Roy v. Moore

82 A. 233, 85 Conn. 159, 1912 Conn. LEXIS 108
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedFebruary 9, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 82 A. 233 (Roy v. Moore) 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
Roy v. Moore, 82 A. 233, 85 Conn. 159, 1912 Conn. LEXIS 108 (Colo. 1912).

Opinion

Wheeler, J.

One ground of error is alleged to be the refusal of the court to grant to the plaintiffs a jury trial of the questions of fact in issue.

This case was duly placed on the jury docket by the plaintiffs, issues were joined, and the plaintiffs seasonably filed their notice requesting that all the issues of fact therein be tried to the jury. The case was regularly assigned for trial as a jury case, and the trial about to *161 begin, when the defendant moved that the equitable issues be tried to the court before the trial to the jury of the other issues. The motion was granted and the case continued. Amendments to the pleadings were subsequently filed, and after issue was again joined. the plaintiffs again duly gave notice that they desired all the issues of fact tried to the jury. Thereafter, on motion, the court ordered: “Equitable issues to be tried to the court and to be tried first.” After trial had, the court found the equitable issues in favor of the defendant, and adjudged that the plaintiffs are not entitled to an injunction nor to damages.

The parties went to trial upon the issue of the ownership and possession of a strip of land lying on the east side of the Wakefield Boulevard, and being about six hundred feet in length by about twenty feet in width at the northerly end and forty-five feet in width at the southerly end, upon a part of which strip the trespasses complained of were alleged to have been committed. The plaintiffs seek to recover damages for the trespasses, and for an injunction against their further continuance.

The plaintiffs’ constitutional right to a jury trial depended upon whether it existed prior to the adoption of the Constitution. Article First, §21; La Croix v. County Commissioners, 50 Conn. 321, 327.

General Statutes, § 720, as amended by Public Acts of 1905, chapter 56, § 1, providing that at the request of either party “civil actions involving such an issue of fact as, prior to January first, 1880, would not present a question properly cognizable in equity,” shall be entered in the docket as jury cases, was not intended to and did not abridge this right. It was permissible for the plaintiffs to seek both remedies — trespass to secure damages, and injunction to restrain the trespasses— in a single action, and to cause the case to be entered *162 on the jury docket within thirty days after the return day provided the action was a “civil action involving such an issue of fact as, prior to January first, 1880, would not present a question properly cognizable in equity.” Nowsky v. Siedlecki, 83 Conn. 109, 112, 75 Atl. 135.

“Properly cognizable in equity” means capable of being judicially heard and determined in equity. Under this statute, when a single issue of fact is joined after said thirty-day period in a civil action which prior to January 1st, 1880, would not present a question properly cognizable in equity, the case may, within ten days thereafter, be entered as a jury case, upon the request of either party to the clerk. Under General Statutes, § 722, as amended by Public Acts of 1905, chapter 56, § 3, “if more than one issue of fact be joined in a cause upon the docket as a jury case, either party may, and the party placing it upon the docket as a jury case shall, within three weeks after the issues are joined,” file with the clerk a written notice of what issues he desires tried to the jury. Whether or not the plaintiffs were entitled to a jury trial on some or all of the issues of fact in the case, depended upon whether these were properly triable to the jury under § 720, and whether they had seasonably brought themselves within the procedure of the statute.

The issues of fact upon which a jury trial is claimed are those of title, possession, and damages. The controversy is thus confined to a single inquiry, were the plaintiffs, prior to January 1st, 1880, entitled, as of right, to try the issues of title, possession, and damages to the jury?

The issue of damages is controlled by those of title and possession. Ordinarily equity will not try title. It extends its protection to undoubted rights, and leaves doubtful or contested rights to be first adjudicated at *163 law, and, if the emergency warrants it, restrains, the continuance of the trespasses pending the decision.

Injunction is not a form of equitable relief designed to try title. It cannot be made the substitute for an action of trespass or ejectment. The adjudication upion the issue of the trespasses involves the issues of title and possession. When the trespasses complained of work irreparable injury injunction may he; Lawton v. Herrick, 83 Conn. 417, 425, 76 Atl. 986; Gorham v. New Haven, 82 Conn. 153, 156, 157, 72 Atl. 1012; and will he provided the complainant’s title is not in doubt or conflict and he has the actual possession.

Under the modern doctrine of equitable interference to restrain continuing trespasses, equity will act only in a case where the complainant’s title is either admitted or not denied, or is established at law, or has been long enjoyed and where the complainant is in actual possession, or perhaps in cases where irreparable injury will be likely to result from non-interference, which is not this case. When the title and possession are not in dispute, the court having jurisdiction may proceed to final judgment. When the title is in dispute, or doubtful, or has not been long enjoyed, or the possession is not in the complainant, equity will leave the parties to settle the title and possession at law, and, pending such adjudication, will issue a temporary injunction restraining the continuance of the trespasses.

In the case at bar the complaint sets up that the trespasses complained of were committed under a claim of ownership, and the second defense specifically sets up the defendant’s title. Further, the defendant claims to be in possession of the part of the premises where the trespasses are alleged to have been committed, and upon a considerable part of the premises no trespasses are alleged to have been committed. • The plaintiffs’ title and actual possession were both contested, hence the *164 greatest exercise of equitable power by the court in view of the dispute as to title and possession, and the motion of the plaintiffs for a jury trial, of the issues of fact, duly made, would only permit the issuance and continuance of a temporary injunction preserving the status quo pending the adjudication at law of title and possession.

The authorities are numerous and generally support these conclusions. Spelling on Extraordinary Remedies (Yol. 1, 2d Ed. § 367) summarizes clearly and accurately the prevailing view and practice of the present day: “1. Where the bill states facts which show that a threatened trespass if not prevented will result in irreparable damage, or is in its character and tendency destructive to the inheritance, or to that which gives it its chief value, an injunction will be granted notwithstanding a dispute, or even pending litigation as to the title. 2.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 A. 233, 85 Conn. 159, 1912 Conn. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roy-v-moore-conn-1912.