D'Amato's Appeal From County Commissioners

68 A. 445, 80 Conn. 357, 1907 Conn. LEXIS 60
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedDecember 17, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 68 A. 445 (D'Amato's Appeal From County Commissioners) 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.

Bluebook
D'Amato's Appeal From County Commissioners, 68 A. 445, 80 Conn. 357, 1907 Conn. LEXIS 60 (Colo. 1907).

Opinion

Hamersley, J.

The only ground of the appellant D’Amato’s appeal to the Superior.Court is the claim that the county commissioners had, in violation of the statute, *359 refused to hear and determine his application; and the only relief he can ask is a judgment, serving the purpose of mandamus, compelling the commissioners to perform a legal duty.

If the record before us shows that D’Amato had no legal right to a .hearing and determination of the application to the commissioners as made by him, the judgment of the Superior Court is correct. It appears upon the face of the application, in connection with the facts found, that D’Amato had not such legal right. The application upon its face purports to be brought under § 2669, which authorizes a removal permit to a licensee. It is not, however, brought by the licensee who wishes to remove from ' one budding to another, but by a stranger who is not a licensee.

The statute does not purport to authorize, and certainly does not require, the commissioners to hear and determine such an application. Section 2669 was first enacted in 1874. By the original license Act of 1872, a license protected only the licensee named, and authorized a sale only in the building specified. An amendment in 1874 (Public Acts of 1874, Chap. 115, p. 259) modified this provision,— in § 6 by authorizing the commissioners to consent to a transfer of a license by the licensee named to another person who had fulfilled the conditions required of a licensee, and in § 7 by authorizing the commissioners to grant the licensee named in a license permission to remove his place of business from one building to another, which had been approved in the same manner as the building specified in the license. By subsequent legislation the commissioners are required to give a hearing and decision on each application for a license, and provisions for a public bearing are made. These provisions for a hearing apply to an application for a removal permit. The provisions applicable in an . application for the substitution of another person for the original licensee are somewhat different. Public Acts of 1882, Chap. 107, pp. 180, 181; General Statutes, §§ 2669, 2671. While an application by a licensee for a transfer of *360 his license to another person, and an application by him for a removal of his place of business, may be heard at the same time, yet the two applications are distinct, and the special process of appeal, for obtaining the interposition of the court to limit the action of the commissioners within their legal power, applies to the one and does not apply to the other. Wakeman's Appeal, 74 Conn. 313, 316, 50 Atl. 733. Treating D’Amato’s application, as it thus appears.to be, the statute gives him no legal right to a hearing before the commissioners, and imposes upon them no legal duty to hear and decide such an application. That right and duty arise only when the licensee named in a license applies for permission to remove his place of business from one building to another.

It appears, however, from the record and memorandum of decision printed in the record, that the Superior Court— treating the application as one by D’Amato for a license to sell liquors on his premises, Ño. 246 Wooster Street, provided a saloon then carried on at Ño. 254 Wooster Street under a license to another person to sell at that place should be closed through a transfer of that license to D’Amato— assumed that the commissioners were legally bound to give D’Amato a hearing upon such application, unless they were debarred from so doing by the provisions of § 2646, and held that the provisions of that section did prevent the commissioners from granting D’Amato’s application. We think the court did not err in this construction of § 2646, and that for this reason, also, the judgment of dismissal may be sustained.

D’Amato, not being a licensee, made this application within six weeks after an application by him to be licensed to sell liquors at 246 Wooster Street had been fully heard at a public hearing, and the application denied on the ground that the building specified as the place of sale was situated in a locality in which there were already saloons enough. In making his present application as treated by the court, D’Amato must be held to stand, in so far as the application of § 2646 is concerned, in the same position he *361 would stand if, after the denial of his former application, the license to another person to sell at No. 254 Wooster Street had been surrendered or revoked, and thereupon he had made a second application for a license to him to sell at No. 246 Wooster Street; otherwise he would have no legal standing as an applicant entitled to a hearing.

We are satisfied that § 2646 forbids the commissioners to grant such a second application. This section was enacted in 1893. Public Acts of 1893, Chap. 225, p. 370. Under the original license Act (1872) a license could only be issued to a “ suitable person,” but the place of selling had to be stated in the license, and its suitability considered ; the recommendation of the selectmen, required by the statute, covering the suitability both of person and place. In 1882, when the present process of application and public hearing was substituted for the recommendation of the selectmen, the statute recognized the importance of the suitability of a licensee’s place of business as bearing upon his being a suitable person to license, and provided in terms that the commissioners should license “ suitable persons to sell ... in suitable places.” Public Acts of 1882, Chap. 107, p. 178, § 1. In 1893 the special process of appeal was authorized, for invoking the power of the court to set aside the action of the commissioners for certain illegal conduct in denying or granting a license. Public Acts of 1893, Chap. 175, p. 319. At the same session, and in view of this additional provision for securing the lawful conduct of the commissioners in the exercise of their administrative powers, the legislature saw fit to limit the discretionary power implied in former legislation, of giving or refusing to give a hearing upon a second application for a license during one license year, and passed the Act now incorporated unchanged in § 2646. Public Acts of 1893, Chap. 225, p. 370. When an application fora license has been denied because the applicant was deemed to be an unsuitable person, the Act forbids that person to make, during the license year, a second application to sell at any place; and when the application has been denied *362 because the place is deemed an unsuitable place, the Act forbids a second application by any person to sell at that place. A license granted upon any such second application is void. The Act classifies all special grounds for denial of a license under these two general grounds, and forbids more than one application during the same license year for a hearing as to the existence of either ground.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
68 A. 445, 80 Conn. 357, 1907 Conn. LEXIS 60, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/damatos-appeal-from-county-commissioners-conn-1907.