Court Opinion

ID: 4560671
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-08-27 13:11:41.613406+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T11:20:05.442037
License: Public Domain

PRESENT: All the Justices

CALVIN HAMPTON
                                                                        OPINION BY
v. Record No. 191194                                             JUSTICE WILLIAM C. MIMS
                                                                       August 27, 2020
NOAH J. MEYER

                FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE CITY OF RICHMOND
                             Beverly W. Snukals, Judge

       In this appeal, we consider whether the misidentification of a defendant in a complaint

was a misnomer or a misjoinder, and whether the filing of a new complaint to correct it after a

nonsuit was barred by the statute of limitations.

               I. BACKGROUND AND MATERIAL PROCEEDINGS BELOW

       Calvin Hampton was a passenger in a 2005 Chevrolet Malibu when it was struck by a

1997 GMC Suburban outside a shopping mall after dark on Christmas Eve 2016. According to

the police report of the collision, the driver of the Suburban ran a red light while making a left

turn into the mall’s entrance, striking the Malibu with sufficient force to propel it across the

intersection into a third vehicle waiting at a red light to exit the mall. Hampton was injured.

According to the police report, he, the driver of the Malibu, and the driver of the Suburban were

taken to the hospital by emergency medical services.

       On December 11, 2018, Hampton filed a complaint seeking damages from the driver of

the Suburban. The complaint alleged that at the time of the collision the driver of the Suburban

“was approaching a red light on Midlothian Turnpike and attempting to make a left hand turn.”

It alleged that the driver had a duty “to operate his vehicle with reasonable care and with due

regard for others using the road.” It alleged that the driver “carelessly, recklessly, and

negligently operated his vehicle, disregarding a red light, and crashing into the front of the
vehicle in which” Hampton was a passenger. It alleged that the driver of the Suburban was

negligent by

       (a) fail[ing] to keep a proper lookout; (b) fail[ing] to give full time and attention
       to the operation of his vehicle; (c) fail[ing] to maintain his vehicle under proper
       control; (d) fail[ing] to obey traffic signals and disregard[ing] a red light in
       violation of Virginia Code § 46.2-833; (e) . . . never attempt[ing] to hit his brakes
       before the crash; and (f) crash[ing] into the vehicle that [Hampton] was riding in
       with enough force to push the vehicle he was riding in into another vehicle.

(Capitalizations omitted.) The complaint alleged that as a result of this negligence, Hampton

“has been caused to sustain serious and permanent injuries” and other damages.

       Notably, the complaint alleged a cause of action for negligent operation of the Suburban

by the person acting in the capacity of its driver. All of the alleged acts arose from the manner of

its operation. The complaint alleged no cause of action connected in any way to the ownership

of the Suburban by any person acting in the capacity of its owner. 1

       The police report identified the driver of the Suburban as Michael Patrick Meyer

(“Michael”), including his driver’s license number and address. It identified the owner of the

vehicle as Patricia Lynn Meyer (“Patricia”), including her address and insurance information. It

reflected that Michael was charged with violating Code § 46.2-833 by disregarding a red light.

Relying on this police report, Hampton’s complaint likewise identified Michael as the driver of

the Suburban. It did not identify Patricia as the owner, or name or refer to her in any way.

Again, it made no allegations and asserted no claim arising from the ownership of the Suburban

or against anyone acting in the capacity of its owner.

       On January 18, 2019, the Meyers’ insurer informed Hampton through counsel that Noah

Meyer (“Noah”) had been driving the Suburban at the time of the collision. Michael was

       1
         The complaint did not, for example, allege a cause of action for negligent entrustment
by the owner(s) to the driver. Cf. Turner v. Lotts, 244 Va. 554, 558 (1992).

                                                 2
actually Noah’s father and a co-owner of the vehicle. The insurer had not provided this

information earlier, despite communicating with Hampton about the collision in December 2016

and September 2017.

       On February 6, 2019, Hampton obtained an order nonsuiting his complaint. On February

25, 2019, he filed a new complaint explaining that he had filed the 2018 complaint naming

Michael as the driver based on the erroneous police report and that he had nonsuited that

complaint upon learning the true name of the driver. He asserted that under this Court’s decision

in Richmond v. Volk, 291 Va. 60 (2016) (“Volk”), the use of the wrong name in his 2018

complaint was merely a misnomer rather than a misjoinder.

       Other than changing the first name of the driver from Michael to Noah, the factual

allegations in Hampton’s 2019 complaint about what the driver of the Suburban had done were

substantially the same as in his 2018 complaint. Like his 2018 complaint, Hampton’s 2019

complaint alleged a cause of action for negligent operation of the Suburban by the person acting

in the capacity of its driver. All of the alleged acts arose from the manner of its operation. The

2019 complaint alleged no cause of action connected in any way to its ownership by any person

acting in the capacity of its owner.

       Noah filed a plea in bar asserting that Hampton’s 2019 complaint was time-barred.

Hampton opposed it, arguing that in Volk this Court had reversed a circuit court’s judgment

dismissing a complaint as time-barred after the plaintiff nonsuited an earlier complaint

incorrectly naming the defendant and filed a new complaint using her correct name. He argued

that we ruled in Volk that because using the wrong name in the original complaint was merely a

misnomer, the parties had not changed. According to him, we held that despite using the wrong

name, other information in the original complaint in that case adequately identified the correct

                                                 3
defendant. Therefore, we ruled that Code § 8.01-229(E) had tolled the statute of limitations. He

argued that the same principles applied with equal force in his own case.

       After a hearing, the circuit court entered an amended order sustaining Noah’s plea in bar,

ruling that naming Michael in the 2018 complaint was a misjoinder, not a misnomer, because

Michael and Noah were separate individuals and that Michael’s name was not a misspelling of

Noah’s. Hampton filed a motion to reconsider, which the circuit court denied. In its final order,

the court stated that “what is determinative is that Michael Meyer, by [Hampton’s] own

admissions in his complaint, is a real person . . . . Because of this, Michael Meyer was the

improper party to be named and sued in the original action because he is a separate individual

from Noah Meyer.” (Emphasis added.)

       We awarded Hampton this appeal.

                                          II. ANALYSIS

       Whether the incorrect identification of a party is a misnomer or a misjoinder is a question

of law reviewed de novo. Volk, 291 Va. at 64-65.

       Hampton asserts that the circuit court erred by sustaining Noah’s plea in bar because

naming Michael as the driver of the Suburban in his 2018 complaint was a misnomer and Volk

controls. He argues that a misnomer occurs when a defendant is properly identified but

incorrectly named, and that courts look to the whole complaint to determine whether it

adequately identifies the defendant. He argues that his 2018 complaint adequately identified the

defendant as the driver of the Suburban—i.e., the person who committed the specific, alleged

acts at the alleged time and in the alleged place, in the manner alleged, to cause the alleged

injuries. Only one person drove the Suburban at the time of the collision, running the red light at

the specified intersection to collide with the Malibu on the specified date, and that person—

                                                 4
whatever his or her name—caused Hampton’s injuries. Consequently, under our holding in

Volk, he continues, a new complaint correctly naming Noah after Hampton nonsuited the 2018

complaint that incorrectly named Michael was not time-barred. We agree.

               [W]here a complaint incorrectly names a party, such an error is either a
       misnomer or a misjoinder. A misnomer is a mistake in the name, not the
       identification, of a party. See Rockwell v. Allman, 211 Va. 560, 561 (1971) (per
       curiam) (“A misnomer is a mistake in name, but not person.”). In other words, a
       misnomer occurs where the proper party to the underlying action has been
       identified, but incorrectly named. Swann v. Marks, 252 Va. 181, 184 (1996).
       Misjoinder, on the other hand, arises when “the person or entity identified by the
       pleading was not the person by or against whom the action could, or was intended
       to be, brought.” Estate of James v. Peyton, 277 Va. 443, 452 (2009).
                                                ....
               The key distinction between a misnomer and misjoinder is whether the
       incorrectly named party in the pleading is, in fact, a correct party who has been
       sufficiently identified in the pleadings. To determine whether the mistake is a
       misnomer or misjoinder, “we consider the pleading as a whole.” Estate of James,
       277 Va. at 455.

                       Thus, whether a party named in a caption is a proper party
               to the action is to be determined not merely by how that party is
               identified in the caption of the pleading, but by the allegations set
               forth within a pleading that identify that party more specifically.

       Id.

Volk, 291 Va. at 64-65.

       Noah argues that the circuit court correctly distinguished this case from Volk. In that

case, the plaintiff’s original complaint named the defendant incorrectly by concatenating the first

name of the person who drove the vehicle at the time of the collision with the surname of the

vehicle’s owner. Id. at 62-63. The result, according to Noah and the circuit court, was the name

of a person who did not exist. Noah asserts that this case is different because, as the circuit court

noted, Michael does exist. Moreover, Michael was one of the vehicle’s owners. We disagree.

       The only issue in Volk was that the name created by coupling the driver’s first name with

the owner’s surname was not the driver’s correct name. We certainly did not rely on the

                                                  5
possibility that no such person existed—a possibility which was not a fact in evidence, and

which Hampton asserts is disproved by searching public records—as the reason that the

plaintiff’s use of the resulting name was a misnomer. Rather, the plaintiff’s use of that incorrect

name was a misnomer because the complaint, read as a whole, contained sufficient allegations to

identify the proper party defendant even though the incorrect name had been used. We ruled that

the allegations “establish[ed] that the intended defendant was the driver of a specific vehicle that

was in a specific location at a specific time and that the driver of that vehicle committed a

specific act.” Id. at 65. Only one person fit the description, so “it is readily apparent that she

was the person against whom the action was intended to be brought.” The plaintiff’s use of the

mistaken name therefore “was a misnomer and not misjoinder.” Id.

       The same is true here. It is clear from Hampton’s 2018 complaint that he knew what the

cause of action was and who—in terms of the performance of the tortious conduct alleged, from

which his claim arose—was the correct defendant for such a cause of action: the driver of the

Suburban who allegedly operated it negligently, thereby causing his injuries. It is clear that the

2018 complaint correctly identified that entity: the driver. It is clear whom Hampton intended to

bring his cause of action for negligent driving against: the driver. Hampton sued the correct

person—the driver—but used the wrong name, the one shown in the incorrect police report.

Thus, there is no mistake of parties, only one of name. That is a misnomer.

       Noah’s argument that Michael exists and, further, is an owner of the Suburban is

unavailing. As noted above, nothing in the complaint alleges any cause of action against the

owner, only against the driver. All of the acts from which liability in this case allegedly arises

were committed by one entity, a person acting in the capacity of the driver. None was

committed by anyone in the capacity of an owner. Thus, the fact that Michael exists and was an

                                                  6
owner of the Suburban may have played some role in the development of this case—it may, for

example, have been the reason that the police misidentified the driver of the Suburban in the

police report—but it is a distinction without a difference when applying the rule articulated in

Volk to the facts here. 2

        2
          The dissenting opinion in this case also observes that the misnamed defendant in Volk
conceded that the plaintiff’s error in that case was a misnomer. Infra at 15 (“Both [parties]
conceded that the error was a misnomer.”). However, as noted above, whether a misnomer has
occurred is a question of law. Volk, 291 Va. at 64-65. “[A] question of law is not subject to a
concession binding on this Court.” Virginia Marine Res. Comm'n v. Chincoteague Inn, 287 Va.
371, 389 (2014) (internal quotation marks and omission omitted); see also Cofield v. Nuckles,
239 Va. 186, 194 (1990) (“A party can concede the facts but cannot concede the law.”).
        Although the dissenting opinion notes that we “evaluated the parties’ concession [in
Volk] de novo and agreed with it,” infra at 15, this inadvertently creates an opportunity to
misunderstand our holding in Volk as being dependent on or influenced by the concession. It
was not. We arrived at an independent legal conclusion, Volk, 291 Va. at 65 (emphasizing that
“we are not bound by the parties' agreement on this issue”), albeit one that coincided with the
positions taken by the parties. Thus, the Volk defendant’s concession is not a basis to distinguish
this case, because it played no part in our decision of that case.
        Although the dissenting opinion asserts that the Volk defendant’s concession influenced
our reasoning there that it was “readily apparent” that she was the person against whom the
plaintiff intended to bring the action, infra at 16 (“If the decisive issue before the Volk majority
was whether the complaint could be fairly read to identify Volk as the defendant involved in the
car wreck, how could it be totally irrelevant that Volk read the complaint and thought it clearly
did?”), that assertion, too, is contradicted by our decision in that case. Our view that the identity
of the intended defendant was “readily apparent” was not based on any motions she signed or
orders she endorsed. Cf. infra at 14-16. To the contrary, it was based on

        the facts laid out in the 2011 complaint[, which] establish that the intended
        defendant was the driver of a specific vehicle that was in a specific location at a
        specific time and that the driver of that vehicle committed a specific act. As Volk
        is the only person that fits this description, it is readily apparent that she was the
        person against whom the action was intended to be brought.

291 Va. at 65.
        Thus, it was the content of the plaintiff’s complaint, not the defendant’s acts, that led to
our holding. That criterion is equally controlling here, where again only one person fits the
complaint’s description of the driver of a specific vehicle that was in a specific location at a
specific time and that the driver of that vehicle committed a specific act. It is this same criterion
that compels us to the same conclusion that Hampton’s use of Michael’s name in the 2018
complaint “was a misnomer and not misjoinder.” Id.

                                                  7
       Noah also argues that we ruled that naming an incorrect party was a misjoinder, not a

misnomer, in Ricketts v. Strange, 293 Va. 101 (2017), after Volk was decided. But Ricketts is

distinguishable from this case. The basis for distinguishing it also illustrates the point that we

made in Volk and which controls here.

       In Ricketts, the plaintiff suffered personal injuries in a February 2012 motor vehicle

collision. In January 2014, she filed a complaint against the defendant. The defendant moved

for summary judgment, asserting that the plaintiff lacked standing to sue him because she had

filed a Chapter 7 bankruptcy petition in September 2012, that she had not exempted her personal

injury cause of action from the bankruptcy estate, and that it therefore belonged to the

bankruptcy trustee. 293 Va. at 104. Because the statute of limitations had by that time elapsed

and a new complaint was time-barred, the plaintiff asserted that bringing the action in her own

name, rather than in the name of the bankruptcy trustee, was a misnomer. She sought to cure it

under Code § 8.01-6. Id. at 105. The circuit court denied her motion and we affirmed. Id. at

106, 110-11.

       In Ricketts, there was a misjoinder, not a misnomer. While the allegations in the

plaintiff’s complaint may have adequately identified whom the defendant injured through his

alleged negligence, that entity—the injured person—was not the entity who owned the cause of

action while the bankruptcy proceeding was pending. The entity who owned the cause of action

and who had standing to file the complaint was the bankruptcy trustee. The injured person and

        As for the dissent’s question—i.e., how could the defendant’s belief that she was the
party whom the plaintiff intended to sue be irrelevant to our holding in Volk?, infra at 16—the
answer is simple: because we have already held that “‘the allegations set forth within a pleading
that identify that party more specifically’” are relevant to determine whether an incorrect name is
a misjoinder or misnomer, Volk, 295 Va. at 65 (quoting Estate of James, 277 Va. at 455), not the
defendant’s opinion on the issue.

                                                  8
the bankruptcy trustee did not just have different names, they were separate legal entities—they

acted in different and separate capacities. The plaintiff could not cure the defect that she lacked

standing to bring the cause of action by changing the entity in whose name it had been brought.

In this case, the defendant in Hampton’s cause of action is a single entity—the driver of the

Suburban—regardless of his or her name.

       Noah also argues that reversing the circuit court’s ruling will permit a personal injury

plaintiff to file a complaint alleging specific facts about his or her claims but purposefully

naming an incorrect defendant to conceal the case until the statute of limitations has elapsed,

then take a nonsuit and refile using the correct name to the defendant’s prejudice. Hampton

responds that there was no prejudice in this case because the Meyers’ insurer was aware of

Hampton’s claim as early as December 29, 2016, five days after the collision, when it sent him a

letter asking for information about his claim. He also adds that the new complaint requires no

changes to any substantive defenses to his cause of action.

       Hampton’s argument is more persuasive in this case. Noah has not identified any

prejudice to him. The record indicates that naming Michael as the driver in the 2018 complaint

was the result of good-faith reliance on the police report. While some plaintiff might be tempted

to adopt the strained construction that Noah warns us about, acting on it would require a daring

interpretation of Code § 8.01-271.1’s requirement that the party or attorney signing such a

complaint against a purposefully misnamed defendant certify that “to the best of his knowledge,

information and belief, formed after reasonable inquiry, it is well grounded in fact.”

       Finally, Noah argues that even if misidentifying the driver of the Suburban in the 2018

complaint was merely a misnomer, Code §§ 8.01-380 and 8.01-229(E)(3) do not toll the statute

of limitations when a plaintiff takes a nonsuit to cure one. Rather, he asserts that Code § 8.01-6

                                                  9
provides the procedure for curing a misnomer so that the resulting amendment relates back to the

filing of the original complaint for purposes of the statute of limitations. Although he

acknowledges that the majority of this Court rejected this argument in Volk, he asks us to revisit

it. We decline this invitation.

       We considered the effect of and interaction among these statutes at length in Volk.

“Since the decision [in that case] was announced, the General Assembly has met [four times] in

regular session and has not acted to amend” any of them. “Under these circumstances, the

construction given to the statute[s] is presumed to be sanctioned by the legislature and therefore

becomes obligatory upon the courts.” Daniels v. Warden of Red Onion State Prison, 266 Va.

399, 401 n.2 (2003) (applying the presumption after only two legislative sessions).

       But a mere formalistic application of the presumption of legislative acquiescence pales

before the importance of applying the principle of stare decisis in this case. As the Supreme

Court of the United States has stated when considering whether stare decisis should bind it to a

construction it adopted in an earlier case,

       precedent is to be respected unless the most convincing of reasons demonstrates
       that adherence to it puts us on a course that is sure error. “Beyond workability, the
       relevant factors in deciding whether to adhere to the principle of stare decisis
       include the antiquity of the precedent, the reliance interests at stake, and of course
       whether the decision was well reasoned.”

Citizens United v. Fed. Election Comm'n, 558 U.S. 310, 362-63 (2010) (quoting Montejo v.

Louisiana, 556 U.S. 778, 792-93 (2009)).

       Volk certainly is not an ancient precedent. We decided it in January 2016. Cf. Jamerson

v. Coleman-Adams Constr., Inc., 280 Va. 490, 504 & n.4 (2010) (Mims, J., concurring) (opining

that a twenty-five-year-old opinion was hardly ancient when issued by a court tracing its

existence to at least 1776). And our decision was not unanimous; three respected colleagues

                                                10
disagreed with our holding, a fact some may invoke to question whether it was well-reasoned.

But the holding that there is no change of parties when one complaint is nonsuited after a

misnomer and new complaint is filed to cure it, so the earlier complaint tolls the statute of

limitations, is not unworkable. And we view the reliance interests here to be particularly

compelling. 3

       When Hampton discovered that the driver of the Suburban’s name was wrong in the

police report, and consequently in his 2018 complaint, he responded promptly by doing exactly

what we said in Volk that plaintiffs could do, in a case where the facts were materially the same: 4

he nonsuited the complaint that used the incorrect name and filed a new complaint using the

correct one. His reliance on Volk was no afterthought desperately invoked at the last minute

after Noah’s plea in bar; rather, it clearly influenced his decision from inception after he

discovered the misidentification, because he cited it directly in his 2019 complaint. Thus,

overruling our holding in Volk now, especially when the General Assembly has not indicated that

our construction of the relevant statutes in that case contravenes what it intended when it enacted

them, would be retroactive and punish Hampton simply for believing us.

       3
          It is true that reliance interests for applying stare decisis are strongest when property
rights are at stake. Myers v. Moore, 204 Va. 409, 413 (1963). They are substantially lower when
dealing with the law of torts. See Memorial Hosp., Inc. v. Oakes, 200 Va. 878, 887 (1959). But
the issue here is one of procedures available for correcting a misnomer, not the source of
Hampton’s cause of action. Prescribing procedure, subject to legislative oversight, is uniquely
the function of this Court. See Code § 8.01-3.
        4
          If anything, the facts in this case are more favorable to Hampton. As the dissent in Volk
noted, the police report in that case got the driver’s name right and the plaintiff’s error was
wholly her own. Volk, 291 Va. at 69 n.2 (Kelsey, J., dissenting). While we believe this factual
distinction is noteworthy because it establishes the source of Hampton’s mistake in this case and
supports his assertion that the misidentification of the driver was made in good faith, we do not
impute any motive for its inclusion in the Volk dissent. Rather, we merely cite the dissent
because that is the only place in the Volk opinions where the fact is recorded.

                                                 11
       Such an outcome would be unjust. As we stated in another case where a party invited us

to revisit an earlier decision and reach a different holding on an issue,

       [i]n Virginia, the doctrine of stare decisis is more than a mere cliche. That
       doctrine plays a significant role in the orderly administration of justice by
       assuring consistent, predictable, and balanced application of legal principles. And
       when a court of last resort has established a precedent, after full deliberation upon
       the issue by the court, the precedent will not be treated lightly or ignored, in the
       absence of flagrant error or mistake.

Selected Risks Ins. Co. v. Dean, 233 Va. 260, 265 (1987) (emphasis omitted). 5

       Accordingly, the reliance interests in this case not only justify the application of stare

decisis but make it at least as important here as the presumption of legislative acquiescence. We

therefore reject Noah’s invitation to reconsider Volk.

                                        III. CONCLUSION

       For the reasons set forth above, we hold that the misidentification of the driver of the

Suburban in Hampton’s 2018 complaint was merely a misnomer, not a misjoinder.

Consequently, under our holding in Volk, his 2019 complaint was not barred by the statute of

limitations. We therefore will reverse the circuit court’s ruling sustaining Noah’s plea in bar and

remand for further proceedings.

                                                                            Reversed and remanded.

       5
          If we should come to believe, without indication from the General Assembly, that our
holding in Volk that a plaintiff may use this procedure to cure a misnomer was the product of
flagrant error or mistake, we have means at our disposal to correct ourselves prospectively, from
that point forward, without punishing a party who has already relied on it because he or she
believed that we meant what we said. For example, we effectively overruled our holding in
Davis v. Marshall Homes, Inc., 265 Va. 159, 168 (2003), by enacting Rule 1:6. In Davis, we
applied the “same evidence test” to evaluate the “identity of the cause of action” element of our
then-controlling res judicata analysis. E.g., Rhoten v. Commonwealth, 286 Va. 262, 270 (2013)
(describing the effect of Davis). However, by enacting the rule, we “expressly rejected” that test,
thereby effectively overruling Davis. Funny Guy, LLC v. Lecego, LLC, 293 Va. 135, 141 (2017).
Notably, our enactment of the rule did not affect already pending litigation. Caperton v. A.T.
Massey Coal Co., Inc., 285 Va. 537, 551 (2013).

                                                 12
JUSTICE KELSEY, with whom CHIEF JUSTICE LEMONS and JUSTICE CHAFIN join,
dissenting.

       The majority holds that suing an owner of a vehicle instead of its driver is a mere

misnomer, not a misjoinder of parties — a holding that conveniently allows the plaintiff to sue

the driver even though the statute of limitations has run on any claims that may be brought

against him. Under Virginia law, however, “[a] misnomer ‘arises when the right person is

incorrectly named, not where the wrong person is named.’” Ricketts v. Strange, 293 Va. 101,

110-11 (2017) (citation omitted). 1 The owner in this case was not the right person incorrectly

named. He was the wrong person correctly named. The mis was not in the nomer. 2 It was in the

person correctly named but incorrectly sued.

       The majority heavily relies upon a single case, Richmond v. Volk, 291 Va. 60 (2016), to

reach two conclusions: (i) the plaintiff’s complaint filed against the owner of the vehicle,

Michael P. Meyer, rather than its driver, Noah J. Meyer, involves a mere misnomer, and (ii) this

misnomer tolls the statute of limitations when the plaintiff takes a nonsuit to cure the misnomer.

The majority invokes the doctrine of stare decisis to support both conclusions — the first

implicitly, the second explicitly. The majority warns that rejecting these conjoined conclusions

       1
          See also W. Hamilton Bryson, Bryson on Virginia Civil Procedure § 5.01, at 5-2 to -3
(5th ed. 2017) (“There can be an amendment where the wrong person was sued, but this is not a
matter of correcting a misnomer but of adding a new party.”); Kent Sinclair & Leigh B.
Middleditch, Jr., Virginia Civil Procedure § 5.8, at 535 (6th ed. 2014) (“[A]n amendment to
correct a misnomer will not be allowed where, in fact, the wrong person had been named.”); id.
§ 11.2[C], at 824 (observing that the misnomer doctrine “applies when the correct person has
been served and is before the court, but the nomenclature used to describe the defendant is
incomplete or inaccurate” but “does not apply when the ‘wrong person’ has been served”); id. at
826 (“The ‘misnomer’ doctrine is not applicable when a different person would be brought
before the court by an amendment.”).
       2
        The word “misnomer” is formed from the French prefix “mes” and the French root
word “nommer,” which means “to name.” Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 1444
(1993).

                                                13
would “punish” the plaintiff “simply for believing” what Volk so clearly said. Ante at 11. And

any tolerance toward inflicting such punishment, the majority adds, would downgrade the

ancient doctrine of stare decisis to the status of “a mere cliché.” See ante at 12 (citation omitted).

       For several reasons, I disagree.

                                                  I.

                                                 A.

       Let me begin with Volk. In that case, the original complaint stated the name of the

defendant as “Katherine E. Cornett.” Volk, 291 Va. at 63. The name of the defendant listed on

the clerk of court’s summons was “Katherine E. Cornett a/k/a Katherine Craft,” id., and the

summons warned the Cornett-a/k/a-Craft “party” that she would be held in default if she failed to

respond to the complaint within 21 days, Joint Appendix at 18, Volk, 291 Va. 60 (Record No.

150192). Though she denied being “also known as” Katherine E. Cornett, Katherine E. Volk

(whose maiden name was Craft at the time of the accident) filed a motion to quash contesting the

service of process. In doing so, she expressly conceded that she was “erroneously identified in

the caption of [the plaintiff’s] complaint as ‘Katherine E. Cornett.’” Volk, 291 Va. at 63. As

“Counsel for Defendant,” Volk’s counsel later endorsed the nonsuit order that listed “Katherine

E. Cornett” as the defendant. Id.

       The plaintiff subsequently filed a suit against “Katherine E. Volk, f/k/a Katherine E.

Craft, a/k/a Katherine E. Cornett,” but the circuit court granted Volk’s special plea in bar and

dismissed the case. Id. at 63-64. The circuit court held that the suit was barred by the statute of

limitations because Volk was “not the same person or entity as Katherine E. Cornett” and

because the plaintiff had not timely sought to correct the error in the original complaint. Id.

                                                 14
       On appeal, neither party asserted that this scenario involved a misjoinder. Both conceded

that the error was a mere misnomer. As the Volk majority recognized, “the parties agree that [the

plaintiff’s] use of the name ‘Katherine E. Cornett’ was a misnomer.” Id. at 64. The Volk

majority evaluated the parties’ concession de novo and agreed with it. Three unique facts not

found in any prior case were conspicuously present in Volk:

               •   The clerk of court’s summons identified Katherine Craft (one
                   of the defendant’s true names) as an “a/k/a” of Katherine E.
                   Cornett (the mistaken name). Id. at 63.
               •   Katherine E. Volk (the true defendant) filed a motion to quash
                   contesting service of process and conceded that she was
                   “erroneously identified in the caption of [the plaintiff’s]
                   complaint.” Id.
               •   Counsel for Katherine E. Volk (the true defendant) signed the
                   nonsuit order as “Counsel for Defendant” when the
                   “Defendant” was listed as “Katherine E. Cornett.” Id.

These facts confirmed the parties’ concession in the circuit court and on appeal “that [the

plaintiff’s] use of the name ‘Katherine E. Cornett’ was a misnomer.” Id. at 64.

       I do not accept the majority’s assurance that the misnomer concession in Volk “played no

part in our decision of that case” because a “question of law is not subject to a concession

binding on this Court.” Ante at 7 n.2 (citation omitted). It is true, of course, that concessions of

law, while capable of triggering procedural defaults, can never compel a Virginia court to

misstate the law. See Butcher v. Commonwealth, 838 S.E.2d 538, 539 (Va. 2020). But that is

not the manner in which the misnomer concession crept into the Volk analysis.

       The complaint in Volk alleged “that the intended defendant was the driver of a specific

vehicle that was in a specific location at a specific time and that the driver of that vehicle

committed a specific act.” Volk, 291 Va. at 65. Upon reviewing these “specific” factual

allegations, the Volk majority concluded: “As Volk is the only person that fits this description, it

                                                  15
is readily apparent that she was the person against whom the action was intended to be brought.”

Id. With her concession, Volk was simply admitting that, upon reading the complaint, it was

also “readily apparent” to her that she was the “only person that fits this description” in that

“specific vehicle” at that “specific location” at that “specific time” involved in that “specific

act.” See id. Volk’s concession was not a futile attempt at a binding concession of law but was

instead a highly relevant factual concession that informed the ultimate question of law.

       If the decisive issue before the Volk majority was whether the complaint could be fairly

read to identify Volk as the defendant involved in the car wreck, how could it be totally

irrelevant that Volk read the complaint and thought it clearly did? She was there after all. None

of us were. That explains why Volk, despite the misspelling of her name in the complaint and

the inclusion of her correct name as an a/k/a identity in the summons, filed a motion to quash

service of process as the defendant and signed the nonsuit order as the defendant. I am thus

unpersuaded by the majority’s assurance that Volk’s concession “played no part in our decision

of that case.” Ante at 7 n.2.

       At any rate, those of us in dissent mused over the “tangled narrative of this case,” Volk,

291 Va. at 71 (Kelsey, J., dissenting), but found it mostly irrelevant to the legal issue in the case.

We believed that “[u]nder Code § 8.01-6 . . . only a court can correct ‘a misnomer or otherwise’

in a plaintiff’s complaint” and that “[n]othing in the nonsuit statute, Code § 8.01-380, or its

related tolling statute, Code § 8.01-229(E)(3), implies that a plaintiff can unilaterally correct a

misnomer with a refiled pleading — thereby rendering Code § 8.01-6 irrelevant.” Id. (emphasis

in original). The majority in Volk disagreed, however, holding that when a refiled pleading

changes a name “for the purpose of correcting a misnomer,” Code § 8.01-6 is irrelevant. Id. at

67 (majority opinion).

                                                  16
                                                  B.

       Embracing stare decisis, I accept the Volk holding that a misnomer tolls the statute of

limitations when a nonsuit is taken to cure the misnomer. The contest over the tolling of the

statute of limitations arose in the context of a debatable question of statutory interpretation,

which could be easily corrected legislatively if the 4-3 split decision in Volk misperceived the

General Assembly’s intent. Stare decisis is at its zenith in circumstances like this. See

Halliburton Co. v. Erica P. John Fund, Inc., 573 U.S. 258, 298 (2014) (Thomas, J., concurring in

the judgment) (acknowledging the consensus view that stare decisis has “special force” in the

“context of statutory interpretation” (citation omitted)); Bryan A. Garner et al., The Law of

Judicial Precedent 333, 352, 409-10 (2016) (same); 2B Norman J. Singer & J.D. Shambie Singer,

Sutherland’s Statutes and Statutory Construction § 49:4, at 22 (7th ed. 2012) (observing that

“considerations of stare decisis weigh heavily in the area of statutory construction” (citation

omitted)).

       What I do not accept is that the stare decisis tailwind of Volk compels us to hold that a

plaintiff commits a mere misnomer when he sues a vehicle owner instead of its driver in a

personal injury suit arising from a vehicle accident. Volk did not address that question at all.

Reviewing the matter de novo, the Volk majority accepted the factual basis for the parties’

concession that a mere misnomer had occurred. One of the correct names of the defendant

appeared as an “a/k/a” name in the clerk of court’s summons accompanying the incorrect name

from the complaint. Volk, 291 Va. at 63. The correctly named defendant, despite the

misspelling of her name in the complaint, filed a motion to quash service of process as the

defendant and signed the nonsuit order as the defendant.

                                                 17
       The fact pattern in Volk, the arguments of the parties in Volk, and the holding of Volk

inform — but do not dictate — our independent analysis of the present case. Stare decisis is a

common-law doctrine baked into the very nature of the “judicial power of the Commonwealth,”

Va. Const. art. VI, § 1. When properly applied, it requires more than a cut-and-paste approach

from the most recent judicial opinion on a subject. Lord Mansfield captured the idea succinctly,

observing that “precedent, though it be evidence of law, is not law in itself; much less the whole

of the law.” Jones v. Randall (1774) 98 Eng. Rep. 706, 707; Lofft 384, 385. This view was

accepted wisdom among the very jurists that developed stare decisis. Those jurists uniformly

“thought that the cases were not themselves the common law of England, but are only evidence

of the common law.” W. Hamilton Bryson, Summary Conclusion, in 1 Ratio Decidendi: Guiding

Principles of Judicial Decisions 283, 287 (W. Hamilton Bryson & Serge Dauchy eds., 2006). 3

The earliest American jurists were in full agreement with this view of the nature of judicial

precedent. 4

       3
            See, e.g., 1 William Blackstone, Commentaries *71 (“[T]he decisions of the courts of
justice are the evidence of what is common law . . . .”); Coke upon Littleton § 254a (Thomas
Coventry ed., 1830) (“Here it appears that our book-cases are the best proofs [of] what the law
is . . . .”); Matthew Hale, The History of the Common Law of England 67 (3d ed. 1739)
(observing that court decisions “have a great Weight and Authority in Expounding, Declaring,
and Publishing what the Law of this Kingdom is” but noting that such decisions “are less than a
Law, yet they are a greater Evidence thereof than the Opinion of any private Persons”). See
generally Rupert Cross & J.W. Harris, Precedent in English Law 25 (4th ed. 1991) (describing
“‘the declaratory theory’ hallowed by Coke, Hale, and Blackstone” under which “the decisions
of the judges never make the law, they merely constitute evidence of what the law is”); 9 The
Works of Francis Bacon 888 (James Spedding et al. eds., 1882) (“It is a sound precept not to take
the law from the rules, but to make the rule from the existing law. For the proof is not to be
sought from the words of the rule, as if it were the text of the law. The rule, like the magnetic
needle, points at the law, but does not settle it.”).
       4
         See, e.g., Kerlin’s Lessee v. Bull, 1 U.S. (1 Dall.) 175, 178 (Pa. 1786) (“A Court is not
bound to give the like judgment, which had been given by a former Court, unless they are of
opinion that the first judgment was according to law; for any Court may err; and if a Judge
conceives, that a judgment given by a former Court is erroneous, he ought not in conscience to

                                                18
       Things have changed, to be sure. But that ancient judicial humility still lives in Justice

Frankfurter’s admonition that stare decisis should not be treated as “a mechanical formula of

adherence to the latest decision, however recent and questionable, when such adherence involves

collision with a prior doctrine more embracing in its scope, intrinsically sounder, and verified by

experience.” Helvering v. Hallock, 309 U.S. 106, 119 (1940); see also Ramos v. Louisiana, 140

S. Ct. 1390, 1405 (2020) (recognizing that “stare decisis isn’t supposed to be the art of

methodically ignoring what everyone knows to be true” and that “stare decisis has never been

treated as an ‘inexorable command’” (citation omitted)).

       Even in modern times, the elegant resilience of the common-law tradition is its capacity

to stay on its intended course despite the inevitable, but thankfully few, questionable deviations.

Properly understood, stare decisis seeks to find a new judicial opinion’s place within the “fabric

of law,” Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Pena, 515 U.S. 200, 233-34 (1995), rather than to take

every newly discovered thread and attempt to weave a wholly new quilt. As Chief Justice

Roberts has explained, “Stare decisis is a doctrine of preservation, not transformation. It

counsels deference to past mistakes, but provides no justification for making new ones.”

Citizens United v. Federal Election Comm’n, 558 U.S. 310, 384 (2010) (Roberts, C.J.,

concurring).

give the like judgment, he being sworn to judge according to law.”); 1 James Kent,
Commentaries on American Law 442 (1826) (describing judicial decisions as the “highest
evidence which we can have of the law applicable to the subject, and the judges are bound to
follow that decision so long as it stands unreversed, unless it can be shown that the law was
misunderstood or misapplied in that particular case”); 2 The Works of the Honourable James
Wilson, L.L.D. 303 (Bird Wilson ed., 1804) (stating that judicial decisions should “be considered
as strong evidence of the law” for a judge’s “duty and his business is, not to make the law, but to
interpret and apply it”).

                                                19
                                                 II.

        Several Virginia cases, all deserving the respect of stare decisis, have distinguished

between misnomers and misjoinders. They uniformly use the same definitional structure: Suing

the correct person, while incorrectly stating his name, constitutes a misnomer. Suing the

incorrect person, while correctly stating his name, constitutes a misjoinder. When described in

its most succinct form, “[a] misnomer is a mistake in name, but not person.” Rockwell v. Allman,

211 Va. 560, 561 (1971), superseded by statute on other grounds, 1991 Acts ch. 693, at 1298

(codified as amended at Code § 8.01-229(B)(2)(b)); see also Ricketts, 293 Va. at 111. To

understand this distinction consistently, our search must go deeper than a cursory citation to

Volk.

                                 A. Misnomer — Not Misjoinder

        In an early case involving a true misnomer, Baldwin v. Norton Hotel, Inc., a plaintiff sued

“Norton Hotel, Incorporated,” a company that did not exist. 163 Va. 76, 79 (1934). The

intended defendant, “Norton Realty Corporation,” owned and operated the hotel using the trade

name “Hotel Norton.” Id. We held that the plaintiff naming the defendant as “Norton Hotel,

Incorporated” was a misnomer because the “wrong name” used by the plaintiff was the “name by

which [the real] defendant was known to the public.” Id.

        Similarly, in Jacobson v. Southern Biscuit Co., the plaintiffs sued “Southern Biscuit

Company, Incorporated, a Virginia corporation” located at “Terminal Place, Richmond,

Virginia.” 198 Va. 813, 814 (1957). The real defendant, “Weston Biscuit Company, Inc.,”

purchased “Southern Biscuit Company, Inc.” and dissolved it but continued to use “Southern

Biscuit Company” as a “trading as” name. Id. at 815-16. Since the parties did not change and

only the registered company name was substituted in place of a trade name, we held that the

                                                 20
mistake was a mere misnomer. Id. at 817-18 (“If the right party is before the court although

under a wrong name, an amendment to cure a misnomer will be allowed.”).

       In Arminius Chemical Co. v. White’s Administratrix, the plaintiff filed suit against

“Arminius Chemical Company, a corporation created by and existing under the laws of the state

of Virginia,” and the summons was delivered to the agent of “Arminius Chemical Company,

Incorporated.” 112 Va. 250, 265-66 (1911). The defendant company pleaded that the agent

could not be legally served with process because Arminius Chemical Company and Arminius

Chemical Company, Incorporated “were separate and distinct legal entities.” Id. at 266.

Arminius Chemical Company was a West Virginia company that had conveyed its property by

deed to the company Arminius Chemical Company, Incorporated, which had been incorporated

under Virginia laws. See id. The circuit court rejected the defendant’s argument and permitted

the plaintiff to amend the pleading by inserting “Incorporated” after “Company.” Id. We agreed

with the circuit court because “[t]here was at the time of the institution of this suit but one

company which was Arminius Chemical Company, Incorporated,” its agent was properly served,

and “Arminius Chemical Company, Incorporated, was thereby brought before the Court.” Id.

                                  B. Misjoinder — Not Misnomer

       Our caselaw also includes several cases involving misjoinders. The most recent was

Ricketts, a unanimous decision issued a year after the 4-3 decision in Volk, in which the plaintiff

filed a negligence claim arising out of a vehicle accident after she had filed for bankruptcy. See

Ricketts, 293 Va. at 104. The defendant moved for summary judgment, alleging that the plaintiff

lacked standing because she had failed to exempt the claim from her bankruptcy estate, and thus,

only the bankruptcy trustee had standing. See id. The trial court granted the motion for

summary judgment, and because the statute of limitations had expired at the time of the court’s

                                                  21
ruling, the plaintiff moved to amend her pleadings to name the bankruptcy trustee as the plaintiff

“due to the misnomer.” Id. at 105. Both the circuit court and this Court rejected the plaintiff’s

contention that the error was a mere misnomer. See id. at 106, 111. Because the plaintiff and the

bankruptcy trustee were “not the same person” and because the “right person . . . was not

incorrectly named” but “[r]ather, the ‘wrong person,’ . . . was named,” we held that the pleading

error was “not a misnomer.” Id. at 111.

       In Estate of James v. Peyton, the plaintiff filed a negligence claim against Robert Judson

James for personal injuries caused by a vehicle accident. 277 Va. 443, 447 (2009). After the

plaintiff became aware that James had died prior to the filing of the suit, the plaintiff filed a

motion for leave to amend the pleading to substitute the named defendant as “the Estate of

Robert Judson James, Administrator, Edwin F. Gentry, Esq.” Id. at 447-48. A motion for

summary judgment filed on behalf of “the Estate of Robert Judson James, Administrator, Edwin

F. Gentry, Esq.” contended that the suit “was a nullity because the named defendant was an

estate” and that “naming the estate [was] not a misnomer” because “this is not merely a mis-

ordering of words” as “the personal representative and the estate are two different entities.” Id.

at 448-49 (alterations omitted).

       The plaintiff in Estate of James sought to “correct[]” his pleading to name the defendant

as “Edwin F. Gentry, Esq., Administrator of the Estate of Robert Judson James” because “Gentry

had actual notice of the action and would not be prejudiced by allowing the further amendment.”

Id. at 449. The circuit court held that the administrator, rather than the estate, had been properly

identified as the defendant, but we reversed following an interlocutory appeal. See id. at 450,

456. We found that “the most straightforward reading of the amended motion for judgment

identifies ‘the Estate of ROBERT JUDSON JAMES’ as the party defendant,” and “[w]hile the

                                                  22
caption of the pleading goes on to identify Gentry as the administrator of the estate and the body

of the pleading recites the fact of his qualification as administrator, at best these references only

serve to identify James’ estate more specifically.” Id. at 455. We thus held that the error was a

misjoinder, not a misnomer, because a “misnomer arises when the right person is incorrectly

named, not where the wrong defendant is named,” and “because a misjoinder is simply not

subject to being legitimized by substituting the correct party.” Id. at 456 (alteration and citation

omitted).

       Estate of James relied heavily upon the reasoning in Swann v. Marks, in which the

plaintiff filed a personal injury action against an estate for injuries sustained in a vehicle

accident, Swann, 252 Va. 181, 182-83 (1996). After the qualification of the personal

representative for the estate, the plaintiff moved to amend his pleading by substituting the

personal representative for the estate as the named defendant, and the trial court granted the

motion “to correct [a] misnomer.” Id. at 183. We held that “the substitution of a personal

representative for the ‘estate’ is not the correction of a misnomer” because a “[m]isnomer arises

when the right person is incorrectly named, not where the wrong defendant is named.” Id. at

184. Since the personal representative and the estate “are two separate entities,” “one cannot be

substituted for another under the concept of correcting a misnomer.” Id.

       Similarly, in Rockwell, a plaintiff filed a negligence action arising out of a vehicle

accident in Roanoke County allegedly caused by Jacie Shotwell, the driver of the other vehicle.

211 Va. at 560-61. Shotwell died from her injuries. Department of Motor Vehicles information

had identified Roanoke as Shotwell’s residence, and since no administrator had been appointed

for her estate in Roanoke, the plaintiff arranged to have the City Sergeant of Roanoke, Kermit

Allman, appointed as her administrator. See id. at 560. The plaintiff then sued that officer as the

                                                  23
administrator of Shotwell’s estate, naming the defendant as “Kermit E. Allman, Administrator.”

Id. Allman later discovered that the decedent’s two daughters had been appointed as co-

administrators in Botetourt County, where Shotwell in fact had resided at the time of her death,

before Allman was appointed by the Circuit Court of the City of Roanoke, and thus, his

appointment as administrator in Roanoke was void. See id. at 561.

       Seeking leave to amend to include the correct administrators, the plaintiff in Rockwell

claimed the matter was a mere misnomer. Rejecting that argument, we held that the

subsequently appointed administrator, Allman, was a different party than the two co-

administrators of the same estate who had been appointed earlier in the correct county. See id.

The problem was not that Allman was misnamed but that he was named at all. In short, Allman

“was not the right party.” Id. 5 See generally Sinclair & Middleditch, supra note 1, § 11.2[C], at

826 (observing that “the Supreme Court made it clear in Rockwell v. Allman that the misnomer

statute does not permit a party to change the person against whom the action is brought” and that

“[w]hen the amendment attempts to deal with a change from the wrong party, who is before the

court, to a different defendant who is not, the misnomer provision statute does not operate”).

       In an analogous context, we rejected the plaintiffs’ argument in Miller v. Highland

County that naming the County as the defendant instead of the Board of Supervisors was a mere

misnomer that could be corrected by adding the Board as a party. See 274 Va. 355, 367-68

       5
         On appeal, the plaintiff noted that opposing counsel had conceded before the circuit
court that Shotwell’s insurance company “knew who the administrators were” of her estate at the
time the suit was filed. Petition for Appeal at 5, Rockwell, 211 Va. 560 (Record No. 7301).
Contending that the court should have allowed plaintiff to amend his pleadings to correct the
alleged misnomer, plaintiff argued that the insurance company “knew the facts and chose to do
nothing about them, and now the time of the statute of limitations has run and no new suit can be
successfully brought.” Id. at 22. Unpersuaded by this argument, we implicitly rejected it in
Rockwell by holding that an amendment was not permitted because “the party before the court,”
Allman, “was not the right party.” Rockwell, 211 Va. at 261.

                                                24
(2007). The plaintiffs’ declaratory judgment action alleged that the Board had acted arbitrarily

and capriciously in approving an amendment to a zoning ordinance, but the complaint named

only the County as the sole defendant. See id. at 362. We held that the plaintiffs’ failure to

name the Board as a defendant was not a misnomer because “[a] misnomer occurs when the right

person or entity is incorrectly named,” and the complaint “did not incorrectly name the right

entity, but named a different entity.” Id. at 368.

        Likewise, in Cook v. Radford Community Hospital, Inc., a husband was appointed by the

circuit court as legal guardian for his wife, who was then incapacitated after alleged medical

malpractice during treatment she had received as a patient at Radford Community Hospital. 260

Va. 443, 446 (2000). Almost two years later — without seeking any court order to terminate the

guardianship after her recovery — the incapacitated wife filed a medical malpractice action in

her own name, rather than by her guardian, in violation of then-applicable statutory provisions

requiring all actions by a ward to be prosecuted only by the court-appointed fiduciary. See id.

We found that the pleading error was not a misnomer because “[a] misnomer ‘arises when the

right person is incorrectly named, not where the wrong [person] is named.’” Id. at 451 (citation

omitted). The “right person” was the court-appointed guardian, who was not incorrectly named;

instead, “the wrong person,” the ward, who lacked standing to sue on her own behalf, was named

as the plaintiff. Id.

        In Herndon v. St. Mary’s Hospital, Inc., the parents of a minor child injured during

medical care provided before and after his delivery filed a medical malpractice action in their

own names as the “next friend[s]” of the minor child. 266 Va. 472, 474 (2003). We upheld the

circuit court’s dismissal of the suit, holding that the suit could only be brought in the name of the

minor child as “the real party in interest in such action,” not in the names of the parents as the

                                                 25
minor child’s next friends. Id. at 476-77. To hold otherwise, we reasoned, would “confer on

parents the status of a real party in interest in their minor child’s action.” Id. at 477. While the

definitions of misnomer and misjoinder were not discussed in Herndon, the logic of our

reasoning is relevant here — “the real party in interest” must be named, id. at 476, even if the

allegations make clear the identity of the injured party.

       The General Assembly has intervened in this line of precedent with respect to two

categories of misjoinder: business trade names and suits against estates. Subsection A of Code

§ 8.01-6.2 allows an amendment to a complaint to substitute “another entity” (described as the

“correct” party) for an incorrectly named “party” with a similar trade or corporate name if the

correct party or its agent had notice of the suit before the statute of limitations has run.

Subsection B of the same statute provides similar relief from the applicable statute of limitations

for certain flawed suits “against the estate of a decedent.” These statutory exceptions prove the

general rule. Suing the correct person, while incorrectly stating his name, constitutes a

misnomer. Suing the incorrect person, while correctly stating his name, constitutes a misjoinder.

No other statutory exception outside the two categories mentioned in Code § 8.01-6.2 has ever

been recognized by the legislature.

                                C. The Defendant-Got-Lucky Factor

       The majority appears to believe that if the intended target of litigation somehow learns of

the plaintiff’s misjoinder mistake, either by happenstance or from reading the complaint, then the

mistake is no longer a misjoinder. It is transformed into a misnomer. If that were true, a plaintiff

could mistakenly sue Honda for a product defect in a Camry. As long as Toyota learned of the

suit and remembered that it, not Honda, manufactured the Camry, then what was an obvious

misjoinder would be downgraded to a mere misnomer. This simple fallacy seems to be fully

                                                  26
embraced by the majority. The entire majority opinion can be summarized by just one of its

sentences: “Hampton [the plaintiff] sued the correct person — the driver — but used the wrong

name,” ante at 6, the name of the owner. That is no different from saying, to use the Toyota-

Honda hypothetical, that the plaintiff sued the “correct” manufacturer — Toyota — but used the

“wrong name,” Honda.

       The majority’s recitation of the complaint veils this conceptual flaw. The majority quotes

the allegations in the initial complaint that named Michael P. Meyer as the defendant and then

characterizes each of the allegations as stating generically that “the driver” performed each of the

negligent acts leading to the accident. See, e.g., ante at 1 (“The complaint alleged that at the

time of the collision the driver of the Suburban ‘was approaching a red light on Midlothian

Turnpike and attempting to make a left hand turn.’” (emphasis added)); ante at 1 (“It alleged that

the driver had a duty ‘to operate his vehicle with reasonable care and with due regard for others

using the road.’” (emphasis added)); ante at 1-2 (“It alleged that the driver ‘carelessly,

recklessly, and negligently operated his vehicle, disregarding a red light, and crashing into the

front of the vehicle in which’ Hampton was a passenger.” (emphasis added)); ante at 2 (“It

alleged that the driver of the Suburban was negligent [in various ways].” (emphasis added)).

       The full quotation of each allegation from the complaint, however, does not speak

generically of “the driver” performing the negligent acts. Instead, in every instance, the

complaint specifically names the “Defendant, Michael P. Meyer” as the tortfeasor using his

correct name. See, e.g., J.A. at 7 (“At the time and place aforesaid, Defendant, Michael P.

Meyer, was approaching a red light on Midlothian Turnpike and attempting to make a left hand

turn . . . .” (emphasis added)); id. at 8 (“[I]t was the duty of the Defendant, Michael P. Meyer to

operate his vehicle with reasonable care and with due regard for others using the road.”

                                                 27
(emphasis added)); id. (“Notwithstanding said duties, Defendant, Michael P. Meyer, did then and

there so carelessly, recklessly, and negligently operate[] his vehicle, by disregarding a red light,

and crashing into the front of the vehicle in which Plaintiff, Calvin Hampton was riding.”

(emphasis added)); id. (“Defendant, Michael P. Meyer, was negligent [in various ways].”

(emphasis added)).

       The complaint identifies “Michael P. Meyer” ten times. Id. at 7-9. On each occasion, he

is alleged to be the defendant who had negligently driven the vehicle and had injured the

plaintiff. The “WHEREFORE” clause demands judgment against “Michael P. Meyer” alone.

Id. at 9. The complaint nowhere generically identifies “the driver” as the defendant. Compare

id. at 7-9, with ante at 1-2. The multiple substitutions of “the driver” (generically stated in the

majority opinion) for “Michael P. Meyer” (specifically stated in the complaint) are distracting

but not enough so to obscure the obvious fact that the plaintiff did not mistakenly spell the

correct party’s name. The plaintiff sued and correctly spelled the wrong party’s name.

       Once again, “[a] misnomer ‘arises when the right person is incorrectly named, not where

the wrong person is named.’” Ricketts, 293 Va. at 110-11. In the present case, it is alleged that

the “right person,” id., knew that his legal adversary had mistakenly sued the “wrong person,” id.

If that were legally dispositive, however, we have incorrectly decided several prior misjoinder

cases in which this fact was clearly present. See, e.g., Estate of James, 277 Va. at 455-56;

Miller, 274 Va. at 368; Cook, 260 Va. at 451; Swann, 252 Va. at 184. Summarizing several of

these cases, Justice Koontz has explained:

               As in Cook and Miller, there was no dispute in Swann as to
               whether the pleading naming the incorrect party could have been
               interpreted as actually naming the proper party. In each case,
               respectively, the pleading clearly named the incompetent, the

                                                 28
               locality, and the estate, not the guardian, the governing body, or
               the personal representative . . . .
                                                  ....
               Because we have determined that the estate was the party
               defendant named by the amended motion for judgment, it follows
               that this case is controlled by Swann, unless there is merit in
               Peyton’s contentions that Swann can be distinguished on the
               ground that despite the “misnomer” of the proper party defendant,
               here [the administrator], the proper party, was identified in the
               amended motion for judgment and was actually served with that
               pleading. Accordingly, [the plaintiff] contends that there would be
               no prejudice in allowing a correction of the “misnomer.” We
               disagree with those contentions.

Estate of James, 277 Va. at 454, 456. 6

       Based upon this reasoning, the unanimous Court in Estate of James held that the

plaintiff’s attempt to change the defendant’s name from “Estate of Robert Judson James,

Administrator, Edwin F. Gentry, Esq.” (the incorrect party) to “Edwin F. Gentry, Esq.,

Administrator of the Estate of Robert Judson James” (the correct party) constituted a misjoinder,

not a misnomer. Id. at 456. In Estate of James, as well as many of the other Virginia misjoinder

cases, the intended target of the litigation would have known of the misjoinder mistake. But in

none of those cases did that fact, by itself, change the legal nature of the mistake from a

misjoinder into a misnomer.

       6
          The majority mentions a footnote in my Volk dissent, ante at 11 n.4, in which I noted
that “[t]he plaintiff has never alleged that anyone misled her or that she reasonably relied on
incorrect information supplied by others,” Volk, 291 Va. at 69 n.2 (Kelsey, J., dissenting). The
majority’s intended implication is that, because I mentioned that factual omission in Volk, I must
have thought it was legally relevant or perhaps even legally dispositive. My reason in pointing
out that factual omission in Volk, however, was to eliminate the need to address at length its legal
irrelevance — not to sub silentio concede the salience of some unspoken legal principle. That
footnote was similar to saying, “Judge, the plaintiff did not plead a breach of contract claim.”
Saying so, however, does not imply a concession that the breach of contract claim would have
been legally successful had it been pleaded.

                                                 29
                                                   III.

           In sum, the plaintiff in this case correctly named but incorrectly sued the “wrong

person” — the vehicle owner — which by definition was a misjoinder. If the plaintiff had

incorrectly named but correctly sued the “right person” — the vehicle driver — this would have

been a misnomer. The majority’s reasoning to the contrary is defeated by, not justified by, stare

decisis.

           I respectfully dissent.

                                                   30