| Conn. | Jul 6, 1893

The defendant in this action, which was brought to recover damages for injuries resulting in the death of the plaintiff's intestate, filed on December 31st, 1890, in the Superior Court, in which the action was pending, a demurrer to the complaint, which demurrer was heard and overruled April 29th, 1892. Nothing further was done until the October term of the court, 1892, when the case was put by the plaintiff on the trial list marked "jury," and on motion of the plaintiff was assigned for a hearing in damages to the court on December 21st, 1892. At that time both parties appeared with their witnesses, and the plaintiff, after the papers were read, moved that the cause be heard in damages to the jury. No jury was or had been in attendance during the term and none was to be summoned at that session. No previous notice of such motion had been given to the defendant. The defendant objected to granting the motion, on the ground, first, that under the practice of the court the cause could only properly be heard in damages to the court, and, second, that the motion came too late; but the court granted the motion, and continued the cause to be heard by the jury in damages at the next session, where the cause was so heard, resulting in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff for five thousand dollars damages.

In view of the conclusion which we have reached, which renders the other questions raised upon the defendant's appeal unimportant, the only question which we shall consider is, whether the defendant's first objection, as above stated, to a hearing in damages by a jury, should have been sustained. It is conceded that the question narrows itself to purely one of construction of chapter 157 of the public acts of 1889, since, by the immemorial practice in this state, supported by repeated decisions and sanctioned by statute, damages in such cases are assessed by the court, without the intervention of a jury. The act of 1889 provides that "in every action of tort, in which the defendant suffers a default, and *262 there is a hearing in damages, said hearing in damages shall be to a jury, unless the defaulting defendant shall have given notice of his intention to suffer such default to the clerk of the court in which such action is pending, within thirty days after the time fixed by law for closing the pleadings in such action shall have expired." The inquiry is, whether the defendant should be held within the intent and meaning of this act to have "suffered a default," and to be a "defaulting defendant."

The record shows that after the demurrer was overruled no further pleadings or answer over were filed by the defendant, and it is the claim of the plaintiff that "upon the overruling of a demurrer the case stands without answer; that one of two courses is open to the defendant, to let the case stand without answer or to answer over; and if he answers over, the cause is tried upon the issue raised by that answer; and if he does not see fit to answer over, he suffers a default, whereupon the plaintiff is entitled to judgment on the cause of action set forth in his complaint, if it is capable of exact ascertainment, and if not, an ascertainment of the damages by a court or jury upon a hearing in damages."

Now, in reference to the above claim, it is true that by virtue of our statute, Gen. Statutes, § 1014, in all civil actions upon the overruling of a demurrer a party may plead over. That is a privilege accorded. But if a party fails to avail himself of that privilege, he stands as if it had not been granted, and judgment is rendered upon demurrer. If judgment upon demurrer ever meant anything different from judgment upon default, it means so still as applied to one who fails to avail himself of the statutory privilege of pleading over. That it has had such distinct meaning is manifest even from the citations made by the plaintiff to show the contrary. Thus Swift in his System, Vol. 2, page 267, says: "Where the action is founded on a tort, if on demurrer judgment be rendered against the defendant, or if he refuses to plead, or makes default of appearance, etc.," and the same distinction runs throughout all the other numerous citations made. Black, in his work on Judgments, Vol. 1, § 12, classifies *263 judgments as of four kinds; — 1, Judgments on an issue of law; 2, Judgments upon a verdict; 3, Judgments without a verdict; 4, Judgments against a verdict. In section thirteen he treats of the first, saying — "These judgments are given upon the decision of a demurrer;" and classifies them, the first class being "for the plaintiff when the issue raised by a demurrer to any of the pleadings is decided in his favor." Of this judgment he says — "It is final and definitive and concludes the right of action. Its style isquod recuperat." In section fifteen, in treating of the third class, judgments without verdict, he gives as the first of numerous varieties, "judgment by default," saying — "This is a judgment entered in consequence of the non-appearance of the defendant. Where the defendant omits to plead within the time required, the judgment taken against him for that cause is more properly called nildicit, but the term `default' is usually extended to cover this case also." In Lennon v. Rawitzer, 57 Conn., on p. 585, LOOMIS, J., delivering the opinion of the court, defines it default as "a common law judgment which was entered when the defendant neglected or refused to appear, or when he acknowledged the action to be just and withdrew his appearance" — a definition which clearly does not embrace judgments upon demurrer, whether such judgments be regarded as final or interlocutory. They are indeed doubtless the latter in such a case as the one now under consideration, for two reasons; first, because being in an action for unliquidated damages, it is, as a default also would be in such a case, an incident which entitles the plaintiff to judgment, but does not determine the amount of such judgment; (Sheldon v.Sheldon, 37 Vt., 152" court="Vt." date_filed="1864-08-15" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/sheldon-v-sheldon-6577752?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="6577752">37 Verm., 152; Holcomb v. Townof Winchester, 52 Conn., 448;) and second, because the statute passed in 1872, allowing a party upon the overruling of a demurrer to plead over, causes the interlocutory judgment of respondent ouster to be entered. But in reference to the latter point, as said by this court inDenton v. Town of Danbury, 48 Conn., 372, "if the party entitled to plead or answer over refuses or neglects so to do, the court must render judgment in favor of the plaintiff for his damages and costs, if the demurrer be *264 determined in his favor." And this judgment, when rendered and final, either because immediately so, the damages being liquidated, or after damages assessed if unliquidated, is a judgment upon demurrer and not on default. Even if it were admitted that the defendant was bound to answer over, and that he was, in common parlance, in default for failing so to do, we do not see as that would support the plaintiff's contention, for in the single case where at common law a judgment of respondent ouster was rendered upon a defendant's demurrer, that is, where a defendant demurred for a variance between declaration and writ, and pending demurrer leave was granted to amend, and thereupon demurrer was overruled, (Walker v. Walker, 6 Howard, Miss., 500,) or in the cases where the plaintiff's demurrer to the defendant's dilatory plea is sustained, and thereupon the defendant is ordered to answer over or further, (Cook v. Crawford, 1 Tex., 9" court="Tex." date_filed="1846-12-15" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/cooke-v-crawford-4886832?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="4886832">1 Texas, 9;Trow v. Messer, 32 N. Hamp., 361;) "the practice is to give judgment that he answer over, after which, and on his failure to plead to the merits, he may be defaulted." Black on Judgments, Vol. 1, sect. 89. This is akin to the rules under our practice act. See58 Conn., p. 566, section 1, which provides that upon failure to plead agreeably to rule or the order of the court, "the court may, on motion of the other party, order a nonsuit, default, or judgment on a cross-complaint, counter-claim or set-off, as the case may be." Why order a default in such case, if failure to plead itself constituted a default without such order?

But after all, to do the plaintiff's case full justice, the real contention appears to be that the overruling of the defendant's demurrer, with failure of the defendant further to answer within the time limited by the rules of court, is equivalent in its effect to a default; that the right established to a final judgment for damages, and the procedure to ascertain and fix the amount of such damages, are identical in both cases; and that being so, there is no reason to infer that the legislature intended by the act in question to create a difference where none existed before in fact, or now exists in principle, but that the opposite inference should be drawn, and the act construed as extending to demurrers overruled, with failure *265 to answer over, as being "the clear intention of the legislature, sufficiently expressed."

We fully agree that there is force in the claim that such intention should be imputed to the legislature, and will further say that the claim is strengthened by the consideration of the language which has sometimes been used by this court. Thus, in Daniels v. Town ofSaybrook, 34 Conn., 377" court="Conn." date_filed="1867-09-15" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/daniels-v-town-of-saybrook-6578611?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="6578611">34 Conn., 377, the court, BUTLER, J., said on page 381: — "The defendants in this case, by demurring to the declaration, defaulted as to the facts sufficiently alleged and essential to constitute a cause of action, and thereby admitted them. When their demurrer was overruled, their case stood as upon default, with all the essential elements of the cause of action, and the right of the plaintiffs to recover some damages, conclusively admitted;" and this language thus made use of in that case, before the act of 1872 permitting answer over was passed, was repeated with apparent full approval in Crane v. EasternTransportation Line, 48 Conn., 366, after the passage of that act. Nor does it substantially weaken the argument as to the inferred intent of the legislature to say, as is undoubtedly true, that such language was uttered with no reference to any point under consideration in this case, and that properly understood, with the words "defaulted as to the facts" limited by the subsequent expression that "the case stood as upon default, with all the essential elements of the cause of action and the right of the plaintiffs to recover some damages conclusively admitted," means nothing more than that a judgment upon demurrer, that is, on an issue of law, establishes the same right in the plaintiff, and entitles the plaintiff to the same further procedure to perfect such right, as would follow from a default.

But notwithstanding these strong grounds we are forced to the conclusion that we ought not to construe the act in question as claimed by the plaintiff. There are, as appears to us, even more conclusive reasons for the opposite conclusion. The assessment of unliquidated damages by the court, in cases both of default and of demurrer overruled is not alone in consonance with "the uniform practice of the courts of this state ever since they have existed," (Lennon v. Rawitzer, *266 supra, p. 584,) but also a statute originally passed in 1821, ever since continued upon our statute book, and now General Statutes, § 1106, provides that "in all cases where a judgment is rendered, otherwise than on a verdict, in favor of the plaintiff, the court shall assess the damages which he shall recover." Against the settled policy of the state, so often declared by the courts, so long and uninterruptedly continued, for more than seventy years sanctioned by the direct and positive provisions of the statute, it appears to us that no rules or canons of construction justify our extending the provisions of the act of 1889 beyond its express terms. In more than a score of Connecticut cases in the Supreme Court reports, as also in General Statutes, § 1118, and in Swift's Digest, the expression "default or demurrer overruled" has been used as clearly meaning and intending two things, not one, and not convertible. In the general rules of practice in the book containing the practice act and rules of 1879, at page 248, in the arrangement of cases for assignment and trial according to the order of privilege, hearings in damages on default stand as one class, No. 14, and hearings in damages on demurrer overruled as another, No. 15. This is now changed, however; 58 Conn., p. 576; No. 9, embracing "hearings to the court in damages on default or demurrer overruled."

Such being the case, it seems to us that if the legislature had purposed to change the law, both common and statute, in reference not only to defaults properly and commonly so called and understood, but also in regard to demurrers overruled in which no judgment of default for failure to plead had ever been moved for by counsel or ordered by the court, it would have been natural and easy to adopt the form of expression so popularly and universally in use; and that failing to do so, it may be and ought to be inferred that such was not its intention; and we therefore hold that the plaintiff was not entitled to have her damages assessed by the jury.

There is error in the judgment complained of, and the case is remanded for a new trial or hearing in damages by the court

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