Cacavallo v. D'Elia

The complaint alleges that on April 13th, 1911, the plaintiff executed and delivered to the defendant a note for $3,826, secured by mortgage; that on May 1st, 1911, the plaintiff paid $2,000 to the defendant upon this indebtedness, and received a receipt therefor; that between May 1st, 1911, and January 1st, 1912, the plaintiff rented land to the defendant, and performed labor and services for the defendant, of the value of $1,957.50, and that by such payments, rentals, labor and services, the mortgage has been fully paid; but that the defendant, although requested by the plaintiff, has refused to execute a quitclaim deed.

The defendant denies these payments of $1,957.50, and pleads specially that the plaintiff and defendant were in the years 1911 and 1912 in partnership, that upon its dissolution an accounting of all matters between them was had and that it was agreed that the indebtedness of the plaintiff and her husband to the defendant was $3,000, of which sum the said mortgage is a part.

Upon the trial the court found that none of the items comprising the payments making up the balance of the indebtedness upon the mortgage subsequent to the payment of the $2,000, had been paid.

That finding determined the only issue involved in the trial. So long as any of the mortgage indebtedness remained, the plaintiff was not entitled to have the mortgage discharged.

The plaintiff says in her brief: "The principal questions involved are two in number: first, whether after the giving of a mortgage, an amount found due on an *Page 118 oral accounting and involving items having nothing whatever to do with the mortgage debt, can by an oral agreement be brought within the mortgage security." The trial judge expressly states that he has not ruled upon this question, and that the only ruling made by him was that none of the claims of the plaintiff, as to the payment of the balance due upon the mortgage, could be sustained. In view of this ruling the question did not arise in the case and ought not to have been made a part of the appeal.

The second question which the plaintiff characterizes as of principal importance is, that, a judgment having been rendered upon the equitable issues for the defendant, another judge "while the case is still to the jury, and without further evidence," could not render a final judgment upon the legal issue involved.

It would be a sufficient answer to this claim to point out that the final judgment recites that "the court having heard the parties finds the legal issues in favor of the defendant." Nothing in the record contradicts this finding, and since the appeal does not question its accuracy, we are bound by it.

Aside from this, the legal damage claimed is that which flows from the failure to execute and deliver a quitclaim of the mortgage after the same had been paid. Since the finding is that the mortgage has not been paid, there exists no basis for a claim for legal damages, and there was no occasion for the court to grant a further hearing; a judgment upon the claim for legal damage follows this finding as a matter of course, and that, too, without a further hearing.

The only other ruling complained of is the order that the equitable issues "be tried by the court and tried first." The case presented upon these issues was one which, prior to January 1st, 1880, was properly cognizable in equity, and an order that the equitable issue *Page 119 be tried to the court, was one within the discretion of the court, as was, too, the order that these issues be tried first. General Statutes, §§ 5752-5755.

There is no error.

In this opinion the other judges concurred.