64 A.2d 173 | Conn. | 1949
In this action in equity brought by a wife separated from her husband for her support and that of the minor children of the parties, the plaintiff made a motion that the court order that she be furnished temporary support during the pendency of the action. The trial court granted the motion and ordered the defendant to pay the plaintiff $600 a month. The defendant filed an appeal from the order. The plaintiff now moves to have the appeal erased from the docket. The question is: Was the order such a final judgment as to be the basis of an appeal?
We have never been called upon to consider that question. The situation is analogous to that which obtains in divorce actions. In Morgan v. Morgan,
We have said that the test for determining whether *336
a judgment is final "lies, not in the nature of the judgment, but in its effect as concluding the rights of some or all of the parties; if such rights are concluded, so that further proceedings after the entry of the order or decree of the court cannot affect them, then the judgment is a final judgment." Banca Commerciale Italiana Trust Co. v. Westchester Artistic Works, Inc.,
The conclusion that the order was a final judgment from which an appeal lies and the reasons we have given have direct support in the following cases: Hecht v. Hecht,
The plaintiff refers to our decision in Olcott v. Pendleton,
It is not necessary, to afford the basis of an appeal from judgments rendered in the course of an action, that there be a formal judgment file, and if an order of the court so made constitutes a final adjudication of the rights of a party an appeal may be taken from it. Conn. App. Proc. 5.
The motions to erase the appeal from the docket and for an order that the clerk prepare a judgment file are both denied.