68 Conn. 273 | Conn. | 1896
This is the third attempt to obtain a construction of the will of Selah Strong in behalf of one of the devisees. See the cases of Miles v. Strong, 60 Conn. 393, and 62 Conn. 95.
The devisee, Ernest Strong Miles, is a grandson of the
On the 19th of May, 1890, Ernest became of age, and immediately following that event he by deed, in trust for himself during life and for his wife and children after his decease, conveyed the real estate so devised to him, to his father; and thereupon the first of- the two cases above mentioned was brought. In that case one of the present plaintiffs, as executor of Selah Strong, some eight years after the estate of his testator had been fully and finally settled and distributed, asked to have this eighth clause of the will construed; and this court held, in effect, that under the circumstances his request came too late, and advised the Superior Court to dismiss the complaint.
After this the present plaintiffs brought the second of the above cases against the present defendants, alleging in substance that the defendants claimed some interest in or title to said land under the eighth clause of said will, which claims constituted a cloúd upon the then plaintiffs’ title, which they asked to have removed. This court in that case said : “ The Complaint in this case in effect asks a court of equity to take
In this condition of affairs chapter 66 of the Public Acts of 1893 was passed, which reads as follows:—“ Section 1. An action may be brought by any person claiming title to, or any interest in real property, against any person or persons who claim to own the same, or any part thereof, or who claim to have any estate either in fee, for years, for life, in reversion, or remainder, or any interest in the same, or any lien or incumbrance thereon, adverse to the plaintiff, for the purpose of determining such adverse estate, interest, or claim, and to clear up all doubts and disputes, and to quiet and settle the title to the same.
“ See. 2. The complaint in such action shall describe the property in question and state the plaintiff’s claim, interest, or title, and shall name the person or persons who claim such adverse estate or interest.
“ Sec. 3. Each defendant shall, in his answer, state whether or not he claims any estate, interest in, or incumbrance on said property, or any part thereof, and, if so, the nature and extent of the estate, interest, or incumbrance which he claims, and he shall set out the manner in which, and the sources through whichsuch estate, interest, or incumbrance, is claimed to be derived.
“ See. 4. No judgment for costs shall be rendered in such action against any defendant who, by his qnswer, disclaims all estate, interest in, or incumbrance on said property, but costs shall be taxed in his favor at the discretion of the court. But the court shall, in such cases, without further proof, render judgment that such defendant has no estate, interest in, or incumbrance on said property, or any part thereof.
This Act was approved April 19th, 1898, and took effect upon its passage, and on the next day the present suit was begun.
The complaint describes the property in question, states the origin and nature of the plaintiffs’ claims thereto, as derived under said will and trust deed, and sets out the will, the return of the distributors, and the trust deed; it also names the defendants as the persons who claim an adverse estate or interest in the land described, and alleges in paragraph eight that “ the defendants claim that they have some interest in said property adverse to the plaintiffs.” The relief claimed is, (1) that the defendants shall state the nature, extent and source of the estate or interest which they each claim; (2) an adjudication of the several claims of the parties, and the determination of their several rights; (3) an adjudication quieting, and settling the title to said property.
One of the defendants, Mira R. Strong, in her answer disclaimed all right and title to the property in question, and she is not a party to the present appeal. The other defendants demurred to the complaint, mainly on the ground of the unconstitutionality of the Act of 1893, and the demurrer was overruled. Then the defendants answered over, setting up as a first defense, the former judgment in the case of Miles v. Strong, 62 Conn, supra, in bar of this suit; and as a second defense they denied the allegations of paragraph eight of the complaint. In their reply the plaintiffs admitted the existence of the former judgment, but denied that it was upon, the merits, and the issue upon this -point was found in favor of the defendants. After this the court, on the plaintiffs’, motion, ordered the defendants to state in their answer what their claim or interest, if any, in said real estate was, and .the nature, extent and origin of it. Thereupon the attorneys.
Upon the trial to the jury, the plaintiffs offered in evidence the original files in the two cases before mentioned, which contained, among other matters, answers signed by the attorneys of record therein, which answers tended to show that the defendants then made certain claims to the land in question. To this evidence the defendants objected, on the ground, (1) that if any such claims were made, they were made prior to the passage of the Act under which the present suit was brought, and therefore the evidence was not relevant upon the question whether those defendants had made such claims subsequent to the passage of the Act; (2) that the admission of such evidence would give the Act a retrospective effect; (3) that it did not appear that said attorneys had any authority to make any admissions that might be the basis of a cause of action against said defendants. The court overruled the objections and admitted the evidence. The plaintiffs also offered in evidence the papers filed in the present case by the attorneys for the defendants, in compliance with the orders of the court hereinbefore mentioned. The defendants objected to this evidence on the ground, (1) that it did not appear that defendants’ counsel had any authority to make any admissions that would be the basis of a cause
“Eo evidence, except as above stated, was admitted tending to show that between the time of the passage of said Act of 1898 and the bringing of this action, the defendants made claims to the real estate in question. On this evidence the defendants requested the court to charge the jury that the action could not be maintained upon the facts in evidence ; that the action could not be maintained unless they should find from the evidence that between the passage of the Public Act of 1893, Chap. 66, which was approved April 19th, 1893, and the bringing of this action on April 20th, 1893, the defendants had made some verbal or written claim to the real estate referred to in the complaint; that mere unexpressed opinions on the part of any defendant as to his or her legal rights under the will of Selah Strong, whether held within such times or at any other time, did not constitute on the part of such defendant such a claim that the plaintiffs could maintain as against him or her this action; that any claim made by the defendants based upon the language of the eighth clause of the will, was not actionable and did not constitute a claim adverse to the plaintiffs; that the statements in the ‘ Compliance with Order of Court of May 3d, 1894 ’ and in the ‘ Further Compliance with Order of Court of May 3d, 1894,’ were not such claims, or the evidence of such claims, as would enable the plaintiffs to maintain their action.” The court refused so to charge the jury, but did charge them as follows:—
“ Gentlemen of the Jury: This action of certain plaintiffs against certain defendants, is presented for your consideration upon a single issue or question raised by the pleadings. The plaintiffs have alleged that the defendants claim they*283 have some interest in said real property adverse to the plaintiffs. The defendants have in their answer denied this allegation ; so that your duty is to determine whether at the time of the institution of this suit, April 20th, 1893, the defendants claimed an interest in the real estate referred to in that paper .... The question therefore is as to the attitude of these defendants in regard to this real property, at the time of the bringing of this suit. You have nothing to do with what is to become of the property, but are to try simply the question whether the defendants claimed an interest adverse to the plaintiffs. Upon this question there has been admitted the record in two certain other suits brought by one or other of these plaintiffs against these defendants, or a part of these defendants. In the later one of these it appears that these defendants set forth certain claims that they made of an interest in this real estate. The answer made by them in that case is evidence tending to show that they at that time claimed adverse interest in this property. A part of the answer in this suit is also admitted as evidence tending to show that on the 21st day of May, 1894, these defendants again claimed to have certain interests in the real estate at that time. Upon this evidence it is for you to say whether they were at the time of the bringing of this suit claiming to have an interest in the property adverse to the plaintiffs. It is not necessary that they should have called upon, or seen or written the plaintiffs that they made claim to the property. The question is as to their attitude in relation to the property. The will itself in the eighth paragraph provides that upon certain contingencies of the death of Ernest Strong without disposing of the property by deed or will, the heirs at law of the testator should take the property. These defendants are heirs at law of the testator. It would seem that under the terms of this will there may be some question as to its construction or effect, upon the happening of certain contingencies. Perhaps there may be some inference that in questions of doubt in relation to property, parties will make whatever claims they can in conscience make in respect to it. I must say to you that any claim made by these defendants,*284 that upon the death of Ernest Strong they will in certain contingencies have an interest in the property, is, in the construction of the statute under which this suit is brought, in its nature adverse to the plaintiffs, as it is in derogation of an absolute title in fee simple to the property. If the defendants at the time of bringing this suit were claiming any interest in the property after the death of Ernest Strong, upon any contingency, that claim was adverse. There is no evidence whatever presented by the defendants, except Mira Strong, tending to show that they disclaimed a claim of interest in the property, or tending to show that they deny such claim. The case is therefore submitted to your consideration upon this question, whether or no these defendants were at the bringing of this suit in an attitude of claiming an adverse interest in this real estate. ... I think I made it plain that if these defendants were in an attitude at the time of the bringing of this suit of claiming that they would at some time have an interest in this property at the death of Ernest Strong, that claim is in its nature adverse to the plaintiffs.
“ Upon the trial to the court of the issues raised by the defendants’ rejoinders to the second and third replies, the plaintiffs having, with other evidence to prove the allegations of the second and third replies, offered in evidence the original files in the case of Miles, Trustee, v. Strong, .... offered, in connection therewith, to read to the court the opinion of the Supreme Court found in Yol. 62 of the Connecticut Reports, pages 99 to 105 inclusive. To the reading of said' opinion to the court, counsel for defendants objected. The court ruled that plaintiffs’ counsel might read said opinion to the court, as bearing upon the issues on trial. The defendants excepted to said ruling. . . . Ho evidence was offered as to the hour of the day upon which the writ in the present suit was issued or was served. The defendants claimed that the judgment in the former action was a bar to the maintenance of this action, and that said causes of action were the same; that the Act of 1898 was in violation of article first, § 21 of the Constitution-of this State; that the*285 present action could not be maintained under said Act of 1893, because to apply the same to the facts alleged and proved in this action would be to give to said Act a retrospective and unlawful construction and effect, and because said act did not go into effect before the commencement of the present action.
“ The court having found said issues in favor of the plaintiffs, upon a further hearing to the court as to the judgment to be rendered and the construction to be placed upon the language of the clause of the will in question, the defendants claimed that the court had no power to render final judgment in said cause, as the issue raised by the second defense had been tried to the jury; that if final judgment could be rendered, such judgment should be to the effect that in case Ernest S. Miles should die without leaving lawful issue surviving him at the time of his death, or in case said Ernest S. Miles should die without having personally disposed of all and every part of said real estate by deed or will before his own decease, then and in either of these events said real estate would belong to the defendants (other than Mira R. Strong) per stirpes, and as heirs of Selah Strong. The court held and decided that the plaintiff, Samuel A. Miles, had an absolute title in fee to the real estate in question, subject only to the trust created by the provisions of the deed from Ernest Strong Miles, and described in the complaint as Exhibit C, and rendered judgment as on file.” From that judgment the defendants took the present appeal.
■ The errors assigned are thirty-five in number, but it will not be necessary to consider them separately, inasmuch as the principal assignments relate to the following questions, namely: (1.) Is the act under which this suit is brought a valid one? (2.) Is the judgment set up in the first defense a bar to this proceeding ? (3.) In the trial to the jury did the court err in admitting the evidence objected to, or in refusing to charge as requested, or in charging as it did ? (4.) In the trial to the court is there error in any of the rulings complained of? These questions will be considered in the order above stated.
Equally unfounded is the claim that the Act deprives defendants of due process of law. In proceedings under this Act a defendant is at liberty to make any legitimate defense open to him under the laws and practice of this State, as in other cases, and to have the issues tided and determined by ! court or jury, as the case may be, as in other cases; and this 1 is due process of law. It is true that under this Act a defend- ; ant may be compelled either to say that he claims no interest at all in the property, or to state fully just what his claim is ; s but this is no hardship, for if he has no claim he ought to say so, and if he has, it cannot harm him merely to state in his own way what it is. At all events the provision in question is a valid exercise of legislative power.
In the absence of any objections to the validity of the Act in question, other than those already considered, we are brought to the conclusion that the Act is a valid one; and this conclusion is justified by two of the plainest principles of judicial construction. One of them is “ the safe and wholesome rule that where an Act of the legislature admits of two constructions, one valid and the other invalid, courts should adopt
The next question is whether the former judgment is a bar to the present suit. The court below rightly decided that such judgment was, in a certain sense, a judgment upon the merits. In the then existing state of the law and practice' in this State, it put an end to the attempt to obtain a construction of the will by or on behalf of the devisee in a proceeding of that kind; but it did not construe the will, nor did it determine the respective rights of the parties under the will to the land in question, and this last was the real object of the suit. That judgment did not settle the controversy between the parties, but left it where it found it, and settled only this: that such controversy could not be determined in that way and at that time. Upon the facts in that case, as the plaintiffs claimed them to be, it is quite clear that an early settlement of the controversy would greatly benefit them, and could not harm the defendants ,• and it is not clear how, as the law then was, in the absence of agreement, such settlement could be had except through an action at law by the defendants, after the death of Ernest. In other words there was here an apparent wrong and hardship for which there was no plain and adequate remedy; and the Act of 1893 was evidently intended to provide such a remedy. Under this Act the plaintiffs can now get that which was denied them in the two former proceedings, namely a settlement of this controversy; and it is that-which they now seek. Under these circumstances the former judgment is not a bar, because it did not determine this controversy nor- decide anything relating to it, which is sought to be re-litigated'in the present .proceeding.
The evidence objected to, then, was clearly relevant to the fact in issue, because it afforded some ground for an inference as to the truth of that fact. The question remains whether that evidence was admissible as containing admissions of the defendants. The defendants say it was not, unless it appears that they authorized these answers to be made, or at least were aware that they had been made in the respective cases. If this be granted, it does not help the defendants, for we think it does appear that they were aware of these statements made for them and on their behalf; because the answers filed in the two former cases and in this, are not mere technical statements of a formal ground of defense, ordinarily made by counsel without consulting the client, but they are statements of the individual claims and beliefs of the defendants under this will with reference to their individual rights, and they could have been obtained only from the defendants themselves. Besides, it further fairly appears that the defendants in effect adopted the answers in the two former suits, by making them the basis of their claim for the judgments in their favor which they obtained in those suits; and as to the statement of their claims in the present suit, it was their duty under the statute and the order of court to disclaim all interest in the land, or to state truly whatever interest they claimed therein. This duty was performed by their counsel, and the defendants then and now claim to have thereby complied with the order, and to that extent have profited bjr the act of their counsel. Under these circumstances we think it sufficiently appears that all these answers were made by the authorized agents of the defendants acting within the scope of their
' The complaints made with reference to the action of the court in refusing to charge as requested, and in charging as' it did, are in most cases based upon the supposition that unless the defendants had asserted their claims in some way, after the passage of the Act of 1893, the present proceeding could not be maintained against them. This is to confound the existence of their claim with the continuous outward assertion of it, as before explained. The supposition is not correct. All the requests to charge, save one, are based upon this erroneous supposition, and were properly refused. The one excepted request was in substance this: that a mere unexpressed claim on the part of any of the defendants did not constitute a claim under the statute. This claim was in substance sustained in the charge given.
The claimed errors in the charge itself, as set forth in the assignments of error numbered from 13 to 22 inclusive, are all, save the last one, based largely upon the same erroneous supposition, and for that reason are not well taken. The last assignment alleges that the court failed to instruct the jury that the burden of proof rested upon the plaintiffs, and that they must prove their case by a fair preponderance of evidence. If we assume that the record fairly shows’that this was not done, it will not aid the defendants;, for neither party requested a charge upon these points, probably because no question was made about them; and “ a new trial is never granted because the court omitted to give a charge not asked for, provided the instructions actually given were-correct, adapted to the issue, and sufficient for the guidance of the jury in the case before them.” Waters v. Bristol, 26 Conn. 398, 403. We are of opinion that the charge in the case at bar was of the kind above described, and that the fail
Upon the trial- to the court certain rulings were made as hereinbefore stated, and of these the defendants complain. Among other things the court, in effect, held that the Act of 1898 was valid, that the former judgment set up was not a bar, and that the present proceeding could be maintained under the Act in question. For the reasons already given in another part of this opinion, there was no error in so holding.
■ The defendants asked the court to rule that the Act did not go into effect before- the commencement of the present suit. The Act went into effect on the 19th of April, 1893,- and the suit was begun the next day. The court did not err in refusing to hold as requested on this point.
The court permitted the plaintiffs, against the-objection: of the defendants, to read to it from the opinion of this court, referred to in the finding, “ as bearing upon the issues in the case.” One of the-issues was whether the judgment in that case was a bar to this suit, and that depended on the further fact whether the judgment in question had settled the matters in litigation in the present suit-; and to ascertain, this, the court below clearly might have read the opinion for itself, and it was no error to permit the plaintiffs to read it in the manner and for the purpose stated.
Contrary to the claim of the defendants the court held, that the .plaintiff, Samuel A. Miles, had an absolute title in fee to the land in question, subject only to the trust created by the provisions of the deed from Ernest, the other plaintiff. Upon this point it seems sufficient to say that we are of opinion that the court did not err in so-holding. This disposes of the principal errors assigned, and of the case. The others are few and unimportant, and as they are all really disposed of in what has been said with reference to the principal assignments, the specific consideration of them is deemed to be unnecessary.
..There is no error and a new trial is denied.
•In this opinion Fenn and Baldwin, Js,, concurred; Andrews, C, J. and Hamersley, J. dissented.