Town of Canaan v. Greenwoods Turnpike Co.

1 Conn. 1
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 15, 1814
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 1 Conn. 1 (Town of Canaan v. Greenwoods Turnpike Co.) 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
Town of Canaan v. Greenwoods Turnpike Co., 1 Conn. 1 (Colo. 1814).

Opinion

Trumbull, J.

[After stating the case.] The decision of this case depends on the construction of our own statutes respecting bridges and turnpike roads.

The general statute respecting bridges enacts, That the inhabitants of the several towns in this state shall make, build, keep and maintain in good and sufficient repair, all the needful highways and bridges within their respective townships ; unless it belongs to any particular person or persons to maintain such bridge in any particular case.” Tit. 29. s. 1. There can be no doubt but these bridges come within the purview of this act, and that it is the duty of the inhabitants of the town of Canaan to build and maintain them, unless they can throw the burden on some other person according to the proviso.

Nor can any doubt arise as to the sufficiency of the complaint. By the same statute, when the inhabitants of any town shall neglect or refuse to repair any bridge, across a [6]*6river in a public highway within the bounds of such town, whereby the public travel is obstructed or incommoded, on complaint thereof to the county court by any person or persons, said court is empowered and directed to enquire and adjudicate upon the same. Should the whole that is stated relative to the former applications, judgments and orders, be rejected as surplusage, sufficient allegations would remain in the complaint to warrant the court in sustaining it, and proceeding to final hearing and adjudication.

The first question which arises in this case, is, whether the decisions of the county court, in 1806 and 1808, are conclusive between the parties, and thereby the respondents are in law estopped to deny, that it is the duty of the town of Canaan to maintain and repair said bridges.

On both the former complaints, the same point was in issue as in the present, viz. whether it is the duty of the town of Canaan to maintain and keep these bridges in repair ; in both, the court adjudged that the duty by law is fixed upon the town ; both judgments are in force and unreversed ; and the parties in all the cases are the same.

It is agreed, that a judgment of court which settles a right or interest, title or duty, is conclusive between the same parties, so long as it remains unreversed and in force on the record; unless it can be shown, that since the passing of the judgment, the right or duty of the parties has been altered and varied by some subsequent transaction or occurrence. To cite, authorities as to this point, however easy, is unnecessary.

But it has been urged, that in this kind of process, the complainant is not properly a party; that the right of entering the complaint is given to all persons, whether they have any interest in the decision of the question, or not ; and that a corporation, or incorporated company, cannot be a common informer.

I agree, that this turnpike company cannot be admitted to prosecute merely as a common informer, and that they have no right to complain of the insufficiency of bridges on any other road than their own. But they have a direct interest in the support of those bridges ; it is on the ground of their interest only, that they have a right to sustain their complaint; and on account of that interest, they are as much [7]*7a party in this kind of process, as if contending in an action at law, or a petition in chancery. But I shall by no means concede, that these adjudications are not conclusive on the respondents, as to their duty to maintain these bridges, and decisive against them, whenever the same question arises in any court, whether they are litigating with the same parties or others. Their duty has become res adjudicata, and cannot again be called in question.

A judgment, decree, sentence or order, passed by a court of competent jurisdiction, which transfers, creates or changes a title, or any interest in estate real or personal, or which settles and determines a contested right, or which fixes a duty on one of the parties litigant, is not only final as to the parties themselves and all claiming by or under them, but furnishes conclusive evidence to all mankind, that the right, interest or duty belongs to the party to whom the court adjudged it. It is admissible evidence in favour of any person, who may be interested to prove the existence of such right or duty as a fact. A record imports absolute verity, and is conclusive as to every point directly decided, and every material fact expressly found. No evidence can be admitted to impugn or contradict it, so long as it remains in force and unreversed.

A title to real estate by judgment in a court of law, or transfer by decree of chancery, is as valid against all mankind, as a title by deed, will or descent. A recovery of damages in trover vests the property of the articles converted in the defendant. Adams v. Broughton, 2 Stra. 1078.

Indeed, a recovery in value in any personal action, as book-debt, assumpsit, trespass, &c. has the same effect in transferring the property.

So a title to land may be acquired by estoppel on record. Trevian v. Lawrence & al. 1 Salk. 276. “A man may be estopped by verdict on record; as in trespass, if the defendant prescribes for common, and the plaintiff traverses the prescription, the defendant may say that in a former action by the plaintiff against the defendant the same prescription was found against the plaintiff.” Com. Dig. tit. Estoppel, A.

Every matter of estoppel may be given in evidence, and when so given, if the jury find contrary thereto, the verdict [8]*8is bad. 7 Bac. Abr. tit. Verdict, U. Iseham v. Morrice, Cro. Car. 110.

Where the estoppel is of such a nature interest in, or works upon the estate of the land, the court and jury, as well as the parties, are bound by it ; the jury cannot find a verdict against it; it runs with the land into whose hands soever the land comes; and an ejectment is maintainable on the mere estoppel. Trevian v. Lawrence, 2 Ld. Raym. 1051. S. C. 1 Salk. 276. S. C. 3 Salk. 151. S. C. 6 Mod. 256. Holman v. Hore, 3 Salk. 152.

The sentence of a court of admiralty in a case of prize is conclusive on all mankind as to all matters expressly found and points directly decided in it [Doug. 554.]—not (as is sometimes alleged) on the ground that all men are actually parties in the trial, which is a technical fiction and impossible in fact, but because the decree of that court operates in rem, and according to the established law of nations, effects a transfer of the property ; and because no other court can re-examine the truth of the facts it expressly finds, or reverse its decrees. So the decrees chancery, and of the exchequer court, are equally conclusive when given in rem. Stewart v. Warner, 1 Day’s Ca. 142.

So also the decree of a court of probate is conclusive on all persons concerned, whether they are actually parties to the decree or not. Goodrich v. Thompson, 4 Day’s Ca. 221.

So is the sentence of the spiritual court in a cause within its jurisdiction.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Conn. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-canaan-v-greenwoods-turnpike-co-conn-1814.