DocketNumber: No. CV92 0338311
Judges: HODGSON, JUDGE.
Filed Date: 5/17/1994
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/17/2021
The third party complaint is made in a suit in which William Roundtree and his mother, Bernice Roundtree have sued A. M. alleging that William was injured at work because of a defect in a machine manufactured by A.M., a division of The Atwood Corporation. In their third party complaint, the defendants allege that any harm CT Page 5300 to the plaintiff arose from the actions of his employer, The Bagel Connection, Inc., ("employer") which the A.M. alleges modified the machine, failed to instruct the plaintiff as to its proper operation, and bypassed a safety feature by the manner in which it instructed the plaintiff to use the machine.
In their prayer for relief, A.M. and seeks indemnification from The Bagel Connection, Inc. for any amounts they may be required to pay the plaintiffs, plus costs.
The employer raises several grounds in support of the motion to strike A.M.'s third party complaint:
1. The claim is barred by §§
2. The claim is barred by the applicable statute of limitations, §
52-577a (b) C.G.S., and3. The third party plaintiffs have failed to cite the statute upon which their claim is based.
This case has been consolidated with the Roundtrees' suit against The Bagel Connection, Docket No. CV92 0333501, in which the plaintiffs have sued the employer, relying on the allegations 1) that William Roundtree was a minor at the time of the injury and 2) that the employer engaged in reckless and wanton misconduct. The employer's motion to strike and motion to dismiss the plaintiffs' claims in that case were denied. Though no memorandum of decision accompanied the denials of these motions, it appears that the complaint was held sufficient to come within one or more exceptions to the exclusivity of the workers' compensation remedy.
I. STANDARD OF REVIEW
The function of a motion to strike is to test the legal sufficiency of a pleading. Practice Book § 152; Ferryman v. Groton,
A motion to strike may properly be used to raise the defense of the running of a statute of limitation. Vilcinkas v. Sears,Roebuck Co.,
II. IMMUNITY
Section
In any product liability claim for personal injury or death arising out of and in the course of employment subject to the provision of sections
52-240a ,52-240b ,52-572 M to52-572r inclusive, and52-577a , brought by any third party, such third party may not maintain any actions for indemnity against any person immune from liability.
The movant has not raised the general issue of a source of a duty to indemnify, see Atkinson v. Berloni,
Section
While an employer may be liable to a third party for injuries employee in certain circumstances in which the employer has an independent duty to the third party, see Ferryman v. Groton,
The inquiry is, then, whether the third party complaint is "a product liability claim for personal injury or death arising out of employment" and whether the employer is a "person immune from liability" within the meaning of §
The present state of the record is that the employee's action against the employer is not barred by §
III. STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS
The employer asserts as an additional ground for striking the third party complaint that the third party plaintiffs failed to bring their claim within the applicable statute of limitation, which it identifies as §
A.M. contends that the one year time limit is inapplicable because Roundtree's claim is not a "product liability" action because a product seller is not liable where the injury results from modification or misuse of its product.
Section
The issue remains, however, whether A.M.'s claim against the employer is a product liability claim at all. A.M. seeks no remedy for any injuries to itself that could be characterized as a product CT Page 5303 liability claim against the employer. Although A.M. claims in its brief, at page 2, that it is not asserting a right of indemnification against the employer, its third party complaint specifically identifies indemnification as the remedy sought:
Wherefore the defendant AM Manufacturing Company, Inc. and The Atwood Corporation pray that . . . if they are found liable in any respect or in any amount that its said defendant Bagel Connection, Inc. be required to indemnify them and hold them harmless and reimburse them for any and all such amounts they may be required to pay. . . .
Third Party Complaint, filed February 15, 1994.
The allegations of the third party complaint are not based on any theory that the employer is liable to A.M. as a product seller, manufacturer or the like. The court concludes that A.M.'s claim (as distinguished from Roundtree's claim) is one for indemnification, not a "claim or action brought for personal injury, death or property damage . . ." within the statutory definition cited above. Roundtree's own suit against The Bagel Connection, Inc. is not a product liability claim within the definition of the statute; and A.M.'s claim for indemnification is not a product liability claim within the statutory definition either.
In Malerba v. Cessna Aircraft Co.,
The court in Malerba clearly distinguished claims for contribution for harm to a victim from claims for indemnification owed to a claimed joint tortfeasor.
Sec.
Since defendants' claim against the third party in the case before this court is based on indemnification, not contribution, the one-year statute of limitation imposed by §
The second ground asserted by the third party defendant does not supply grounds to strike the complaint.
IV. FAILURE TO STATE A CLAIM
The employer asserts that the complaint must be stricken for A.M.'s failure to allege that it is maintaining a statutory cause of action. The movant's theory appears to be that it is necessary for a party utilizing the procedures of
The movant invokes Practice Book § 109A, which requires that a party asserting a claim "grounded on a statute" must identify the statute by number. The movant appears to view A.M.'s indemnification claim as being "grounded on" § 51-102a C.G.S. A.M.'s claim is not, however, "grounded on" that statute, which merely prescribes procedures, without creating a statutory cause of action. Rather, A.M. appears to be asserting a common law claim for indemnification.
The movant also asserts that A.M. has failed "to allege that third party defendant is or may be liable to the third party plaintiff for all or part of the plaintiff's claim against it." (Brief of Third Party Defendant, page 3)
Upon receiving permission from the court to serve a third party complaint, a party must file a complaint that contains factual allegations to the effect that the third party defendant is or may be liable to the third party plaintiff. Senior v. Hope,
Though the prayer for relief in the third party complaint identifies the remedy sought as indemnification, all of the factual allegations of the complaint relate to the third party defendant's alleged breach of duty to the plaintiff in causing his physical injury.
A.M. alleges no facts to the effect that The Bagel Connection is or may be liable to A.M., nor any allegation supporting any right to indemnification. (To the extent that A.M. would argue that it is, in reality, seeking contribution rather than indemnification, its claim would be subject to the one year statute of limitations imposed on such claims by §
The third party plaintiff has failed to allege any facts giving rise to a common law duty by the employer to indemnify it, and it has therefore failed to state a cause of action.
CONCLUSION
The motion to strike the third party complaint is granted.
Beverly J. Hodgson Judge of the Superior Court