DocketNumber: File #47699
Citation Numbers: 2 Conn. Super. Ct. 142, 2 Conn. Supp. 142, 1935 Conn. Super. LEXIS 230
Judges: Hon, Cornell
Filed Date: 6/29/1935
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
In form, the demurrer is defective in that there should have been a separate demurrer to each of the special defenses sought to be attacked.
No objection on that score was made upon argument and the matter will be considered upon its merits in default of such exception taken.
As to so much of the demurrer as applies to the First Special Defense, this is directed to the statement contained in the latter to the effect that "none of the plaintiffs offered to be sworn before said board of relief and answer questions touching said taxable property."
This is based upon a provision in General Statutes, Rev.1930 #1196, which restrains a board of relief from reducing the list of any resident of this state unless such resident shall appear before it and so offer to be sworn. The appellants, here, are allegedly residents.
While the failure to so appear and offering to be sworn may affect the relief which this court may grant (Wilcox vs.Madison,
As it applies to the Second Special Defense, the demurrer is predicated on an assertion in the latter of the purport that the instant application was not made within two months from the time of the alleged refusal of the board of relief to reduce the claimed excessive valuations, as required by statute.
A statute of limitations must ordinarily be specially pleaded.Practice Book #104.
Where however, a statute confers a right of action which did not exist at common law and fixes the time within which it must be enforced, the time so fixed is a limitation or condition *Page 144
attached to the exercise of the right and is not, mere matter of remedy, alone. DeMartino, Admx. vs. Sieman
The entire subject of appeals from assessment of property for purposes of taxation is statutory in origin. Until 1798, no appeal lay from the doings of boards of relief. When it was established, it of course, owed its life to legislative enactment. The limitation upon the period during which the right may be exercised, must, within the rule laid down by the authorities cited, supra, be held to be a condition attached to the right itself, rather than a mere statute of limitation affecting only a remedy.
The demurrer, insofar as it applies to the first special defense is overruled, insofar as it applies to the second special defense, it is sustained.