DocketNumber: File CV980414991S
Citation Numbers: 1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 14098, 23 Conn. L. Rptr. 527, 45 Conn. Supp. 525
Judges: Blue
Filed Date: 12/11/1998
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 11/3/2024
The plaintiff, Lataunya Brock ("Brock"), claims that on June 28, 1996, she was injured in an accident caused by a vehicle owned by A1 Auto Service, Inc. ("A1"). Brock does not know the name of the person who drove the A1 vehicle. She commenced this action, alleging negligence, by service of process on July 7, 1998. There are two defendants. One defendant, A1, does not contest the court's jurisdiction. The problem lies with the second defendant.
Brock's complaint describes the second defendant as "John Doe." It alleges that, "John Doe was the operator of the vehicle owned by [A1]." It further claims that John Doe operated the A1 vehicle negligently and that A1 "allowed" him to do so. The complaint consists of two counts. The first count is directed at Doe. The second count is directed against A1.
The summons describes the second defendant as "Joe Doe." It gives his address as "c/o A1 Auto Service, Inc., 50 Amity Road, New Haven, Ct."
The sheriff's return states that service was made on July 7, 1998, "by leaving a true and attested copy of the original Writ, Summons, Complaint and Statement of Amount in Demand with my doings thereon endorsed, with and in the hands of DOMINICGAGLIARDI, AGENT FOR SERVICE FOR A-1 AUTO SERVICE, INC. WHOACCEPTED FOR JOE DOE."
On July 24, 1998, counsel filed a general appearance for "All Defendants." The motion to dismiss now before the court was filed on August 12, 1998. While the motion facially seeks dismissal of Brock's entire complaint, the only ground for the motion is that the court lacks jurisdiction over the second defendant, variously described as John Doe and Joe Doe. The court will consequently construe the motion as being directed at only the first count of the complaint (the count directed against Doe). The motion was heard on December 7, 1998. CT Page 14100
One minor problem must be mentioned before a much larger one is discussed. The complaint describes the second defendant as "John Doe," while the summons and the return identify the same defendant as "Joe Doe." If John Doe was the defendant's real name, service on a person named Joe Doe would pose obvious problems because of the possibility that the wrong person had been served. That is not, however, the case here. The plaintiff has used Jonn Doe as a fictitious name, and the very real problems of service of process on this pseudonymous person have nothing to do with the variance in the names of John and Joe Doe. If service had been otherwise proper, the plaintiff could subsequently seek to amend the writ by insertion of the right name Scandinavian Jewelry Box Works, Inc. v. Gilbert,
The real questions raised by this case involve the use of a pseudonym to describe — and serve — a defendant whose actual name cannot be determined. It should be emphasized that the use of a pseudonym is not by itself objectionable. Our case reports are full of cases involving pseudonymous parties. John Doe and his significant other, Jane Doe, appear periodically in our case reports as plaintiffs, as defendants, and sometimes as both. SeeState v. Doe,
The cases just cited, however, all involve identifiable persons whose names have been cloaked in anonymity at some point after the onset of the litigation, almost always to spare them from the embarrassment of publicity. In the numerous State v.Anonymous cases, for example, there can be no doubt that a real person has been arrested and that he knows that he has been arrested. The cloak of anonymity is conferred after the commencement of the action. CT Page 14101
Existing Connecticut law offers some guidance on this subject. Conn. Gen. Stat. §
These provisions draw a common sense distinction between the writ (and, much later, the judgment file), which must describe the parties with particularity, and the pleadings, which may cloak the names of the parties with anonymity, at least under certain circumstances. The writ must identify the parties — particularly the parties being sued — for the litigation to even exist. "By its very terms, an action at law implies the existence of legal parties." Thompson v. Peck,
"[T]he books do show us how to proceed when proper parties are unknown." Kentucky Silver Min. Co. v. Day, 14 F. Cas. 351, 352 (D. Nev. 1873) (No. 7,719). "The difficulty is not overcome CT Page 14102 by making the unknown ones parties under a false name, but by dispensing with them altogether, if the suit can proceed without them, or by praying a discovery for the purpose of bringing them before the court." Id. Either of these alternatives could plainly have been followed in the case at hand. Brock knows the name of one defendant, A1, and she claims that the known defendant allowed the unknown defendant to use its vehicle. She could have simply sued A1 and learned the name of the driver through either formal or informal discovery. Once the identity of the driver was ascertained, a proper action against him could have been commenced. (This alternative, of course, remains open to Brock in the future.) Alternatively, Brock could have brought a bill of discovery in equity. P.B. §
This analysis is reinforced by both by several unpublished Superior Court decisions and numerous published decisions from other jurisdictions. "The majority of courts considering the issue have held that jurisdiction to sue unknown or fictitious persons must be obtained pursuant to some express rule or statute." Van Biene v. ERA Helicopters, Inc.,
Although these observations are sufficient to dispose of the motion now before the court, it should be noted that the service of process in this case would present serious technical difficulties even if the court were to have theoretical jurisdiction over John Doe defendants in the abstract. Process on the second defendant here was served on an "agent for service for A1." Process in this state must ordinarily be left "with the defendant, or at his usual place of abode." Conn. Gen. Stat. §
Brock does not rely on §
For the reasons set forth above, the motion to dismiss the first count of the complaint is granted.
Jon C. Blue Judge of the Superior Court
State v. Anonymous , 173 Conn. 414 ( 1977 )
Doe v. Doe , 163 Conn. 340 ( 1972 )
Noble v. Corkin , 45 Conn. Super. Ct. 330 ( 1998 )
Scandinavian Jewelry Box Works, Inc. v. Gilbert , 18 Conn. Supp. 445 ( 1953 )
Anonymous v. Norton , 168 Conn. 421 ( 1975 )
State v. Doe , 149 Conn. 216 ( 1962 )