DocketNumber: No. CV90 0109065 S
Citation Numbers: 1990 Conn. Super. Ct. 4612
Judges: LEWIS, J. CT Page 4613
Filed Date: 12/18/1990
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/18/2021
The defendant claimed the case for the jury docket and the plaintiff thereafter moved to strike the case from this docket. The issue is whether the defendant is entitled to a jury in a foreclosure action where the counterclaim alleges a breach of contract by the foreclosing plaintiff.
This analysis must start with Skinner v. Angliker,
The constitution of Connecticut, article
first ,19 , states that ``[t]he right of trial by jury shall remain inviolate.' is particular provision of our constitution has been consistently construed by Connecticut courts to mean that if there was a right to a trial by jury at the time of the adoption of the provision, then that right remains intact.It is generally held that the right to jury trial ``exists not only in cases in which it existed at common law and at the time of the adoption of constitutional provisions preserving it, but also exists in cases substantially similar thereto . . .' At common law, legal claims [were] tried by a jury, [and] equitable claims [were] tried by a court . . .' Equitable actions, therefore, are not within the constitutional guarantee of trial by jury.
Moreover, General Statutes
52-215 provides that as a matter of right ``civil actions involving such an issue of fact as, prior to January 1, 1880, would not present a question properly cognizable in equity' should be entered on the docket as jury cases upon proper request. Section52-215 goes on to state that certain enumerated actions CT Page 4614 and ``all other special statutory proceedings, which, prior to January 1, 1880, were not triable by jury,' shall be tried to the court without a jury.
To determine whether a right to a jury trial exists under Article
To the same effect is Motor Vehicle Mfrs. v. O'Neill,
Turning specifically to the propriety of the jury claims in this case, I believe the closest case, although it is not exactly on point, is Savings Bank of New London v. Santaniello,
There have been several relatively recent Superior Court decisions on this topic. In Gorbach Properties v. Guilmette,
The defendant filed a counterclaim in Hebron Road Associates v. Alvord Associates,
In Connecticut Bank and Trust v. Trolley Barn Corp., 2 CtLR 300 (October 1, 1980), the defendant filed a counterclaim requesting that a trust be impressed upon the mortgage being foreclosed, that the mortgage be subordinated to another mortgage, as well as claims for breach of contract, fraud, interference with contract, and CUTPA violations. The court noted that a constructive trust was an equitable remedy, as were specific performance and the requested "cancellation" of the mortgage, and therefore determined that the essence of the defendant's counter-claim was equitable and that the claim for equitable relief was relatively more important than the claim for legal relief, and thus a jury trial was not warranted.
Courts in other states have addressed this problem and recent decisions of the Supreme Courts of Idaho and Rhode Island illustrate the division in authority on the subject of jury trial in foreclosure actions where a counterclaim alleges a breach of contract.
In David Steed and Associates v. Young,
"Since the right to a trial by jury is ``inviolate' under the Constitution of the State of Idaho, a party to an equity action has a right to a jury trial on the legal causes of action raised pursuant to his compulsory counterclaim, unless there is a clear showing of ``imperative circumstances' which would cause the claimant irreparable harm while affording a jury trial in the legal cause. Id., 720-21."
On the other hand, in Tilcom Gammino, Inc. v. Commercial Associates,
A respondent opting to file a counterclaim in the equitable proceeding cannot then convert the equitable action filed by the petitioner. The respondents have the choice of proceeding with their counterclaim in the table proceeding or reserving the claim and bringing a separate suit for breach of contract at law. The respondents cannot assert that their rights to a jury trial are being denied when the option of filing an independent action is readily available to them.
The motion to strike this case from the jury docket is granted for the reasons stated by the Supreme Court of Rhode Island as well as in the decisions quoted from our Superior Court, namely, that the basic thrust of a foreclosure action is equitable in nature, and the assertion of a counterclaim with legal causes of action should not be deemed to convert the case from its essential nature as an equitable action, and thus entitle the counterclaiming defendant to a jury trial.
Hence, the plaintiff's motion to strike the case from the jury docket is granted.
SO ORDERED.
Dated at Stamford, Connecticut this fourteenth day of December, 1990.
LEWIS. J.