157 A.2d 494 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1959
This action for annulment or divorce and custody of a minor child was brought by the plaintiff-husband by writ returnable the first Tuesday of March, 1959. Defendant-wife, by motion dated March 31, 1959, requested an allowance to defend, but this motion was not heard in open court, being, instead, discussed informally in chambers with the result that it was decided by counsel to allow the motion to go off and renew it at time of trial. It is undoubtedly true that defendant's counsel performed valuable services for defendant both *498 before and after this discussion for which he expected eventually to attempt to collect from plaintiff.
However, on October 23, 1959, before the commencement of trial, plaintiff withdrew his action without any prior notice to defendant or her counsel, who, feeling aggrieved, filed a motion for allowance to defend on November 5, 1959, after such withdrawal. At the suggestion of the court, a hearing on this motion was postponed until defendant also had filed a motion to restore the case to the docket so that any claim that the court was without jurisdiction to hear the motion for allowance could be resolved at the same hearing, which was subsequently held on both motions on November 20, 1959.
After consideration of the law cited by counsel during argument, the court is of the opinion that it has continuing jurisdiction to determine any claim of a vested right acquired during the pendency of an action and prior to its withdrawal, but that it must first reinstate it on the docket before granting the relief sought. This seems implicit from the language of our Supreme Court in Lusas v. St.Patrick's Roman Catholic Church Corporation,
That such procedure would have to be followed in the specific situation involved here would appear from the following language of the court in Morgan
v. Morgan,
On the other hand, there is no doubt that the court should exercise its discretion to restore a case to the docket for further action upon such a motion if rights of the defendant acquired by reasons of such action would be injuriously affected by such withdrawal.Bristol v. Bristol Water Co.,
It was early held in this state that an attorney has no claim upon a husband for services and disbursements in defending his wife against a divorce action brought by the husband, and that the only way of securing such payment from the husband is by an order of the court for a sufficient allowance for the purpose. Cooke v. Newell,
Here, the trial court never passed upon the question whether the exigencies of the situation required an allowance to defend, nor was the defendant deprived of her rights for lack of funds. She was, in fact, so capably defended during the preliminary motions in this case that the action against her was withdrawn by plaintiff before she had obtained a right to an allowance to defend by order of the court. At the time of such withdrawal, therefore, *501
she had no right to such an allowance of which the withdrawal deprived her or which it injuriously affected. This line of reasoning appears to be in accord with the case of Salonia v. Salonia,
Public policy demands that lawsuits once withdrawn, especially actions for divorce, should not be restored to the court docket except to prevent an obvious destruction or impairment of a right in another created by such action. This is not such a case.
Defendant's motion to restore and motion for allowance to defend are both denied.