Welbrot v. Levenberg

118 A. 911, 98 Conn. 217, 1922 Conn. LEXIS 22
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedNovember 27, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 118 A. 911 (Welbrot v. Levenberg) 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
Welbrot v. Levenberg, 118 A. 911, 98 Conn. 217, 1922 Conn. LEXIS 22 (Colo. 1922).

Opinion

Burpee,

J. By the pleadings in this action it was admitted that the money contributed by and received from the plaintiffs and the other non-appearing persons whom they assumed to represent, was given by them for the purpose of buying a dwelling-house in New Haven. The principal material issue raised was whether it was the purpose of the contributors that the property to be bought with this money should belong to the United Synagogue Society, and its title held in the name of this society in trust for the use of the person who, from time to time, in succession, might be the Chief Rabbi in New Haven, or should be a personal gift to the Rabbi Juda Levenberg and be his private property with title in his own name. Upon the decision of this issue depended the right of the plaintiffs to any *222 of the equitable relief which they prayed for. The question involved was one of title, which ordinarily equity will not try; nor will it take property out of the possession of one and put it into the possession of another, but will leave the parties to settle their doubtful right first at law. Roy v. Moore, 85 Conn. 159, 82 Atl. 233. Either party to this action, therefore, had the right to a trial of this issue by a jury, before the trial of any equitable issue by the court. General Statutes, §§ 5752, 5753, 5755. Hence the counsel in this case quite properly agreed, and the court consented, to submit these questions of fact to the jury for their determination, before the court should proceed to hearing and render judgment on any equitable issues which the action might present. These questions would be laid before the jury most clearly and determined by them most effectively by means of written interrogatories. Accordingly, the plaintiffs requested the court to submit such interrogatories in forms prepared by them. They complain now that the court did not adopt their forms. But comparison shows that the essential substance of the first, second and fourth of the plaintiffs’ proposed questions was distinctly and intelligibly expressed in those allowed by the court.' The plaintiffs’ proposed third interrogatory would have called on the jury to consider and pass on a matter not pertinent to any issue in the case; for if the contributed money was not given for the purpose stated in the complaint, nor for the purpose set up in the affirmative defense, the jury could not be called on to consider and state upon what other conditions the fund was raised. That matter would be irrelevant and immaterial to the issues to be decided in the case.

The appellants criticize the terms'of the interrogatories allowed, because they submitted the subject to the jury “treating the fund as a whole.” It is true that *223 the money collected was mentioned as “this fund,” and no part of it was distinguished from another. But this money was so described in the complaint, which sets forth that the plaintiffs and others “subscribed to a fund,” that the defendants “accepted said fund,” and “with said fund” bought the premises in question; and in the affirmative defense it is alleged that “the moneys given by any and all parties were donated” for a single purpose. No pretense had been made that the contributions of certain subscribers to this fund were made for one purpose and those of other subscribers for a different purpose, or that this fund was divisible into parts bearing different characteristics and consequences. The fact which an interrogatory submitted to a jury is intended to elicit should be pertinent to some issue framed, and one which may be of material weight in its decision. In the present case, the discretion of the trial court was wisely exercised in allowing the interrogatories to be put to the jury in the forms which it preferred to those proposed in the plaintiffs’ request.

There was no error in denying the plaintiffs’ motion for judgment “non obstante veredicto,” or their motion in arrest of judgment. Contrary to their contention, the answers to the interrogatories were pertinent to a material issue framed by the pleadings in the case, and were decisive of that issue and binding upon the court in its consideration and determination of the other issues raised. These answers made the affirmative defense impregnable, and gave it a controlling position in any further contest between the parties.

The appellants complain because the court, in its charge, did not instruct the jury ‘ ‘ in any way to separate the fund,” but did continually refer to the fund as one sum of money. As we have said, the fund was so described and presented in the pleadings and in the *224 claims of the parties, and neither of the triers of the action was asked to divide it, or would be justified in dividing it, into parts of different kinds. The purpose of each component contribution was to be considered only so . far as it affected the character of the whole fund.

Nor should the court have instructed the jury that if they found that the money contributed was intended for any public charitable use, their verdict should be for the plaintiffs. Their verdict should not be in favor of the plaintiffs unless the plaintiffs had proved the allegations of their complaint, in which a single specific purpose or use was stated. If the jury, wandering outside of the issues raised by the pleadings, should find that any other purpose or use was intended by the donors of this fund, a verdict for the plaintiffs based on that conclusion could not be justified.

The intention of the corporation called the United Synagogue Society, if it had any intention, was not pertinent nor material in this action. The complaint set out that the deed of the premises to the defendant Levenberg was not made by the society or by its authorized agents, and is void. Any purpose this society may have had respecting this fund was of no importance; only the purpose of its donors was in issue. The court.below properly ignored the plaintiffs’ request to charge upon these matters.

We find no error in the conduct of the court respecting its charge.

Turning to the assignments of error which are based • upon rulings on evidence, we recall this language of Justice Gager in State v. Perretta, 93 Conn. 328, 343, 105 Atl. 690: “Although on account of the gravity of the case we have waived any defects in the form of the record in this case, and have endeavored to answer such plausible reasons as might have been given, yet we *225 call special attention to Rule 5 of the Supreme Court of Errors (Practice Book, 1908, p. 266), which requires that ‘when error is claimed in rulings upon evidence of witnesses, upon a trial either to the court or to the jury, the finding should state in each instance the question, the objection, the exception, and the answer, if any.’ ‘Objection’ here means, not merely that there is objection, but what the objection is. Section 116, Rules of Superior Court (Practice Book, 1908, p. 236), provides that ‘whenever an objection to the admission of testimony is made, counsel shall state the ground of the objection succinctly and in such form as he desires it to go upon the record, before any discussion or argument is had thereon.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 A. 911, 98 Conn. 217, 1922 Conn. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/welbrot-v-levenberg-conn-1922.