161 A. 100 | Conn. | 1932
The complaint originally sought recovery upon a note, but a second count was later added based upon a failure to pay rent claimed to be due the plaintiff for a certain garage. The defendant, besides answering the complaint, filed a counterclaim, seeking in one count damages for wrongful eviction from the garage and in another damages for the loss of personal property which he claimed the plaintiff withheld from him. The jury returned a verdict as follows: "In this case the jury finds the issues for the defendant." The plaintiff filed a motion in arrest of judgment and also a motion to set the verdict aside, because it was against the evidence and because it was not a determination of the issues in the case. The trial court granted both motions. The verdict was plainly defective in that it failed to dispose of the issues in the case in view of those raised by the counterclaim. The motion *705
in arrest of judgment was properly granted. Smith
v. Raymond, 1 Day, 189, 192; 3 Blackstone, Commentaries, p. 393; 2 Standard Encyclopedia of Procedure, p. 1027. It is sometimes said that at common law the granting of a motion in arrest of judgment ended the case, without, however, preventing the bringing of a new action upon the same cause. Raber v. Jones,
There is no error.