Walko v. Colon, No. Cv 92 029 86 18 (Jan. 8, 1993)
This text of 1993 Conn. Super. Ct. 847 (Walko v. Colon, No. Cv 92 029 86 18 (Jan. 8, 1993)) 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.
Opinion
Further, the court is not at all persuaded that the CT Page 848 plaintiffs complaint is a Bill of Discovery, assertable in equity. "The plaintiffs right to a discovery does not extend to all facts which may be material to the issue, but is confined to facts which are material to his own title or cause of action. It does not enable him to pry in the defendant's case, or find out the evidence by which that case will be supported." Downie v. Nettleton,
To sustain a pure bill of discovery, a party must show that the matter he seeks to discover is material and necessary to the proof of, or is needed to aid in the proof of, another action, already brought or about to be brought, and that he has no other adequate means of enforcing discovery of the matter. 3 Story, Equity Jurisprudence (14th Ed. 1930, 1943) (cited in Pottetti v. Clifford,
A petitioner in a pure bill of discovery must show that he has stated a valid cause of action for the equitable relief in support of which he seeks to invoke the equitable powers of the court for a discovery.
The court also observes that the plaintiff has cited three Conn. Report cases in which they are cases involving valid causes of action pending. Such is not the instant case.
JOHN W. MORAN, JUDGE
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