John W. Bryan and Muriel S. Bryan instituted this action against Karl B. Reynolds, Lewis E. TJhl and John P. Uhl. The action was returnable to the Superior Court at New Ha
On March 15, 1955, Karl B. Reynolds, Lewis E. Uhl and John P. Uhl, the defendants in the case at bar, sued John W. Bryan and Muriel S. Bryan, the plaintiffs in the case at bar, in an action in which legal and equitable relief was demanded. The writ was returnable to the Superior Court at New Haven on the first Tuesday of April, 1955, and, when returned, was docketed as case No. 81547.
On April 20, 1955, counsel for Reynolds and the Uhls, on the one hand, and counsel for the Bryans, on the other, appeared before
Roberts, J.,
presiding at a session of the Superior Court at New Haven. The following colloquy, as disclosed by the stenographer’s minutes, then occurred: “The Court — I’ll take up for the moment the cases of 81547,
Reynolds
versus
Bryan,
and 81465,
Bryan
versus
Reynolds.
I believe you gentlemen have a stipulation? Mr. Kilpatrick [counsel for Reynolds et al.] — If it please the Court, in 81465,
Bryan
against
Reynolds,
On May 19, 1955, the Bryans filed a motion to extend for two weeks the time referred to in the stipulation made in open court on April 20. The court granted the motion in part by extending the time until May 27. On that date, John W. Bryan appeared in court by counsel and, upon his request, the court granted an additional extension to June 1 but, in doing so, observed that no further extension would be ordered and that judgment would enter on that date in conformity with the stipulation of
The Superior Court, having had jurisdiction of the subject matter, had inherent power to enter-judgment by stipulation. Such a judgment is not a judicial determination of any litigated right.
New York Cent. & H. R. R. Co.
v.
T. Stuart & Son Co.,
It necessarily follows that if the judgment con
Although the plaintiffs failed to address such a motion to the court, we have examined their claims in the light of the record of the case at bar and of case No. 81547, of which we have taken judicial notice. See Maltbie, Conn. App. Proc., § 158. Their grievances have no substance. We are not concerned with any question as to the authority of counsel to join in the consent judgment, for no such question has been raised. The only matter for our determination, at this point, is whether the judgment dismissing the case at bar conformed to the terms of the stipulation. The answer is clearly in the affirmative. The court construed the stipulation as one requiring the dismissal of case No.
There is no error.
In this opinion.the other judges concurred.
