Citation Numbers: 169 A. 787, 117 Conn. 639, 1933 Conn. LEXIS 211
Judges: Avery, Banks, Haines, Hinman, Maltbie
Filed Date: 12/7/1933
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/3/2024
The history of prior litigation concerning the real estate involved in this action was reviewed upon the occasion of the last preceding appearance in this court. Spelke v. Shaw,
The first four assignments are to the effect that the judgment is erroneous in that it was not rendered before the close of the next term or session of the Superior Court after that at which the trial was commenced, in violation of § 5409 of the General Statutes, which is quoted in a footnote.* The facts material to the question so raised, as set forth in the finding, are as follows: The trial was commenced on December 1st, 1932, and after the taking of oral evidence and introduction of exhibits the plaintiffs on December 8th at the request of the court filed their claims of law, and on December 9th the defendants filed their reply thereto; on December 20th the plaintiffs filed a paper designated as "claims as to the equitable lien," and the defendants filed a reply on December 22d. On February 8th, 1933, at the request of the court made in a joint letter addressed to counsel of all parties of record, *Page 641 the plaintiffs furnished to the court detailed claims, based upon the evidence, as to the taxes due, the amounts paid thereon, and the total amount claimed to be due, and on February 17th, 1933, at the request of the court, made in a like joint letter, the plaintiffs furnished a detailed description of the land involved, which description was used in making up the judgment. The trial court held the decision of the case until April 17th, 1933, when it was announced by a memorandum of decision. The 1932 term of the Superior Court in and for Fairfield County began on the third Tuesday (the 16th) of September, 1932, and ended on the fourth Friday (the 23d) of June, 1933. The fall session as designated by the judges at their June session, 1932, commenced on the 16th day of September, 1932, and ended on the 23d day of December; the winter session commenced on the 30th day of December and ended on the 24th day of March, 1933; and the spring session of the court ran from the 31st day of March to June 23d 1933. It appears from the record, further, that the judgment was dated April 17th, 1933; upon seasonable application the time for taking appeal and filing request for finding and draft-finding was extended to May 11th, and on May 9th the defendants filed their appeal and a request for finding, with draft-finding annexed, including in the questions of law to be reviewed that raised by the assignments above mentioned.
Until 1886 the sittings of the Superior Court in each county were designated only as "terms." "Terms of said court shall be held annually, by one of the judges thereof, at the following times and places." General Statutes, 1875, p. 40, Chap. III, § 4. This statute provided for terms in Fairfield County at Bridgeport, for trial of civil causes only, on the third Tuesday of October, the second Tuesday of December, and the *Page 642 first Tuesday of March, and "for the transaction of criminal business, and the trial of such civil causes as may be transferred thereto, by order of the court," on the fourth Tuesday of August, the third Tuesday of October, and the third Tuesday of February. Terms at Danbury were also designated. This statute was superseded by Chapter 133 of the Public Acts of 1886, which provided, in § 1, that a term for the transaction of civil business be held in Hartford County on the second Tuesday in October, in Windham County on the first Tuesday in May, and in each of the other counties on a designated Tuesday in September, and that "sessions of said court for the trial of civil causes shall be held at the beginning of each term in said counties respectively, and . . . in Fairfield County at Bridgeport on the first Tuesday of December. . . . And further sessions may be held at the several places provided by law as is hereinafter provided. The judges of the Superior Court, at their annual meeting, . . . shall provide for and fix the time of such additional sessions of said court for the trial of civil causes as may be necessary, at the several places provided by law for holding said court, and shall assign the judges to hold said civil sessions." Section 4 designated terms for criminal business in the several counties, and § 5 provided that at certain specified "civil terms and sessions" criminal as well as civil business might be transacted. These sections, with minor amendments, became §§ 790, 791 and 792 of the General Statutes, Revision of 1888.
In 1897, by Chapter 223 of the Public Acts, §§ 790 and 791 were repealed and there was substituted definite designation of both terms and sessions in each county; for example, in Fairfield County it was provided that sessions for civil business shall be held at Bridgeport on the first Tuesday in January, the first *Page 643 Tuesday in April, and the second Tuesday in October, respectively, and at Danbury on the third Tuesday in January. This Act became § 452 of the General Statutes, 1902, and, in substance, § 5451 of the General Statutes, 1918; and § 792 of the Revision of 1888, concerning provision by the judges for additional sessions, was continued as § 454 of the General Statutes, 1902, and § 5453 of the General Statutes, 1918. No material change was again made until 1929, when Chapter 232 of the Public Acts, as to Hartford, New Haven, Fairfield and New London counties, designated, in § 1, one annual "term" for both criminal and civil business, held on the third Tuesday of September, and provided, in § 3, that "there shall be . . . sessions" held in each of these counties "at such times and places and for such duration of time, as shall be fixed and determined by the judges of the Superior Court at their annual meeting." The times and places of sessions in the other counties remained specifically designated by statute. This Act appears in the Revision of 1930 as §§ 5329 and 5330. The term of the Superior Court in Fairfield County stated in the finding was specified by, and the sessions were fixed pursuant to, these statutes.
Section 5409 of the General Statutes, 1930, the statute here directly involved, originated as Chapter 3 of the Public Acts of 1879. It probably was inspired by situations such as that presented in Jaques v.Bridgeport Horse-Railroad Co. (1875)
Lawrence v. Cannavan (1903)
In In re Application of Title Guaranty Co.,
An addition to the finding, made at the instance of the appellees, sets forth that the defendants made no objection to the further consideration of the case after the expiration of the winter session (March 24th, 1933) or claim of lack of jurisdiction until after the judgment, adverse to them, had been entered. It was indicated in Lawrence v. Cannavan (p. 306) that consent that a judgment may be rendered at a later term or session may be implied from the conduct of the parties or their attorneys — as in proceeding, without objection, with the trial or argument of the case, or, under some circumstances, from silence until judgment had been rendered. The most that this record shows is failure of the defendants to object, at or before the expiration of the winter session, to further consideration of the case and to rendition of judgment thereafter. Implications from silence or inaction, however, import some duty or occasion to speak or act, and in order to imply consent that rendition of judgment in the present case might be deferred beyond the limit of time imposed by statute, there must be found to exist some obligation on the part of the defendants or their counsel either seasonably to admonish the trial judge that the statute must be complied with or, after the second session and before judgment, to interpose objection to its entry thereafter. We find no justification for so far extending the duty of a party or his counsel. The impracticability, if not the impropriety, of the first course is obvious; as to the second, it seems that the most that can reasonably be required is objection seasonably made after the filing of the decision. In the present case this was done in the manner contemplated by our rules of appellate procedure.
We are unable to concur in the view of Molyneux v.Huey,
The object sought through the adoption of this statute apparently was to promote decision of cases within a reasonably brief period after trial and thereby obviate the manifest disadvantages attendant on long delay in rendering judgment. If, as the appellees suggest, developments since the statute was passed — such as congestion of court business and designation of relatively short sessions — argue for more liberality than is afforded by the statute when construed as its terms compel, these are considerations appropriate to legislative rather than judicial functions.
The appellants, in their brief, assert a laudable desire that the already prolonged litigation regarding the property involved be terminated through decision on this appeal. They could have evidenced sincerity in this wish and confidence in their assignments pertaining to the merits of the case by forbearing to take advantage *Page 648
of the delay in judgment, thereby impliedly consenting to the filing of it, as in Borden v. Westport,
There is error and a new trial is ordered.
In this opinion MALTBIE, C. J., HAINES and BANKS, Js., concurred.
McLoughlin v. Shaw , 95 Conn. 102 ( 1920 )
Spelke v. Shaw , 114 Conn. 272 ( 1932 )
Whitford v. Lee , 97 Conn. 554 ( 1922 )
Lawrence v. Cannavan , 76 Conn. 303 ( 1903 )
Gruskay v. Simenauskas , 107 Conn. 380 ( 1928 )
Cheshire Brass Co. v. Wilson , 86 Conn. 551 ( 1913 )
In Re Application of Title Guaranty Co. , 109 Conn. 45 ( 1929 )
Shaw v. Spelke , 110 Conn. 208 ( 1929 )
Borden v. Town of Westport , 112 Conn. 152 ( 1930 )
Bogaert v. Zoning Board of Appeals , 162 Conn. 532 ( 1972 )
State v. Faillace , 134 Conn. 181 ( 1947 )
Gordon v. Feldman , 164 Conn. 554 ( 1973 )
Connecticut Light & Power Co. v. Costle , 179 Conn. 415 ( 1980 )
Cichy v. Kostyk , 143 Conn. 688 ( 1956 )
Florida Hill Road Corp. v. Commissioner of Agriculture & ... , 164 Conn. 360 ( 1973 )
Shaw & Estes v. Texas Consolidated Oils , 1957 Tex. App. LEXIS 2395 ( 1957 )
Hurlbutt v. Hatheway , 139 Conn. 258 ( 1952 )
Simpson v. Young Men's Christian Ass'n , 118 Conn. 414 ( 1934 )
Whitaker v. Cannon Mills Co. , 132 Conn. 434 ( 1945 )
Foote v. Commissioner of Correction , 125 Conn. App. 296 ( 2010 )