355 A.2d 319 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1975
The plaintiff bank brought this debt action against the defendants Rosenberg, Schwann, and Stolz. The note, which remains unpaid, apparently was made and endorsed by the defendants Lillian Rosenberg, Abner Rosenberg, now deceased, Marvin Gold, and Annette Gold. Lillian Rosenberg has been sued by the bank on the note as coexecutor of the estate of Abner Rosenberg, as have been Schwann and Stolz. The defendants' earlier motion to require the plaintiff to cite in the comakers and coendorsers, Marvin and Annette Gold, was denied.
The defendants now move to implead the Golds, and the plaintiff objects that the defendants are attempting to commence a third-party action in contribution and such action is not allowed until actual payment is made by the defendants. The plaintiff cites Waters v. Waters,
The law of contribution, as stated in Waters, is still controlling in Connecticut. It is, however, not determinative of this case. The issue here is whether a defendant is barred from impleading a third party in an action for contribution when the liability of the defendant for the debt on which contribution is sought is the subject matter of the principal cause of action. This is a question of third-party practice.
The issue has not heretofore been raised in Connecticut. The courts of other jurisdictions having third-party practice rules similar to those in Connecticut, however, allow such impleading. Gustafson
v. Johnson,
Section
Senior involved an action to recover damages by a third-party plaintiff against third-party defendants on an indemnification agreement. One of the third-party defendants demurred on the grounds that (1) the action was premature because its obligation was conditioned on the failure of two other individuals to indemnify the third-party plaintiff and (2) there was no allegation in the complaint of such a failure. The Supreme Court held that General Statutes §
The difference between indemnity and contribution does not require this court to vary the principle in Senior. With regard to indemnity, the law implies an agreement or obligation and enforces a duty on the principal wrongdoer to respond for all damages, *4
whereas, with contribution, there is a common burden which the parties in equity should bear equally. George's Radio v. Capital Transit Co.,
But this question of substantive law is not involved on the procedural issue of whether impleader will be permitted under §
The motion to implead is granted.