DocketNumber: No. 62100
Citation Numbers: 1992 Conn. Super. Ct. 5277, 7 Conn. Super. Ct. 743
Judges: AUSTIN, J.
Filed Date: 6/10/1992
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/17/2021
Whether the court should grant the defendant's motion to strike because the six counts of the complaint are misjoined in that there is no plaintiff with an interest in all eight parcels which are the subject of the present tax appeal.
FACTS
The following facts are alleged in the complaint. The present tax appeal involves eight parcels located in the Town of East Hampton, Connecticut. These CT Page 5278 parcels are owned by eight plaintiffs in various combinations of joint and sole ownership.1 The six counts of the complaint correspond to the six combinations of ownership of the eight parcels.2 The plaintiffs allege that the valuations made by the assessors of the defendant Town of East Hampton on the eight subject parcels were grossly excessive, disproportionate and unlawful. The plaintiffs further allege that they duly appealed the valuations on their properties to the East Hampton Board of Tax Review (the "Board"), which did not alter the valuations. The plaintiffs also allege that the Board failed to hold or conduct a proper and fair hearing as required by the General Statutes thereby denying the plaintiffs of their right to appeal the valuation of their property.
The defendant now moves to strike the complaint on the ground that the six counts are misjoined.
DISCUSSION
"The motion to strike is used to test the legal sufficiency of a pleading" and "admits all facts well pleaded." Ferryman v. Groton,
"Whenever any party wishes to contest . . . (4) the joining of two or more causes of action which cannot properly be united in one complaint, whether the same be stated in one or more counts . . . that party may do so by filing a motion to strike the contested pleading . . . ." Practice Book Sec. 152. "Practice Book Sec. 198 provides: ``The exclusive remedy for misjoinder of parties is by motion to strike."' DeRosa v. DeRosa,
The pertinent part of General Statutes Sec.
"An action shall not be defeated by the nonjoinder or misjoinder of parties. New parties may be added and summoned in, and parties misjoined may be dropped, by order of the court, at any stage of the action, as the court deems the CT Page 5279 interests of justice require."
Id., 117 n. 2; see also Practice Book Sec. 100.
The granting of a motion to strike [on the ground of misjoinder] invites the losing party to file a new pleading in order to cure the defect . . . . [I]t would permit the plaintiff either to allege facts which might link the misjoined causes of action or to elect which cause of action should remain in the original complaint and which should form the basis of a new complaint.
Ferriera v. Estevam,
General Statutes Sec.
In any civil action the plaintiff may include in his complaint both legal and equitable rights and causes of action, and demand both legal and equitable remedies; but, if several causes of action are united in the same complaint, they shall be brought to recover, either. . . (7) upon claims, whether in contract or in tort or both, arising out of the same transaction or transactions connected with the same subject of action. These several causes of action so united. . . shall affect all the parties to the action.
Practice Book Sec. 133 contains language virtually identical to that of General Statutes Sec.
The defendant argues that because the present action concerns eight tax appeals regarding eight different parcels owned by eight different owners, the plaintiffs are misjoined because each tax appeal does not affect all of the plaintiffs.3
The plaintiffs argue that courts favor the policy of litigating related claims in one action. Veits v. Hartford,
Mueller v. Board of Tax Review,
The facts of the Harvard and Mueller cases are easily distinguishable, however, from the facts of the present case because every plaintiff in the Harvard and Mueller cases had an interest in every parcel involved. In order for the valuation of separate parcels to be considered a single transaction for the purpose of joinder there must be at least one plaintiff with an interest in every parcel involved. Otherwise, all of the causes of action stated in the complaint would not affect all of the parties. General Statutes Sec.
The present case involves eight parcels owned by six combinations of owners. No individual has an ownership right in all of the properties involved in the present case.4 Accordingly, the facts of the present case, as alleged in the complaint, fail to satisfy General Statutes Sec.
CONCLUSION
The court grants the defendant's motion to strike because the six counts in the complaint are misjoined in that there is no plaintiff with an interest in all eight subject parcels.
AUSTIN, J.
ENDNOTES