This suit was brought for the benefit of Anthony Carroll of New Haven. The facts are these: Joseph R. Warren was, on the 2d of December, 1890, chosen a constable of the town of New Haven, and the defendant had given a bond to the town for the faithful discharge by Warren of his duties as such constable during the year for which he was then elected. Warren was re-elected a constable in subsequent years, and gave another bond on which the defendant was not a surety. In 1893 the said Carroll recovered a judgment in the Superior Court for New Haven county against the said Warren, for neglect by him of his duty as a constable in an action which Carroll had had against one Brady. In the said action by Carroll against Brady, constable Warren had served the writ and had also served the execution. Upon the trial of the present case the plaintiff offered the files and records of the Superior Court in the said action of Carroll against Warren, and claimed that the same was conclusive of his right to recover in this case. The court admitted the same in evidence, but ruled that it was not conclusive; also that upon all the facts in the case, including said judgment, said Warren had not been unfaithful, and overruled the claims of the plaintiff and rendered judgment for the defendant. In the finding of facts, and also in the memorandum of decision, the trial judge mentions other evidence in this case besides the said judgment; what such other evidence was, does not appear. If the ruling of the court that-said judgment was not conclusive, as claimed by the plaintiff, was correct, then there was no error; otherwise there is error.
We do not find it necessary to discuss the point made by the counsel for the plaintiff, that a judgment fairly obtained *400against one for whom another has given an indemnity, is evidence, and usually conclusive, in a suit on the indemnity. Ch. J. Marshall, in Clark’s Exrs. v. Carrington, 7 Cranch, 308, 322; Drummond v. Prestman, 12 Wheat. 515, 517; Levick v. Norton, 51 Conn. 461; Bassett v. McKenna, 52 id. 437; Welch v. McKane, 55 id. 25; Willey v. Paulk, 6 id. 74; De Forest v. Strong, 8 id. 514. Even if this is so, in a suit on an indemnity it must of course he shown that the defendantgave the indemnity, that the judgment was fairly obtained, and that it was rendered for a matter to which the indemnity applied; and if this is not done the judgment is not conclusive. The complaint in the action of Carroll v. Warren contained two counts. The first one clearly charged a neglect by constable Warren in the service of the writ in the case against Brady. For that neglect, if proved, the defendant in this case had given a bond of indemnity. The second one charged a neglect by said Warren which might have been in the service of the execution in that ease against Brady; and if so, it was a neglect for which the present defendant liad not given a bond of indemnity. There was a general judgment in that case; and whether it was rendered for the neglect charged in the first count, or for the one charged in the second count, does not appear by the judgment itself. Evidently that judgment was not conclusive against the defendant, because it was ambiguous, and did not show clearly that the defendant was liable. That ambiguity might have been removed by intrinsic evidence. Supples v. Cannon, 44 Conn. 424, and note. Extrinsic evidence was offered on the trial, but as it failed to remove that ambiguity so as to satisfy the court that such former judgment was rendered upon a matter to which the bond given by the defendant applied, there is nothing' in the record to show that there is any error.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.