Stillman v. Thompson

67 A. 528, 80 Conn. 192, 1907 Conn. LEXIS 29
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 30, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 67 A. 528 (Stillman v. Thompson) 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
Stillman v. Thompson, 67 A. 528, 80 Conn. 192, 1907 Conn. LEXIS 29 (Colo. 1907).

Opinion

Robinson, J.

This case was tried to the jury upon the issues as they appear in the record. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiffs to recover the sum of $1,900. The defendants thereupon moved for a new trial on the ground that the verdict was against the evidence ; the trial judge denied the motion February 19th, 1907, and this denial furnishes the ground of the tenth reason of appeal.

The plaintiffs filed a plea in abatement to the appeal from this denial, on the ground that it was not taken till March 22d, 1907, and not within six .days after entry of *194 judgment upon the verdict. To this plea the appellants demurred, on the ground that they filed a notice of appeal within six days after the entry of judgment upon the verdict, and that the appeal was taken within the time and in the manner prescribed by law.

This demurrer is overruled by us and the plea in abatement accordingly sustained. The provisions of § 805 of the General Statutes limit the time to six days within which to take an appeal from the denial of such a motion, and this express provision cannot be modified or extended without statutory authority. The filing of a notice of appeal within six days is not a compliance with this section; and we would add that no trouble, inconsistency, or uncertainty need result from this view. It is entirely feasible to take an appeal both from a denial of the motion to set aside the verdict, and from the judgment itself, within the shorter of the periods of time limited for such appeals; or, if the appealing party does not care to take this course, he has the other course open to him to take the first appeal within the time limited by the statute for such appeal, and later add to this appeal, by way of amendment, his appeal from the judgment itself. In this way the rights of the appellant can, without serious inconvenience to himself, be abundantly protected. This plea in abatement being held good, it follows that the defendants’ tenth reason of appeal is not properly before this court.

Taking the other reasons of appeal in their order, it will be observed that the first one is based upon the claimed error of the court (Thayer, J.') in overruling the defendants’ demurrer to the entire complaint. Six grounds of demurrer are set up, but it is hardly necessary to pass upon each separately. It is a single demurrer to the whole complaint.

The defendants say, in legal effect, that the plaintiffs have on the face of their complaint set up no sufficient cause of action. In making this claim the defendants apparently overlooked the pleaded facts, to wit, that the plaintiff Mrs. Stillman entered into a contract of leasing *195 ■with the defendants, and that one of the terms of that contract was that during the period of the defendants’ tenancy the defendants should use the premises for the purposes of a bakeiy continuously, and in the manner in which they had theretofore been used, and that the same should not be closed as such bakery ; and further, that the premises owed their principal value to the fact that they could be used, and had long been used, as a bakery, and were well known to the public as a bakery; and that the defendants did not keep this part of their contract, but suspended baking in said premises, and closed the same as a bakery, in consequence of which the premises became incapable of use as a bakery under the statute, * thereby causing the plaintiffs damage.

Here is plainly a cause of action, and the court below did not err in overruling the demurrer.

The next reason of appeal is that the court erred in sustaining the plaintiffs’ demurrer to the defendants’ second defense. This second defense sets up that the premises described in the plaintiffs’ complaint did not comply with the requirements of the statute in regard to premises used for bakeries and bake-shops. The plaintiffs demurred to this as constituting no defense to the action. The court below (Thayer, <7.) sustained this demurrer, on the ground that, admitting the fact to be as stated in this defense, it did not follow that the contract could not be carried out by the defendants without a violation of such statutory requirements.

The court did not err in sustaining this demurrer. The defendants insist that by this ruling of the Superior Court they were denied the right to make in some way the defense that they could not, on account of the condition of the premises, use and keep them open as a bakery. We do not think so. First, they did not set up or disclose the condition itself, but a conclusion arising from an undis *196 closed condition. They should have stated the condition in fact. This they did not do. They had the opportunity, but did not avail themselves of it, to set up in their second defense allegations of fact laying the foundation for the claim that, as between the statutes of the State and the actual condition of the premises, they were powerless to keep their contract without a breach of the law. They did not attempt to do this, either as a defense or in mitigation of damages. This defense discloses no facts making it a legal defense or excuse for not keeping their contract in the respects complained of. For aught that appears on the face of this defense, a slight alteration or repair to the premises would have brought them into compliance with the statute. The Superior Court did not err in sustaining the demurrer to the second defense.

In the third, fourth, fifth, sixth, seventh and ■ eighth reasons of appeal, it is claimed the court erred in rulings upon the admission and rejection of evidence.

The third, fourth and fifth reasons relate'to evidence offered by the plaintiffs, objected to by defendants, and received by the court, touching the capacity, character, and value of the oven in this bakery, as affecting the question of the decreased value of this property, and the damage to the plaintiffs. The defendants’ objections to this class of evidence were that there was no allegation in the complaint under which the capacity of the oven was admissible, or in which was alleged the cost of the expense for installing the oven; and because Gowdy, the man who put it in, was not a party to this suit, and therefore the cost and expense incurred by him was not admissible.

The court properly overruled all these objections. It is quite manifest that the capacity of this oven had somewhat to do with its value; and further, the cost of it and the expense of installation, even though bought and installed originally at the expense of some one else, and made a part of the plaintiffs’ premises by agreement, would furnish some proper test and guide in determining its present value, and furnish some data from which to estimate the *197 decreased value claimed to have been occasioned by the defendants’ breach of this contract.

The sixth ground of appeal is based upon the ruling of the court in rejecting a question put to Gowdy by the defendants’ counsel. This witness was called by the plaintiffs, but defendants’ counsel, desiring to prove by him the unprofitableness of the baking business he formerly conducted on these premises, made a suitable inquiry, to which the witness made answer that the business was profitable.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 A. 528, 80 Conn. 192, 1907 Conn. LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stillman-v-thompson-conn-1907.