Bremer v. Doctor's Building Partnership

465 S.E.2d 787, 251 Va. 74, 1996 Va. LEXIS 14
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJanuary 12, 1996
DocketRecord 950730
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 465 S.E.2d 787 (Bremer v. Doctor's Building Partnership) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bremer v. Doctor's Building Partnership, 465 S.E.2d 787, 251 Va. 74, 1996 Va. LEXIS 14 (Va. 1996).

Opinion

JUSTICE LACY

delivered the opinion of the Court.

In this appeal, we consider whether the trial court erred in granting a nonsuit when a defendant’s plea filed pursuant to Code § 8.01-422 was pending.

Doctor’s Building Partnership (Doctors) filed a motion for judgment against James Bremer, Lewis F. Shrensky, and Jose Rodrigues, general partners of Castle Way Partnership (collectively, Bremer). Doctors sought to enforce payment of a deferred purchase money note executed in connection with the 1983 sale of a commercial office building. Bremer filed an “answer,” counter *76 claims, and a plea under Code § 8.01-422. Both the statutory plea and one of the counterclaims were based on an allegation that Doctors breached express warranties contained in the purchase agreement that the office building conformed to the requirements set out in the applicable state and county building codes. 1

Trial was set for October 31, 1994. Prior to the trial date, Bremer nonsuited the counterclaims and, after an ore terms hearing, the trial court ruled that, although the purchase agreement had been modified by a subsequent addendum, the modification did not displace the warranties and they remained in effect. On the day of the trial, the trial court granted Doctors’ motion for nonsuit.

Bremer filed an appeal asserting that the trial court’s nonsuit order violated the provisions of Code § 8.01-380 because his statutory plea was pending and because the case had been submitted for decision. Bremer also contended that, even if Code § 8.01-380 was not violated, the trial court’s action was contrary to “extra-statutory common-law principles which prohibit a plaintiff from taking a nonsuit if, by so doing, it allows the plaintiff an advantage, and serves to prejudice or oppress the defendant, or deprives the defendant of any just defense.” We awarded Bremer an appeal and, because we conclude that the trial court properly applied Code § 8.01-380, we will affirm the order of the trial court.

I.

Consideration of Bremer’s contention that Code § 8.01-380(C) precluded a nonsuit because of his pending statutory plea requires a review of the legislative history of the nonsuit statute and of the provision upon which Bremer’s statutory plea is based, Code § 8.01-422. In the 1977 recodification of Title 8, the Code sections dealing with nonsuits were consolidated in Code § 8.01-380 of new Title 8.01. Report of the Virginia Code Commission to the Governor and the General Assembly of Virginia, House Document No. 14, at 243 (1977). Code § 8.01-380 provides in pertinent part:

*77 A. A party shall not be allowed to suffer a nonsuit as to any cause of action or claim . . . unless he does so . . . before the action has been submitted to the court for decision. . . .
B. Only one nonsuit may be taken ... as a matter of right ....
C. A party shall not be allowed to nonsuit a cause of action, without the consent of the adverse party who has filed a counterclaim, cross claim or third-party claim . . . unless the counterclaim, cross claim, or third-party claim can remain pending for independent adjudication by the court.

Subsection C is based on former Code § 8-244 which prohibited a nonsuit if a defendant had filed a counterclaim and did not consent to the nonsuit. Acts 1954, ch. 611 at 785. Prior to 1954, Code § 8-244 did not refer to a counterclaim, but prohibited a nonsuit without the consent of the defendant if the defendant had filed a “plea or account under [Chapter 14 of Title 8].” Code § 8-244 (1950). Former Code § 8-241 was within Chapter 14 of Title 8, and, thus, pleas filed thereunder were protected from nonsuit. In 1977, Code § 8-241 was recodified as Code § 8.01-422, the source of Bremer’s statutory plea. Acts 1977, ch. 617 at 1125.

The premise underlying Bremer’s position is his assertion that the amendments to and recodification of former Code §§ 8-241 and -244 made no substantive changes and that the insertions of the word “counterclaim” in those sections were changes in nomenclature only. Based on this premise, Bremer asserts that his statutory plea is entitled to protection against nonsuit as a “counterclaim” in Code § 8.01-380(C) in the same manner that former “plea[s] and account[s]” under Chapter 14 of Title 8 were protected by former Code § 8-244. Thus, Bremer concludes that because his statutory plea is a “counterclaim” which cannot “remain pending for independent adjudication,” the trial court erred in granting a nonsuit.

Our review of the legislative history of these sections shows, however, that Bremer’s premise is flawed. Substantive changes were made to both former Code §§ 8-241 and -244 based on the distinctions between counterclaims and pleas filed under former Code §8-241. Following the enactment of the 1950 Code, the General Assembly instructed the Virginia Code Commission to identify statutes dealing with court practice and procedure which had been rendered obsolete by the new Code. In its report, the *78 Commission noted that certain procedural statutes had also been rendered obsolete by new Rules of Court effective contemporaneously with the 1950 Code. Repeal of Obsolete Procedural Statutes, A Report of the Virginia Code Commission to the Governor and the General Assembly of Virginia, House Document No. 16 (1954) (hereinafter, House Document No. 16). Consequently, the Commission’s recommendations included changes needed as a result of both the 1950 Code and Rules of Court.

One of the areas identified by the Commission for legislative action was precipitated by the adoption of Rule 3:8, which, for the first time, identified a counterclaim as a specific form of pleading. New Rule 3:8 defined a counterclaim broadly by covering various types of relief a defendant could seek from the plaintiff which could be resolved in the same litigation. 2 Counterclaims were limited, however, to actions at law. Thus, as the Commission explained, the new rule encompassed many of the pleas formerly authorized by Code § 8-241 but did not include pleas seeking equitable relief in the form of damages which were allowed by the statute. To make Rule 3:8 coextensive with former Code § 8-241, the Commission recommended that Rule 3:8 be amended to include “any matter which would entitle [a defendant] to relief in equity in the nature of damages.” House Document No. 16, at 24. If the Rule was not changed, however, the Commission recommended that only “so much of § 8-241 as relates to equitable defenses” be retained. Id.

Rule 3:8 was not amended and, following the Commission’s recommendation, the General Assembly amended Code § 8-241 to eliminate a number of the pleas formerly authorized under that *79 section but now embraced as counterclaims under Rule 3:8. 3 Pleas seeking relief in equity remained in the statute as amended.

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Bluebook (online)
465 S.E.2d 787, 251 Va. 74, 1996 Va. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bremer-v-doctors-building-partnership-va-1996.