Cacace v. Morcaldi
The plaintiff has appealed from a summary judgment rendered by the trial court which upheld the special defense of the statute of limitations raised by the defendant against each of the three counts of the complaint. The suit arose out of the claimed defective construction of a chimney and fireplace which the defendant, a masonry contractor, built as an addition to the plaintiff's house in East Haven. The complaint alleged a breach of an implied warranty of fitness for a particular purpose in the first count, a breach of an implied warranty of merchantability in the second count and negligence on the part of the defendant in the third count. The issues presented by the appeal are: (1) whether the statute of limitations for product liability claims, General Statutes
The defendant filed a brief with his motion for summary judgment, relying wholly upon the allegations of the complaint as the factual basis for the motion. The plaintiff filed a detailed opposing affidavit which set forth the following facts:
In June, 1973, the plaintiff entered into an oral agreement with the defendant for the construction of a chimney and fireplace for his house in East Haven at *Page 737 a price of $1100. Half of this sum was paid to the defendant at the time of the agreement and the balance was paid at the time the job was completed, July 7, 1973.
In June or July, 1976, the plaintiff noticed that the chimney was beginning to lean away from the house. He contacted the defendant who came to the house a few days later and attempted to fill the space where the chimney had separated from the house with some caulking material. Four months later the plaintiff noticed that the chimney had pulled farther away from the house. Again he contacted the defendant who assured him that the situation would get no worse and that it was not serious. The condition of the chimney continued to deteriorate. After repeated attempts to have the defendant correct the condition the plaintiff employed another contractor, who proceeded to reconstruct the chimney in September, 1977, at a cost of $2200. The plaintiff had engaged an attorney on May 24, 1977, who wrote a letter to the defendant demanding some action in satisfaction of the claim. This suit was not commenced until May 28, 1978.2
The plaintiff's cause of action was essentially one for breach of a contract for services in failing to perform the task agreed upon in a workmanlike manner. Although the first and second counts employ the usual phraseology of suits for breaches of implied warranties arising in the sale of personal property under the Uniform Commercial Code; General Statutes
Upon this appeal the defendant claims that, even if the trial court erred in relying upon
There is no error with respect to the judgment entered upon the third count of the complaint alleging negligence.