Orsi v. Hall

8 Conn. Super. Ct. 92, 8 Conn. Supp. 92, 1940 Conn. Super. LEXIS 44
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedMarch 8, 1940
DocketFile 7240
StatusPublished

This text of 8 Conn. Super. Ct. 92 (Orsi v. Hall) 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
Orsi v. Hall, 8 Conn. Super. Ct. 92, 8 Conn. Supp. 92, 1940 Conn. Super. LEXIS 44 (Colo. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

SEYMOUR, J.

On July 30, 1938, an automobile accident occurred at a street intersection in Winsted, which resulted in damage to both automobiles. On October 17, 1938, a complaint setting forth the claim of the plaintiff and seeking recovery in damages to property only, was executed and served. On September 27, 1939, the defendant interposed an answer setting forth a general denial and a special defense by way of counterclaim, also asking money damages only. The plaintiff demurred to this special defense, setting up the bar of the statute of limitations (Gen. Stat. £1930} §6015 as amended by Cum. Supp. £1935] §1680c).

There is no dispute but that a year had elapsed between the date of the accident and the interposition of the counterclaim. Whether or not the demurrer to the special defense is good in law, depends on the answer to the question whether the allegations of the special defense relate back to the institution of the action. Our statutes (Gen. Stat. £1930] §5511) provide: “In any case in which the defendant has either in law or in equity or in both a counterclaim, or right of set-off, against the plaintiff’s demand, he may have the benefit of any such set-off or counterclaim by pleading the same as such in his answer, and demanding judgment accordingly; and the same shall be pleaded and replied to according to the rules governing complaints and answers; provided no counterclaim, set-off or defense, merely equitable, shall be available in any action before a justice of the peace.”

There are two recognised methods of presenting such a counterclaim as this, either by answer or cross complaint. Beach vs. Whittlesey, 73 Conn. 530, 534.

It is argued by the demurrant that in the absence of an express statute, a demand of the defendant, whether pleaded by way of set-off, counterclaim or cross bill, is regarded as an affirmative action, and therefore, unlike a matter of pure defense, is subject to the operation of the statute of limitations and is unavailable if barred by such statute. This is a statement of the rule of set-off as set forth in an annotation (16. A.L.R. 326, 328) to the case of Huggins vs. Smith, 141 Ark. 87, 216 S.W. 1. Following the statement of this rule, which seems generally to be approved by cases from 17 states, and *94 by the Federal Court in the Second Circuit, and also to be the rule in England, three Connecticut decisions are cited, which include Alsop vs. Nichols, 9 Conn. 357, and Gorham vs. Bulkley, 49 id. 91. (The annotator might also have cited Brabazon vs. Seymour, 42 Conn. 551 and Davis vs. Naugatuck Valley Crucible Co., 103 id. 36.) In eight states of the Union, barred claims are held available as a counterclaim or set-off, but always under the terms of a statute or provisions of the code existing in such states.

The annotator adds among his citations, a third Connecticut case, but apparently with some doubt, for he says: “See also Beecher vs. Baldwin (1887), 55 Conn. 419, 3 Am. St. Rep. 57.” The doubt whether the Beecher case supports his theory is, I think, warranted.

•If I read the decision in the Beecher case aright, the court is not referring to a set-off, or counterclaim, but to the ancient common-law defense of recoupment.

The defense of recoupment exists as long as the plaintiff’s cause of action exists and may be asserted though the claim as an independent cause of action is barred by limitations. This has been so held in the case of Williams vs. Neely, 134 Fed. 1, and in Crosset Lumber Co. vs. United States, 87 F. (2d) 930, and Bull vs. United States, 295 U.S. 247; and by the highest courts in Alabama (195 Ala. 186, 70 So. 141); Arkansas (141 Ark. 87, 216 S.W. 1); Georgia (9 Ga. 398, 54 Am. Dec. 346); Minnesota (55 Minn. 492, 57 N.W. 211); Nebraska (88 Neb. 95, 129 N.W. 184); Massachusetts (130 Mass. 519), and Vermont (46 Vt. 200). Our Supreme Court of Errors in its opinion in Beecher vs. Baldwin, supra, quoted the text writers Wood and also Angel, on limitation of actions, saying (p. 432) : “Not only does the bringing of an action stop the operation of the statute as to a proper matter of set-off, but it also seems that it revives a claim which is actually barred out, which is the proper subject of recoupment in the action, as damages growing out of the same transaction. .. .Where there are cross demands between parties, which accrued nearly at the same time, both of which would be barred by the statute, and the plaintiff had saved the statute by suing out process, but the defendant has not, the defendant may nevertheless .set off his demand.”

Beecher vs. Baldwin is cited in 24 R.C.L. 837, and the editors of this particular title, “Set-off and Counterclaim”, say: *95 “In pleading the statute of limitations to a counterclaim, it must be shown that the bar of the statute had matured when the original suit was commenced, and it is not sufficient to aver a bar when the counterclaim was filed.”

A counterclaim is a cause of action existing in favor of the defendant against the plaintiff. “It has also been defined as a claim which, if established, will defeat or in some way qualify a judgment to which the plaintiff is otherwise entitled. It is generally defined by the codes as a cause of action arising out of the contract or transaction set forth in the complaint as the foundation of the plaintiff’s claim, or connected with the subject of the action; or, in an action arising on contract, any other cause of action arising also on contract, and existing at the commencement of the action (italics not in original).” 24 R.C.L. Set-off and Counterclaim §4.

In Connecticut the right of set-off, whether legal or equitable, seems to have been confined to rights arising from contract. Downing vs. Wilcox, 84 Conn. 437. In the opinion in this case by Judge Prentice, he adopts the definition of Judge Loomis in Harral vs. Leverty, 50 Conn. 46, at page 63, wherein Judge Loomis says: “We are satisfied therefore that a defendant by a counterclaim under the statute, cannot bring in for adjudication any matter that is not so connected with the matter in controversy under the original complaint that its consideration by the court is necessary to a full determination of the rights of the parties as to such matter in controversy, or, if it is of a wholly independent character, is a claim upon the plaintiff by way of set-off, and not a claim against a co-defendant.” Judge Prentice adds (p. 441) : “Further than this we need not go in determining the scope to be given to the term [of set-off].... since a claim arising from tort has never been brought within its application. The right of set-off, whether legal or equitable, has always been confined to rights of action arising from contract. The defendant’s action in setting up his counterclaim must find its justification, if any there is, outside the field of set-off” (citing Plumb vs. Griffin, 74 Conn. 132, 135; Lovell vs. Hammond Co., 66 id. 500, 508).

To “recoup” is to keep back or stop something which is due. It corresponds with the reconvention

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Bluebook (online)
8 Conn. Super. Ct. 92, 8 Conn. Supp. 92, 1940 Conn. Super. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orsi-v-hall-connsuperct-1940.