Olmstead v. Edwards Superstores, No. Cv97 0058382s (Jul. 7, 1998)

1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 8399, 22 Conn. L. Rptr. 343
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedJuly 7, 1998
DocketNo. CV97 0058382S
StatusUnpublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 8399 (Olmstead v. Edwards Superstores, No. Cv97 0058382s (Jul. 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.

Bluebook
Olmstead v. Edwards Superstores, No. Cv97 0058382s (Jul. 7, 1998), 1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 8399, 22 Conn. L. Rptr. 343 (Colo. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]

MEMORANDUM OF DECISION ON DEFENDANT EDWARDS SUPERSTORES' MOTION TO STRIKE
This case involves a products liability claim. The plaintiff claims he was injured when a plastic chair he bought at Edwards Superstore collapsed — Edwards distributed the chair so that suit was brought under our products liability act, § 52-572m et seq. Edwards, as defendant, then impleaded Gracious Living Industries, Inc., the alleged manufacturer of the chair. In the third party complaint, Edwards set forth two counts. The first is based on a theory of common law indemnification. The defendant Edwards states that if a jury determines it is liable to the plaintiff for damages, its liability is "passive" and arises directly from the "active negligence" of a defective chair by Gracious Living.

The second count basically repeats the factual allegations of the first count denying negligence and asserting that Gracious CT Page 8400 Living, the manufacturer, is responsible for any defect in the chair and any damages caused to the plaintiff. The count then asserts that the manufacturer "is a necessary party under the provisions of § 52-572(o) of the General Statutes in order to have a complete determination of the issues involved in the present case."

Shortly after Edwards filed its third party complaint against Gracious Living, the plaintiff filed a complaint itself against the manufacturer, Gracious Living, so that it is also now a direct defendant in the plaintiff's action.

Gracious Living has now moved to strike both counts claiming both counts are legally insufficient to state a claim. Pratt v.Town of Old Saybrook, 225 Conn. 177, 189 (1993).

(1)
As to the common law indemnification claim in the first count, Gracious Living points to the fact that it is a direct defendant in the plaintiff's action, so that the comparative responsibility provisions of our Product Liability Act (CPLA) prevent the application of this doctrine. Kyrtatas v. Stop ShopInc., 205 Conn. 694, 699 (1998), and its language is cited — the doctrine is not available when all potential defendants are before the court. Section 52-572(o) abrogates the prohibition of contribution among joint tortfeasors that is why indemnification is barred. Stefano v. Smith, 705 F. Sup. 733, 735 (1989) is cited for this rationale. Thus, Gracious Living argues the comparative responsibility provisions of the CPLA "eliminates the need for indemnification actions in the products liability context." Page 4 of brief.

But then came a case called Malerba v. Cessna Aircraft Co.,210 Conn. 189 (1989). In that case the plaintiff brought suit against Cessna and Cessna then was granted permission to and then filed a third party complaint against the owner and mechanic of the aircraft involved in the accident which caused the plaintiff his injuries. This complaint was in four counts and sought recovery based upon common law principles of indemnification and contribution. The plaintiff Malerba filed a motion to strike claiming no actions lied for indemnification and contribution in an action involving our product liability act which, under §52-572(o), requires apportionment of responsibility. The court, seemingly departing from the position it took in Kytatas, held CT Page 8401 that at least under certain circumstances an indemnification action can be pursued against the background of a statutory comparative liability action where the trier of the initial claim asserting injuries against the various defendants is required to apportion liability among the plaintiff and all the defendants.210 Conn. at pp. 196, et seq. The analytical basis of the court's decision is set forth on page 198 and is fairly sweeping as regards the issue involved. The court said the following:

General Statutes § 52-572 (o)(c) provides: "In determining the percentage of responsibility, the trier of fact shall consider, on a comparative basis, both the nature and quality of the conduct of the party." An indemnitee, however, must prove "that the negligence with which it has been found chargeable was passive or secondary, while the indemnitor" has been negligent and in a manner which was active and primary. Kaplan v. Merberg Wrecking Corporation, supra, page 415. The principles are different and are articulated in a different manner. Thus, a finding that a given defendant was liable to the plaintiff does not necessarily determine whether that responsibility was based on a passive negligence which might, therefore, entitle that defendant to a full reimbursement from other defendants based upon indemnification principles.

The court makes a passing reference to Kyrtatas in footnote 9 on page 198 to the effect that its holding there "was specifically limited to its factual circumstances." But whatever that case's factual circumstances may be perceived to be, it is still true whether all prospective defendants are parties or not that, as said in Malerba, that a finding that a particular defendant was liable in a CPLA action does not necessarily determine whether that party's responsibility was based on passive negligence which might entitle it to full reimbursement from other defendants.

Perhaps the distinction between Kyrtatas and Malerba is really based on procedural considerations. In other words inKyrtatas all defendants were parties and the jury was asked to decide issues of comparative responsibility and indemnification by the mechanism of special interrogatories after a charge that presumably covered both matters. This could be a daunting task so perhaps the solution is bifurcation of the indemnity claim and CT Page 8402 the failure to do so may be the basis of the problem in Kyrtatas.

In any event Malerba seems to say that common law indemnification remains viable despite § 52-570 (o)(c) and its comparative responsibility rules.

That seems to be the only sensible result given the purposes of our product liability act. The act was passed to expedite the handling of the claims of consumers injured by defective products released into the stream of commerce by manufacturers and distributors of that product. Given that purpose and once the adjudication of such a consumer claim has been made what difference does it make for any of the purposes with which the product liability act is concerned that an indemnification claim must be sorted our between manufacturer and distributor of a defective product?

The legislature should not be presumed to have abrogated a long standing common law remedy unless it explicitly indicates that it is doing so. Besides it could be counterproductive to bar indemnification actions in this area of the law. Passive/active theories of negligence, enforced through indemnification, focus responsibility on the party primarily responsible for injuring the consumer by release of a defective product into the marketplace.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 8399, 22 Conn. L. Rptr. 343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/olmstead-v-edwards-superstores-no-cv97-0058382s-jul-7-1998-connsuperct-1998.