Sessa v. Barney

12 Conn. Super. Ct. 187, 12 Conn. Supp. 187, 1943 Conn. Super. LEXIS 80
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedSeptember 2, 1943
DocketFile 58988
StatusPublished

This text of 12 Conn. Super. Ct. 187 (Sessa v. Barney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sessa v. Barney, 12 Conn. Super. Ct. 187, 12 Conn. Supp. 187, 1943 Conn. Super. LEXIS 80 (Colo. Ct. App. 1943).

Opinion

McEVOY, J.

In this action the plaintiff sets out, in the substituted complaint, that he is the owner of certain lands which are described in the first paragraph of the substituted complaint. As a continuation of the first paragraph the plain' tiff sets out what he claims to be a dividing line between his property and that of the defendants.

He also sets out in paragraph 2 of the substituted complaint that the defendants claim estates or interest in the land or to have a right of way, and that these claims are adverse to the title of the plaintiff.

The plaintiff asks that the court hear the several claims and determine the rights of the parties and the true location of the boundary lines between them and that judgment be rendered, determining the claims and disputes and quieting the title to these premises.

The defendants have filed an answer and, in the first para' graph of it, they allege no knowledge or information as to the plaintiff’s claims respecting his ownership of the land -or his claimed boundary line.

In the answer, paragraph 2 of the substituted complaint, which alleges that the defendants claim estates or interest in the land adverse to the plaintiff, is admitted. In the substituted answer of the defendants they allege, by way of special defense, in the first paragraph of the special defense, that they claim a right of way over and across the property of the plaintiff described in paragraph 1 of the substituted complaint. This right of way is described with reasonable accuracy. It is further claimed that they and their predecessors in title have used and enjoyed this right of way for all purposes and they have set out the characteristics of that claim by way of prescription and adverse possession.

In their second special defense, the defendants set .out their claim as to what they say is the true division line between their land and the claimed land of the plaintiff.

In their third special defense, the defendants set up a specific claim respecting their land, based upon prescription, *189 and, again, the claimed boundary line between the lands of these litigants is definitely described and set up, both upon the theory of prescription and upon the theory of adverse possession.

In their fourth special defense these defendants set up that all the matters in question are res judicata and they claim that the matter has been definitely and finally adjudicated in a previous action between these parties and respecting the game subject matter, heard in the Court of Common Pleas in and for New Haven County, in which judgment is claimed to have been rendered in favor of the defendants on the 14th day of June, 1939.

The pleadings show, and upon the trial it was admitted, that the parties in this action and in the case in the Court of Common Pleas, No. 29263, were and are identical.

Taking up the claim of res judicata:

As to this issue the plaintiff says that the matter is not res judicata because, in the case in the Court of Common Pleas, No. 29263, while there was a judgment for the defendant, it was simply “for the defendants on the issues”, and that no decree was entered quieting the title.

The plaintiff further sets out, in his brief, that “all that judgment [in the Court of Common Pleas] determined was that the defendants were not liable-for damages.”

The plaintiff further says that “there can be no res judicata of the present issues because neither the boundary nor any right of way was found, nor was essential to the decision.”

Taking up these elements in their detail:

The descriptions of the land of the plaintiff in the complaint in this action and in the action in the Court of Common Pleas, in which judgment was rendered on June 14, 1939, are, for all practical purposes, identical descriptions. There are a few words, more or less, in which there is a slight deviation, but the intended, and pleaded, description is the same in each action.

For all practical purposes the relief sought by the plaintiff in the former action and in the present action is the same.

*190 In so far as the land is concerned, the parties, are really in dispute as to two matters: (1) the boundary or dividing line between the two parties; (2) whether or not the defendants have a right of way over the plaintiff’s land.

In the plaintiff’s complaint in the present action, the general description of the plaintiff’s general boundaries, as claimed, and of the claimed dividing line or boundary line between the two properties is the same.

The defendants have likewise set up, in both actions, the description which they claim is the correct description of their land and of the true division line, as claimed, between the land of .these parties. In the amendment to the defendant’s answer, filed in the former action on June 13, 1939, the defendants set out a description of the boundaries of. their land, as claimed by them, and a precise description of the course and extent of what the defendants then claimed in that action was the true division line between the land of the parties.

That description is found in paragraph 3 of the amendment to the answer filed June 13, 1939, which I have marked as paper No. 12 in that action.

The description of the claimed division line filed in that amended answer in the former action is, for all practical purposes, substantially the same as the description of the claimed true division line set out by the defendants in the instant action, as appears in paragraph 1 of the second special defense, filed by the defendants in this action on December 17, 1942.

In their special defense in the former action, filed February 20, 1939, in the second defense to the second count of the plaintiff’s complaint, the defendants alleged that they were entitled to the use of a right 'of way over the land of the plaintiff, and the location, extent and boundaries of the claimed right of way are specially set out in paragraphs 1 and '2, and the resulting claim of prescription is set .out in paragraph 3 of the second defense.

The extent, location and dimension of that claimed right of way is, for all practical purposes, of the same description .as that set out by way of special defense filed by the defendants on December 18, 1942, in the instant action.

It would appear that one of the plaintiff’s claims respecting *191 the plea of res judicata is that the issues were merely “found for the defendants” in the former action, and that no afirma' tive action was prayed by the defendants and that, therefore, there was no settling of the disputes by that judgment.

In Spencer vs. Mack, 112 Conn. 17, at page 21, it appeared that, in that action, no affirmative action was prayed by the defendant, but that the “court entered a judgment finding all the issues for the defendant Mack.” From that judgment no appeal was taken.

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Related

Ruocco v. Logiocco
134 A. 73 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1926)
Spencer v. Mack
151 A. 309 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1930)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
12 Conn. Super. Ct. 187, 12 Conn. Supp. 187, 1943 Conn. Super. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sessa-v-barney-connsuperct-1943.