Citation Numbers: 209 A.2d 523, 25 Conn. Super. Ct. 512, 25 Conn. Supp. 512
Judges: Hon, Shapiro, County
Filed Date: 2/9/1965
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
The plaintiff is a resident of this state. While operating his Connecticut registered motor vehicle in New Jersey on November 2, 1964, he there received a summons charging him with speeding. In order to avoid appearing in a New Jersey court, the plaintiff, he states, had his wife forward a sum of money to the clerk of that court in relation to that summons. On or about December 21, 1964, the plaintiff received from the defendant a suspension notice of his Connecticut operator's license and right to operate a motor vehicle in this state. The suspension was to commence on January 3, 1965, for a period of thirty days. On December *Page 513
29, 1964, the plaintiff's attorney issued a writ returnable to the Circuit Court, first circuit at Norwalk, on the first Thursday of February, 1965, in which he sought, among other relief, a temporary and permanent injunction restraining and enjoining the defendant from interfering with the right of the plaintiff to operate a motor vehicle in Connecticut. On December 30, 1964, a judge of the Circuit Court in Norwalk issued an ex parte temporary injunction, under penalty of $1000, restraining the defendant and others acting under him "from interfering with the right of plaintiff to operate a motor vehicle in the state of Connecticut" until a later session and until further order of that court. While this is a question before the Circuit Court, it is interesting to note that "[p]rocess in all civil actions . . . brought to the circuit court shall be made returnable on any Tuesday in any month." General Statutes §
On January 13, 1965, the defendant made an application to a judge of the Superior Court to require the said Mosher to appear before him on January 26, 1965, and there show cause why said temporary injunction, heretofore issued, should not be dissolved. On that date the matter was presented before the undersigned as a judge of the Superior Court under §§
The commissioner, by this motion, seeks to have the Circuit Court's temporary injunction dissolved. *Page 514
This injunction, as earlier pointed out, was granted before the return day of the cause related thereto. "Whenever a temporary injunction is granted in any cause before the return day thereof, it may be dissolved . . . by any judge of the superior court; provided a written motion for such dissolution shall be preferred before the return day." §
No provision of chapter 246 of the General Statutes, the Motor Vehicle Act, shall be construed to prohibit the commissioner from suspending any operator's license "for any cause that he deems sufficient, with or without a hearing." §
From the foregoing, it is clear that at least two remedies were available to Mosher. From the commissioner's order suspending his license he could have asked for a hearing before the commissioner (§
The operation of motor vehicles upon the public highways of the state is a subject clearly within the police power. The General Assembly has exercised this power through the enactment of a large body of statutes, on the one hand dealing with mechanical requirements and on the other hand designed to insure the fitness of drivers. In great measure these are concerned with the prevention of accidents in contradistinction to the punishment and penalizing of persons responsible for such occurrences. The purpose of all this is the protection of life, limb and property on and adjacent to the public highways. The legal duty of enforcing these preventive provisions has been delegated to the motor vehicles commissioner to a very large degree.Meany v. Commissioner of Motor Vehicles, supra, 169. The above enunciation of the commissioner's powers was made in an opinion filed in 1939. It would seem even more valid and persuasive today, over twenty-five years later, with the enormous increase in the use of highways by motor vehicles. An operator's license is a purely personal privilege issued by the state on account of fitness. Shea v.Corbett,
When the law is adequate for the determination of a controversy, equity should not be asked to interfere.Kelly v. Waterbury,
Mosher finds himself in a dilemma entirely of his own making. He chose to follow a course that has led to the motion at hand. He adopted a proceeding that cannot stand up to the test of the law. He cannot utilize an ex parte temporary injunction, such as was obtained in this case, in the face of other available recourse, as already discussed here. He cannot decide to follow any course he chooses and thereby hamstring the commissioner in the exercise of his functions and duties. Here, since Mosher acted as he did, under the circumstances recited, the temporary injunction cannot be allowed to stand.
Acting under the authority of §
Ginsberg v. Mascia , 149 Conn. 502 ( 1962 )
Young v. Tynan , 148 Conn. 456 ( 1961 )
Kelly v. City of Waterbury , 82 Conn. 255 ( 1909 )
Shea v. Corbett , 97 Conn. 141 ( 1921 )
Holt v. Wissinger , 145 Conn. 106 ( 1958 )
Empire Transportation Co. v. Johnson , 76 Conn. 79 ( 1903 )