28 A.2d 87 | Conn. | 1942
In this foreclosure action judgment for the plaintiff was rendered on March 28, 1941. Thereafter the judgment was opened and new law days fixed, and it was again modified on stipulation of the parties as to the law days, setting them as April 24 and 25, 1942, for the respective defendants. On April 16th the named defendant, hereinafter referred to as the defendant, filed another motion to extend the law days which simply stated that the defendant "is equitably entitled" to that relief. The motion was denied on April 24, 1942. On May 6, 1942, she filed an appeal "from the judgment . . . and particularly from the decision . . . denying said defendant's motion for an extension of the law day." On May 8, 1942, she filed a motion for an extension of time in which to file a draft finding, but the record fails to show that the trial court granted this motion. On May 20, 1942, the defendant filed a request for a finding and draft finding. On May 23, 1942, the plaintiff filed a motion to erase the appeal for want of jurisdiction in this court to entertain it, and also a plea in abatement. Thereafter the defendant filed motions to dismiss the motion to erase and the plea on the ground that they were filed too late. *376
Ordinarily the denial of a motion to reopen a judgment is not a final judgment within the appeal statute; its effect at most is that, if filed within the time when an appeal is required to be taken, it may postpone the time within which the appeal need be taken; but, if filed after the time within which a party has a right to appeal, it will not revive that right. Daland's Application,
In Carrington v. Muhlfeld,
The appeal purports also to have been taken from the original judgment in the case which had been rendered more than a year before. In the absence of any extension of time, this was entirely too late. Practice Book, 335. This would not be ground for erasing the appeal; Conn. App. Proc., 150; but it was subject to abatement on this ground. The plea in abatement, it is true, was not filed within ten days from the taking of the appeal, as the rule requires in such a case as this; Practice Book, 393; but it was filed seven days late. It rests, however, in the discretion of this court whether or not to entertain it. Alling v. Weissman,
The motion to erase is denied but the plea in abatement is sustained.