delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal by the original defendant-third party plaintiff from an order of the Circuit Court for Montgomery County sustaining, without leave to amend, a third-party defendant’s demurrer to the amended thirty-party complaint filed against it.
Maryland Rule 315 dealing with third-party practice is modeled largely upon Rule 14 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, as amended in 1946.
Northwestern National Insurance Co. v. Rosoff,
The fact that Worthington’s claim against A. & W. is in contract and A. & W.’s claim against Grimberg is or may be in tort does not seem to preclude the filing of a third-party complaint in view of the joinder provisions of Maryland Rule 313, particularly Rule 313 (f). Cf.
McCormick v. St. Francis De Sales Church,
However, not every liability of any kind which Grimberg may have to A. & W., in any way related to the equipment which A. & W. bought from Worthington may be made the basis for a third-party complaint by A. & W. against Grim-berg in the Worthington v. A. & W. suit. The language above quoted of Rule 315 a requires that the liability of the third-party defendant to the original defendant must be for all or a part of the claim of the original plaintiff against the original defendant. This was recognized in the Northwestern Insurance case. The test was there met, as it was in a similar case, Lee’s, Inc. v. Transcontinental Underwriters, etc., supra, involving F.R.C.P. 14 (a), which was removed to a Federal court on the basis of diversity of citizenship; but in both Northwestern and Lee’s, the third-party complaint was rejected for other reasons as a matter of the exercise of the discretionary power of the trial court.
Cases which turn upon that part of F.R.C.P. 14 (a) requiring that the third-party defendant is or may be liable to the original defendant are not apposite here. (The alternative basis for impleader provided in the original Rule 14 (a), that the third-party defendant is or may be liable to the plaintiff, was eliminated by the 1946 amendment, though its memory occasionally seems to linger on at least enough to call for mention, as here.)
The usual basis for third-party impleader is that the third-party defendant is or may be secondarily liable for all or some part of the plaintiff’s claim against the original defendant as in the case of an indemnitor, guarantor, surety or insurer or a joint tortfeasor obligated by substantive law to 'make contribu
The requirement of Rule 315 a that the third-party claim must be for all or a part of the plaintiff’s claim against the original defendant for which the third-party defendant is or
Applying the above test to the present case, we think that A. & AV.’s claim against Grimberg does not meet the requirement that Grimberg is or may be liable to A. & W. for a part of A. & AV.’s liability to Worthington. In reaching this conclusion we have not overlooked a case heavily relied upon by the appellant,
Fruit Growers’ Co-op. v. California Pie & Baking Co., 2
F.R.D. 415 (D.C., N.Y., 1942). In that case the plaintiff-seller sued the defendant-buyer for the price of a shipment of cherries which reached the buyer in damaged condition. The buyer than impleaded the carriers over whose lines the shipment had moved. The court said: “The situation so closely approximates that of the surety or indemnitor that the case appears reasonably within the scope of Rule 14. Considerable time would be wasted were two separate actions necessary. The responsibility for the damage is either that of the plaintiff or the carrier. Much is to be gained by having all parties before the Court. It is moreover by no means certain that plaintiff has no cause of action against the carriers. If the facts, as they develop, should show such a cause of action, the carriers
Whatever liability Grimberg may be under to A. & W., it simply is not a liability for any part of the claim of the original plaintiff, Worthington, against the original defendant, A. & W. Therefore, under the language of the Rule and the authorities above cited as to requirement of such a connection, the attempted impleader of Grimberg is not sustainable. What was said in Murtagh v. Phillips Waste Oil, etc., supra, seems very much in point here: “Neither does the fact that the defendant itself may have sustained damage as a result of the negligence of the proposed third-party defendant give it a right to implead the third party. Rule 14 (a) gives the right to implead third parties only when the latter may be liable to defendant 'for all or any part of plaintiff’s claim against [the defendant],’ [Emphasis supplied.]” We think that the order sustaining Grim-berg’s demurrer to the third-party complaint without leave to amend that complaint further must be affirmed.
This affirmance is without prejudice to any rights which the appellant may have to seek to bring up for trial in a single action its counterclaim against Worthington and its claim against Grimberg, either by bringing a new suit against Grim-berg and then seeking consolidation for trial under Md. Rule 503 or by seeking to join Grimberg as a party under the appellant’s counterclaim against Worthington, pursuant to Md. Rules 313 c 1 and 314 c. (As to the latter see Barron & Holtzoff, op. cit. supra, § 426, dealing with F.R.C.P. 13(h)). We express no opinion with regard to such possible rights. Questions pertaining thereto would first require consideration by the Circuit Court.
Order affirmed, with costs.
