Wooley v. Williams

136 A. 583, 105 Conn. 671, 1927 Conn. LEXIS 211
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 5, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 136 A. 583 (Wooley v. Williams) 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
Wooley v. Williams, 136 A. 583, 105 Conn. 671, 1927 Conn. LEXIS 211 (Colo. 1927).

Opinion

Maltbie, J.

This action of replevin was originally made returnable to a justice of the peace. The complaint sought the recovery of a grafanola alleged to be of the value of $210, and also $400 damages. The amount involved was such that a justice court could not adjudicate the issues; General Statutes, § 5555; and, previous to a Public Act passed in 1917, the defect would have been fatal to the action. Fowler v. Bishop, 32 Conn. 199, 206. In that year an Act was passed which provides that any civil action brought to the wrong court may, upon motion, be removed to a court having jurisdiction, either before or after the filing of a plea in abatement; it establishes the procedure by which such a removal is accomplished, including a requirement of notice to the adversary party served as is civil process; and it states that, upon the removal, all attachments and lights growing out of the filing of a lis pendens shall be preserved as of their original dates. General Statutes, § 5606. The word “court” as used in the statute is broad enough to include the court which a justice of the peace holds for the disposal of judicial matters brought before him; Fox v. Hoyt, 12 Conn. 491, 497; Alcorn v. Fellows, 102 Conn. 22, 30, 127 Atl. 911; and the broad remedial purpose of the statute requires that it should be so construed. The effect of the statute in the instant case was to extend the jurisdiction of the justice to whom the writ was made returnable so that he might take cognizance *674 of the action so far as to order its removal to the proper court; and, such removal being accomplished, the action would then be valid from its inception.

The writ was returnable to the justice of the peace on February 9th, 1926, and the record shows that on February 25th, 1926, the plaintiffs made a motion for its removal to the City Court of the City of Meriden, and that on the same day the justice' granted the motion. The statute does, not require that the removal be ordered upon the return of the writ, and it may be made upon a later day, to which the justice has adjourned his court. The order provided that the action be removed to the City Court “upon condition, however, that the plaintiffs shall pay costs of $1, conditioned upon the final outcome of this action.” The statute provides that the order of removal shall be conditioned upon the payment of such costs as would have been taxable, had a plea in abatement been sustained. The meaning of this provision is that the court, in granting a motion for removal, is to direct that the action be removed, provided the plaintiff making the motion shall, within some reasonable time fixed by it, pay to the defendant an amount equivalent to the costs which would have been taxed to him had a plea in abatement filed by him been sustained. The provision as to costs in the order in this case was not in compliance with the statute, but the defect was not one which would of itself destroy the jurisdiction of the City Court to take cognizance of the action. Ives v. Finch, 22 Conn. 101, 106; Orcutt's Appeal, 61 Conn. 378, 383, 24 Atl. 276; Douglass v. Unmack, 77 Conn. 181, 183, 58 Atl. 710.

Upon the entry of the action in the City Court, the defendant appeared personally and filed a plea in abatement and to the jurisdiction, setting forth the defect in the order just noticed and many other claimed *675 defects in the procedure before the justice. The plaintiffs demurred to the plea upon several grounds, one being that it did not pray judgment. The action of the trial court in sustaining the demurrer is fully justified upon this ground, however it might be as to the others alleged. Coughlin v. McElroy, 72 Conn. 444, 448, 44 Atl. 743. The plea out of the way, the City Court had before it a copy of the writ and complaint and of the order of removal, which were sufficient on their face to give to it jurisdiction of the action. It was entitled to assume that the justice had proceeded properly in all respects, including the continuance of the action before him by adjournment to February 25th, 1926, when the order of removal was made. Fort Orange Barbering Co. v. New Haven Hotel Co., 92 Conn. 144, 149, 101 Atl. 505. The justice of the peace having jurisdiction to take cognizance of the action under the statute and to cause its removal to a proper court, the writ-issued to the officer was not void, but gave him authority to take possession of the grafanola described in the complaint.

In the City Court the defendant filed an answer, in certain paragraphs of which he set up the conduct of the officer serving the writ as making void the proceeding. The plaintiffs moved to expunge these paragraphs and the court granted the motion. Thereafter the plaintiffs filed an amended complaint and the defendant filed a new answer. Under such circumstances he cannot now claim error in the court’s ruling upon the motion. Allen v. Chase, 81 Conn. 474, 475, 71 Atl. 367; Lakitsch v. Brand, 99 Conn. 388, 389, 121 Atl. 865.

In his later answer the defendant alleged that, when the officer was serving the writ, the plaintiffs were present in person, and by their servants and agents, and that they, and at their request the officer, seized certain records in addition to the grafanola described *676 in the complaint, and that thereby the plaintiffs and the officer became trespassers ab initio, thus rendering void the process and all subsequent proceedings. The trial court found that one of the plaintiffs, More, an employee, and the officer did go to the defendant’s house and, gaining admittance in his absence by means of a key secured from the landlady, took the grafanola. But, although requested, the court made no finding as to the taking of the records. The defendant asks the addition of a finding as to this matter. All that the evidence discloses is that, in answer to a question, “You and Mister Mulligan (the officer) then went in and got the grafanola?” More answered, “Yes, and the records.” The court should have found that the records were taken by More and the officer at the same time as the grafanola.

The grafanola had been placed in the possession of the defendant by the plaintiff Wooley under a so-called lease by the terms of which the defendant was to malee weekly payments of $2.50, until the sum of $210 had been paid, when the defendant was to receive a bill of sale; in addition to the grafanola, this instrument covered also certain articles stated to be enumerated upon the back of it, but nowhere described in the record; it provided that, upon default being made in any of the payments, Wooley, his servants and agents, might enter any house owned, occupied or controlled' by the defendant where the articles were and remove them; and it further contained an agreement by the defendant that in the event of his failure to make any] of the payments provided he would, on demand, return the articles to Wooley.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
136 A. 583, 105 Conn. 671, 1927 Conn. LEXIS 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wooley-v-williams-conn-1927.