Malmo's Appeal From County Commissioners

43 A. 485, 72 Conn. 1, 1899 Conn. LEXIS 124
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJune 1, 1899
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 43 A. 485 (Malmo'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
Malmo's Appeal From County Commissioners, 43 A. 485, 72 Conn. 1, 1899 Conn. LEXIS 124 (Colo. 1899).

Opinion

Hamebsley, J.

The defendants’ main contention is that

licensing the sale of intoxicating liquors is an executive function which cannot be exercised by the Superior Court. The incapacity of the judicial department, under our Constitution, to exercise functions that are essentially and distinctively executive or legislative, unless as incident to the exercise of some legitimate judicial power, was so deliberately considered and settled in the recent case of Norwalk Street Ry. Co.’s Appeal, 69 Conn. 576, and the application of this constitutional prohibition was then so fully discussed, that we deem it unnecessary to say anything further on the subject now; the present case must be controlled by that decision.

There was in former times no clear distinction between courts as a depository of judicial power, and courts as the servants of the executive power; but this confusion was confined largely to the highest tribunal in which supreme legislative, executive and judicial power were united, and to inferior courts whose position as judicial or executive bodies was not infrequently difficult to determine.

The Constitution radically changed this. Certain courts were established and authorized, the tenure of office and mode of appointment of their judges prescribed, and in these courts or “ magistracy ” the judicial power of the State was vested, and they were excluded from the exercise of legislative and executive power.

It does not, therefore, follow that the exercise of a particular function by a court—especially by an inferior court—during *5 the period of confusion, even if continued afterwards, neces-! sarily indicates such function as pertaining to the judicial power. It is, however, true that a particular function may be so near the border line of judicial power that its definition-calls for subtle distinctions and its nature depends to an-extent on the purpose and manner of its use; and in respect1 to such a function its long association with judicial action may be decisive of its character, so far at least as to justify its treatment as being, according to circumstances, either; within the judicial or executive power. A constitutional prohibition involved in the declaration of a fundamental principle of government, cannot be treated from the narrow standpoint of mere statutory construction; it controls the substance rather than the form of legislation; it speaks with an ever present authority which is not modified by the fact of occasional violations overlooked or condoned; and should not be invoked unless the principles on which it rests are actually concerned. .

In Hopson's Appeal, 65 Conn. 140, 146, we stated that the licensing of persons to sell intoxicating liquors is a matter which the legislature may properly commit to either depart-1 ment of government. When, however, it is treated as a judicial function, the purpose and manner of its exercise cannot be, in all respects, the same as when it is treated as a purely executive function; and the power may be committed to courts in such manner and for such purpose as to pass the limits of judicial power. In Hopson's Appeal we did not consider the power of the legislature to commit to the Superior Court the licensing of persons to sell intoxicating liquors in the manner such power is committed to county commissioners by the statute concerning “ Intoxicating Liquors.” That question was not involved. We were then considering the power of this court to review the action of the Superior Court in deciding, on an appeal from the county commissioners, this question: Is the appellant, or his place of business, “ suitable ” for a license within the meaning of § 3058 of the General Statutes? We held that the legislature might commit the matter of such licensing to the courts, and therefore the *6 question was not so exclusively of an executive nature that the Superior Court for that reason could not determine it upon appeal, and further held that while the question of suitability was one which the court might decide upon appeal, yet in reaching its result the court exercises -that kind of judicial discretion which is not the subject of review in this court; that this element of discretion is inherent in the question of statutory suitability, which the county commissioners must find in order to issue a license, and that the nature of the question is not altered when it is brought before the Superior Court by appeal. To this extent Hopson’s Appeal is affirmed in Norwalk Street Ry. Co’s Appeal, supra, where it is held that “ appeals ” allowed by various statutes from the action of administrative and legislative boards are not appeals in the sense of a transfer of jurisdiction from one court to another, but that such statutes must be construed as providing a process, under the misleading name of appeal, for invoking the judicial power to determine a legal injury complained of, or the legality of an act done by the officers of another department.

For these reasons we cannot sustain the defendants’ main contention; nor their further claim that the Act of 1898, in so far as it allows an appeal to an applicant to whom a license has been refused, is unconstitutional. McCrea v. Roberts, 43 Atl. Rep. (Maryland Court of Appeals) 39.

The defendants also claim that the Superior Court had no authority, under existing statutes, to adjudge that a license must be granted and issued to said Malmo. This depends first and mainly upon the question: Have the county commissioners a discretion in refusing a license, independent of the judicial discretion involved in deciding whether an applicant and his place of business are “ suitable ” within the meaning of the statute ? The latter may be brought to the Superior Court for review by a proper process; the judicial control of the former presents a different question.

For more than 250 years we have treated the business of selling intoxicating liquors as one subject to legislative regulation and prohibition; and until 1854, the selection or *7 appointment of persons for that purpose was in general committed to legislative or executive bodies, while the determination of the fitness or suitability, in view of the statutory regulations, of a person so selected, was treated as a judicial question and committed to the courts. At first the retailing of liquors was confined to innkeepers. In 1644 each town was required to select persons for that service, and the persons so,, chosen were presented to two magistrates “that they may be! judged meet for that employment.” 1 Col. Rec. 104, 154, 533; 4 id. 486. In 1719 the selection of licensees was vested; in the civil authority, and the licensing of such persons, upon a judicial determination of their fitness, was vested in the» County Court. The substantial provisions of this statute remained in force until 1854. 6 Col. Rec. 156; Rev. 1750; (Ed. 1784), p. 129; Comp. 1808, p. 640; id. 1854, p. 812. During this period, covering a century of practice under a system permitting the indiscriminate use of executive and judicial power, some slight variations from the plan involved, in the Act of 1719 were made.

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Bluebook (online)
43 A. 485, 72 Conn. 1, 1899 Conn. LEXIS 124, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/malmos-appeal-from-county-commissioners-conn-1899.