44 Conn. App. 759 | Conn. App. Ct. | 1997
The defendant appeals from the judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff. The defendant claims that the trial court improperly heard the defendant’s claim for a set-off at the same time as a hearing in damages and deprived the defendant of reasonable notice and a meaningful opportunity to be heard on its set-off. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
The sole issue in this appeal is whether the defendant is entitled, as a matter of law, to a separate hearing on its claimed set-off distinct from a scheduled hearing in damages at which the defendant participated.
The following facts are necessary for the resolution of this appeal. The plaintiff commenced this action by a three count complaint to collect money claimed owed for goods sold and delivered to the defendant. By its answer, the defendant admitted that it had received the goods and had not made payment to the plaintiff. The defendant pleaded a set-off against the plaintiffs demands for judgment should the plaintiff be entitled to judgment for money damages.
In a subsequent articulation,
The sole issue before the trial court at the hearing in damages was the amount of damages that the plaintiff was entitled to recover. To make that determination, the court may accept evidence offered to reduce the amount of damages claimed. Practice Book § 374;
“The policy of the law is always to prevent unnecessary litigation, and where . . . entire justice can be done to both of the parties before the court, by the ascertainment and set-off of their mutual claims against each other, without a violation of any of the settled rules or forms of law, such set-off ought always to be made.” Avery v. Brown, 31 Conn. 398, 401 (1863). “A set-off is made where the defendant has a debt against the plaintiff . . . and desires to avail himself of that debt, in the existing suit, either to reduce the plaintiffs recovery, or to defeat it altogether, and, as the case may be, to recover a judgment in his own favor for a balance.” Id. We conclude that clearly a set-off may be heard as part of a hearing in damages in order to reduce or defeat the plaintiffs damages. It is irrelevant that a defendant asserting a set-off may have judgment rendered on his behalf for a balance due.
The defendant also argues that the judge trial referee was without discretion or authority to hear the claim for a set-off sua sponte. We do not agree. A judge trial referee has authority to conduct a hearing to determine the amount of damages pursuant to Practice Book § 385.
The defendant also argues that it was greatly prejudiced by having to put forth evidence on its set-off because it was “unable to fully assemble its witnesses and documents for trial, adequately prepare the witness it was able to produce, or adequately prepare to test [the plaintiffs] evidence with organized, thorough, cross-examination.” There is no issue presented that the trial court abused its discretion in any fashion. The defendant never sought a continuance, nor did it suggest any witness or scheduling difficulty, nor did it seek additional time to present other evidence in support of its set-off.
The judgment is affirmed.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
The three count set-off alleged breach of contract, quantum meruit, and a violation of General Statutes § 42-110a et seq., the Connecticut Unfair Trade Practices Act.
After this appeal was filed, the defendant unsuccessfully sought articulation on the trial court’s legal basis for its decision on the set-off. The defendant then filed a motion for review of that denial with this court. We granted the relief sought.
Practice Book § 374 provides: “The defendant may, without notice, offer evidence to reduce the amount of damages claimed.”
The defendant cites Miller v. Bourgoin, 28 Conn. App. 491, 494-500, 613 A.2d 292, cert. denied, 223 Conn. 927, 614 A.2d 825 (1992), a case in which the trial court granted the plaintiffs motion for summary judgment on his complaint, and sua sponte granted summary judgment on the defendant’s counterclaim, without an appropriate motion for summary judgment on the defendant’s counterclaim having been filed. We acknowledged that a court may not grant summary judgment sua sponte, and that pursuant to Practice
Practice Book § 385 provides in relevant part: “A summary judgment, interlocutory in character, may be rendered on the issue of liability alone, although there is a genuine issue as to damages. In such case the court shall order an immediate hearing before a referee ... to determine the amount of damages. . . . Upon the conclusion of these proceedings, the court, shall forthwith render the appropriate summary judgment.”