DocketNumber: No. CV 95 59460 S
Citation Numbers: 1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 3881
Judges: SULLIVAN, J.
Filed Date: 3/18/1998
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/17/2021
The third count of the complaint seeks "contribution from the third party defendant for their proportionate share of same." (¶ 15). "Same" refers to damages. This third party complaint was dated June 7, 1996, served June 11, 1996 and filed in court June 19, 1996, pursuant to a motion for permission to implead third parties, granted by this court, Hammer, J. on June 10, 1996.
Thereafter the original plaintiff, on September 10, 1996 filed a request to amend her complaint to assert her claim for damages in negligence against the impleaded defendant North Central Mental Health Inc. and filed an amended complaint. This court, Hammer, J. denied this third party's objection to the original plaintiff's request to amend, by decision of October 7, 1996.
Therefore, as the matter now stands this third party defendant is a party to this action in the same fashion as if it had been an original defendant. Its liability, if any, will be apportioned by virtue of the provisions of General Statutes §
At common law there is no contribution allowed between joint tortfeasors Gomeau v. Forrest,
"Apportionment" of liability takes place at the time of judgment. ". . . each party against whom recovery is allowed shall be liable to the claimant only for his proportionateshare . . ." General Statutes §
General Statutes §
There is no question, in the instant case, but that the defendant did not serve the third party defendant with an "Apportionment complaint" within the requisite 120 days from the return date. See General Statutes §
The defendant's brief, February 12, 1997 states "in the present case the defendant third party plaintiff is not seeking apportionment of NCCHMS's liability to the plaintiff, but rather to determine NCCHMS's liability to the defendant third party plaintiff Superior Ambulance." Properly, the defendant is not CT Page 3884 seeking apportionment against the third party defendant, as a claim for such apportionment may be asserted by the defendant only under the auspices of General Statutes §
The defendant is therefore left with a claim that it is entitled to "contribution" from the third party defendant. The case of Malerba v. Cessna Aircraft Co.,
In product liability action the right to contribution exists because the defendant who pays the; entire judgment is paying his own obligation under the joint and several judgment. In negligence actions the paying defendant, by being required to pay a supplementary amount, is paying the judgment of another, not his own limited judgment. In essence, the post judgment procedures under the negligence statute, §
The third count of the complaint sets forth no theory to support a claim that the third party defendant is or may be liable to the defendant at the time of judgment. There is no contribution allowed between joint tortfeasors. One tortfeasor is simply not liable to another tortfeasor for "contribution". Any such liability for contribution does not arise out of the relationship of joint tortfeasors. Any such cause of action arises only post judgment, under a separate set of circumstances involving post judgment debtors and only to the limited extent and under the limited circumstances permitted by general statutes §
The court further notes that, in distinguishing between product liability claims and negligence actions, that the existence of a right of indemnity in negligence actions does not convert such claims into claims for contribution. See Kyrtatas v.Stop Shop Inc.,
Finally, the remedy sought by the defendant in the third count of the third party complaint, realistically apportionment, may from a practical standpoint be already applicable as the original plaintiff has amended the complaint to assert a direct claim against the third party defendant, thereby invoking the automatic apportionment provisions of General Statutes §
The defendant has not pleaded such facts as are necessary to set forth a cause of action for contribution against the third party defendant. The motion to strike the third count of the third party complaint is granted.
As to the fourth count of the third party complaint, seeking common law indemnity, the third party defendant has withdrawn the motion to strike that count (see supplemental memorandum February 18, 1988), and properly so. See Skuzinski v. Bouchard Fuels Inc.,
L. Paul Sullivan, J.