175 A. 582 | Conn. | 1934
This is a writ of error brought to this court from a judgment of the Superior Court. The record of the original action attached to the writ discloses the following situation: By writ dated March 10th, 1933, the State brought an action against the plaintiff in error, as trustee of the estate of Francis A. Coughlin. In the complaint it was alleged that since 1914 Coughlin had been an inmate of the Connecticut State Hospital; that he had been and was without funds or property with which to pay for his support there; that from 1914 to April 30th, 1921, William Anderson had made contributions for his support; that thereafter the city of Bridgeport made contributions for his support as a pauper, at the rate provided by the statute; that since 1914 the State has been put to expense *219 for his support; that since 1921 Anderson has died, leaving a will in which he bequeathed $3500 to the plaintiff in error in trust for Coughlin during his life, with directions to her to expend or appropriate in her discretion any or all of the income or principal for his comfortable support and if he recovered his health to pay over to him any part of the fund which had not been expended, with a gift at his death of any unexpended remainder to certain named legatees; and that the plaintiff in error, although she was required by law to provide support for Coughlin and had agreed to pay the State for his support at the hospital, had failed to do so. The writ and complaint were personally served upon the plaintiff in error but she made default of appearance. Thereafter the State moved for judgment and the trial court gave judgment for it to recover $2811.17 with costs taxed at $68.94. In the writ of error the errors assigned, apart from one too general in form to require attention, are to the effect that, under Anderson's will, the fund in the hands of the plaintiff in error could not legally be taken to repay the State for the expense of supporting Coughlin at the hospital and that the trial court erred in not remitting the parties for relief to the Court of Probate. The State has filed a plea in abatement upon several grounds and to the plea the plaintiff in error has demurred.
One ground stated in the plea is that it does not appear that the State has consented to become a party to the action and without that consent the action may not be prosecuted against it. The rule undoubtedly is that the State cannot be made a party defendant to an action without its consent; but if the State itself invokes the jurisdiction of the court to secure affirmative relief, it subjects itself to any proper cross demand involved in the subject-matter of the action. State v. *220 Kilburn,
Another ground upon which the plea in abatement rests is that the plaintiff in error, having made default of appearance in the original action, cannot now prosecute this writ. It may be that ordinarily a defendant who suffers a judgment by default is precluded from attacking that judgment by appeal or writ of error. See 3 C. J. 604. In this case, however, we have a close counterpart to Shaw v. Spelke,
The plea states, as another ground of abatement, that execution issued upon the judgment in the original action and it was satisfied, and this allegation the demurrer admits. But a writ of error is not barred for such a reason, any more than is an appeal, to neither of which is a stay of execution a necessary incident.Brewster v. Cowen,
A writ of error to this court presents only claimed errors apparent upon the face of the record. State v.Muolo,
The demurrer to the plea in abatement is sustained and the plea overruled.
In this opinion the other judges concurred, except HINMAN, J., who had serious doubts whether the defendant, having permitted a judgment by default to enter, was not precluded from relief in this proceeding.