years, make only one telephone call
       prior to the running of the statute, and then enjoy the benefits of the rule.

Id. at (¶¶13-14).

¶57.   The appellees argued heartily that the NTSB’s investigation protocol should not have

hampered Hammons from earlier discovery of the identity and theory of liability of the

defendants. The trial court did not rest its findings on that ground, and its assertion by the

appellees appears to be argument rather than based upon the evidence in the record or, at the

least, a finding by the court below. The majority cites to the NTSB report being published

on May 26, 2011. The majority appears to imply that Hammons had access to that report,

which would provide all the information needed to amend the complaint. No such finding

was made below as to when Hammons had access to the NTSB report, nor whether it

identified any of the defendants and their respective liability. Upon review of an NTSB report

found within the record, such does not provide a single name of any defendant. In that report

the fuel truck’s system is implicated in corrupting the fuel. Hammons originally asserted that

the fuel was defective before it was pumped into the helicopter.

¶58.   Thus, for the above-stated reasons, I would find that the trial court did not correctly

interpret the meaning of unidentified parties under Rule 9(h). I would find that the Womble-

Rawson-Doe case line provides the correct interpretation of Rule 9(h) in this case as the



                                              31
standard to apply, and that that portion of the Womble-Rawson-Doe analysis is met. I would

not rule on the issue of reasonably-diligent-inquiry analysis because it was not a part of the

circuit court’s decision. Thus, I would reverse the trial court’s decision, and remand for

further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

¶59.   Therefore, I respectfully dissent.

     LEE, C.J., IRVING, P.J., ISHEE AND WESTBROOKS, JJ., JOIN THIS
OPINION.




                                             32
