Rossignol v. Danbury School of Aeronautics, Inc.

227 A.2d 418, 154 Conn. 549, 4 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 305, 1967 Conn. LEXIS 710
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 28, 1967
StatusPublished
Cited by117 cases

This text of 227 A.2d 418 (Rossignol v. Danbury School of Aeronautics, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rossignol v. Danbury School of Aeronautics, Inc., 227 A.2d 418, 154 Conn. 549, 4 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 305, 1967 Conn. LEXIS 710 (Colo. 1967).

Opinion

House, J.

The facts giving rise to this action, as admitted by demurrer, may be briefly summarized. The defendant Eaton Manufacturing Company sold an exhaust valve to the defendant Avco Corporation. Avco incorporated this exhaust valve into a motor which it manufactured and sold to the defendant Piper Aircraft Corporation. Piper incorporated this motor into an airplane which it manufactured and sold to the defendant the Danbury School of Aeronautics, Inc. Danbury School sold the airplane to a customer, who, after using the airplane, resold it to Danbury School, which subsequently sold it to the plaintiff in May, 1963. In August, 1963, the airplane was damaged in a crash landing due to *552 engine failure, which, in turn, was “due to a cracked or defective exhaust valve in Number 3 cylinder probably caused by excessive valve guide wear.” At the time of the accident, the engine had been operated for 687 hours. Normal overhaul time for such an engine is 800 to 1200 hours.

The plaintiff in a four-count complaint has sued all of the above-mentioned parties except the first purchaser from the Banbury School. The school answered on the merits and is not involved in this appeal. The remaining defendants, Piper, Avco and Eaton, were each the object of an individual count. As to each of these three defendants, there was set up in a single count three causes of action sounding in (1) warranty, express “and/or” implied, (2) negligence and (3) “tortious conduct ... in manufacturing and selling a product containing a defect, or likely to develop a defect, which made or would make such product unreasonably dangerous for those purposes for which it would reasonably be used.” This manner of pleading is a permitted practice; Veits v. Hartford, 134 Conn. 428, 58 A.2d 389; but a hazardous and complicating one in a case already complicated by the joinder of multiple defendants.

From this point on, the case developed into a gordian knot of procedural difficulties owing to a failure of the parties to observe elemental rules of pleading and practice. It is a knot which we can neither entirely untie nor cut without prejudice to one or the other of the parties.

Piper, Eaton and Avco each filed demurrers which were sustained. Piper’s amended demurrer was addressed to the entire second count directed against it. As we have noted, the count purported to set out three causes of action, one of which *553 sounded in negligence. The demurrer did not reach the negligence aspects of the count, and accordingly, even if the demurrer was good as to the other allegations, since it was addressed to the entire count, it should not have been sustained. Practice Book § 106; McNish v. American Brass Co., 139 Conn. 44, 54, 89 A.2d 566, cert. denied, 344 U.S. 913, 73 S. Ct. 336, 97 L. Ed. 704; Cashman v. Meriden Hospital, 117 Conn. 585, 586, 169 A. 915; Folwell v. Howell, 117 Conn. 565, 568, 169 A. 199; Blakeslee v. Water Commissioners, 106 Conn. 642, 649, 139 A. 106; Goldfarb v. Cohen, 92 Conn. 277, 281, 102 A. 649; see Practice Book Form 258 (third form).

The joint demurrer of Eaton and Avco to the respective counts directed against them was limited to the purported causes of action other than that sounding in negligence. The sustaining of this demurrer would, therefore, under normal circumstances, present on appeal only the specific question as to whether the counts stated causes of action for express “and/or” implied warranty and for manufacturing and selling a defective and dangerous product.

The judgment as printed in the record and a reference in the plaintiff’s briéf, however, have prompted us to examine the file in this case. It discloses that the court’s memorandum of decision sustaining the demurrers was filed on June 16, 1965. On July 28, 1965, the plaintiff filed a motion for permission to amend his complaint, and this motion was granted on September 10, 1965, the amendment being docketed as filed on that day. This pleading amended each of the counts as to which, in whole or in part, a demurrer had been sustained by removing the cause of action based on negligence *554 and, as to each defendant, made that cause of action a separate additional count of the complaint. “When a demurrer to the whole or a portion of a pleading which purports to state an entire cause of action is sustained, the sustaining of the demurrer removes from the case the cause of action demurred to. Practice Book [1951] § 98 [now Practice Book, 1963, § 112]. ‘Whenever, after a demurrer sustained, the complaint or pleading demurred to is amended or a substitute filed, that demurrer and the pleading to which it relates are taken out of the case. The filing of the amendment or substitution, as the case may be, is a withdrawal of the first.’ Eames v. Mayo, 93 Conn. 479, 489, 106 A. 825; Maltbie, Conn. App. Proc., § 48.” Grady v. Kennedy, 145 Conn. 579, 584, 145 A.2d 124; Pope v. Watertown, 136 Conn. 437, 438, 72 A.2d 235; Antman v. Connecticut Light & Power Co., 117 Conn. 230, 234, 167 A. 715; Lakitsch v. Brand, 99 Conn. 388, 389, 121 A. 865; Allen v. Chase, 81 Conn. 474, 475, 71 A. 367; Pettus v. Gault, 81 Conn. 415, 418, 71 A. 509; Arnold v. Kutinsky, 80 Conn. 549, 552, 69 A. 350; Mitchell v. Smith, 74 Conn. 125, 128, 49 A. 909; Boland v. O’Neil, 72 Conn. 217, 220, 44 A. 15; Goodrich v. Stanton, 71 Conn. 418, 424, 42 A. 74. Hence, the effect of the plaintiff’s amendment to the count against Piper, which had been demurred to in its entirety, operated as a removal or withdrawal of that count, and accordingly the ruling on the demurrer addressed to that entire count cannot be made the subject of an appeal. Antman v. Connecticut Light & Power Co., supra. On the other hand, the amendment to the counts directed against Eaton and Avco did not amend them with respect to the only two causes of action set forth therein to which the demurrer of those defendants was addressed. Accordingly, the *555 rulings on those demurrers remained properly the subject of appeal.

On September 20, 1965, ten days after amending his complaint, the plaintiff, presumably acting pursuant to the authority of such cases as Vincent v. McNamara, 70 Conn. 332, 340, 39 A.

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227 A.2d 418, 154 Conn. 549, 4 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 305, 1967 Conn. LEXIS 710, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rossignol-v-danbury-school-of-aeronautics-inc-conn-1967.