Mahony Fittings, Inc. v. Becon, Inc., No. Cv-97-0568728-S (May 7, 1998)
This text of 1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 6184 (Mahony Fittings, Inc. v. Becon, Inc., No. Cv-97-0568728-S (May 7, 1998)) 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
Amendments to pleadings are allowed and governed by General CT Page 6185 Statutes Section
On the issue of delay, plaintiff cites a number of cases, all of which involve a significantly greater passage of time than that involved in this case. In Johnson v. Toscano, supra, the amendment was sought some eight years after the suit was brought, and two years after the case was pretried. In Freccia v. Martin,
Although pretrials had been scheduled in this case after the pleadings had been certified as closed (by plaintiff, on July 28, 1997) it does not appear that the case was ever actually pretried prior to the 1/26/98 motion for permission to amend. Plaintiff cites Doyle v. A P Realty Corporation,
As plaintiff's counsel has stated, the allowing of this counterclaim will unquestionably occasion significant delay in the advancing of this case, all to the economic prejudice or disadvantage of the plaintiff/creditor. However, the claim is a substantial one; the case, while not a recent filing, is not one involving a delay to date at all comparable to the delays in the cited cases; there is not a basis, on the limited information, for concluding that defendant's CUTPA claim is groundless, frivolous and intended only as a delay mechanism; and, while the reality of economic prejudice is not to be minimized, the desirability of having both parties obtain a complete airing of their respective claims is paramount.
I am unable to conclude that defendant has been negligent in not filing the request to amend at an earlier stage in this litigation. In a number of filed pleadings, defendant referred to the complexity of the ongoing transaction of the parties and the need to ascertain additional, germane facts through discovery. At oral argument, it was represented that depositions had been taken and information developed relative to the proposed counterclaim.
Plaintiff contends that the defendant's CUTPA claim is separate and distinct, and can be asserted in an independent, subsequent action. However, the counterclaim stems from the same facts forming the basis for the complaint. Here, the factual grounds for defendant's asserted counterclaim arise from the same transaction that is the subject of plaintiff's complaint, and thus, litigation of the counterclaim is relevant to plaintiff's demand. Connecticut National Bank v. Voog, 233 Conn. supra p. 367-69. As stated by defendant, the assertion of the counterclaim through a separate action would quite likely result in consolidation for trial, since the two claims would involve the identical parties and arise from the same transaction or series of transactions.
Plaintiff's objection (#113) to defendant's motion for permission to amend its answer is overruled. CT Page 6187
Mulcahy, J.
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1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 6184, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mahony-fittings-inc-v-becon-inc-no-cv-97-0568728-s-may-7-1998-connsuperct-1998.