Opinion
In this action on a promissory note, the defendants, American Golfer, Inc. (Golfer), and Ian M. Davis, an officer of Golfer, appeal from the rendering of summary judgment in favor of the plaintiff, Kazlon Communications, LLC, and the court’s award of prejudgment interest to the plaintiff. Specifically, the defendants claim that it was incorrect as a matter of law for the court to grant the plaintiffs motion for summary judgment when a special defense had been filed, and moreover that, in this instance, the special defense raised genuine issues of material fact. Additionally, the defendants claim that the court improperly found that the general release they had executed operated to bar them from asserting conversion by way of a counterclaim. Finally, the defendants claim that the court improperly awarded prejudgment interest because the plaintiffs offer of judgment had been conditional. We affirm the judgment of the trial court.
The following facts and procedural history set the context for our assessment of the claims on appeal. In its complaint, the plaintiff alleged that the defendants had executed a promissory note, for consideration, promising to pay the plaintiff the principal sum of
In its response to the complaint, Golfer filed a special defense alleging that there was no consideration for the making of the note. Additionally, Golfer filed a two count counterclaim in which it alleged that the plaintiff was in possession of certain electronic data belonging to Golfer, which the plaintiff had failed to turn over to Golfer. The first count of the counterclaim characterized the plaintiffs alleged failure to turn the property over to the defendants as conversion. In the second count, the plaintiffs inaction is claimed to constitute theft. In reply to Golfer’s special defense and counterclaim, the plaintiff denied the allegations set forth in the special defense. In addition, the plaintiff asserted two special defenses to the counterclaim, namely, that the defendants had executed a general release in favor of the plaintiff and that the note on which the action was brought contained a waiver provision that barred the claims asserted in the counterclaim.
Thereafter, the plaintiff filed a motion for summary judgment on the complaint and on the counterclaim, asserting that the defendants had not raised any genuine issues of material fact, and that the defendants’ special defense and counterclaim were barred by the merger and integration language in the note, as well as by the general release executed by the defendants at the time the note was executed. Following the submission of affidavits by the parties, the court rendered summary judgment in favor of the plaintiff on the complaint and on the counterclaim. This appeal followed.
It is well established that summaiy judgment should be rendered “if the pleadings, affidavits and any other
I
The defendants first claim that it was incorrect as a matter of law for the court to render summary judgment when a special defense had been filed. We are unfamiliar with any rule that prevents the court from rendering summary judgment on a complaint, cross complaint or counterclaim simply because of the existence of one or more special defenses. To the contrary, it is appropriate for a court to render summary judgment in favor of a plaintiff when the special defenses asserted by a defendant are either not legally viable or do not present a genuine issue of a material fact. See, e.g., Webster Bank v. Oakley,
II
The defendants next claim that the court incorrectly rendered summary judgment because the allegations contained in Golfer’s special defense raised a genuine issue of material fact. As noted, in response to the complaint, Golfer filed a special defense alleging that there was inadequate consideration for the note on which the action was brought.
Later, a dispute over billing and services between Graphic and the defendants spawned three lawsuits, all of which were subsequently settled. As part of the settlement, the parties, including the plaintiff and the defendants in this action, executed general releases for any action that could have been asserted in the past or the future against each other “upon or by reason of any matter, cause or thing whatsoever from the beginning of the world to the date of this Release . . . .” The releases also made specific reference to the then pending litigation involving both of the parties herein as well as others. In conjunction with that global settlement, the defendants herein executed a promissory note in favor of the plaintiff in the amount of $70,000. After the parties reached that accord and the note had been signed, Golfer discovered that it had lost the data it had received from Graphic and then requested a copy from the plaintiff, to whom the material had been transferred by Graphic. In response, the plaintiff reported that the material either had been lost or discarded.
Golfer’s special defense of lack of consideration is premised on an allegation that the plaintiffs destruction of the material or its failure to turn it over to Golfer constitutes a failure of consideration for the note and release. In response, the plaintiff has argued that it was
Ill
The defendants next claim that the court was nevertheless incorrect in rendering summary judgment on the counterclaim. That assertion is based on the defendants’ contention that the counterclaim raised, as a genuine issue of material fact, the question of whether the plaintiff wrongfully had retained and either negligently or wilfully failed to turn over the subject data to Golfer. Our review of the release signed by the parties in conjunction with the settlement of their then pending litigation leads us to the conclusion that the clarity and scope of the release language relieving the parties from liability “by reason of any matter, cause or thing whatsoever” arising in the past and in the future bars the defendants from seeking to litigate the issue raised by Golfer’s counterclaim. Indeed, we find the language of the subject release to be as “definite and unambiguous” as that found by our Supreme Court to be definite and unambiguous in a similarly worded global settlement document in Tallmadge Bros., Inc. v. Iroquois Gas Transmission System, L.P.,
rv
Last, the defendants claim that the court improperly granted prejudgment interest. That argument is based
Our Supreme Court’s recent discussion of the offer of judgment statute is germane to both claims made by the defendants. In Cardenas v. Mixcus,
Finally, as to the defendants’ claim that the offer of judgment on the counterclaim should have been made pursuant to Practice Book § 17-11, which covers offers of judgment made by defendants, we agree with the plaintiff that if it had been required to file two offers of judgment, one as a plaintiff on the complaint and another as a counterclaim defendant, the possible consequence of the defendants accepting one offer while rejecting another would have thwarted, not advanced, the overarching purposes of the offer of judgment statute.
The judgment is affirmed.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
