42 A.2d 656 | Conn. | 1945
The facts out of which this controversy arises were fully stated in our decision when the case was previously before us. Varanelli v. Luddy,
We held that the judgment rendered in the City Court in the action based on the lien was in fact one for its foreclosure; that the error in the judgment file was a clerical one which the City Court should have corrected, but that the judgment file was conclusive evidence of the judgment rendered unless and until it was corrected; that the Superior Court in this action had authority to issue a writ of mandamus to direct the correction to be made; and that the denial of the motion in the City Court to have the judgment file corrected, from which no appeal was taken, was a proper basis for a plea of res adjudicata as regards Mrs. Luddy's right to have the correction made, but that the pleadings in this case, then before the court, were not such that Varanelli could take advantage of that fact. We found error and remanded the case to be proceeded with according to law. Practically, our judgment meant that Mrs. Luddy could not maintain the position that she was entitled to the property as the result of a judgment of foreclosure unless she could secure a correction of the judgment file in the City Court and that to any attempt to secure that correction the denial of her motion in the City Court that it be made would be a defense on the ground of res adjudicata, if properly pleaded.
Of the subsequent proceedings, it is only necessary to refer to the final steps, which culminated in the present appeal. The defendant filed another application for a writ of mandamus directed to securing an order that the judgment file of the case in the City Court be corrected to constitute a judgment in foreclosure, and she attached to the application a request for a rule to show cause why the court should not issue the writ, directed to the former judge of that court, who was in office when the judgment was rendered, and its clerk. No rule to show cause was ordered *116
by the trial court. The only further action taken was a motion by Varanelli to quash the application upon the ground of a recital in it that Mrs. Luddy had made the motion in the City Court for the correction of the judgment file and that it had been denied. In that connection we note that Mrs. Luddy now makes a claim not presented on the former appeal: that Varanelli, by his motion that the judgment be opened and the law day extended, waived the defect in the judgment file. Other considerations aside, as that motion was made before Mrs. Luddy's motion to correct the judgment file and was a part of the record of the case, it was necessarily involved in the ruling of the trial court denying the correction, and the claim could not be again raised in connection with the present proceeding. Huntley v. Holt,
Most of the difficulties presented in this case have arisen out of the failure to follow proper procedure in presenting the issues to the court for determination. The present appeal illustrates that fact. Probably the shortest way to reach an end to this litigation is to restate the procedure in mandamus as outlined in our decisions. State ex rel. Standard Oil Co. v. New Britain,
The procedure in the case before us failed completely to follow the proper course. There was no need to issue a rule to show cause on the application for the writ. As no alternative writ issued, there was nothing to which to direct the motion to quash. Moreover, as the motion to quash is the equivalent of a demurrer, the ruling granting it was not a final judgment from which an appeal could be taken. Martin v. Sherwood,
The appeal is dismissed.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.