Cousins v. Hooper

224 A.2d 836, 1966 Me. LEXIS 218
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedDecember 16, 1966
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 224 A.2d 836 (Cousins v. Hooper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cousins v. Hooper, 224 A.2d 836, 1966 Me. LEXIS 218 (Me. 1966).

Opinion

DUFRESNE, Justice.

The defendant, Gilbert H. Hooper, was arrested upon a justice-of-the-peace warrant issued on plaintiff’s accusation and examination in bastardy proceedings under R.S.19S4, c. 166, §§ 23 and 24, now 19 M.R.S.A. §§ 251 and 252. He gave bond with sureties conditioned for his appearance at the next term of the Superior Court in and for the County of Hancock to be held on the second Tuesday of September, 1963, and for his abiding the order of the court thereon as ordered by the justice of the peace. R.S.1954, c. 166, § 25, now 19 M.R. S.A. § 253. The bastard child was born on August 8, 1963 and the plaintiff’s declaration was filed in the Superior Court on September 5, 1963. The docket entries reveal that the case came to a climax on September 20, 1964, when the Clerk of the Superior Court recorded the following:

“Sept. 20, 1964: Pathologic Report filed.
Sept. 20, 1964: Respondent surrendered before Court and sureties discharged.
Sept. 20, 1964: Order by [Presiding Justice] signed on 9/24/64, filed.”

The latter entry had reference to the filiation order in which the facts of the plaintiff’s declaration were stated to have been admitted “by default by agreement” and in which the presiding Justice adjudged the defendant as the father of plaintiff’s child, charged him with the maintenance of *838 the child with the assistance of the mother, ordered him to pay future weekly support of $10.00, also the costs of suit, delivery and medical expenses, past support and attorney’s fees. The presiding Justice in said filiation decree further ordered the defendant to give a bond in the penal sum of $1,500.00 with sufficient sureties approved by the court or by the Clerk of said court, in term time or in vacation, to the plaintiff, conditioned for the faithful performance of the foregoing order, also to give a bond in the penal sum of $500.00 with sufficient sureties so approved, to the town of Blue Hill in said County of Hancock, conditioned for the maintenance of said child and in default of furnishing said bonds, to be committed to the County Jail in Ellsworth in said County, until said bonds are furnished or he be legally discharged by due course of law.

On May 28, 1965, the plaintiff filed her motion to vacate the docket entry of September 20, 1964: “Respondent surrendered before Court and sureties discharged.” The reasons given for the expunction were as follows: “The facts of the case do not warrant such an entry and in fact show that on said September 20, 1964, the Respondent was not in the Superior Court at Ellsworth, in and for the County of Hancock, and further that the sureties mentioned in said docket entry were not in said Court.” Service of the motion was made upon Harvard Blaisdell, as attorney for the defendant, Gilbert H. Hooper, by mail. The same Justice of the Superior Court who had signed the previous filiation decree and presumably had authorized the docket entry evidencing the surrender of the principal and the discharge of the sureties granted the plaintiff’s motion to strike and under date of July 7, 1965, ordered the Clerk to vacate the docket entries relating thereto. It is conceded by the parties that the court ordered the deletions without re- ■ ceiving any evidence surrounding the circumstances of the alleged surrender. The record is silent as to the' reasons for the -correction. The defendant appeals.

R.S.1954, c. 166, § 26, now 19 M.R:S.A. § 254, provides for the surrender of the accused or principal by his bondsmen or sureties in manner as follows:

“If at such next or any subsequent term, the complainant is not delivered of her child, or is unable to attend court, or shows other good reason, the cause may be continued. The bond shall remain in force until final judgment, unless the sureties of the accused surrender him in court at any time before final judgment, which they may do, and thereupon they shall be discharged. He shall be committed until a new bond is given.” [Emphasis supplied.]

The record of surrender which the plaintiff successfully had the court expunge was intended undoubtedly to discharge the defendant’s sureties from liability on their bond given in preliminary proceedings to guarantee defendant’s appearance in court for trial and to assure his performance of the order of the court therein should the respondent be adjudged the father of the bastard child. It is further conceded that the plaintiff and defendant were represented by attorneys at the time of the entry of surrender on record, but their respective attorneys were not the same as now represent them in these proceedings. The court below was not given the benefit of the original attorneys’ version of the circumstances under which the docket entry of surrender was made, as no evidence was presented at the hearing to vacate, unless it be argued that the court relied on its own version of the recollected facts.

But if the presiding Justice decided the motion to vacate solely on his recollection of the facts, [but this does not appear of record] then we are left with no eviden-tiary record to test the propriety of the decision below. Whether the. defendant could have ascertained as a matter of right the facts upon which the court relied and the manner in which it reached its conclusions of law in directing the vacation of the docket entries by requesting the court *839 within 5 days after notice of the decision to find the facts specially and state separately its conclusions of law thereon under M.R. C.P. 52, we need not decide. Even though the rule says that findings of fact and conclusions of law are unnecessary on decisions of motions under Rules 12 or 56 or any other motion except as provided in Rule 41(b), it might be that under the peculiar circumstances of this case, such a request for findings may be proper to address to the sound discretion of the court, in order that the rights of the parties on appeal might be protected.

The defendant however maintains that the presiding Justice had no legal power to correct the docket entry, on the grounds that the bastardy action had come to a final conclusion by the entry of the filiation order and thereafter the parties were out of court and not subject to revision of their rights by correction of the record.

The decree of filiation in the instant case adjudicated the paternity of the child and provided all the incidental relief statutorily available to the mother of the child, such as the payment of all expenses incurred in the past and the obligation for future support and for furnishing bonds to secure the court’s order and the child’s support. It was a full bastardy decree in the usual form. It constituted the final judgment of the court in the bastardy action pending between the plaintiff and the defendant. Goding v. Beckwith, 116 Me. 396, 102 A. 105 (1917); Brett v. Murphy, 80 Me. 358, 14 A. 934 (1888); Corson v. Dunlap, 80 Me. 354, 14 A. 933 (1888); Doyen v. Leavitt, 76 Me. 247 (1884);

The plaintiff argues that the defendant was not actually committed to jail for failure to give bond as ordered in the filiation decree and that, so she claims, divests the court judgment of finality. Not so. The enforcement of the judgment is no part thereof.

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Bluebook (online)
224 A.2d 836, 1966 Me. LEXIS 218, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cousins-v-hooper-me-1966.