71 Conn. App. 565 | Conn. App. Ct. | 2002
Opinion
The plaintiff Debra A. Marshall,
The following facts are relevant to our resolution of the plaintiffs appeal. Upon the death of Raymond Marshall, the Probate Court admitted his will to probate and approved the defendant as executrix of his estate. The plaintiff appealed to the Superior Court from that decree and on November 1, 1996, claimed the case for a jury trial. In her appeal, the plaintiff contested the will, arguing that the defendant had unduly influenced the decedent and that this influence resulted in a will that did not accurately reflect his wishes. The plaintiff also objected to the defendant’s appointment as executrix and asserted that the defendant should not be named executrix because she had filed a criminal complaint against the decedent as a result of an incident that is not germane to the present appeal.
In addition to his will, Raymond Marshall also had executed a general power of attorney to Susan Marshall. The Probate Court, however, determined that the power of attorney was partially invalid. The Probate Court found the power of attorney valid only for the limited purpose of allowing Susan Marshall to raise funds to
Subsequently, in the fall of 2000 and after the plaintiffs attorney was granted permission to withdraw from the first appeal from probate, the plaintiff learned that her attorney had withdrawn the case from the jury docket on April 14, 1998, without her permission and knowledge. After discovering that the case no longer was going to be tried to the jury, the plaintiff protested that situation to the court at a status conference on March 9, 2001, prior to trial.
Thereafter, in the first appeal from probate, the court upheld the order of the Probate Court admitting the will to probate and approving the defendant as executrix of the estate. In the second appeal from probate, the court upheld the order of the Probate Court that denied, in part, the accounting of Susan Marshall. The plaintiff thereafter filed separate appeals to this court, which we consolidated. Additional facts will be set forth as needed.
The plaintiff first claims that the court deprived her of her right to due process when it failed to hold an evidentiary hearing to determine whether her attorney had engaged in misconduct in withdrawing the first appeal from probate from the jury docket.
At the outset, we must first address a jurisdictional issue that is implicit in the plaintiffs claim. Specifically, we must determine whether the court had jurisdiction to hold such an evidentiary hearing. Because we determine that the court did not have jurisdiction to hold the evidentiary hearing, the claim must fail.
We first note the standard of review applicable to that issue and the relevant law. “The determination of whether subject matter jurisdiction exists is a question of law and, thus, our review is plenary.” Hultman v. Blumenthal, 67 Conn. App. 613, 615, 787 A.2d 666, cert. denied, 259 Conn. 929, 793 A.2d 253 (2002). Furthermore, with regard to appeals from probate, our case law states that “[a]n appeal from a probate order or decree to the Superior Court is not a civil cause of action. It has no more of the ordinary attributes of a civil action than the original proceedings in the court of probate. . . . [A]ppeals from probate are not civil actions because it has always been held that the Superior Court, while hearing appeals from probate, sits as a court of probate and not as a constitutional court of general or common-law jurisdiction. It tries the questions presented to it de novo, but in so doing it is . . . exercising a special and limited jurisdiction conferred on it by the statute authorizing appeals from probate.
“In a probate appeal, the Superior Court cannot consider events that occurred after the issuance of the order or decree appealed from. . . . The appeal brings to the Superior Court only the order appealed from.
“In a probate appeal . . . the Superior Court’s jurisdiction is statutory and limited to the order appealed from. The issues presented for review are those defined in the reasons of appeal. The Superior Court cannot consider or adjudicate issues beyond the scope of those proper for determination by the order or decree attacked. This is so even with the consent of the parties to the appeal because the court has subject matter jurisdiction limited only to the order or decree appealed from.” Id., 58.
In the present case, the plaintiff requested that the court hold an evidentiary hearing to determine whether her attorney had engaged in misconduct in withdrawing her case from the jury docket without her consent or knowledge. In accordance with the jurisdictional test previously set forth, however, we conclude for two reasons that the trial court did not have jurisdiction to consider that issue, and, therefore, could not properly hold such a hearing. First, the court did not have jurisdiction to hold the hearing because the misconduct issue arose after the issuance of the decree from which the appeal was brought. Specifically, counsel withdrew the case from the jury docket in April, 1998, well after the Probate Court had issued its decree. Therefore,
Second, the court did not have jurisdiction to hold the hearing because the issue of whether counsel had engaged in misconduct went well beyond the subject of the appeal. Specifically, the plaintiff appealed from the admission of the will to probate and the approval of the defendant as executrix. As a result, those issues defined the scope of the Superior Court’s jurisdiction. The issue of whether counsel committed misconduct by withdrawing the case from the juiy docket was in no way related to the subjects of the appeal. The court, therefore, had no jurisdiction to consider this issue. As stated in Silverstein’s Appeal from, Probate, the Superior Court cannot consider or adjudicate issues beyond those related to the decree attacked in the appeal because an appeal from probate brings only the order appealed from to the Superior Court.
Because we conclude that the court did not have jurisdiction to consider whether the plaintiffs attorney had committed misconduct, she cannot prevail on her claim that the failure to hold an evidentiary hearing on this matter denied her due process of law.
II
The plaintiffs second claim is that the court improperly denied her motion to restore the first appeal from probate to the jury docket. She argues that the court should have restored the case to the jury docket because her attorney removed the case without her knowledge or permission and that it was not her intention to waive her right to a jury trial.
When viewed in that light, it is evident that the genesis of the plaintiffs problem is not rooted in the exercise of her right under § 52-215, but rather in her attorney’s decision to withdraw the case from the jury docket. The pertinent issue, therefore, is whether it was improper for the court to refuse to restore the case to the jury docket after it had been withdrawn by her attorney.
Moreover, the court’s decision cannot be construed as an abuse of discretion given the context and procedural history of this case. Specifically, the plaintiff discovered that her case had been withdrawn from the jury docket sometime in the fall of 2000, but she did not file a motion to restore the case to the jury docket until the first day of trial, April 24, 2001. Because she was aware of that situation for roughly seven months and could have acted on it at the status conference or at any time prior to the start of the trial, the court did not abuse its discretion in denying her motion on the first day of the trial.
Despite the plaintiffs claimed lack of knowledge or consent, her attorney’s actions were binding on her, and it was within the court’s discretion to decline to restore the case to the jury docket.
Ill
The plaintiffs’ last claim is that the court improperly denied her motion for a continuance on the first day of trial, which she filed so that she could obtain a new attorney.
At the outset, we note our standard of review. “A trial court holds broad discretion in granting or denying a motion for a continuance. Appellate review of a trial court’s denial of a motion for a continuance is governed by an abuse of discretion standard that, although not unreviewable, affords the trial court broad discretion in matters of continuances. ... An abuse of discretion must be proven by the appellant by showing that the denial of the continuance was unreasonable or arbitrary.” (Internal quotation marks omitted.) DiStefano v. DiStefano, 67 Conn. App. 628, 631, 787 A.2d 675 (2002). “Decisions to grant or to deny continuances are very often matters involving judicial economy, docket management or courtroom proceedings and, therefore, are particularly within the province of a trial court.” In re Shaquanna M., 61 Conn. App. 592, 604, 767 A.2d 155 (2001).
In the present case, the plaintiff twice sought a continuance and was denied both times by the court.
The court did not abuse its discretion in denying the motion for a continuance. As we have stated, matters of judicial economy, docket management and control of courtroom proceedings are particularly within the province of a trial court. In the present case, we conclude that the court properly exercised its discretion with regard to all three considerations. It is clear that a continuance for one month would have disrupted the trial court’s complex litigation docket. Moreover, as the court correctly noted, the plaintiff had been without a
The judgments are affirmed.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Susan E. Marshall also is a plaintiff in the appeal from probate that is the subject of AC 21945. Because only Debra A. Marshall has appealed from the judgments of the trial court, we refer in this opinion to her as the plaintiff.
We refer in this opinion to the named defendant executrix as the defendant.
It appears from the transcript that despite her general protestations, the plaintiff, at the time of the status conference, did not file any specific motion with regard to the case having been stricken from the jury docket.
General Statutes § 52-215 provides in relevantpart: “In the Superior Court a docket shall be kept of all cases. In such docket immediately following the names of the parties and their attorneys in all jury cases shall be entered the word ‘jury’. The following-named classes of cases shall be entered in the docket as jury cases upon the written request of either party made to the clerk within thirty days after the return day: Appeals from probate involving the validity of a will or paper purporting to be such . . .
As noted in footnote 3, the plaintiff protested the situation to the court at the March 9, 2001 status conference, but did not file a motion for restoration at that time.
In her brief, the plaintiff also states that “owing to the unusual nature of these cases as trials without partners, it may well be that plaintiffs’ claims should be reviewed under the plain error doctrine.” Because we conclude that there was no abuse of discretion, we need not address that assertion.
The plaintiff in her brief does not indicate whether she takes issue with the court’s denial of her request for a continuance at the status conference