Zaleski v. Clark

45 Conn. 397
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedDecember 15, 1877
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 45 Conn. 397 (Zaleski v. Clark) 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
Zaleski v. Clark, 45 Conn. 397 (Colo. 1877).

Opinion

Loomis, J.

When this, case came before this court at a former term it came up on a special finding of the facts by the Court of Common Pleas, with a judgment rendered upon those facts in favor of the plaintiff; the defendant moving for a new trial on the ground that the court erred in applying the law to the facts so found; and this court advised that a new trial be granted on that ground.

When the case came up for re-trial in the Court of Common Pleas, the plaintiff proceeded to introduce his evidence, when the defendant’s counsel objected to the evidence on the ground that the facts sought to be proved by it were the same facts on which evidence had been introduced on the former trial, and that the finding then made by the court was an adjudication upon these facts which was conclusive upon the parties. The court overruled the objection and allowed the plaintiff to proceed with his evidence in the same manner as if there had been no former trial and finding of facts.

The defendant contends that this ruling of the court was erroneous, and having had judgment rendered against him, now asks for a new trial.

It is obvious that the precise objection made by the defendant to the introduction of the plaintiff’s evidence, namely, that the former finding was a conclusive adjudication between the [401]*401parties, was not well taken, as, if that finding was set aside and the whole case opened by the order granting the new trial, there was no longer any finding to operate as an adjudication ; while if the finding was not set aside and the whole case opened by that order, the plaintiff had no right whatever to proceed to a new trial of the whole case, and the objection should have been taken to his attempt so to proceed and not to the evidence which he offered when the trial was commenced. In other words, the question was wholly one of practice, not of evidence; the evidence offered being pertinent and admissible if the plaintiff had, as a matter of practice, the right under the order granting a new trial, to a full re-trial of his case; and no evidence whatever being admissible if he was not, as a matter of practice, entitled to such re-trial. The objection that ought to have been taken was thus a preliminary one and was necessarily a fundamental one in the case.

As however no objection has been made by the counsel for the plaintiff to the form in which the objection was taken in the court below, we will consider it as sufficient to raise the question whether the plaintiff, upon the granting of the new trial to the defendant, was entitled to a full new trial of all the facts as if no finding of facts had previously been made, or whether that finding was to stand and the order for a new trial was to extend only so far back as to cover the error upon which the new trial was granted.

The term “new trial” has been a familiar one to the profession in this state since our early colonial history, and had acquired a settled meaning in England before our ancestors came to this country. It is believed that it has always been used in the sense of a complete re-trial of a cause, except in certain instances of which we will speak hereafter. These new trials were always re-trials of the facts of a case, and the term “new trial” is defined by Bouvier in his Daw Dictionary, as “ a re-examination of an issue in fact.” Previous to the year 1762 they were granted only by the General Assembly, upon petition of the aggrieved party. In that year a statute was passed giving to the Superior and County Courts [402]*402power to grant new trials in cases tried before them, “ for mispleading, discovery of new evidence, or other reasonable cause,” and from that date to the year 1807 new trials were obtained only on petitions to these courts, like those at present brought in such cases. The new trials thus granted, so far as we are able to learn, were new trials of the entire issue of fact made in the case, precisely as if there had been no former trial. Thus Hosmer, C. J., in Lockwood v. Jones, 7 Conn., 436, speaking of the effect of the granting of a petition for anew trial, says: — “ The original suit is entered in the docket, and the first and only cause of action, on the first and only writ, is tried again at a subsequent day. By the operation of the new trial, [meaning evidently the order granting the new trial,] the cause, in contemplation of law, is precisely in the same condition as if no judgment had ever been rendered.” In 1807, after the re-organization of the courts by the act of the previous year, and the establishment upon a new basis of the Supreme Court of Errors, which was now to consist of the nine judges of the Superior Court, the judges, under a statute authorizing them to establish rules of practice, adopted a rulo that bills of exceptions should not thereafter be admitted, but that motions for new trials should be admitted in all cases in their place, to be filed within forty-eight hours after verdict and during the session of the court; and that the several circuit courts should, at their discretion, reserve such motions for new trials for the opinion of the nine judges. This is the first that we hear of motions for new trials as distinguished .from petitions. See remark of Hosmer, C. J., to that effect, in Magill v. Lyman, 6 Conn., 63. These motions were intended only for cases of error in law, either in the rulings or charge of the court; the jury having been held, up to that time, to be the judges of the law as well as of the facts in • all cases, and the judges having no power to correct their errors except by sending them out to a re-consideration of the case, which could be done but twice. In connection with the rules of practice before mentioned, the judges adopted another, to the effect that the judges should, in charging the jury, state to them the several points of law arising in the [403]*403case, “ and declare to them the opinion of the court thereon.” Thus the law of the case was separated from the fact, and any error in the rulings or charge of the court could be presented for review by a motion for a new trial. From that time, while petitions for new trials for causes other than errors of law have still prevailed as before, errors of law have been constantly carried up by these motions. The difference between them has become more marked by the practice of reserving all motions for new trials for the advice of the Supreme Court of Errors, while petitions for new trials are still, as then, heard and.decided by the court that originally tried the case. These reservations were, by the rule of 1807, left to the dis-: cretion of the judges holding the court in which the motion was filed, but the act of 1830 mado it imperative on the judges to reserve all such motions. It should be observed, too, that these motions were allowed only in the Superior Court, the remedy in the County Courts being by appeal or writ of error to the Superior Court. Neither the Superior nor the County Courts were regarded as having power, upon a petition for a new trial, to consider errors of law, and it has recently been expressly decided that such questions can not be considered on such petitions. Andersen v. The State, 43 Conn., 514. In all the cases, however, in which new trials have been granted upon motions, it is believed that the new trial has been, like that granted upon petitions, a re-trial of the issue of fact, in the former ■ trial of which the error intervened.

We remarked before, that the term “ new trial ” had always been regarded by the profession as meaning a complete re-trial of a cause, except in certain instances of which we were to speak.

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Bluebook (online)
45 Conn. 397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zaleski-v-clark-conn-1877.