Dunton v. Mead

6 Conn. 418
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 15, 1827
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 6 Conn. 418 (Dunton v. Mead) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dunton v. Mead, 6 Conn. 418 (Colo. 1827).

Opinion

Daggett, J.

That the order to erase or strike the cause from the docket, was erroneous, is very clear, even if it had not been regularly appealed from the county court; because, by the 63rd section of the act for the regulation of civil actions, it is expressly enacted, that “ whenever an appeal is taken from the county to the superior court, in an action not appealable, the superior court shall remand it to the county court, from whence it came by appeal,” &c. This was, then, the correct course, unless it was not regularly before the county court; for in such case, it would be idle to remand it, as that court could only strike it from its docket. But that it was regularly before the county court, by appeal from the justice of the peace, is manifest, because the 23 rd section of the statute above referred to, provides, that in all cases brought before a justice of the peace, wherein the sum demanded exceeds seven dollars, except on notes or bonds vouched by two witnesses, given for money only, an appeal shall be allowed to the next county court. This case was not embraced by the exception, and more than seven dollars, viz., thirty-five, was demanded. It was, then, regularly appealed to the county court; and if irregularly appealed to the superior court, it is a case within the 63rd section before cited, and should have been remanded to the county court, and not stricken from the docket. But

2. The cause was regularly before the superior court by appeal; and of course, that court had jurisdiction over it.The 62nd section of the act mentioned, declares, that in every action brought to, and tried by the county court, wherein the title of land is drawn in question and determined, if either party shall be aggrieved, by the sentence or judgment of such court, an appeal shall be allowed to the next superior court in the same county. That this was brought to the county court, so as to be embraced by this section, though it came there by appeal from a justice of the peace, was decided by this court, in June, 1826, at Litchfield, in the case of Clark v. Beach,

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Related

Whitman v. Town of Pownal
19 Vt. 223 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1847)
Burnham v. Hotchkiss
14 Conn. 311 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1841)
Scovill v. Seeley
14 Conn. 238 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1841)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
6 Conn. 418, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dunton-v-mead-conn-1827.