Hoffman v. Hada, No. Cv90 273489s (May 15, 1991)
This text of 1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 4240 (Hoffman v. Hada, No. Cv90 273489s (May 15, 1991)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The defendant contends that: (1) Practice Book 168 permits the pleading of a set off in its answer; (2) the jury will not be prejudiced because pleadings are no longer required to be sent in to the jury with the evidence during deliberations, and (3) Connecticut General Statutes Sections
The court agrees with the defendant's assertion that even if the collateral source payment credit on any judgment is specially pled, it will not prejudice the jury because it will never be submitted to them.
The collateral source credit rule requires the judge to reduce the economic damage portion of any award by the amount of collateral source payments. Connecticut General Statutes
The statute then goes on to require the court to receive evidence from the plaintiff "claimant" and "other persons" about the amounts of such collateral source payments and the amount of any necessary legal expenses expended in obtaining them.
While it is clear that no judgment can enter for the plaintiff until any collateral source payment is netted off the verdict amount, the law is hardly certain regarding who has the burden of going forward with proof as to these sources and credit.
Where a defendant chooses to bring certainty to an uncertain legal procedure and to place the court on notice by filing a special defense and clearly assume the burden of proof, no harm is done to the plaintiff and the interests of justice are better served.
The premise of plaintiff's motion to strike is that the collateral source credit could be raised by the defendant after the verdict even if it were not specially pled and that because it need not be specially pled to be asserted, it should be CT Page 4242 struck as not legally sufficient. The minor premise that because it need not be specially pled, it must be struck, is faulty.
Although under Tort II, the judge determines the amount of the judgment after setting off any net collateral sources against the verdict amount, there is no legal impediment or insufficiency to the defendant specially pleading the right to such a credit.
The defendant has a right to plead her case in her own way unless that way is forbidden by a rule of practice, Miller v. President Directors of Hartford Retreat,
The provisions of Practice Book Section 164 providing that "advantage may be taken under a simple denial, of such matters as the statute of frauds [etc.] . . ." is permissive not mandatory.
A defense which a party might have to paying the full amount of the verdict as a judgment can be specially pled by a defendant even if our highest court should eventually decide that such a special pleading was not necessary to raise it. This is so because our civil procedure has always permitted a party to a law suit to raise by special defense what might have also been asserted by a mere answer to the complaint. Rule 164 of that procedure does not forbid the pleading by special defense of what it does not require to be pled by special defense. See, Glover v. Shelton,
The Motion to Strike is DENIED.
FLYNN, J.
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1991 Conn. Super. Ct. 4240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hoffman-v-hada-no-cv90-273489s-may-15-1991-connsuperct-1991.