362 A.2d 540 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1976
This action was instituted on December 4, 1973, and was made returnable on the second Tuesday of January, 1974. Service of the writ was made on December 14, 1973, on the "named defendant Edna M. Rice by leaving at his [sic] usual place of abode at 616 Winchester Avenue, New Haven, a true and attested copy hereof, with my endorsement thereon." On January 17, 1974, a motion for default for failure to appear, judgment and order of payments, together with an affidavit of debt, bill of particulars, and military affidavit, were filed with the clerk of the court. Judgment in the amount of $885.04, including attorneys' fees and costs, was rendered on February 11, 1974, and the defendant was further ordered to make weekly payments in the amount of $2.00. The plaintiff notified the defendant of the judgment by mail on February 19, 1974.
On June 7, 1974, an attorney for the defendant appeared specially and filed a motion to vacate the judgment and recall a wage execution issued on March 28, 1974. In her motion, filed pursuant to
This appeal is concerned with the denial of both motions. It is apparent that the trial court erred in stating incorrectly that it had denied the motion to rescind the action of July 8, 1974. Since the motion to vacate the judgment was actually heard on the merits on September 23, 1974, and a finding was made by the court at the request of the defendant on appeal, the denial of the motion to rescind is harmless error.
With respect to the motion to vacate the judgment the court found, after the defendant's motion to correct the finding, that service of the original Writ, summons and complaint was made on the defendant on December 14, 1973, and that a default judgment was rendered on February 11, 1974. The court then concluded that the defendant was properly served and that the defendant was not prevented from appearing by mistake, accident, or other reasonable causes, but through her own negligence.
In her assignments of error, the defendant has listed errors apparent on the face of the record as well as errors in the conduct of the evidentiary hearing to the court. The assignments of error relative to the court's failure to correct many of *557 the findings are irrelevant because this court has found error in connection with the denial of the motion to rescind. Other corrections requested are immaterial. We shall consider the assignment of error which deals with the failure of the court to correct its finding by adding the following: that no personal in-hand service was made on the defendant nor read to the defendant; that the defendant did not receive a copy of the writ, summons and complaint prior to the entry of judgment; and that the defendant's residence at 616 Winchester Avenue is a multi-unit structure containing three apartments. In her draft finding, the defendant did not request a finding of those facts as required by 979 of the Practice Book. An examination of the transcript, however, reveals that evidence was offered by the defendant, which was uncontradicted. Justice and equity compel this court to correct the finding. Also, this court corrects the finding by deleting that portion in which the court found that the default for failure to appear was entered on January 17, 1974, since the record reveals that that default was entered on February 11, 1974.
The principal assignment of error relates to the conclusion of the court that the defendant was properly served on December 14, 1973. In granting relief under
The sheriff's return indicating that he made service by leaving an attested copy at the defendant's place of abode at 616 Winchester Avenue, New Haven, is prima facie evidence of the facts stated therein. Jenkins v. Bishop Apartments, Inc.,
The defendant relies on such cases as Cugno v. Kaelin, supra, and Clover v. Urban,
The defendant also claims that the court erred in concluding that she was not prevented from appearing by mistake, accident or other reasonable cause. That assignment must fail in view of our holding that the court's finding supports its conclusion that the defendant was properly served.
The defendant relied solely on lack of jurisdiction to support her motion to vacate the judgment and offered no other evidence to justify the reopening of the judgment. The conclusion of the court that the failure of the defendant to appear was due to her own negligence is not supported by the subordinate facts found. It is harmless error, however, because the other conclusions reached, which are supported by the subordinate facts, are sufficient to warrant the judgment without reliance on this additional fact.
There is no error.
In this opinion SPEZIALE and D. SHEA, Js., concurred.