29 Conn. App. 378 | Conn. App. Ct. | 1992
This appeal arises out of a case that had not been concluded before the trial judge died. A successor judge then issued a decision. Because we conclude that the method by which the successor judge reached his decision was not proper, we reverse the judgment of the trial court and remand the case for further proceedings.
This case involves a request to compel arbitration. The plaintiff claimed that he was a resident in his father’s household and therefore had standing to compel arbitration on the uninsured motorist portion of an insurance policy held by his father.
“The court finds that in the months preceding November 27,1990 and particularly June 8,1986, the plaintiff by his own testimony lived at the residence of friends, at the residence of a girlfriend, in tents when taking excursions on a motorcycle, and also on occasion, in the basement of his parents’ home.
“It was also the testimony of the plaintiff that any living accommodations afforded the plaintiff by his father [were] temporary.
“The court concludes that the plaintiff’s residence was not at the home of his parents.
James D. O’Connor, Judge
“The above written Memorandum of Decision was typed from the decision of Judge O’Connor made in script prior to his death but not reduced to the usual typewritten form.
“Based on the decision of Judge O’Connor that John D. Stevens was not a resident of his father’s household, he therefore, does not have standing under the father’s insurance policy to demand arbitration under that policy.
“The application for arbitration is denied.
/§/_
Arnold W. Aronson, Judge”
On November 27, 1991, the plaintiff filed a motion to set aside the judgment and for a new trial. In that motion, the plaintiff argued, inter alia, that Judge O’Connor’s handwritten decision “is not a proper basis for the Court’s ruling on the Application to Proceed With Arbitration . . . [because] there is no way of determining that this was a final decision [of Judge O’Connor] in that [he] did not cause the decision to be typed, signed, and filed with the Clerk of the Court.” On December 23,1991, after hearing argument on the
The plaintiff argues that Judge O’Connor’s handwritten decision, which was neither signed nor filed, was not a proper basis for the rendition of judgment by Judge Aronson. We agree.
It is abundantly clear that Judge O’Connor never rendered judgment in this case. “A judgment is in fact rendered in a cause tried to the court when the trial judge officially announces his decision orally in open court, or, out of court, signifies orally or in a writing filed with the clerk in his official capacity the decision pronounced by him.” Bogaert v. Zoning Board of Appeals, 162 Conn. 532, 535, 294 A.2d 573 (1972). Where a memorandum of decision is the judgment of the court, “[t]he judgment ... is not rendered when the judge arrives at his decision in the privacy of his chambers” but when the paper is handed to the clerk. Id., 536. Consequently, the handwritten decision by Judge O’Connor, which was neither signed by him nor filed with the clerk, could not be given the force or effect of a judgment of the court.
Judge Aronson, as the successor judge in this case, had the power to complete the proceedings commenced before Judge O’Connor. General Statutes § 51-183f provides in relevant part that “if any judge of the superior court is retired because of a disability, dies or resigns during the pendency of any proceeding before him, any other judge of that court, upon application, shall have power to proceed therewith as if the subject matter had been originally brought before him.” Because § 51-183f authorizes the successor judge to proceed in the matter as if it had been originally brought before the successor judge, it is incumbent on the successor judge to exercise independent judgment in completing the proceedings. In this case, it was Judge Aronson’s responsibility to find the facts and apply the law to those facts. Rather than finding the facts himself, Judge Aronson relied on the inchoate findings articulated in Judge O’Connor’s draft decision. Nowhere is it indicated that Judge Aronson made his own findings of fact. Just as a successor judge, “if the case comes before him regularly and he becomes convinced that the view of the law previously applied by his coordinate predecessor was clearly erroneous and would work a manifest injustice if followed . . . may apply his own judgment”; Breen v. Phelps, 186 Conn. 86, 100, 439 A.2d 1066 (1982); a successor judge must
Having determined that the judgment of the trial court must be reversed, we must now address the appropriate scope of the remand in this case. The plaintiff urges us to remand this case for a new trial. We do not believe, however, that a new trial is required under the circumstances of this case.
Our appellate courts have not had occasion to consider the proper procedure under General Statutes § 51-183Í to be followed in a trial to the court. To order a new trial here because of the death of Judge O’Con-nor would be tantamount to declaring a mistrial due to his death because he had not completed the trial of this case. This result, we believe, would be contrary to the provisions of General Statutes § 51-183f, which authorizes any other judge, in the event a judge dies during the pendency of a proceeding, to continue with the case as if the matter had been originally brought before the successor judge. The plain language of § 51-183Í, therefore, authorizes further proceedings before another judge where the original trial judge is unable to complete proceedings due to death, disability or resignation.
In conducting these further proceedings, however, the trial court must be extremely cautious in deciding issues in a case in which it has not heard the evidence.
The guidance we receive from the requirements of rule 63 in determining how our courts should proceed under § 51-183Í allows us to formulate the proper procedure to assure the expeditious resolution of this case, submitted for ultimate decision over two years ago, while, at the same time, ensuring that, pursuant to the mandates of due process, “[t]he one who decides must hear.” Morgan v. United States, 298 U.S. 468, 481, 56 S. Ct. 906, 80 L. Ed. 1288 (1936). Accordingly, we hold
The judgment is reversed and the case is remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Although the plaintiff claimed that this issue was one of coverage and therefore was itself arbitrable; see Gaudet v. Safeco Ins. Co., 219 Conn. 391, 593 A.2d 1362 (1991); he consented to a hearing in Superior Court to resolve this threshold issue.
The plaintiff raises five claims on appeal, one of which was abandoned at oral argument before this court. Because we conclude that the plaintiff’s first argument is dispositive of this appeal, we confine our decision to a discussion of this issue alone.
In this regard, we note that, in a remarkably similar case, the Supreme Court of New Hampshire aptly observed long ago: “[I]t cannot be found that he did what he did not do. Report of an oral statement of the trial judge as to the finding he proposed to make would be evidence of the same character as the written memoranda left in this case; but it would hardly be contended that a post mortem judgment could be rendered upon the statement of a trier of fact as to what he intended to find.” Labonte v. Lacasse, 78 N.H. 489, 490, 102 A. 540 (1917).
Of course, this concern is not present where the parties have stipulated to a decision by the successor judge based on a review of the evidence before the original trial judge. See Nahas v. Nahas, 25 Conn. App. 595, 597 n.1, 595 A.2d 926 (1991).