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Crane v. Loomis

Supreme Court of Connecticut
Apr 10, 1942
128 Conn. 697 (Conn. 1942)

Summary

In Crane, the court rejected the defendant's argument that the failure of the plaintiff to refer to General Statutes § 5084 (predecessor to § 49-15) in challenging the motion to open the judgment constituted a waiver by the plaintiff to the invocation of that statute. It specifically stated that " [i]n the absence of waiver, the reopening of a judgment after [the vesting of title] was erroneous."

Summary of this case from Bank of N.Y. as Tr. v. Hannan

Opinion

After the expiration of the law day the trial court, on defendants' motion alleging fraud, accident and mistake, reopened the judgment of strict foreclosure and fixed a new law day. The facts found by the court, upon which its action was based, were not otherwise shown than by a statement made to the court by defendants' counsel at the hearing, and although they were disputed by the plaintiff, the court did not permit the latter to introduce evidence. Held that the finding, insofar as it contained any fact not admitted by plaintiff's counsel, must be disregarded and did not establish any fact tending to show fraud, accident or mistake, and title became absolute in the plaintiff on the failure of defendants to redeem on or before the law day fixed by the judgment which was reopened. Section 5084 of the General Statutes provides that no judgment of strict foreclosure "shall be opened after the title shall have become absolute in any incumbrancer." In the absence of waiver, the reopening of a judgment after that time is erroneous. Upon the facts in the present case there was no waiver.

Argued March 4, 1942

Decided April 10, 1942.

ACTION for the foreclosure of two mortgages, brought to the Superior Court in Tolland County, where judgment of strict foreclosure was rendered for the plaintiff and after the expiration of the law day, upon motion of the defendants, the court, Foster, J., set aside the judgment solely as to the law day and fixed a new law day, from which the plaintiff appealed. Error and case remanded with direction.

John B. Harvey, for the appellant (plaintiff).

Nathan Aaron, with whom, on the brief, was Samuel H. Aron, for the appellees (defendants).


From the file in this case it appears that an action was brought to foreclose two mortgages upon certain real estate in the town of Mansfield, and that personal service was had on the two defendants. No appearance or answer having been filed, a judgment of strict foreclosure was granted on June 24, 1941, and the law day fixed at August 5, 1941. Before the expiration of the period limited, a motion to open the judgment and extend the law day having been made on behalf of the defendants and a stipulation having been filed by both parties to that effect, the judgment was opened and a supplemental judgment entered fixing the law day as August 15, 1941. Thereafter, and after the expiration of the law day, on August 29, 1941, the defendants, through different counsel, filed a motion that the judgment theretofore entered in the case be vacated and set aside, alleging as grounds of the motion that the defendants had failed to defend the action because of fraud, accident and mistake and that execution of the judgment would be against equity and good conscience, and the defendants prayed that they be permitted to appear and defend. On September 19, 1941, after hearing statements of counsel, the court reopened the judgment of foreclosure again and entered a new judgment fixing a new law day as of September 30, 1941. From this judgment the plaintiff has appealed.

The trial court has made a finding of facts. It has found that the defendants failed to redeem the mortgaged premises upon the date decreed in the judgment and the title became absolute in the plaintiff on August 16, 1941. This paragraph of the finding is not attacked and must stand. The findings of the trial court which are attacked by the plaintiff are these: Although a substantial equity was shown at the hearing on June 24, 1941, when the law day was fixed as August 5, 1941, a very short law day was granted; between August 5th and 15th, the defendants were successful in obtaining a loan from a third party to pay the judgment debt; the plaintiff was fully aware of the negotiations to obtain this loan, but due to the fact that the lender was on vacation the funds were not actually in the hands of the defendants until August 16th; on August 14th counsel for the defendants, who had recently been retained in place of counsel originally appearing in the case, notified the plaintiff's attorney by telephone that all arrangements were completed to redeem the mortgage on August 16th and the plaintiffs attorney at that time answered, "All right, two days more"; relying on this assurance the defendants' counsel did not make a motion for the extension of the law day beyond August 15th; and, on August 16th, the defendants tendered to the plaintiff's attorney the full amount of the debt with interest and costs and have been able and ready to pay the judgment debt and costs ever since. From the record of the proceedings taken at the hearing on September 19th, it appears that these facts, aside from the answer of the plaintiff's attorney to the telephone communication from the defendants' attorney, quoted above, were not otherwise shown than by a statement made to the court by the counsel then acting for the defendants. These facts were not agreed to by the plaintiff's attorney, who asked the court for permission to introduce evidence on the case. The trial court refused to hear any evidence but ordered the judgment reopened and entered judgment fixing a new law day as of September 30, 1941. Inasmuch as the plaintiff's counsel was not permitted by the trial court to offer evidence in contradiction of the claims made by counsel for the defendants, the finding, in so far as it contained any fact not admitted by the plaintiff's counsel, must be disregarded and we cannot consider it as establishing any fact tending to show fraud, accident or mistake in connection with the entry of the original judgment of foreclosure. If such facts were established they might be ground for an independent action in equity for relief. Hoey v. Investors' Mortgage Guaranty Co., 118 Conn. 226, 230, 171 A. 438. However, upon the failure to redeem on or before the law day of August 15, 1941, title to the premises became absolute in the plaintiff. City Lumber Co. of Bridgeport, Inc. v. Murphy, 120 Conn. 16, 25, 179 A. 339.

Section 5084 of the General Statutes provides that no judgment of strict foreclosure "shall be opened after the title shall have become absolute in any incumbrancer." In the absence of waiver, the reopening of a judgment after that time was erroneous. Ferguson v. Sabo, 115 Conn. 619, 623, 162 A. 844; Meriden Savings Bank v. Sujdak, 124 Conn. 604, 610, 1 A.2d 134. The defendants contend that, because it does not appear from the report of the hearing on September 19th, contained in the record, that plaintiff's counsel specifically referred to 5084, any objection based upon that statute was waived. That the trial court understood that this claim was in issue appears from the finding that it was one of the claims made by the plaintiff at the hearing. The defendants rely also upon the answer of the plaintiff's attorney to the telephone communication from their attorney, quoted above, as establishing a waiver; but the trial court has not found that this answer, at most equivocal in meaning, did constitute a waiver. In Ferguson v. Sabo, supra, relied upon by the defendants, we held that where a judgment of strict foreclosure had been reopened upon motion of the defendant and the plaintiff thereafter had come in and filed a substitute complaint and sought a judgment upon it, the plaintiff had thereby waived his right to claim the benefit of the statute, but we said: "Had the plaintiff stood upon his original complaint and sought merely to recover upon that and to defeat the claim of title Sabos upon the counterclaim, he could not be held to have waived his right upon this appeal to take advantage of any error in the ruling upon the motion to open the original judgment."


Summaries of

Crane v. Loomis

Supreme Court of Connecticut
Apr 10, 1942
128 Conn. 697 (Conn. 1942)

In Crane, the court rejected the defendant's argument that the failure of the plaintiff to refer to General Statutes § 5084 (predecessor to § 49-15) in challenging the motion to open the judgment constituted a waiver by the plaintiff to the invocation of that statute. It specifically stated that " [i]n the absence of waiver, the reopening of a judgment after [the vesting of title] was erroneous."

Summary of this case from Bank of N.Y. as Tr. v. Hannan
Case details for

Crane v. Loomis

Case Details

Full title:CLARENCE G. CRANE v. FREDERICK D. LOOMIS ET AL

Court:Supreme Court of Connecticut

Date published: Apr 10, 1942

Citations

128 Conn. 697 (Conn. 1942)
25 A.2d 650

Citing Cases

VanEck v. Porriello (In re VanEck)

Id. (citing East Hartford v. Miller, 27 Conn. Sup. 503, 506 (Conn. Super. 1968); Crane v. Loomis, 128 Conn.…

Bank of N.Y. as Tr. v. Hannan

It has also been intimated that a judgment may be opened where there is evidence of a waiver of the…