190 A.2d 493 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1963
The interposed joint demurrer of the minor defendant, Charles Steele, and his parents, the defendants Clarence Steele and Eleanor Steele, to the fifth and sixth counts of the complaint, which concern them (the preceding counts concern other defendants), raises the basic question whether the one-year statutory limitation of action (§
The fifth count of the complaint is directed against Charles Steele. It alleges in substance that on or about September 5, 1961, this defendant "did wilfully, wantonly and maliciously set fire to" a school owned by the plaintiff, causing damage thereto and resulting in an extensive monetary loss to the plaintiff. The sixth count is directed against the defendants Clarence Steele and Eleanor Steele. After incorporating by reference the allegations of the preceding count, it alleges in substance that at the date and time in question these defendants were the parents of the defendant Charles Steele, their minor son, and that their liability to the plaintiff is predicated upon §
Granting that § 102 of the Practice Book provides that the Statute of Limitations and other specified defenses should be specially pleaded if relied upon as a defense, the rule is not one of unbending rigor. Exceptions have been permitted and the question determined by demurrer. See DiPiro v. Chapin,
There is no question that the dereliction of Charles Steele, the minor defendant, as alleged in the fifth count of the complaint, stands admitted by the demurrer as being on or about September 5, 1961. One of the grounds of the joint demurrer is that service of process was not made upon the demurring defendants until October 30, 1962, being more than one year after the alleged accruing damage of September 5, 1961. The officer's return as on file discloses this to be the fact.
Section
The gravamen of the fifth count of the complaint is that the minor defendant, Charles Steele, "did *323
wilfully, wantonly and maliciously set fire to" a school owned by the plaintiff. Neither the word "negligence" nor the expression "reckless misconduct" is employed in the allegation. To be sure, the expression "wanton misconduct" may be said to be invoked by the use of the adverb "wantonly" in the particular allegation. However, compare the full allegation as quoted in the fifth count with the quoted provisions of §
It is the considered opinion of the court that the alleged cause of action stated against the defendant Charles Steele in the fifth count of the complaint, read as a whole, is controlled in limitation by the three-year statute (§
Since it is the opinion of the court that the alleged cause of action directed against the defendant Charles Steele in the fifth count of the complaint is controlled by the three-year statutory limitation (§
The interposed joint demurrer of the defendants Charles Steele, Clarence Steele and Eleanor Steele, directed to the fifth and sixth counts of the plaintiff's complaint, is required to be, and is, overruled in toto.
A gratuitous observation is made. Some of the eight defendants, including Charles Steele, are minors. The plaintiff in due course should file a motion for the appointment of guardians ad litem for such minors. No final judgment of a valid nature could be obtained until this procedure is followed and acted upon by the court.