Housing Authority, City of Bridgeport v. Pezenik

9 Conn. Super. Ct. 483, 9 Conn. Supp. 483, 1941 Conn. Super. LEXIS 124
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedAugust 14, 1941
DocketFile 58730
StatusPublished

This text of 9 Conn. Super. Ct. 483 (Housing Authority, City of Bridgeport v. Pezenik) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Connecticut Superior Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Housing Authority, City of Bridgeport v. Pezenik, 9 Conn. Super. Ct. 483, 9 Conn. Supp. 483, 1941 Conn. Super. LEXIS 124 (Colo. Ct. App. 1941).

Opinion

CORNELL, J.

The proceeding is one prosecuted under the authority of section 5072 of the General Statutes, Revision of 3930, captioned “Mode of Condemning Land for Certain Purposes.” Accordingly, a reference was made to a committee which was, thereupon, required “to view the property in question, hear the evidence, ascertain the value, assess just damages to the owner or parties interested [sic} in the property so proposed to be taken and report their doings” to this court. The committee filed its report on December 4, 1939, and in this set forth, only, that the value of the premises in question was found to be $147,100 and that it assessed that “sum to be paid as just damages... .to the owner of the pro' perty for the taking of the same.”

To this the defendant Pezenik (hereinafter referred to as “the defendant”) on. January 19, 1940, filed a remonstrance and motion to recommit on certain grounds below examined in connection with his “Remonstrance to Committee’s Report and Supplemental Report.” Included among them was one to the effect that the committee had failed to award damages to all the parties in interest. When the matter was presented, the court ordered that the report be recommitted for the single “purpose of considering and determining the amount of the interest, if any, which all of the defendants have in *485 the property and in the award” and in so doing designedly refrained from passing upon the other questions involved in the remonstrance and motion to recommit. This course was obviously followed to permit of disposing at one time of all the questions which might be presented when the report was complete.

The committee in compliance with the court’s order, filed a supplemental report on December 17, 1940, in which it set forth only, but with particularity, the interests which each of the defendants have in the premises in question, whether as lien holders or otherwise, but made no finding of what each had in the award. This done, the defendant, on January 6, 1941, interposed a “Remonstrance to Committee’s Report and Supplemental Report.” Included in this are motions to re' commit. In this respect and all others with the exception of one embodied in an amendment to this last remonstrance, viz., “(C)”, it has substantially the same content as the original remonstrance and motion to recommit. One of the motions to recommit referred to is as follows: “(B) 6. The committee should find the interests of all the defendants in the award as well as in the property as recommended by the court.... recommitting the original report to the Committee.” Plain' tiff opposes this contention on the claimed authority of Bridge port Hydraulic Co. vs. Rempsen, 124 Conn. 437, 445.

This connotes the contention that the proceeding is gov' erned in this respect by section 5077 of the General Statutes, Revision of 1930, instead of section 5072 of the General Statutes, Revision of 1930. Section 5077 has for its purpose the protection of persons other than the owner having in' terests in land taken for public use where the procedure under which such property is acquired makes no provision for notice of the proceeding, or for payment to them in so far as the award will suffice for the purpose before anything is paid to the owner. It affords them opportunity to be heard as con' cerns the amount of the award, as to any question that may arise affecting the legality of the proceeding and to establish the priority of the interest or encumbrances which they have. Palo vs. Rogers, 116 Conn. 601, 604; Kaufman vs. Valente, 115 id. 428, 434. It is particularly appropriate to instances where land is condemned or the power of eminent domain is exercised by municipalities and public or public utility con porations whose charters precribe the procedure to be fol *486 lowed in the use of such authority, but make no, or inadequate, provision for notice and opportunity to encumbrancers on property taken to participate in the proceeding, establish their claims and the priority of them and to insure payment of them accordingly. See Bridgeport Hydraulic Co. vs. Rempsen, supra; Palo vs. Rogers, supra; Kaufman vs. Valente, supra; Thomson vs. New Haven, 100 Conn. 604. In proceedings under such provisions, a committee is without right to pass upon the validity of encumbrances and when the amount to be paid for the property taken is finally determined the share of the encumbrancers therein must be adjudicated by force of section 5077, supra, in a separate proceeding. Bridgeport Hydraulic Co. vs. Rempsen, supra, 445.

Section 5072, however, “is not a statute of general application. Its application is in terms'restricted to the condemnation of land for the particular purposes set forth in certain other sections of the statutes, each of which is identified by its number. These other sections refer to the taking of land by the State, by counties, by school districts and by towns.” Thomson vs. New Haven, supra, 606. See General Statutes, Revision of 1930, §§5065, 5066, 5067, 5068 and 5073. To them may be added instances where in any special act the General Assembly denotes that the procedure outlined in section 5072 is to be followed in exercising power conferred to acquire land. Waterbury vs. Macken, 100 Conn. 407, 410. In the instant situation it is specifically required by applicable public act that the exercise of powers of eminent domain bestowed upon plaintiff shall be in accordance with section 5072 of the General Statutes, Revision of 1930 (Supp. [1937] §148d).

The provisions of section 5072, in cases where they apply, manifest a purpose to settle in one proceeding the questions of what sum shall be awarded for the property acquired, the character and number of encumbrances against it and the holders of same, the various interests therein and the owners thereof and, finally, require a determination of what share in the award each is entitled to according to his interest in the land, and, of course, an opportunity to all to be heard at every stage of the proceeding. As respects the instant matter, the direction is clear. The committee is not merely to determine the value of the property taken or of the interest of the owner therein, but also, to “assess just damages to the *487 owner or parties interested [sic] in the property....” (Italics added.) This accomplished, it is then required that the court or judge “shall make any order necessary to protect the rights of all parties interested.” (Italics added.) All this makes it evident that in a proceeding under this statute, as is the instant one, it is the duty of the committee, not only to determine the interests of the several parties affected in the real estate which is condemned, or taken, but likewise, to assess to each, the amount in dollars to which the committee finds he is entitled in the award made according as it ascertains his in' terest in the land to be.

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Related

Palo v. Rogers
165 A. 803 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1933)
Alishausky v. MacDonald
167 A. 96 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1933)
Fox v. City of South Norwalk
82 A. 642 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1912)
City of Waterbury v. MacKen
124 A. 5 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1924)
State v. Giant's Neck Land & Improvement Co.
172 A. 861 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1934)
Thomson v. City of New Haven
124 A. 247 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1924)
Bridgeport Hydraulic Co. v. Rempsen
200 A. 348 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1938)
Wilcox v. City of Meriden
17 A. 366 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1889)

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Bluebook (online)
9 Conn. Super. Ct. 483, 9 Conn. Supp. 483, 1941 Conn. Super. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/housing-authority-city-of-bridgeport-v-pezenik-connsuperct-1941.