12 Conn. Super. Ct. 210 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1943
Plaintiff's complaint is in the form of a bill of interpleader under the statute (Gen. Stat. [1930] § 5911) directed against two defendants. It alleges in substance that (1)(2) in May, 1943, plaintiff was the owner of certain real estate and sold it to M; (3) both defendants claim they are entitled to $310 "as commission for effecting the sale"; (4) defendants are "proposing to proceed with law-suits" against plaintiff "to enforce their claims"; (5) plaintiff "is ready and willing" to pay the regular commission "but is ignorant of the rights of the defendants." The complaint concludes with the usual claims of injunction, interpleading, discharge and payment of counsel fees and disbursements out of the fund in question as contained in Form 501 of the Connecticut Practice Book (1934).
Defendant Walter H. Hart, Inc., demurs on three grounds: (1) there is no allegation of "any common fund"; (2) "the allegations of the complaint as to the other defendant discloses that the defendants are strangers to any fund"; (3) it does not appear that the claims of the defendants are "in any way connected with or dependent upon said fund or derived from a common source."
"The basis for an action of interpleader is the existence of conflicting claims to property in the hands of a stakeholder." *212 Commercial Discount Co. vs. Town of Plainfield,
"A demurrer lies to a bill of interpleader if the facts therein alleged do not entitle the plaintiff to have the defendants or some of them interplead." Athol Savings Bank vs. Bennett,
Generally speaking four conditions are necessary to entitle a stakeholder, such as plaintiff, to maintain a bill of interpleader: "(1) The same thing, debt, or duty must be claimed by both or all of the parties against whom the relief is demanded (2) all their adverse titles or claims must be dependent, or be derived, from a common source; (3) the plaintiff must not have or claim any interest in the subject matter; (4) the plaintiff must have incurred no independent liability to either of the claimants, but must stand indifferent between them merely as a stakeholder." 30 Am. Jur. Interpleader § 8, p. 218.
The interposed demurrer satisfies the court that the complaint is insufficient respecting foregoing conditions (1), (2) and part of (4). Had the complaint contained an allegation to the effect that both defendants claim that they were "the efficient or effective procuring cause of the sale" (HousatonicValley Insurance Agency, Inc. vs. Klipstein,
The observation of Chief Justice Beasley of New Jersey inVreeland vs. Vetterlein (1869),
In the light of the interposed demurrer, however, the complaint in the case at bar is obviously susceptible to different possibilities. To paraphrase, "Plaintiff may be indebted to Walter H. Hart, Inc. for $310 ... and she may also be obligated to pay Hormidas Voghel for his services. Or plaintiff may be indebted to Walter H. Hart, Inc., and it may be indebted to Voghel. Such situations would not be the basis for interpleader, since the defendants would not claim the same debt. In the first supposed case, each asserts a separate right against plaintiff... In the second, Voghel looks not to plaintiff but to Walter H. Hart, Inc." Leader Holding Corp. vs.McLintock,
The office of a demurrer admits facts well pleaded. Hardyvs. Scott,
Demurrer sustained.