Spear v. Summit Medical Center, No. Cv-92-0525939 S (Apr. 27, 1998)

1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 5019
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedApril 27, 1998
DocketNo. CV-92-0525939 S
StatusUnpublished

This text of 1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 5019 (Spear v. Summit Medical Center, No. Cv-92-0525939 S (Apr. 27, 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
Spear v. Summit Medical Center, No. Cv-92-0525939 S (Apr. 27, 1998), 1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 5019 (Colo. Ct. App. 1998).

Opinion

[EDITOR'S NOTE: This case is unpublished as indicated by the issuing court.]CORRECTED MEMORANDUM OF DECISION In this case, plaintiffs John M. Spear ("Spear") and Spear Printing Company, Inc. ("Spear Printing") have sued defendant Summit Medical Center, Inc., f/k/a Summit Women's Center West, Inc. ("Summit"), to recover money damages for certain injuries and losses they claim to have suffered due to Summit's alleged participation in the maintenance against them of a vexatious suit. The plaintiffs complain, more particularly, that from September 22 through December 6, 1989, Summit caused them to endure public humiliation, damaged their reputations, and forced them to incur significant legal expense by maliciously joining with the Town of West Hartford in the prosecution of a federal civil lawsuit entitled Town of West Hartford v. Operation Rescue, et als., Civ. No. H-89-400 (PCD) (D.Conn.) (the "underlying action"), in which they both had been named defendants.

The underlying action grew out of certain unlawful, costly and highly disruptive anti-abortion protests, referred to by their perpetrators as "rescue," which had been conducted at the Summit Women's Center in West Hartford in the Spring of 1989. Brought initially by the Town of West Hartford ("Town"), whose Police Department had responded to the protests and made scores of arrests, the action sought monetary, declaratory and injunctive relief against several persons, organizations and entities, including Spear and Spear Printing, whom the Town accused of conspiring and combining together to mount the protests, in alleged CT Page 5020 violation of the federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act ("RICO"),1 the federal Hobbs Anti-Racketeering Act ("Hobbs Act")2, and other federal and state statutes.

According to the Town's original Verified Complaint ("V.C.") dated June 29, 1989, Spear and Spear Printing not only conspired with the other defendants and unnamed third persons to mount the protests, but took affirmative action to promote their success by "deliberately and maliciously publishing an inaccurate, defamatory account" of the initial, April 1, 1989 protest in the Orange CountyPost, a Washingtonville, New York newspaper edited by Spear and published by Spear Printing. V.C., ¶ 66. The Town alleged that the plaintiffs wrote and published the challenged account of the initial protest, which falsely accused the West Hartford Police Department of brutality in its treatment of arrested protesters, "in furtherance of the efforts by the defendants and others to harass, intimidate and extort a less diligent or softened response from the West Hartford Police Department for further protest activities by the defendants and others at the Summit Women's Center and elsewhere within the Town of West Hartford." Id.

On July 24, 1989, about one month after the underlying action was commenced, defendant Summit and the National Organization for Women ("NOW"), both then represented by Attorney Anthony F. Slez, Jr., moved jointly to intervene in that action under Rule 24 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.3 Though Rule 24 expressly provides that any motion to intervene in a federal civil action "shall be accompanied by a pleading setting forth the claim or defense for which intervention is sought," Summit's and NOW's joint motion to intervene was accompanied only by an affidavit from Attorney Slez, who averred that if intervention were permitted, his clients would file an intervening complaint which adopted all the allegations of the Town's Verified Complaint.

On August 24, 1989, United States District Judge Peter C. Dorsey filed his written Ruling On Motion To Intervene ("Ruling"). In the Ruling, Judge Dorsey denied NOW's request to intervene due to the "attenuated" nature of its interests in the subject matter of the underlying lawsuit, and thus to its "remoteness from the particulars of this case." Id., p 6. In that same Ruling, however, Judge Dorsey granted Summit's parallel request to intervene based on both the "direct[ness] and concrete[ness]" of its interests in the lawsuit, on its own behalf and that of its patients, id., pp. 4-5, and the "common[ality]" of factual and legal issues between Summit's claims and those of the Town, as evidenced CT Page 5021 by Summit's avowed "inten[tion] to adopt the current complaint."Id., p. 3.

Thereafter, on September 22, 1989, defendant Summit, acting through new counsel, Attorney Pamela Hershinson, filed an intervening complaint which, with only minor technical changes, adopted all the allegations the Town's original Verified Complaint. By so doing, Summit formally joined the Town in prosecuting the underlying action against Spear and Spear Printing. Later, however, on December 6, 1989, the Town and Summit jointly filed a Second Amended Complaint which, among other things, unilaterally dropped Spear and Spear Printing as defendants from the underlying action. The plaintiffs now claim that by voluntarily withdrawing its claims against them, Summit caused the underlying action to terminate in their favor, and thus formally exposed itself to liability for prosecuting, with malice and without probable cause, what had always been a vexatious civil lawsuit.

Summit has denied that it acted maliciously or without probable cause when it joined the Town of West Hartford in the prosecution the underlying action. It has also denied that by participating in that action, it proximately caused the plaintiffs any loss or injury they would not otherwise have suffered had its motion been denied and the Town proceeded alone.

In addition, Summit has interposed several special defenses.

Its special defenses include the following:

First Special Defense: As an intervening plaintiff in the federal lawsuit, Summit Medical Center was required by federal rule and precedent to file a "mirror" complaint to that of the Town of West Hartford, and therefore had no control over the inclusion of John M. Spear and Spear Printing Co. in the initial action.

* * * *

Third Special Defense The defendant relied upon the advice of its counsel that probable cause existed for both the original action brought by the Town of West Hartford and for the intervening complaint brought by the defendant.

CT Page 5022

Fourth Special Defense The intervening complaint was brought in good faith.

Fifth Special Defense The defendant's intervening complaint was brought in reliance upon the investigation conducted by the Town of West Hartford, and the representations made by the Town of West Hartford's counsel.

Sixth Special Defense The defendant played no role in the decision of the Town of West Hartford to name the plaintiffs in the initial complaint or to seek a preliminary injunction against them.

Amended Answer (dated 12/27/94), pp. 2-3.

Finally, Summit has filed a Counterclaim for abuse of process. In it's Counterclaim, it alleges that the plaintiff' principal reason for pursuing this lawsuit has always been to hinder or prevent it from collecting a judgment of $13,453 in attorney's fees, which it was awarded by United States District Judge Alan H. Nevas following tne 1992 dismissal of the plaintiffs' earlier federal civil rights action against it.

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Bluebook (online)
1998 Conn. Super. Ct. 5019, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spear-v-summit-medical-center-no-cv-92-0525939-s-apr-27-1998-connsuperct-1998.