Civil procedure in the United States |
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In civil procedure, a party's claim is a counterclaim if the defending party has previously (in the present action) made a claim against the claiming party.
Examples of counterclaims include:
Counterclaims did not exist at common law; they are an invention of modern civil procedure.
In U.S. federal courts, counterclaims can arise on various occasions, including e.g.:
Under the FRCP, counterclaims are either compulsory or permissive.
Permissive counterclaims comprise "any claim that is not compulsory."[1] Such claims may be brought, but no rights are waived if they are not. Courts rarely give permissive counterclaims the necessary supplemental jurisdiction to be brought.
A claim is a compulsory counterclaim if, at the time of serving the pleading,
This last (fourth) requirement is explained in the official notes as follows:
When a defendant, if he desires to defend his interest in property, is obliged to come in and litigate in a court to whose jurisdiction he could not ordinarily be subjected, fairness suggests that he should not be required to assert counterclaims, but should rather be permitted to do so at his election. If, however, he does elect to assert a counterclaim, it seems fair to require him to assert any other which is compulsory within the meaning of Rule 13(a). Clause (2), added by amendment to Rule 13(a), carries out this idea. It will apply to various cases described in Rule 4(e), as amended, where service is effected through attachment or other process by which the court does not acquire jurisdiction to render a personal judgment against the defendant. Clause (2) will also apply to State courts jurisdictionally grounded on attachment or the like, and removed to the Federal courts.
— NOTES of Advisory Committee on 1963 amendments to Rules[3]
If the counterclaim is compulsory, it must be brought in the current action or it is waived and lost forever.
Various tests have been proposed for when a counterclaim arises from the same transaction or occurrence, including same issues of fact and law, use of the same evidence, and logical relation between the claims.[4]