132 A. 395 | Conn. | 1926
This action, brought to the Superior Court in Hartford County by the plaintiff against Louis Friedman, Aaron Raphael and Harry Klein, and returned to the first Tuesday of April, 1924, was tried therein September 9th, 1924, and judgment rendered against the defendants Raphael and Klein to recover $1,060 damages and costs. Friedman had become a bankrupt and no judgment was rendered against him. From this judgment the defendant Klein appealed to this court, which found the judgment erroneous, remanded the cause, and directed judgment in favor of the defendant Harry Klein on February 23d 1925. The defendant Raphael did not appeal to this court. This description of the judgment refers to the same as corrected. In correcting the judgment, the following memorandum appears of record appended to the judgment file:
"Foregoing judgment corrected by the court (Simpson, J.) October 9, 1925, by inserting in the third paragraph after the words `and directed judgment for the' and in the place of the word `defendants' the words `defendant Harry Klein' and inserting in the fourth paragraph after the words `Supreme Court of Errors that the' and in place of the word `defendants' the words `defendant Harry Klein' and by inserting in place of the word `their' in the last line of the same paragraph the word `his'; and execution of said judgment is hereby stayed for one week from October 9, 1925. Simpson, J."
The third and fourth paragraphs of the judgment-file as originally entered read as follows:
"Said Supreme Court of Errors found error in said judgment, remanded the cause and directed judgment for the defendants on February 23, 1925.
"Whereupon it is adjudged, pursuant to the direction *109 of the Supreme Court of Errors that the defendants recover of the plaintiff their costs taxed at . . . dollars, and . . . cents."
The judgment-file in the form last noted was prepared March 6th, 1925. On October 3d 1925, the plaintiff moved to correct the judgment-file, reciting the facts outlined above, and further alleging that the word "defendants" in the original judgment-file was erroneously used, since the judgment of this court ordered "judgment to be entered for the defendant Klein," and praying that the judgment be corrected by striking out the word "defendants" wherever appearing therein, and substituting therefor the words, "the defendant Klein." The motion also asked for an order allowing the plaintiff to take out execution against the defendant Raphael. This motion was granted, as appears from the memorandum above quoted. From the action of the court in making this correction, the defendant Raphael appealed, and alleged as error the granting of plaintiff's motion, both as to correcting the judgment-file and in staying execution against defendant Raphael for one week, and in correcting the judgment without hearing evidence upon the motion, and in that Judge Simpson erred in altering judgment ordered by Judge Dickenson of the same court.
The trial court when correcting the record did not err in staying execution for one week. This was clearly in favor of defendant Raphael, evidently for the purpose of giving him a reasonable time in which to take any appeal, which he did within the week, and thereby issuance of execution was stayed by operation of law. He has no cause to complain. His statutory right to one week in which to take an appeal was thereby conserved. It does not appear from the appeal record that the court acted upon the motion to correct without hearing evidence, but assuming that to be the case, in *110 this instance no oral evidence was necessary or proper; the correction was to be made or refused upon the record in the Superior Court and in this court, from facts appearing upon its face. That the judgment was originally entered by the court when held by one judge and that the correction was made at a subsequent session presided over by another judge, is of no significance legally. The act of correction was the act of the court. If the court had a right to make the correction, it is of no moment who happened to be the presiding magistrate.
The only matter of importance arising in the case pertains to the right of the court to make the correction of the form of the judgment. The case on appeal to this court is reported in
The Superior Court has the right to correct a judgment as regards clerical errors — and the mistaken wording of the first judgment-file was unquestionably a clerical error — at any time when the error is brought to its attention, after a hearing. *111
"Mistakes merely clerical, by which the judgment as recorded fails to agree with the judgment in fact rendered, may be corrected at a term subsequent to that in which the judgment was rendered, upon proper notice to all concerned." Goldreyer v. Cronan,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.