Chanosky v. City Building Supply Co.
This text of 208 A.2d 337 (Chanosky v. City Building Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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These cases, although unrelated, are treated together because of the identity of the immediate issue. The appellants in these eases were, on our motion, cited to appear and show cause why the appeal in each case should not be dismissed for failure to prosecute with proper diligence. Practice Book § 696. No cause was shown, and the appeals were dismissed. We granted reargument, and it produced no subject deserving consideration other than the assertion of counsel that they had not understood the purport of Practice Book § 696 and were, therefore, taken by surprise by its enforcement. We have decided to accept that [451]*451representation, made by officers of the court, at its face value and to lay at rest any basis for a like claim in future cases.
Counsel confound extensions of time in which to take various steps in the appeal, granted by the trial court with the consent of the adverse party under Practice Book § 665, with the utterly different question of proper diligence in prosecuting the appeal under § 696. They treat the obtaining of an extension of time from the trial court as indicating proper diligence in processing the appeal. On the contrary, a series of such extensions may be cogent, and indeed the only necessary, evidence of a lack of proper diligence. The supervision and control of proceedings on appeal are in this court from the time the appeal is filed. Practice Book § 692.
The right to an appeal is not a constitutional one. It is but a statutory privilege available to one who strictly complies with the statutes and rules on which the privilege is granted. Bronson v. Mechanics Bank, 83 Conn. 128, 133, 75 A. 709; 4 Am. Jur. 2d 533, Appeal and Error, § 2; 16 Am. Jur. 2d, Constitutional Law, §576, p. 980, §§583, 584 p. 989. Implicit in counsel’s claim of surprise is the suggestion that this court has laid down no guidelines by which they could determine how dilatory they might safely be. A sufficient answer is that the rules set forth the time period for each step in the appeal. Those periods govern unless there is good cause for modifying them. And the cause which is asserted to be a good one should be explicitly set forth in any motion for an extension filed under Practice Book § 665. The granting of such a motion in the trial court, however, in no wise affects the power of this court under § 696 to compel the expeditious processing of appeals. If the interpretation of the [452]*452rules were otherwise, the ultimate control of the prosecution of appeals would pass from this court into the hands of counsel and the court or judge from whose decision the appeal is taken. Under § 696, this court will, as occasion requires, make its own determination whether, from the time an appeal is filed, it is being prosecuted with proper diligence. This has been done, prior to 1962, in a number of unreported cases; in the court year 1962-63, in State v. McSweeney, 150 Conn. 707, McMahon v. Civil Service Commission, 150 Conn. 712, Baldwin v. Town Plan Commission, 150 Conn. 712, and Ficara v. Town Plan Commission, 150 Conn. 713; and, in the court year 1963-64, in Tuozzolo v. Zoning Board of Appeals, 151 Conn. 727, 197 A.2d 942, Tkaczyk v. Levine, 151 Conn. 728, 197 A.2d 942, Wells v. Wells, 151 Conn. 728, 197 A.2d 943, and State v. Fenster, 151 Conn. 729, 197 A.2d 944. An important element in that determination is the number, extent and merit of the extensions of time obtained for taking various steps in the appeal, either with or without the consent of opposing counsel. The work of this court is not expedited if counsel are permitted to dally for the purpose of bargaining with the opposition, for personal convenience or because other cases in hand are deemed by them to deserve preferential treatment.
Solely because we accept counsel’s asserted lack of understanding of what we consider the obvious import of § 696, as set forth above, the appeal is restored to the docket in any of the above-entitled cases in which the appellant’s brief and appendix shall be filed within three weeks after the publication of this opinion.
In this opinion Kixg, C. J., Comley and Shaxxox, Js., concurred.
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208 A.2d 337, 152 Conn. 449, 1965 Conn. LEXIS 501, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chanosky-v-city-building-supply-co-conn-1965.