Judges: Hall, Prentice, Thayer, Roraback, Wheeler
Filed Date: 1/6/1911
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The Superior Court granted the motion to erase the appeal in each case, and the appeals are taken directly from its decision, no judgment-file having been entered of record.
Until there is a final judgment there can be no valid appeal. General Statutes, § 788, as amended by Chap. 112 of the Public Acts of 1905; State v. Vaughan,
If the granting of the motion to erase is not a final judgment, it must follow that the appeal is void, and if so, the court is without jurisdiction and must erase these appeals whenever it ascertains its own want of jurisdiction, quite irrespective of how it obtained this knowledge. Wildman v. Rider,
A final judgment is a determination of the rights of a litigant with respect to his suit. It is any adjudication which finally disposes of a case before a court.
A decision on a demurrer that a pleading is sufficient or insufficient is not necessarily a final judgment: by amendment the cause may continue to trial.
The decision of a motion to dismiss or erase an appeal for want of jurisdiction is a final adjudication: it throws the case out of court. 1 Black on Judgments (Ed. 1891) § 21; Freeman on Judgments (4th Ed.) § 12; 2 Ency. of Pl. Pr. P. 72.
Any order or proceeding which disposes of the cause, and places the parties out of court, is final. Hovey v.Crane, 10 Pick. (Mass.) 440. We have so held on several occasions. O'Brien's Petition,
Appeals lay directly upon the granting of the motions to erase, for these were the judgments of the court.
In practice the appeal has sometimes been taken directly upon the granting of the motion of erasure or dismissal and no formal judgment-file has been placed on record. Wheeler v. New York, N. H. H.R. Co.,
The better practice is to enter of record all judgments or orders of dismissal or erasure. Such a record will be of assistance when the disposition of the case *Page 32 shall become a subsequent matter of judicial investigation. In addition it will preserve among the records of the judgments of the court, where it belongs, this judgment of the court, equal in its conclusiveness to any.
In their appeals the appellants state they are aggrieved by the orders of the commissioners "in so far as the same concern the layout and construction of the railway and tracks of said The Shore Line Electric Railway Company in the highways in said borough and town of Guilford adjacent to your petitioners' property."
Nowhere in the appeals are the specific grounds of the grievance set forth.
The motion to erase in each appeal was based upon the single point, that the duties of the railroad commissioners in acting upon the petitions and appeals of said Railway Company from the local authorities were the exercise of legislative and administrative powers and not judicial; from which no appeal lay to the Superior Court.
This court has repeatedly held that it had no jurisdiction over the action of an administrative body of an administrative character, unless there was involved in such action an illegal exercise of power or of regulation.
A cause cannot be erased unless the want of jurisdiction appears plainly on the face of the record. Wheeler
v. New York, N. H. H.R. Co.,
In a doubtful case the motion should be denied. And where the power in controversy is "so near the border line of judicial power that its definition calls for subtle distinctions and its nature depends to an extent on the purpose and manner of its use," the question of law may be dependent upon further allegations *Page 33
before the test of the question of power can be applied, or it may have to await the trial. Malmo'sAppeal,
Like a demurrer, in such actions as these, the motion to erase admits all well pleaded facts and it contests the right of appeal on any and every ground; but, unlike the demurrer, the decision of it is a final judgment.
No statute required the appellants to state in their appeals to the Superior Court from the railroad commissioners the grounds of their grievance.
General Statutes, §§ 3832 and 3843, require such appeals from the local authorities to so state. It could not have been the intention of the framers of these statutes that the reasons of appeal before the commissioners should stand as the reasons on appeal before the Superior Court, since the appeal is not by the statutes required to contain these, and the cause before the commissioners is tried de novo (Hartford v. HartfordStreet Ry. Co.,
The statute, General Statutes, § 3834, gives the right of appeal to "any party . . . aggrieved by the decision or order of said commissioners," and § 3843 gives the right of appeal from the location by the local authorities to "any owner of land fronting on such highway, aggrieved by the location of said track."
One is aggrieved, in the sense in which this term is used in these statutes, by a judgment or order when his rights of property are injuriously affected. "Any party aggrieved" is he who claims that his rights of property are injuriously affected through the illegal action of the railroad commissioners, and it appears upon the face of the proceedings that this may be so. *Page 34
In Bethel Redding Lime Co. v. New York, N. H. H.R. Co.,
In appeals from the railroad commissioners such as these, the more general practice has been to simply allege, as these appellants have done, that the appellants are aggrieved by the findings and orders of the railroad commissioners. Bethel Redding Lime Co.
v. New York, N. H. H.R. Co.,
In the different classes of appeals, except probate appeals, given to one who is aggrieved, or claims to be aggrieved, we believe the practice generally has been to allege the appellant is aggrieved, or claims to be aggrieved, by the judgment or order appealed from, without stating in detail the grounds of the grievance.
In appeals such as this it is sufficient if an interest of the appellants in the controversy can be ascertained *Page 35 from the express terms of the appeal or its necessary implications; it is unnecessary to state in the appeals the specific acts which constitute the grievance.
Of course an appellant may choose in his appeal to state in full the grounds of his appeal, and where this plainly appears and the want of jurisdiction is clear, a motion to erase or dismiss is the proper remedy.
Ordinarily such a condition will not occur. And where no grounds are stated, only the allegation that the appellant is aggrieved, or where other substantial grounds than those which may be stated apparently exist, the motion to erase or dismiss should not be granted. Under such circumstances the proper practice would require the filing of reasons of appeal, voluntarily or by order of court, and any legal question arising thereon might be tested by a demurrer, or, if the want of jurisdiction then existed, by motion to erase or to dismiss.
When the order of the commissioners appealed from is in any respect unauthorized in law, irregular or informal, or based upon a misconception of the law, or of their powers or duty, or it will materially damage an appellant, or it appears that it has invaded or threatened the legal rights of an appellant, or that it is so unreasonable as to justify judicial interference, — it is within the judicial power of this court on an appeal in proper form to set such order aside. Spencer's Appeal,
Before the railway company could "proceed to construct" its railway "it shall cause a plan to be made showing the highway or highways in and through which it proposes to lay its tracks, the location of the same as to grade and the center line of said highways, and such changes, if any, as are proposed to be made in any highway," and secure the acceptance and adoption of *Page 36
such plan by the local authorities with such modifications as to them shall seem proper. Public Acts of 1905, p. 448, Chap. 244, § 1. "This mode of procedure undoubtedly contemplates a plan of location of the railroad which has been previously approved by the directors."New York, N. H. H.R. Co. v. Stevens,
These proceedings disclose no vote approving a plan of location by the directors of the railway company. Until such vote all action by the railroad commissioners in the appeals from the local authorities was unauthorized in law.
The plan of location upon which the railroad commissioners passed is not found in this appeal, nor recited in the finding and order of the commissioners attached to the appeals. A plan was submitted to the commissioners and the order states that a copy of the plan is on file in the office of the commissioners. The Superior Court could not determine whether the proposed location was either a threatened invasion of these appellants' legal rights, or would do material injury to their property, or was so unreasonable as to justify judicial interference, until it could know from the plan just what the location was and its relation to the appellants' property, and if in these particulars the plan and its relation to this property required explanation, only a trial could furnish this.
Ordinarily a subject of this kind will not be satisfactorily presented upon a motion to erase, but must be left to the trial.
In this case had the plan been made a part of the record this court might not have been able to have determined its relations to the appellants' property on a motion to erase.
In their assignment of reasons of appeal before the railroad commissioners the appellants alleged that these *Page 37 orders "will seriously damage them." Were this in terms made a reason of appeal from the commissioners to the Superior Court, it must be conceded to be a matter within the judicial power of the Superior Court to ascertain, since it is a judicial and not an administrative matter.
In their appeals to the Superior Court the appellants allege they are aggrieved by said orders "in so far as the same concern the layout and construction of the railway and tracks of said railway in the highways in said borough of Guilford adjacent to appellants' property"
Had there been no specification in the reasons of appeal filed before the commissioners pointing the ground of grievance, the general allegation of grievance to a property owner adjacent to the highway on which the railway is located would have sufficiently indicated that the appellants made a claim of damage to their property and a threatened invasion of their legal rights, since, as far as the record shows, there had been no legal taking of the land of appellants. Only a trial could decide such a question.
The findings of the commissioners recite its order of notice in cases 6922 and 6924, and its hearing on the day named, December 15th, when the appellants in each case presented a protest against granting the appeal of the Railway Company because the plan filed with the commissioners showed that said company proposed to lay its tracks through private land owned by appellants on York Street, and no notice had been given them and no agreement made to allow said company to take said land. This protest was filed to case number 6923, and had no relation to cases 6922 and 6924. The findings further recite that the petition of the Railway Company was disposed of by approving the petition of said Company as to its method of construction and findings filed April 30th, 1910, and this was case 6923. The *Page 38 findings then recite: "The petitions of Lottie I. Norton and Cynthia C. Norton, dated December 9, 1909, are therefore dismissed." They nowhere state that they heard, considered and determined the appeals of these appellants in cases 6922 and 6924.
The appellants state in their appeals that the commissioners did hear their appeals.
If the language of the findings is to be credited they did not give them any consideration. The findings give, as a reason for the dismissal of the appeals, the commissioners' approval of the Railway Company's petition and method of construction; that is, their decision in 6923 is the basis of their dismissal of the appellants' appeals in cases 6922 and 6924, which are cases entirely independent of 6923.
It may be that through inadvertence these records in the several appeals have been confused by the commissioners in making up their formal finding, though their decisions were perfectly clear, just as the appellants were confused in alleging in paragraph 7 of their appeals to the Superior Court that the hearing on cases 6922 and 6924 was on the protest filed in 6923. A strict construction of these appeals would lead to these conclusions.
A motion to erase depends upon the facts of record, not upon facts without the record; by these, the appellants never have had a determination by the commissioners of their reasons of appeal that such location is unnecessary and will seriously damage them, but have had their appeals dismissed upon conclusions reached in another case.
Such orders, if made by the commissioners in the exercise of their power of regulation upon such a consideration of the legal rights of these appellants, were not only irregular and informal, but entirely unwarranted in law, and involved a clear invasion of legal *Page 39 rights of the appellants to their material injury, and ought not to stand.
These considerations present judicial, not administrative, questions.
A further grievance of the appellants is the failure to give them notice of the appeals of the Railway Company. No notice was given them, but they appeared, became parties to the appeals, and were heard; and the legal presumption, in the absence of allegation to the contrary, is that they were fully and fairly heard. Under such circumstances the failure to give them notice of the appeals of the Railway Company became of no consequence. The purpose of the notice was to give them the opportunity to appear and be heard; all this they had.
The appellants' motion to amend their several appeals should be granted in each case, and this disposes of the motions to erase, filed in this court by said Railway Company, adversely to it.
There is error, the judgments are reversed and the causes remanded with instructions to overrule the motions to erase.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Malmo's Appeal From County Commissioners ( 1899 )
G. M. Williams Co. v. Mairs ( 1899 )
F. Thill's Sons & Co. v. Perkins Electric Lamp Co. ( 1893 )
Bethel & Redding Lime Co. v. New York, New Haven & Hartford ... ( 1909 )
New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad v. Stevens ( 1908 )
Halliday v. Collins Co. ( 1900 )
Appeal of New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad ( 1908 )
City of Hartford v. Hartford Street Railway Co. ( 1903 )
Martin v. Sherwood, Receiver ( 1901 )
Appeal of Waterbury From the Doings of the Railroad ... ( 1905 )
Stevens v. Connecticut Co. ( 1912 )
Driscoll v. Winchester Repeating Arms Division of Olin ... ( 1948 )
Santos v. Publix Theatres Corporation ( 1928 )
Long v. Zoning Commission of Norwalk ( 1946 )
McDermott v. Zoning Board of Appeals ( 1963 )
Pettee v. Hartford-Connecticut Trust Co. ( 1927 )
City of Norwalk v. Connecticut Co. ( 1915 )
Woodmont Ass'n v. Town of Milford ( 1912 )
Kram v. Public Utilities Commission ( 1940 )
Deflumeri v. Sunderland ( 1929 )
Hamelin v. Zoning Board ( 1955 )
Hartford v. Connecticut Natural Gas Corporation ( 1973 )
Banca Commerciale Italiana Trust Co. v. Westchester ... ( 1928 )
Wells Laundry & Linen Supply Co. v. Acme Fast Freight, Inc. ( 1952 )