Liskiewicz v. Hameister

29 Misc. 3d 348
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 27, 2010
StatusPublished

This text of 29 Misc. 3d 348 (Liskiewicz v. Hameister) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Liskiewicz v. Hameister, 29 Misc. 3d 348 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2010).

Opinion

[349]*349OPINION OF THE COURT

Patrick H. NeMoyer, J.

Before this court is one of two actions arising from a motor vehicle accident occurring on October 6, 2006 on Broadway at or near its intersection with Brunswick Road in Depew. A vehicle driven by Mary E. Hameister and owned by James A. Corey struck a vehicle that was being driven by Carrie Liskiewiez and in which Diane Maggio was a passenger. The related or parallel action, which is pending before Supreme Court Justice Frederick J. Marshall, was commenced in 2008 by Maggio against Hameister and Corey. The instant action was commenced in 2009 by Liskiewiez against those same individuals.

The instant motion practice concerns the counterclaim asserted by Hameister and Corey (hereinafter defendants, although they are plaintiffs on the counterclaim) against Liskiewiez (hereinafter plaintiff, although she is defendant on the counterclaim). The counterclaim is unusual in that it seeks contribution from plaintiff toward any liability that defendants might incur to Diane Maggio in the related action.1 Plaintiff moves to dismiss the counterclaim for failure to state a cause of action. Alternatively, plaintiff seeks an order granting her leave to amend her reply2 to the counterclaim to state nine affirmative defenses thereto. The motion is opposed by defendants. On the basis of the parties’ submissions, this court renders the following determinations:

Although a claim over for contribution is usually pressed in the form of a third-party claim or a cross claim within the action in which the liability of the impleading or cross-claiming defendant is to be determined (or, less commonly, in the form of a separate or stand-alone impleader action), there is no reason why the instant claim over for contribution cannot be pursued [350]*350against plaintiff in an action commenced by plaintiff (as opposed to by Maggio). CPLR 1401 makes clear that “two or more persons who are subject to liability for damages for the same personal injury, injury to property or wrongful death, may claim contribution among them whether or not an action has been brought or a judgment has been rendered against the person from whom contribution is sought” (emphasis supplied). Thus, that statute, in conjunction with a rule of practice that allows for a “separate” (i.e., a nonjoined or nonconsolidated) action for contribution (see CPLR 1403), makes clear that a contribution claim need not be made in the same action in which the primary (or pass-through) liability of the impleading party is to be established. Further, CPLR 1403, which is entitled “How contribution claimed,” explicitly provides that a “cause of action for contribution may be asserted in a separate action or by cross-claim, counterclaim or third-party claim in a pending action,” without specifying that the pending action must be the same one in which the primary (or pass-through) liability of the counterclaiming defendant is to be established.

Concerning a party’s capacity or standing to prosecute the claim over for contribution as a counterclaim, including in an action other than the one in which the contribution-claiming defendant’s liability is to be established, CPLR 3019 (a), which governs the “[s]ubject of counterclaims,” simply provides that a “counterclaim may be any cause of action in favor of one or more defendants . . . against one or more plaintiffs” (emphasis supplied). It is thus a long-standing principle of New York practice that a counterclaim need not arise out of the same transactions or occurrences as the main claim (although, here, the subject counterclaim does in fact arise out of the same motor vehicle accident as the main claim) (see Siegel, Practice Commentaries, McKinney’s Cons Laws of NY, Book 7B, CPLR C3019:l). The real point of the aforementioned rule, however, is that defendants may, in the context of the instant action, assert even an unrelated liability of plaintiff to defendants (i.e., a liability to contribute to the payment of damages for Maggio’s injuries) as a counter3 to the claim seeking to impose liability upon defendants for plaintiffs injuries. Therefore, there is no [351]*351prohibition against defendants’ seeking contribution from plaintiff, including by means of a counterclaim in the instant action, for any liability incurred by defendants in the parallel action. Such a counterclaim states a viable claim for relief under New York law and, contrary to plaintiffs contention, defendants do not lack standing to seek such contribution from plaintiff, whether in the context of the instant action or otherwise (see CPLR 3211 [a] [3], [7]). In any case, whatever procedural anomaly might potentially exist here could easily be eliminated by the stipulated or court-ordered consolidation or joinder for trial of the two related actions,4 the effect of which would be to essentially transmute defendants’ counterclaim against plaintiff into a more conventional third-party claim. In any event, whether or not a consolidation or joint trial is agreed to or ordered, the court(s) in which the action(s) is (are) pending should have no difficulty in resolving the various claims or issues — including the extent, if any, of plaintiffs obligation to contribute to any award of damages to her passenger, Maggio — in their logical sequence.

The case of Moreno v Galdorisi (39 AD2d 450 [2d Dept 1972]) is slightly distinguishable from this matter but nevertheless sufficiently analogous to this one in its procedural context to support the result reached herein. There, following a two-car accident, a married couple sued (the husband derivatively) for damages for the injuries of the wife, a passenger. The defendants, the owner and driver of the second vehicle, counterclaimed against the plaintiff husband, the driver of the first, for contribution toward any liability that the defendants might bear for the injuries of plaintiff wife. The Second Department saw

“no defect in the procedural method employed by the defendants in seeking a determination of culpability and apportionment of damages, i.e., by way of counterclaim against [Mr.] Moreno. If Mr. Moreno were not a plaintiff in this action, the defendants would have a right under Dole to commence a third-party action against him as a joint or concurrent tort-feasor. On the other hand, since the plaintiff wife has not chosen to join her husband as a codefendant, a cross claim by the defendants [352]*352against him would not lie. Under these circumstances we deem it procedurally proper and feasible to assert and invoke the right of [contribution] by counterclaim ([see] Sorrentino v. United States, 344 F. Supp. 1308 . . . )” (Moreno, 39 AD2d at 452; see also Matter of Tierney v State of New York, 55 AD2d 158, 163 [4th Dept 1976]; Katz v Dykes, 41 AD2d 913, 914 [1st Dept 1973]).

This court does not take issue with the result reached in Hanover Ins. Co. v Alisa Constr. Co., Inc. (14 Misc 3d 864 [Sup Ct, Kings County 2007]).

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Sorrentino v. United States
344 F. Supp. 1308 (E.D. New York, 1972)
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Hanover Insurance v. Alisa Construction Co.
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Bluebook (online)
29 Misc. 3d 348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/liskiewicz-v-hameister-nysupct-2010.