DocketNumber: File No. 980
Judges: PER CURIAM.
Filed Date: 12/12/1980
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
We have previously ordered a dismissal of the appeal which was taken from the judgment of possession rendered in favor of the plaintiff lessors in this case, because it was filed after the expiration of the five days allowed for an appeal by the summary process statute. General Statutes *Page 627
The judgment of possession was entered in accordance with a motion by the plaintiff for default for failure to plead. The motion to open the judgment contains an affidavit of the attorney for the defendant stating that he had made an agreement with counsel for the plaintiffs that no pleading would be required of him until the plaintiffs had considered his proposal for settlement and had rejected it. The affidavit recites that a letter rejecting the proposal was received by the defendant's attorney on the same day that the judgment for possession was rendered, notice of which he received on the following day. The attorney for the plaintiffs filed an affidavit in opposition to the motion to open, declaring that the defendant's attorney had agreed to file a pleading while the proposal was being discussed.
We do not have a transcript of the proceeding at which the defendant's motion to open the judgment was denied by the trial court.1 It appears, however, that no testimony was taken and that the court relied upon the affidavits submitted. No written memorandum of decision was filed nor did the court, either orally or in writing, indicate how the *Page 628 conflicting statements in the affidavits of counsel were resolved or otherwise set forth the factual basis of its decision as required by Practice Book, 1978, 3060B.
Despite the failure of the trial court to articulate the basis of its decision, which would ordinarily warrant a remand in accordance with Practice Book, 1978, 3060D, we have concluded that the denial of the defendant's motion was proper because the motion failed to conform to the requirements of our rules of practice for opening default judgments. Practice Book, 1978, 377 provides that a written motion to set aside such a judgment "shall state in general terms the nature of the claim or defense. . . ." The same provision appears in General Statutes
There is no error.
SHEA, DALY and BIELUCH, Js., participated in this decision.