7 A.2d 847 | Conn. | 1939
By writ dated April 20, 1937, the plaintiffs brought an action in which they alleged that the defendant had been acting as trustee of "funds of the plaintiffs herein" under a certain trust agreement filed as an exhibit annexed to the complaint and that the defendant had committed various breaches of duty in investing and dealing with the property, and in which they claimed as relief that the court order the defendant to make an accounting of the funds, turn them over to the plaintiffs, grant them any other relief which in law or equity might be afforded them, and also $8000 damages. By writ dated May 19, 1937, the plaintiffs brought another action against the defendant in which it was alleged that by misrepresentations and improper practices and without consideration it had obtained the signatures of some of the plaintiffs to certain documents whereby it had illegally obtained control of the funds and converted them to its own uses and had in this way committed a breach of the trust, and the complaint asked substantially the same relief as in the earlier action except that the damages claimed were $18,000. The trial court subsequently made an order in the second case that it be consolidated with the first and an amendment in the first case was filed to bring this about, in which the prayers for relief were the same as those stated in the two complaints except that the damages claimed were $26,000.
Subsequent to the consolidation of the actions the attorney for the plaintiffs filed a written request for the entry of the case in the docket as a jury case. Thereafter the defendant moved that the action be stricken from the jury docket and the court granted *618
the motion. This ruling is assigned as error. In Barlow Brothers Co. v. Gager,
Where in a complaint separate and distinct causes of action are joined, one at law and one in equity, either party has the right to have a jury trial of the issues involved in the cause of action at law. Purdy v. Watts, supra. So where there is involved in a case a cause of action for damages properly cognizable at law, the fact that relief in equity in aid of or supplemental to it is also demanded will not destroy the right of either party to have the issues at law submitted to the jury. Examples of such situations are: an action for damages for the obstruction of a right of way and for an injunction pendente lite; Spencer v. New York *619
N.E. R. Co.,
There are seven assignments of error. Three are directed to the matter just discussed and one, that the court erred in rendering judgment for the defendant, is too general to merit consideration. Another claimed error is in the refusal of the trial court to allow an amendment to the complaint offered after all the evidence in the case had been presented by both parties except a deposition of one of the plaintiffs; the amendment alleged a breach of trust in addition to the several stated in the consolidated complaint; so far as appears it would have introduced a new element into the case involving further testimony; the circumstances surrounding the ruling of the trial court do not appear of record; and there is nothing upon which we could base a decision that the trial court abused its discretion in refusing to permit the amendment to be filed. Beauton v. Connecticut L. P. Co.,
The final assignment was that the court erred in holding that the trust was validly assignable or alienable under all the circumstances. Apparently this assignment has reference to certain transactions between the plaintiffs and the defendant involving an assignment of the plaintiffs' remainder interests in the funds. The trust was created by the father of the plaintiffs. The trust agreement provided that it should continue until the youngest living child should reach the age of thirty years, made disposition of the income until that time, and, when the youngest living child had reached the age of thirty, if the creator of the trust and his wife were both dead, directed that the principal, with any accumulations of income, should be divided equally among the children of the creator of the trust or their legal heirs. Apart from any right the plaintiffs might have to receive income from the trust fund, they each had a vested remainder interest in the principal which was alienable by them and transmissible by will or inheritance. Perry v. Bulkley,
In the plaintiffs' brief they state thirty-six questions as involved in the appeal. Most of these fall outside the assignments of error; nor could we, should we overlook this fact, consider them. The plaintiffs brought two actions when one would have sufficed; they divided the complaints into several counts when one would have served every purpose. The complaints fail wholly to make plain the facts upon which they rely for relief. The defendant, before the judgment-file was prepared, requested the court to incorporate *622
in it a special finding of facts in accordance with 5660 of the General Statutes, and this the court did. After the plaintiffs had filed their appeal and assignments of error, they made a motion that the court make a special finding in accordance with 5664 of the General Statutes, stating in it the facts they desired to have found. The court granted the motion and made such a finding. The defendant then moved that this be corrected and the court filed a substitute special finding. The purpose of a special finding is to place upon record the material facts upon which the judgment is based. Corbett v. Matz,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.