JENNIE FINKLE, ADMINISTRATRIX (ESTATE OF BARBARA A. ECKERT) v. JOHN F. CARROLL III ET AL.
(SC 18976)
Supreme Court of Connecticut
Argued September 23, 2014—officially released March 24, 2015
Rogers, C. J., and Palmer, Zarella, Eveleigh, McDonald, Espinosa and Robinson, Js.
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James J. Healy, with whom, on the brief, was M. Caitlin S. Anderson, for the appellant (plaintiff).
Scott M. Karsten, with whom, on the brief, was Kateryna Lagun, for the appellees (defendants).
Opinion
ROBINSON, J. This certified appeal requires us to consider the application of
‘‘Three officers, including Marciano, traveled to the decedent’s residence and found Tannenbaum there. Marciano smelled alcohol on Tannenbaum’s breath at that time and found him angry. Tannenbaum told the police that he wanted the decedent arrested for leaving the children in the residence alone. Tannenbaum was arrested and taken to the police station where he was processed. Later that evening, Carroll made the decision to release Tannenbaum on a promise to appear. Subsequent to his release from police custody, on the morning of September 29, 2002, Tannenbaum shot and killed the decedent at her home . . . and then at another location committed suicide.
‘‘On October 21, 2003, the plaintiff filed her initial action pursuant to
‘‘The defendants filed a motion to dismiss, asserting that the plaintiff’s claims were barred by the statute of limitations found in
The plaintiff appealed from the judgment of the trial court to the Appellate Court. In a unanimous opinion, the Appellate Court concluded that the trial court properly granted the defendants’ motion for summary judgment, agreeing with their alternative ground for affirmance that ‘‘
On appeal, the plaintiff claims that, in concluding that this action was not saved by
In response, the defendants rely on Cogan, Isidro, and Iello, and characterize this case as a ‘‘paradigmatic misuse of the wrong defendant statute.’’ The defendants contend, inter alia, that the Appellate Court properly determined that ‘‘some or all of the defendants named in the [original action] were in fact ‘proper defendants’ for the legal theories alleged’’ therein, in particular, the town, which is also named as a defendant in the present case. The defendants argue that the plaintiff’s
The plaintiff’s claim in this certified appeal, founded on a challenge to the trial court’s grant of the defendants’ motion for summary judgment on the ground that it improperly construed
By way of background,
‘‘Under Connecticut law, a right person, as that term is used in
As this court has previously stated, ‘‘failure to name all of the defendants from whom [the plaintiff] could have recovered in [the] original action does not constitute a ‘failure to name the right person as defendant’ within the meaning of
Our review of the operative complaint in the original action reveals that the plaintiff’s failure to name Carroll as a defendant would not have caused her to fail to obtain judgment therein. Specifically, the plaintiff named the town as a defendant in the original action and pleaded a theory of liability, namely, a direct action under
These factual allegations and legal causes of action, together with the fact that the town was a defendant in the original action, both via an indemnification theory under
The plaintiff argues in her reply brief, however, that the fact that the town was a defendant in the original action does not preclude application of
Such an amendment to state a legally and factually correct claim against the town—which was already a party to that case as a proper defendant—would have been without apparent legal obstacle given the ‘‘ ‘liberality’ ’’ with which trial courts are to grant motions to amend when no injustice will result; see, e.g., Rizzuto v. Davidson Ladders, Inc., 280 Conn. 225, 255, 905 A.2d 1165 (2006); given our ‘‘well settled’’ body of case law holding that ‘‘a party properly may amplify or expand what has already been alleged in support of a cause of action, provided the identity of the cause of action remains substantially the same. . . . If a new cause of action is alleged in an amended complaint . . . it will [speak] as of the date when it was filed. . . . A cause of action is that single group of facts which is claimed to have brought about an unlawful injury to the plaintiff and which entitles the plaintiff to relief. . . . A change in, or an addition to, a ground of negligence or an act of negligence arising out of the single group of facts which was originally claimed to have brought about the unlawful injury to the plaintiff does not change the cause of action. . . . It is proper to amplify or expand what has already been alleged in support of a cause of action, provided the identity of the cause of action remains substantially the same, but [when] an entirely new and different factual situation is presented, a new and different cause of action is stated.’’15 (Emphasis added; internal quotation
Under these principles of municipal liability, the plaintiff named a legally and factually correct cast of defendants to play the plot of the original action, with the town as lead actor, and that plot and cast remained generally the same between the original action and the second action, meaning that she was not entitled to introduce additional actors by bringing this second action under
The judgment of the Appellate Court is affirmed.
In this opinion ZARELLA, McDONALD and ESPINOSA, Js., concurred.
We also note that the plaintiff relies on the ‘‘reasonable and honest mistake of fact’’ gloss that the Appellate Court imposed on
