229 A.2d 366 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1967
The third-party defendant herein has demurred to the second and third counts of the plaintiffs' amended complaint on the ground that on the face of this complaint the claims alleged are barred by the applicable statutes of limitations.
The original complaint was brought against the defendant Barkers of Wallingford, Inc., and was returned on the first Tuesday of December, 1963. It alleged a breach of warranty in the sale of a pair of defective ice skates purchased by the named plaintiff. It also alleged negligence in failing properly to inspect the condition of the skates. Thereafter, on September 16, 1966, the defendant Barkers of Wallingford, Inc., filed a third-party complaint, pursuant to General Statutes §
The plaintiffs argue that §
The demurrer to the third count, which sounds in negligence, claims that §
The question, therefore, is whether §
The plaintiffs argue that this act is remedial in nature and that by allowing the bringing of this action beyond the period of the one-year Statute of Limitations no substantive rights would be violated. *49
As is brought out in Massa v. Nastri,
An attempt to ascertain the intent of the legislature has been fruitless. The transcript of proceedings in the senate on substitute for Senate Bill 1202, entitled "An Act Permitting Defendants in a Civil Action to Implead a Person Who May Be Liable to Him for All or Part of the Plaintiff's Claim," shows only that there was a favorable report of the joint standing committee on judiciary and governmental functions. The chairman of the committee moved its acceptance, stating: "Mr. President, I move acceptance of the committee's favorable report and *50 passage of the bill. The bill would bring into our procedure the impleading process of the federal procedure. It's a worthwhile device to have on occasion and I think it will improve our court procedure." 11 S. Proc., pt. 6, Feb. 1965 Spec. Sess., p. 1977. In the house, the transcript of the proceedings in connection with this same bill shows only that its acceptance was moved on the basis of the committee's favorable report, and the movant stated: "Mr. Speaker, this Bill is designed to in effect to speed up the calendar by permitting impleading and cross complaints, so that all of the rights of parties to a specific occurrence can be settled in one lawsuit. I think it's a good Bill and should pass." 11 H.R. Proc., pt. 7, Feb. 1965 Spec. Sess., p. 3335. The title of the act itself seems to indicate that its primary purpose is to permit a defendant in a civil action to implead a person who may be liable to him for all or part of the plaintiff's claim. The act itself provides that the third-party defendant "shall have available to him all remedies available to an original defendant."
The court must conclude that §
The third-party defendant has also demurred to the second count, which sets up a claim of breach of implied warranty that the ice skates in question were fit for the purpose of ice skating. The count thereafter alleges that the named plaintiff was caused to crash and fall upon the ice because "said ice skates were in a defective and dangerous condition in that the skating blade of the right shoe was improperly and defectively welded, connected, fastened, secured and attached to the heel plate, *51
so-called, of the right skate shoe." The question raised by the demurrer to this count is whether the Statute of Limitations as to tort actions, §
The issue is thus presented as to whether this is a tort action, rather than one lying in implied warranty, to be dealt with within the framework of the rapidly crystallizing law of products liability. The most recent decision of our Supreme Court, Rossignol
v. Danbury School of Aeronautics, Inc.,
The decision in Rossignol, supra, is a clear indication that the liability claimed by the plaintiffs against this third-party defendant is essentially a tort liability and must be so treated for the purpose of deciding the issues raised by the demurrer; and further that it is not properly within the confines of the implied warranty sections of the Uniform Commercial Code. The court finds that §
Although there are no Connecticut cases which deal precisely with the issue presented here, since §
On the question of the nature and effect of this statute, the opinion in Guaranty Trust Co. v. York,
Tomle v. New York Central Railroad,
Frankel v. Back,
The court, therefore, reaches the conclusion that the statutes of limitation have run as to the allegations set out in both the second and third counts of the plaintiffs' complaint against the third-party defendant, for the reasons hereinabove set out.
The demurrer is sustained as to both the second and third counts of said complaint.