Wetmore v. Wrynn

349 A.2d 857, 32 Conn. Super. Ct. 249, 32 Conn. Supp. 249, 1974 Conn. Super. LEXIS 325
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedMarch 12, 1974
DocketFILE Nos. 134204, 134704
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 349 A.2d 857 (Wetmore v. Wrynn) 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
Wetmore v. Wrynn, 349 A.2d 857, 32 Conn. Super. Ct. 249, 32 Conn. Supp. 249, 1974 Conn. Super. LEXIS 325 (Colo. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

Hull, J.

These cases together raise a difficult issue not previously decided in Connecticut and will be decided as one with the same decision to apply in each case.

The first ease, hereinafter referred to as the collateral attack case, is an action in three counts seeking to set aside the will of the defendant executor’s decedent, Patrick McCullough, to set aside certain transfers made by him prior to his death, and to effect a transfer from the beneficiary under the will to the plaintiffs of any property which passed from the decedent to the beneficiary. A plea in abatement was filed on April 17, 1973, claiming that the action was in the nature of a probate appeal but did not constitute a timely and proper appeal from probate because of certain defects in taking the appeal.

*251 The second ease, hereinafter referred to as the probate appeal, is a probate appeal in the usual form. A plea in abatement was filed in that case on May 23, 1973, claiming abatement because the appeal was not taken within the thirty day time limit and because of the prior pending case between the same parties for the same cause (the collateral attack case).

In each case the plaintiffs filed an answer and special defense to the plea in abatement. The answers admitted the factual allegations but denied the assertions as to legal conclusions. The plaintiffs also filed an amended special defense in each case dated November 2, 1973, in which they alleged in identical language that “if the appeal is defective as to the untimeliness wherein it was appealed to this court, such defect is the result of a mistaken understanding between the parties with regard to the stipulation of the parties in the Probate Court at New Haven on Feb. 5, 1973.”

The defendants denied the allegations of those special defenses, and within ten days the plaintiffs claimed the pleas in abatement for a trial by jury. The defendants then moved to strike the pleas in abatement from the jury trial list, thus giving rise to the issue at hand: whether a party is entitled to a jury trial on the factual issues raised in a plea in abatement.

Both parties briefed and argued contrary views as to whether, assuming a jury trial is available ab initio, the issues involved here are ones that under other statutes and rules would properly be entitled to be tried by a jury. In the view this court takes of the matter, it is unnecessary to consider that question.

The plaintiffs in their argument and briefs treat both cases as probate appeals. The court considers *252 the first case, the collateral attack case, to be a “civil action” within the meaning of General Statutes § 52-215, and the second case, the probate appeal case, to be a probate appeal under the same statute, but similar considerations apply.

The plaintiffs do not seriously claim that they have a constitutional right, state or federal, to a jury trial but rather rely on a statutory right. The court agrees with the defendants’ arguments and citations contained in their briefs in that regard. No authority is cited or known to this court to base the right on constitutional grounds.

Very eminent authority backs the plaintiffs’ views, however. Judge Zephaniah Swift claims that such a right exists but cites no authority. 1 Swift, Digest, p. 612. An annotation in 170 A.L.R. 383, cases cited therein, and in the Later Case Services, all reflect a split of authority but are of little direct aid because of the different statutes and constitutional history involved in each ease.

The respected Connecticut procedural authority, Professor Edward L. Stephenson, appears to claim the right in 1 Conn. Civ. Proc. (2d Ed.) § 108, p. 446. With all due respect the court does not agree.

A logical reading together of General Statutes § 52-215 1 with Connecticut Practice Book §§ 192 *253 and 194 2 compels a different conclusion. Section 52-215 concerns (1) classes of Oases which shall be docketed as jury eases. It includes (2) appeals from probate involving the validity of a will and (3) civil actions involving such an issue of fact as, prior to January 1, 1880, would not present a question properly cognizable in equity. After (4) an issue of fact is joined, the case may be timely *254 claimed for the jury docket. (5) All issues of fact in any such ease shall he tried by the jury. (Enumeration added for clarity only.)

This court holds that it is the ultimate issue or issues of facts decisive of the merits of the ease that are triable by a jury and not a preliminary jurisdictional question raised by a plea in abatement.

The law on statutory construction in Connecticut from time immemorial is aptly summed up in Dental Commission v. Trio-Fit Plastics, Inc., 159 Conn. 362, 365, wherein the court stated: “When the language used in a statute is clear and unambiguous, its meaning is not subject to modification by construction. State v. Simmons, 155 Conn. 502, 504 . . . ; Hurlbut v. Lemelin, 155 Conn. 68, 73 .... It is not the function of courts to read into clearly expressed legislation provisions which do not find expression in its words; Lenox Realty Co. v. Hackett, 122 Conn. 143, 150 . . . ; nor is it our function to substitute our own ideas of what might be a wise provision in the place of a clear expression of the legislative will. Connelly v. Bridgeport, 104 Conn. 238, 249 .... The statute must be applied as its words direct. Obuchowski v. Dental Commission, 149 Conn. 257, 265 . . . .”

Section 52-215 sets the matrix for the interpretation of the statute in the term “classes of cases.” The “case” is the lawsuit, the cause of action, or the matter as a whole. By no stretch of the imagination or attenuation of language can it be taken to mean parts of cases. Just saying that a plea in abatement is triable by a jury doesn’t make it so. In Webster, Third New International Dictionary, “case” is defined in one of its meanings as “¿ suit or action in law or equity.” Does not common sense dictate that a “case” is not part of a case? Ballentine, Law *255 Dictionary (3d Ed.), defines a “ease” as “a controversy presented according to the regular course of judicial proceedings, so that the judicial power is capable of acting upon it to determine and decide the issues presented by the allegations of the parties. Muskrat v. United States, 219 U.S. 346, 356 . . . .” The same dictionary defining “case or controversy” again cites the Muskrat case to define a case as “a suit instituted according to the regular course of judicial procedure.”

An appeal from probate involving the validity of a will (which is not a civil cause or action; see Slattery v. Woodin, 90 Conn.

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Bluebook (online)
349 A.2d 857, 32 Conn. Super. Ct. 249, 32 Conn. Supp. 249, 1974 Conn. Super. LEXIS 325, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wetmore-v-wrynn-connsuperct-1974.