La Croix v. County Commissioners

50 Conn. 321
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedOctober 15, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 50 Conn. 321 (La Croix v. 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
La Croix v. County Commissioners, 50 Conn. 321 (Colo. 1882).

Opinion

Loomis, J.

The complainant, a licensed liquor seller, was convicted before a justice of the peace of keeping open his liquor saloon in Westport on Sunday, and appealed his ease to the Superior Court. Pending the appeal, Perry, one of the defendants, as prosecuting agent, cited him to appear before the county commissioners, under chapter 124, of the session laws of 1881, p. 74, to show cause why his license should not be revoked for the violation of law above mentioned.

He appeared before the commissioners and pleaded in abatement the pendency of the criminal prosecution in the Superior Court. This plea was overruled, and the .commissioners proceeded against his objection to determine by evidence whether he had violated the law as alleged, for the sole purpose of determining whether or not to revoke his license. Thereupon the complainant obtained from the Superior Court a rule to show cause why a writ of prohibition should not issue against the commissioners upon the ground that they exceeded their jurisdiction in proceeding to consider the question whether or not his license should be revoked. The Superior Court, having heard the parties, discharged the rule to show cause and dismissed the application ; and .the complainant brings the record before this court by motion in error.

The statute under which the proceedings complained of were had is as .follows:—

“Sjec. 1. The .eounty commissioners of each county, while in session ,for ¡the purpose, shall constitute a court for the trial of causes ¡for the revocation of licenses for the sale of intoxicating liquors granted in the county; and shall have sole and final jurisdiction of such causes. All licenses [323]*323hereafter issued shall "be revocable, in terms, for any violation of the laws regulating the manufacture or sale of intoxicating liquors.
“ Sec. 2. While so in session at their respective place or places of meeting in the county, the chairman of the board shall have all the powers of justices of the peace holding court in their respective towns, to compel the attendance and secure the testimony of witnesses duly summoned before them. Said commissioners shall receive for such services the same fees and expenses as in other service for the county, and if they find it necessary to be in session, for the purposes provided in this act, any days in excess of the number limited by law, they may charge the usual per diem compensation for such excess, notwithstanding such limitation.
“ Sec. 3. Accused persons shall be cited to appear before the commissioners by complaint of an}’- informing officer setting forth the offences charged, accompanied by a summons signed by competent authority, citing the accused to appear, if he see cause, before the commissioners at their place of meeting, on a given day and hour, to show reasons, if any he has, why his license should not be revoked; such process to be served by copy thereof, left with the accused or at his usual place of abode, at least six days before the day the same is made returnable, by a proper officer.
“ Sec. 4. The fees of the officer serving the process, and of the witnesses summoned, shall be the same as in criminal causes; and the fees of the informing officer shall also be the same as in criminal causes, provided that in the opinion of the commissioners the prosecution was brought in good faith and upon probable cause. And the fees authorized in this section shall be taxed by the chairman of the commissioners, and reported by him in writing to the county treasurer for record in a book provided for the purpose; and the chairman shall, on his order, draw from the treasurer the gross amount so taxed in each cause, and pay out the same to the persons to whom taxed; provided, however, that in no event shall the total amount of costs taxed against the [324]*324county treasury in any one ease exceed the sum of fifty, dollars, and the fees of the commissioners, prosecuting agents, witnesses and officers shall, if necessary, be scaled pro rata to such sums as shall mate the aggregate not more than fifty dollars.
“ Sec. 5. On the revocation of the license by the court of commissioners, the bond given by such person to the county when so licensed shall be put in suit by the treasurer of the county, and prosecuted in his name to final judgment, for the benefit of the county, unless the county commissioners, for good reason, direct otherwise; and the reasonable, expenses of such prosecution, audited by the chairman of the commissioners, shall be paid out of the county treasury.”

It is to be observed that the errors as assigned do not in terms involve the validity of the above statute; they do however in reality and of necessity, for if the statute is constitutional it virtually furnishes its own answer to every objection on the part of the complainant.

L Passing by the general assignment, the first error is that the court mistook the law in holding that the board of county commissioners was a court under the laws and constitution of this state. This assignment we think is subject to the criticism that it nowhere appears from the record that the court so held, and if left to mere inference we would say it held the contrary. Moreover, the assignment, of this as a ground of error implies that the complainant’s contention in the court below was that the commissioners did not constitute a court. If this was true there would be no basis for a writ of prohibition, for such a writ lies only against an inferior judicial tribunal, unless specially authorized by some statute. 1 Swift’s Digest, 565; High on Extraordinary Remedies, sec. 784.

But waiving all criticisms and technicality we will endeavor to meet what we suppose to be the complainant’s real objection under this head, namely, that the statute purports to create a court in the usual legal acceptance of the term; and that, if so construed, the law must be held unconstitutional, because the county commissioners in that event [325]*325must be considered judges, and as such they are elected for three years, contrary to the third section of the fifth article of the constitution of this state, which provides that judges of the inferior courts must be appointed annually; and also because the statute fails to provide for a jury trial or an appeal.

But is the complainant’s construction of the statute correct? On this subject we accept the views of the learned judge who presided in the court below, that although the word “ court ” is used in the first and last sections of the act in question, yet the legislature did not thereby intend to create ■ an inferior court in the constitutional sense, but rather a tribunal for the sole purpose of considering questions relative to the revocation of licenses to sell liquor. The commissioners who are to decide the question are not called judges anywhere in our statute, but are called a board in the second section, having a chairman, and not a presiding judge. In this capacity they grant licenses, and in the same capacity they revoke them; only in the latter case the law, considering that the licensees have paid money and made investments on the strength of the license, gives greater formality to the proceedings in order to guard against injustice.

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Bluebook (online)
50 Conn. 321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/la-croix-v-county-commissioners-conn-1882.