Spear v. Summit Medical Center, No. 52 59 39 (Apr. 29, 1994)

1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 4299
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedApril 29, 1994
DocketNo. 52 59 39
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 4299 (Spear v. Summit Medical Center, No. 52 59 39 (Apr. 29, 1994)) 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
Spear v. Summit Medical Center, No. 52 59 39 (Apr. 29, 1994), 1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 4299 (Colo. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]MEMORANDUM OF DECISION ON DEFENDANT'S MOTION TO CITE IN In this case, plaintiffs John Spear ("Spear") and the Spear Printing Company, Inc. ("Spear Printing") have sued defendant Summit Medical Center, Inc., f/k/a Summit Women's Center West, Inc. ("Summit"), for subjecting them to a vexatious civil lawsuit. They complain, more particularly, that from September 22, 1989 through December 6, 1989, Summit acted maliciously, without probable cause and with the intent to vex and harass them by bringing and maintaining against them a federal civil rights action1 in which it accused them of combining and conspiring with their codefendants and unnamed others to violate the Hobbs Act,2 the federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act ("RICO"),3 the Civil Rights Act of 1866,4 and several provisions of State law by planning, carrying out and supporting a lengthy series of antiabortion protests at Summit's West Hartford clinic.

In the federal lawsuit, Summit alleged that Spear and Spear Printing played the following roles in the alleged CT Page 4300 conspiracy: During 1989, while Spear was working as the editor of the Orange County Post, a newspaper owned and published by Spear Printing in Washingtonville, New York, he wrote and published an editorial entitled "Northern Rednecks". In this editorial, Spear is claimed to have "deliberately and maliciously published an incorrect defamatory account" of an April 1, 1989 protest at Summit's West Hartford facility. According to Summit, this account was based on the report of Spear Printing employee Catherine A. Jersey, who had attended the protest in question and been arrested as a result thereof. Spear's alleged purpose for publishing Ms. Jersey's account was to further "the efforts of the Defendants and others to harass, intimidate and extort a less diligent or softened response from the West Hartford Police Department to future protest activities by the Defendants and others at Summit and elsewhere in the Town of West Hartford."

The plaintiffs remained defendants in Summit's federal action until December 6, 1989, when Summit unilaterally omitted them from its second amended complaint. In the interim, the plaintiffs claim that they became obligated for legal fees and other costs and expenses associated with the defense of Summit's action. For that reason, they have presented the following alternative claims for relief: a common-law demand for compensatory damages, punitive damages and interest; and a statutory demand, under General Statutes § 52-568(a), for double or treble damages plus attorney's fees.

Defendant Summit has now moved this Court under Practice Book § 85 and General Statutes §§ 52-102 and 52-103 to cite in the Town of West Hartford as a party defendant to this action. In support of this Motion, Summit has advanced two alternative legal claims: first, that the Town is a "necessary party" to this action "for a complete determination of the central question involved in this case, namely whether or not [the plaintiffs] were victims of vexatious litigation;" Motion at 2-3; and second, that "because . . . the Town may be liable for a significant percentage of [the plaintiffs'] damages, if any, . . . [c]iting the Town . . . into the present action as codefendant will be the most equitable and efficient way to determine the respective liability of Summit and the Town, as it will prevent the necessity of proceeding by way of a separate action for contribution or impleader." Id. at 3. CT Page 4301

Summit bases its Motion on the following claims of fact: 1) that the federal lawsuit here at issue was filed initially by the Town of West Hartford on June 29, 1989; 2) that Summit played absolutely no role in the Town's decision to file that lawsuit or to name Spear and Spear Printing as defendants therein; 3) that Summit did not intervene in the Town's lawsuit until the federal court granted its motion for permission to do so on August 24, 1989; 4) that Summit's right to intervene in the Town's lawsuit was "expressly conditioned upon its adopti[on of] the [Town's] original complaint, with only such modifications as were necessary to include [its] independent interests in the action;" Motion at 2; and 5) that consistent with the foregoing condition, Summit's intervening complaint of September 22, 1989 "mirrored the [Town's] original complaint" in every substantive way, including the naming of Spear and Spear Printing as defendants based on the allegations of the original complaint.

Against this background, Summit insists that the Town must be made a defendant to the instant lawsuit because the only reason the plaintiffs ever incurred any of the fees, costs and expenses they seek herein to recover was the Town's unilateral decision to name them as defendant's in its original complaint.

The plaintiffs oppose Summit's Motion for two reasons. Procedurally, they object to the "necessary party" aspect of Summit's claim on the ground that they very issue has already been fully litigated and decided in their favor in Judge L. Paul Sullivan's July 30, 1993 Memorandum of Decision on the defendant's Motion to Strike. Because Judge Sullivan rejected the defendant's earlier claim that the plaintiffs' complaint should be stricken "because of the absence of" the Town as a "necessary party" to this action, Practice Book § 152(3), the plaintiffs contend that the relevant law of this case has been decided, and this Court should be bound thereby.

Substantively, the plaintiffs simply argue, here as before Judge Sullivan, that the decision whether and whom to sue for allegedly subjecting them to a vexatious lawsuit is theirs alone to make and that this Court should not disturb or interfere with that decision. Defendant Summit, they further argue, must bear full responsibility for its own decision whether and how to intervene in the Town's federal action. In particular, it must be accountable for its own independent CT Page 4302 decision to name them defendants in its intervening complaint.

I
Initially, the Court must reject the plaintiffs' procedural argument that the defendant's Motion must be denied because of Judge Sullivan's prior denial of the defendant's similarly grounded motion to strike. It is true, of course, that our Supreme Court has counselled that, "A judge should hesitate to change his own rulings in a case and should be even more reluctant to overrule those of another judge."Breen v. Phelps, 186 Conn. 86, 99 (1982). It is also time, however, that the Court has never authorized a judge to abdicate his personal responsibility to decide each issue which comes before him on its own legal merits, as best he can come to understand them. To the contrary, the Breen Court itself flatly stated that:

"A judge is not bound to follow the decisions of another judge made at an earlier stage of the proceedings, and if the same point is again raised he has the same right to reconsider the question as if he had himself made the original decision." Santoro v. Kleinbarger, 115 Conn. 631, 638, 163 A. 107 (1932). This principle has been frequently applied to an earlier ruling during the pleading stage of a case such as that upon [a] motion to strike [,] . . . .

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Bluebook (online)
1994 Conn. Super. Ct. 4299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spear-v-summit-medical-center-no-52-59-39-apr-29-1994-connsuperct-1994.