Notargiovanni v. Martucci

135 A. 290, 105 Conn. 386, 1926 Conn. LEXIS 41
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedDecember 16, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 135 A. 290 (Notargiovanni v. Martucci) 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
Notargiovanni v. Martucci, 135 A. 290, 105 Conn. 386, 1926 Conn. LEXIS 41 (Colo. 1926).

Opinion

Hinman, J.

The allegations of the complaint which are material to the demurrers were: that at the appearance of the defendant Joseph Martucci before a justice of the peace, on or about April 7th, 1924, upon a request for continuance, by order of the justice Martucci became bound with sureties, the defendants Salvatore and Louise Martucci, in the amount of $2,000, to Fannie Notargiovanni, the complainant, conditioned that he would appear and answer to the *388 charges in the complaint, before the justice, “at all times designated for the trial of said charges”; that upon a subsequent requested continuance defendants executed a stipulation that the bond be extended so that the sureties and principal “will continue liability on same in every manner for any continuance of said case and until case is finally disposed of”; that on May 12th, 1924, the defendant having failed to appear in person and his attorney having withdrawn after denial of his motion for a trial by jury of issues of fact on a plea in abatement, the justice of the peace to whom the case had been transferred heard the complaint, found probable cause, and ordered that the defendant become bound in a recognizance in the sum of $2,000 to appear before the Court of Common Pleas “then and there to answer the charges ... in said complaint and [abide] by the decision of said court thereon, and stand committed until sentence be complied with”; that the papers were then turned over to the Court of Common Pleas and after various proceedings the case was tried to the court and final judgment entered for the plaintiff, and that the defendant pay the judgment or in default thereof be committed to jail. The defendant was represented by counsel, but did not himself appear. An execution and mittimus were thereafter issued and returned unsatisfied.

The sustained grounds of demurrer to the complaint were, in substance, that the bond and stipulation in question did not extend to and secure appearance by the defendant Joseph Martucci before the Court of Common Pleas; that because it is not alleged that the bond was called or a mittimus issued by the justice, after finding probable cause and binding over, the complaint failed to set forth facts which constitute a forfeiture of the bond; and that the rights of the plaintiff under the bond given were waived by failure *389 to procure such forfeiture and by thereafter proceeding to trial and judgment in the Court of Common Pleas. The sufficiency of the complaint in these respects depends largely upon the construction and legal effect of the bond as therein alleged.

Section 6006 of the General Statutes provides that if the justice court finds probable cause it shall order the accused person “to become bound to the complainant with surety to appear before” the specified higher court “and abide the order of said court, and on his failure so to do shall commit him to jail.” While the statute expressly provides only for a bond on binding over, the necessity and propriety of taking a bond or recognizance for the future attendance of the accused at adjourned sessions of the justice court have long been recognized, and such a bond held valid, as well as one given when the accused is bound over to a higher court. New Haven v. Rogers, 32 Conn. 220, 223.

A bond such as is here alleged to have been given undoubtedly imposed an obligation that Joseph Martucci should at all proper times when called upon so appear before the justice court as to place himself in its power and be ready to comply with its orders. The question is whether that is the extent of the scope and effect of the bond or whether it and the stipulation entered into with reference thereto are also effective as constituting the prescribed bond to appear before and abide the order of the Court of Common Pleas.

There is, as above stated, no express statutory requirement of separate bonds or recognizances before and after binding over. Neither is there such inherent inconsistency of nature and purposes between such bonds as to preclude combining the obligations of both in one instrument or extending, by stipulation, the obligation of an appearance bond so as to cover not *390 only the proceedings in the justice court but also those upon binding over.

A justice of the peace has no final jurisdiction in bastardy cases; the sole issue before him is the finding of probable cause or lack of it. Naugatuck v. Smith, 53 Conn. 523, 525, 3 Atl. 550. Hence if the stipulation that liability on the bond should continue “until case is finally disposed of” be regarded as having reference to a final judgment, such a stipulation would be unnecessary for any purpose pertaining to proceedings before the justice, but would be consistent with and, on its face, not unadapted to an extension of the obligation of subjection to the power of the court up to and including final judgment in the higher court.

The failure of the justice of the peace to require a new bond on binding over, the coincidence between the amount ($2,000) of the bond previously given and that specified on binding over, the omission of the plaintiff to move for a mittimus for failure to give a new bond, and the appearance and contest which, it appears, the accused made by counsel in the proceedings in the Court of Common Pleas, may not be without significance as to the intent and understanding of the parties. These facts are, at least, to be taken into account in considering whether, as the trial court held, the requisite intent of the plaintiff to waive her rights under the bond, by failing to procure a mittimus upon defendant’s failure to give a new bond oh binding over, is a necessary inference from the facts alleged. Therefore the allegations of the complaint are such as not, necessarily, to exclude a conclusion that the bond sued upon was intended to and did extend to and secure appearance before and compliance with the orders of the Court of Common Pleas. If this be so, no steps, by mittimus or otherwise, before the justice court, would be necessary-to create a forfeiture, the issue and *391 return of the Common Pleas mittimus being sufficient to that end, and the course of the plaintiff in proceeding before the latter court could work no estoppel, nor waiver of her rights under the bond. The demurrers should have been overruled.

After demurrers sustained the plaintiff filed a substituted complaint which the defendants moved to strike from the files on the ground that the allegations thereof were identical with those of the original complaint, and this motion was granted. Inspection of the substituted complaint discloses, however, at least two material departures from the original. It alleges that the obligation created by the bond and stipulation was intended by all of the parties to cover appearance at all hearings until final disposition of the case before the Court of Common Pleas. This allegation is clearly directed and adapted to the construction to be given the words “until case is finally disposed of”—as to whether, as claimed by the plaintiff, final judgment in the Court of Common Pleas was contemplated, or, as the defendants contended, was synonymous with “final determination of the cause” before the justice of the peace. New Haven v. Rogers, supra, p. 225.

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Bluebook (online)
135 A. 290, 105 Conn. 386, 1926 Conn. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/notargiovanni-v-martucci-conn-1926.