Fuller v. Town of Hampton

5 Conn. 416
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 15, 1824
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 5 Conn. 416 (Fuller v. Town of Hampton) 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
Fuller v. Town of Hampton, 5 Conn. 416 (Colo. 1824).

Opinion

Hosmer, Ch. J.

I shall confine my opinion in this case to the question, whether the complaint of the town of Hampton is sufficient.

The right of an action is given to the plaintiffs below, by the statute providing for the support of bastard children ; and the suit is brought upon the statute. There is no remedy at common law for the town of Hampton ; and if there were, it would be unavailable in the present action. They must bring themselves within the statutory remedy, and aver every fact, which the law has made a prerequisite to their recovery. One indispensible fact is the neglect of the mother of a bastard child to bring forward her suit for its maintenance. “ The town interested in the support of a bastard child, when sufficient security shall not be offered to indemnify such town against all charge and expense for the support of such child, and the mother neglects to bring forward her suit for maintenance, may institute a suit against the person accused of begetting such bastard child." Stat. 92, tit. 8. s. 2. The neglect of the mother to bring forward her suit, is a sine-qua-non of the town’s right to bring forward a suit. This condition precedent is not, that, the mother has not prosecuted her action to final judgment, but that she has not brought it forward at all. If a suit is depending in her favour, there is no reason for sustaining an action in behalf of the town ; because in the mother’s suit, the recovery is, not only co-extensive with her claim, but that the town be indemnified.

From a very early period to the present time, it has been, and is, a maxim of construction, that every thing shall be taken [423]*423most strongly against the party pleading, and every body is presumed to make the most of his own case. Co. Litt. 303. 1 Chitt. Plead 241. 1 Wms. Saund, 259. n. 8. From this it follows irresistibly, that the plaintiff in his declaration cap only have credit for facts expressly averred, or such as result, by necessary inference. Upon this principle, it has been adjudged, where tenant in tail levies a fine with proclamations, he ought to allege expressly, that it was a fine with proclamations, otherwise it will be intended to be a fine only at common law. Stowel v. Lord Zouch, Plowd. 361. b. Moor 220.

In the case before us, the plaintiffs below averred in their declaration, that “ the said Clarissa Neff, the mother of said child, has, at all times, neglected and omitted to bring forward, in her own name, and prosecute to final judgment, her suit.”. This allegation is not aided or affected, by the other averments in the plaintiffs’ declaration, or by any implication arising from them, and therefore must be construed by itself ; nor is it aided, by the finding of the court. A verdict cures no omission in the declaration, unless the matter omitted was a circumstance necessary to some of the facts charged. Nothing is to be presumed after verdict, but what is expressly stated in the declaration, or what is necessarily implied from those facts which arts stated. Buxendin v. Sharp, 2 Salk. 662. Rushton v. Aspinall, Doug. 679. Spieres v. Parker, 1 Term Rep. 141. The case, then, so far as the declaration of the plaintiffs is concerned, depends exclusively on the proper answer to this question, viz. whether an averment that Clarissa Neff had neglected and omitted “ to bring forward, in her own name, and prosecute to final judgment, her suit,” is an allegation, that she had neglected and omitted to bring forward her suit? Certainly not. She might have instituted her action, and the suit be depending before the court, and yet the averment be literally true. The most rigid certainty is not required in declarations; but certainty to a certain intent in general, is indispensible. In degree, it supposes certainty to a common intent, and means “ what, upon a fair and reasonable construction, may be called certain, without recurring to possible facts, which do not appear ; (1 Chitt. Plead. 237.) and in connexion with the rule, that the declaration is to be construed most strongly against the party pleading, it inhibits a construction beyond the plain intendment of the words used. But, on this subject, refined criticism is unnecessary. The allegation of the plaintiffs below proves, not with the lowest degree Of certainty, that Clarissa Neff had [424]*424not brought her suit, and that it was not depending. It does evince, that she had not obtained final judgment, but not that she had not attempted, and was not attempting, by suit actually instituted, to obtain it. I should gladly seize on any legal presumption to sustain the finding of the court ; but there is not the least ground to presume any thing beyond the averment. The court could not enquire, whether a suit was depending, and stop here ; because this was not denied, nor the contrary averred.

It was very ingeniously, suggested, that the court might expunge the word and, in the recited sentence, and substitute or ; but this unfounded assertion there was no attempt to support ; and it was well that no such effort was made.

I am clear, beyond the slightest doubt, that the declaration of the plaintiffs below is insufficient ; and that in the judgment of the county court there is manifest error.

Peters, J.

The case before us, is a writ of error, brought to reverse a judgment of the superior court affirming an order of the county court, in a prosecution for indemnity against the maintenance of a bastard. The record presents a multitude of points for consideration ; but the counsel for the plaintiff in error have wisely reduced them to four.

1. That the complaint is insufficient.
2. That it was improperly amended.
3. That improper testimony was admitted.
4. That the order of the county court is informal.

1. The complaint is said to be insufficient, because it does not aver explicitly, that the mother had neglected to bring forward her suit for maintenance. This certainly is a material averment, and the foundation of the complainants’ right to interfere. The allegation in the complaint is, “ that the mother of said child has, at all times, neglected and omitted to bring forward, in her own name, and prosecute to final judgment, her suit for the maintenance of said child.” The objections to this averment savour more of verbal criticism than of law or logick. Read with the eyes of common sense (generally the safest medium,) it presents but a single object, viz. That this woman has either never commenced, or has abandoned her suit. To bring forward a suit, is to commence it ; and a suit is not commenced until process is served Jencks v. Phelps, 4 Conn. Rep. 149. Had Clarissa destroyed her process as soon as it was served, the averment would have been literally true, and the right [425]*425of the town to prosecute perfect. But if this averment is imperfect, it is cured by verdict. The fact intended to be averred is found by the court. The general rule is, that a verdict will aid a title defectively set out, but not a defective title, 1 Swift’s Dig. 777. Crouther v Oldfield, 1 Salk. 365.

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Bluebook (online)
5 Conn. 416, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fuller-v-town-of-hampton-conn-1824.