66 A.2d 593 | Conn. | 1949
The plaintiff replevied certain personal property from the named defendant, hereinafter called the defendant. He alleged ownership and right to immediate possession. The defendant filed a denial and, in a counterclaim, alleged ownership and right to immediate possession. She claimed a return of the goods and damages. Judgment was for the defendant on the complaint and counterclaim. The plaintiff has *519
appealed. To prevail he must rely on the strength of his title rather than on the weakness of the defendant's and must prove a right to immediate possession. M. Itzkowitz Sons, Inc. v. Santorelli,
The case presents essentially a factual question except as to certain rulings on evidence. It was necessary to print substantially all of the very extensive evidence to support the claim that the finding should be corrected, but it would serve no useful purpose to consider the attacks upon it in any detail. We have made the few corrections to which the plaintiff is entitled.
Plaintiff and defendant met in 1939 and lived together at the plaintiff's request in various places in and around New York until he went overseas as a major in the armed forces in January, 1943. They were in love with each other and intended to be married as soon as the defendant's divorce decree became final. This did not occur until just after the plaintiff left the country and the proposed marriage never took place. Each of the parties subsequently married.
In 1939 the defendant, who had been an interior decorator, owned a large amount of furniture, antiques and bric-a-brac. A part of this was in her house, a part in storage and a part on consignment in an antique shop. Eventually that part of these goods which is the subject of this suit was used to furnish a house in Stamford owned by the plaintiff and occupied by him *520 and defendant at the time of their separation. He admitted that every item originally belonged to the defendant and claimed each by purchase or gift from her. The defendant, on the contrary, claimed the goods were hers. The basic question was one of credibility. The trial court heard testimony which covers about 250 pages of the printed record mainly concerned with this question and concluded that the defendant did not sell or make a gift of any of the items to the plaintiff or his representatives. The title was in the defendant.
The statute makes "a right to. . . immediate possession" one of the conditions of replevin. General Statutes, Rev. 1930, 5942 (Rev. 1949, 8251). When the parties occupied the Stamford house, engaged to marry, the furniture was in their joint possession. When the defendant left the house and married another person, the situation was radically changed. The basis of any right of joint possession was destroyed and the plaintiff's right of possession no longer existed, regardless of the situs of the furniture. The defendant as its owner then became entitled to its immediate possession. D'Addario v. Abbott,
The plaintiff contends that the defendant is estopped by her conduct from claiming title and right to possession and seeks to have many paragraphs of his draft finding added to the finding to enable him to raise this issue. In general this contention is based on the fact that he gave the defendant considerable sums of money and on his claim that he rebuilt the Stamford house with the use of her furniture specifically in mind. He is seeking to recover furniture in the possession of the defendant. A sufficient answer to this claim is that equitable estoppel "is available only for protection, and cannot be used as a weapon of assault." Dickerson v. Colgrove,
Another purpose sought in claiming additions from the draft finding is apparently to prove that some of the money given the defendant by the plaintiff was in payment for her furniture. This was denied by the defendant, was a simple question of fact and was decided against the plaintiff. As stated above, the relationship of these parties was not on a business basis and the testimony with reference to many of the numerous checks was indefinite. The reading of the testimony necessitated by the attacks on the finding shows that the great bulk of the large expenditures was for living expenses, the bills for which were customarily paid by the defendant. None of the additions sought to which the plaintiff is entitled would advantage him.
The plaintiff claimed that his cross-examination of the defendant was unduly restricted. None of the evidence excluded would have contradicted any testimony given by the defendant, nor in itself would have shown conduct on her part indicating a lack of veracity. The claim of the plaintiff was that the questions were preliminary to an examination into conduct of the defendant since her arrival in this country in 1927 which would have shown that she had been doing to others what the plaintiff claimed she did to him. Past conduct, to be the proper subject-matter for cross-examination to affect credibility, must be such as would indicate a lack of veracity; State v. Schutte,
A procedural question remains for discussion. After the plaintiff left for overseas the defendant continued to occupy the Stamford house. The plaintiff appointed his sister, Elizabeth Robinson, a practicing lawyer in New York, his attorney in fact. The latter and the defendant lived in the Stamford house together in 1943 but friction developed between them and the defendant planned to move to New York. She could not find an apartment. When she returned to the Stamford house in September, the locks had been changed and she was locked out, denied admittance and threatened with arrest by Miss Robinson. She demanded her furniture and was refused. On March 15, 1944, she replevied the goods in question from Miss Robinson. Before they had been unloaded from the trucks in which they had been carried away, Miss Robinson, acting for her brother, replevied the same goods from the defendant and put them back in the house, where they remain.
The two actions, Atterbury v. Robinson and Robinson v. Atterbury, were assigned for trial together. The trial court ruled, in effect, that all of the material issues *523
could best be settled by trying the suit of Robinson v. Atterbury first. This ruling was within its discretion. The claim of the plaintiff that this subjected him to an undue burden of proof is without merit. He brought the replevin, alleged title and right to possession and had the burden of proving both. D'Addario v. Abbott,
As stated at the outset, the real question is one of fact, based primarily on credibility, and the conclusion of the trial court may not be disturbed.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.