89 A. 347 | Conn. | 1914
This case is docketed as a writ of error to the Superior Court. A writ of error is an independent action, brought by writ, accompanied by a complaint setting out the record of the case resulting in the judgment complained of, and assigning the errors apparent therein as grounds for the reversal of the judgment.State v. Caplan,
The allegations referred to show that the plaintiffs in error are the receivers of the Windsor Locks Savings Bank, whose affairs are being wound up in the Superior Court. Before receivership proceedings were commenced *611 the bank had occupied a room in the defendants' building. The plaintiffs in error, after their appointment, removed the bank's effects from the room, and paid the defendants two months rent for the time occupied in such removal. The defendants, claiming that the bank had leased the room for a term of ten years, presented a claim to the receivers for damages for the abandonment by them of the lease. This claim was disallowed by the receivers. Upon motion by the defendants a hearing upon the claim was had before the court in the receivership proceeding, and the claim, to the amount of $1,480, was allowed, as appears by the memorandum of the trial judge on file. A request for a finding was then made by the plaintiffs with a view to an appeal, but the trial judge died without making a finding.
Chapter 62 of the Public Acts of 1905, p. 289, provides that when "final judgment has been rendered in any cause in the superior court, . . . an appeal from which lies to the supreme court of errors, and a notice of appeal from such judgment has been filed, if the judge who heard such cause shall die or become incapable of making a finding for the purpose of an appeal, any party to such cause against whom the judgment has been rendered may make a motion in writing, in said court, for a new trial. . . . A statement of the errors which it is claimed occurred in the trial of said case shall be made as a part of said motion. Upon the filing of said motion the court shall hear the same, and if in its opinion the errors claimed to have been committed are of such a nature as fairly entitle the party appealing to a review of said assignment of errors by the supreme court, a new trial shall be granted." The plaintiffs failed to file any motion under this statute, but brought the present writ of error, claiming a reversal of the court's order allowing the defendants' claim. The defendants' *612 plea to the jurisdiction and in abatement is based upon the claim that a proceeding by motion in the Superior Court under the statute is the plaintiffs' only remedy.
This being an independent action, brought to this court for the purpose of revising errors which are alleged to be apparent on the record of the Superior Court in the receivership case, the plaintiffs have no case unless it appears on that record as it now stands, with no finding by the trial judge, that some error of law was committed by the court affecting the judgment of which complaint is made. Had there been no request for a finding, it would hardly be claimed that this writ of error would not lie to correct any error so appearing. The writ is a common-law remedy, recognized by our statute, which has always existed in this State, and one which is not taken away by the statute of appeals. The process by appeal is a more extensive, expeditious and adequate remedy, and is calculated to reach errors which may not be reached by a writ of error, as well as those which may be reached by such writ, but, as to the latter, it does not supersede the remedy by writ of error. As to errors apparent on the record, using that word in its strict sense, the two remedies coexist. This being so, it would be a strange result if the attempt to procure a finding showing errors of the trial court which do not appear upon the record should (if the trial judge die without making such finding) prevent a party from proceeding by writ of error to obtain a revision of errors which do appear upon the record. It is apparent that such a result was not intended by the Act (Public Acts of 1905, Chap. 62, p. 289) upon which the defendants rely. Its purpose manifestly was to afford a remedy in cases where a finding is necessary to disclose upon the record the claimed errors which it is proposed to have corrected *613
by appeal. Prior to the statute the death or inability of the judge to make such finding left the party remediless in such a case. Etchells v. Wainwright,
The plaintiffs' claim is that the record in this case, without any finding by the judge, discloses the errors assigned in the writ. The defendants' plea must be taken to assume that the writ was brought to correct errors so appearing, otherwise it assumes — and because of the improper allegations in the writ there would be considerable ground for such an assumption — that the writ of error is brought to correct errors not apparent on the record. Assuming, then, as we must on the demurrer to this plea, that the writ is brought to correct errors apparent on the trial record, the plaintiffs' remedy is not affected by the statute. The defendants' *614 plea to the jurisdiction and in abatement is insufficient, and the demurrer thereto is sustained.
Both parties have requested us (in case our conclusions upon the questions raised by the demurrer should be as above indicated) to determine whether any error is apparent upon the record of the Superior Court which is before us. As the matter has been fully argued orally and in the briefs, it may properly be disposed of as if a plea of "nothing erroneous" had been filed. Practice Book (1908) p. 277, § 33.
Three errors are assigned as appearing on the record: first, that the court held that a certain instrument, Exhibit A, constituted a valid lease from the defendants to the bank; second, that the delivery of that instrument to the defendants by a former officer of the bank, after the receivers were appointed, gave the defendants a valid claim, under the lease, against the bank and its receivers; and third, that the plaintiffs were responsible in damages for failure to carry out the executory provisions of the lease.
The record which is before us is that in the receivership case, wherein the plaintiffs in error are plaintiffs and the Windsor Locks Savings Bank is defendant. This shows that there were no pleadings in the case relating to the defendants' claim. The only part of the record which relates to that claim is a petition (indorsed "granted") filed by the defendants, alleging that they presented their bill for $1,480.82 to the receivers, that the receivers had notified them of its disallowance, and asking permission to intervene, and that the court should fix a time for a hearing upon the claim which had been disallowed, or that they be permitted to bring a suit to recover it against the receivers; a "memorandum of decision" by the trial judge; and a transcript of the evidence (including exhibits), certified by the official stenographer to be a full and complete copy of *615
his notes in the case. There is no judgment-file, and no memorandum or record by the clerk that a judgment has been rendered. The memorandum of the trial judge reads as follows: "The vote of the directors of the corporation duly recorded, is a sufficient memorandum in writing and signature of recording officer is sufficient signing by party to be charged. [Lamkin v.Baldwin Lamkin Co.,]
A memorandum of decision is not a part of the finding of facts, nor, unless made so by the court, is it such a part of the official record as to become the basis of a writ of error. Cary v. Phoenix Ins. Co.,
The transcript of the stenographer's notes, upon which the plaintiffs in error rely to supply the place of a finding, cannot perform that office. It is true that General Statutes, § 695, provides that an exemplified transcript of the shorthand notes of the official stenographer shall be prima facie a correct statement of the testimony and proceedings, and shall constitute a part of the official record in the cause or matter in which such notes are made. By the terms of the statute the transcript must be exemplified before it becomes a part of the official record, and then it is merely a statement, prima facie correct, of the testimony and proceedings. What inferences the trial court drew from that testimony is another matter, and we cannot, on a writ of error, be asked to determine from the testimony what facts were found, and what conclusions of law were drawn from them.
General Statutes, § 763, provides that courts of record shall keep a record of their doings, and cause the facts upon which they found their judgments to appear on the record. When the issues of fact are properly presented by the pleadings, and they are all found in favor of one of the parties, it is enough if the judgment-record *617 states that the issues are found in favor of such party, and judgment rendered in his favor. If the issues are not all found in favor of one of the parties, and a special finding is requested, such special finding should be made a part of the record. The facts so to be set out in the judgment-record are only those material to the issues tried. Other facts, necessary to make apparent errors in the admission of testimony or in the rulings of the court during the progress of the trial, should not be set out in the judgment-record, but in a finding for appeal. Practice Book (1908) p. 266, § 3. The transcript of the stenographer's notes, although exemplified and made a part of the official record, is not a substitute for either of these findings.
As it does not appear from the record that either of the errors assigned were committed by the trial court, judgment must be for the defendants in error.
The writ of error is dismissed, with costs.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.