DocketNumber: File No. 7950
Citation Numbers: 13 Conn. Super. Ct. 70
Judges: FITZGERALD, J.
Filed Date: 6/20/1944
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
The office of a demurrer serves the purpose of admitting facts well pleaded. Hardy vs. Scott,
The complaint concludes with prayers for a temporary injunction restraining the defendant board from transferring plaintiff out of the detective bureau to one of the regular shifts for police work, and from abolishing the office of detective lieutenant; a permanent injunction to the same effect; and such other relief as to equity and justice may pertain.
The demurrer of defendant board is set out in nine paragraphs. Actually the demurrer is based on three grounds: (1) negligence of plaintiff's counsel in taking the appeal in the first instance to the Superior Court rather than to the Court of Common Pleas; (2) plaintiff seeks to resort to equity when his only remedy is a statutory appeal and not otherwise; (3) plaintiff in any event had an adequate remedy at law following the denial of his motion to transfer by the Superior Court.
The court is of the opinion that the foregoing grounds, individually and collectively, are not tenable in this action for equitable relief. *Page 73
Defendant board argues on the basis of Jarvis vs. Martin,
Moreover, defendant board is not correct when it argues in effect that the exclusive remedy provided plaintiff was the statutory appeal from the board's action of May 2, 1944. "The purpose of the appeal [under the statute] is to provide a summary process by which the court may revoke the order of removal in case any essential formality has been omitted, or, perhaps, in case it finds that the executive power has been exercised so arbitrarily as to defeat the real purpose of the law in modifying an absolute discretion in removal." Sullivanvs. Martin,
It may well be that plaintiff could have taken an appeal to the Supreme Court from the action of the Superior Court in erasing his improper appeal to that court in the first instance and in denying his motion to transfer the cause to this court to which it should have been brought under the 1941 amendment *Page 74 (Sup. [1941] § 810f). However, such an appeal to the Supreme Court might have been futile and accomplish nothing at the expense of loss of time. To rule that the right of appeal to the Supreme Court from the action of the Superior Court would constitute an adequate remedy at law under the circumstances would be based necessarily on the proposition that such appeal in all probability would meet with success. That indeed would be rash speculation for no one can truly say what any appellate court may or may not do in advance of its handing down a formal opinion. Also, as noted previously, the appeal to the trial court provided by statute is not exclusive; it is only an expeditious method designed to get before the trial court the merits of the claimed grievance. In the case at bar time has run against plaintiff bringing a new action under the statute in this court.
One further observation is warranted. The trial court inOlcott vs. Pendleton, supra, saw fit to dissolve a temporary injunction restraining a municipal board of finance from holding a hearing for the purpose of considering the dismissal of the town manager. The action of the trial court was upon the broad ground that equity is without jurisdiction to enjoin the appointment or removal of public officers. The memorandum of decision is lengthy. Had defendant's counsel come across this writing in his researches he doubtless would have tried to invoke its import. That case and this are not parallel in many essential particulars. In erasing the plaintiff's appeal (
To William A. Bree, Clerk of the Superior Court at New Haven, I am indebted for the opportunity of examining the file *Page 75 in the mandamus action of State exe rel. Doherty vs. NeuHaven (No. 24395) which went to judgment in that court on July 16, 1926. The memorandum of decision of Judge Ells, then on the Superior Court Bench, has been most helpful. The trial court concluded therein that although the Board of Police Commissioners acted in good faith in demoting the relator from the position of a police sergeant to that of a Grade A patrolman — to economize and retrench — it did not go about this undertaking in the correct way under the city charter.
Whether or not plaintiff in the case at bar will in fact suffer a demotion by the transfer voted on May 2, 1944, and whether the office of detective lieutenant is being abolished, are some of the many aspects that can only be determined at a hearing on the merits. "A demurrer admits facts that are well pleaded in that it does not deny them, yet the admissions can be used only for the purposes of the argument on the demurrer."State's Attorney vs. Selectmen of Branford,
Counsel should make an effort to have the matter heard on the merits at the earliest possible time. The court will cooperate if and when pleadings are closed.
For reasons stated the demurrer is overruled