Meany v. Connor

7 Conn. Super. Ct. 165, 7 Conn. Supp. 165, 1939 Conn. Super. LEXIS 63
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedMay 29, 1939
DocketFile 57270
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 7 Conn. Super. Ct. 165 (Meany v. Connor) 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
Meany v. Connor, 7 Conn. Super. Ct. 165, 7 Conn. Supp. 165, 1939 Conn. Super. LEXIS 63 (Colo. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

CORNELL, J.

The questions presented in this proceeding arise as a result of an order of the motor vehicle commissioner made on February 21, 1939, suspending for 30 days next thereafter the plaintiff’s license to operate a motor vehicle on the public highways of this state and directing that the certificate evidencing same, theretofore issued to plaintiff, be surrendered for such period. On the same day, the plaintiff appealed from the order in question pursuant to the provisions of section 1610“ of the General Statutes, Revision of 1930. Coincidentally, he applied for a temporary injunction to restrain the commissioner from enforcing such order pending decision on his appeal. Accordingly, the defendant was cited to appear before the undersigned, sitting as a judge, on February 24, 1939, to show cause why a temporary injunction as prayed for should not issue. On the latter date, at the request of counsel, the scheduled hearing was continued until March 8, 1939, when the parties with their counsel appeared in court. It then became evident that the questions which the litigants were intent upon having decided could only be presented upon a hearing on the appeal on its merits, whereupon it was agreed that the parties-produce evidence as upon such a trial and as soon as possible-following the return day close the pleadings and file briefs. Under these circumstances the defendant, commissioner, refrained from insisting that the plaintiff surrender his operator’s license certificate and plaintiff’s motion for a temporary injunction, for obvious reasons, was not pressed. The matter now at hand for disposition is the appeal. The pleadings are not yet closed, but the decisive questions evolve from issues of law, concerning the identity of which there is no disagreement between counsel. It is proposed to decide these without waiting for further pleadings which, when and if filed, will not change the issues.

*169 The order of the defendant, commissioner, which is the subject of appeal, is the aftermath of plaintiff’s arrest on February-3, 1939, while operating a motor vehicle on that part of the Merritt Parkway which lies in the Town of Greenwich and his subsequent trial on February 16, 1939, in the Town Court of Greenwich, following which he was found not guilty upon an information which charged him: with having operated “upon the Merritt Parkway, a certain motor vehicle. . . .at a rate of speed greater than was reasonable having regard to the width, traffic and use of said highway, the intersection of streets and weather conditions against the form of the statute in such case made and provided.” It is the circumstance that plaintiff was acquitted of having violated the statute quoted which accounts for plaintiff’s challenge of the defendant’s right to suspend his. operator’s license for conduct which formed or attended the basis of his prosecution. Plaintiff claims (1) that the commissioner is without authority to suspend or revoke a license to-operate a motor vehicle except in instances where the conduct relied upon as furnishing cause for such action has resulted in a criminal prosecution followed by a conviction, and in any-event may not do so in instances where following a trial, the operator has been found free from wrongdoing, and (2) that if he does possess power to suspend or revoke an operator’s license in the absence of such a conviction, it (a) can only be exercised after a hearing first had at which the holder of the iicense sought to be suspended or revoked shall have opportunity to appear and be heard and (b) in any event such action is illegal where predicated — as it was here — upon no other information than that obtained from newspaper accounts or comment. As concerns the first of these (vis., (1) supra), these observations may be made: “The operation of motor vehicles upon the public highways of the State is a subject clearly within the police power.” LaPlante vs. State Board of Public Roads, 47 R.I. 258, 260, 131 Atl. 641, 642. The General Assembly has exercised this power through the enactment of a large body of statutes, dealing on the one hand with mechanical requirements and on the other, designed to insure the fitness of drivers. In great measure these are concerned with the prevention of accidents in contra-distinction to the punishment and penalising of persons responsible for such occurrences. The purpose of all of it is the protection of life, limb and property on and adjacent to the public highways. The legal duty of enforcing these preventative provisions has been *170 ■delegated to the motor vehicle commissioner to a very large ■degree. With respect to the suspension or revocation of operators’ licenses certain of his duties are mandatory; others are discretionary. In the first class are those provided in section 1608(b) of the General Statutes, Revision of 1930, as amended in section 619c of the Cumulative Supplement to the General Statutes (1935). These leave him no option but to suspend ■or revoke operators’ licenses issued to persons who have been convicted of violating any statute relating to motor vehicles or who, when charged with any such offense, shall forfeit a bond for appearance or against whom such a charge is nolled on payment of any sum of money, or who shall receive a sentence upon which execution is suspended and the period of such suspension is definitely fixed. In the second (or discretionary) category •are those which are embraced within the provisions of the same statute (subsection [a]) which read: “No provision of this chapter shall be construed to prohibit the commissioner from suspending or revoking any registration or any operator’s license issued under the provisions of any statute relating to motor vehicles.... for any cause that he may deem sufficient, with or without a hearing.” This leaves no doubt of the legislative intention to vest the motor vehicle commissioner witii power to suspend and revoke operators’ licenses in instances where no conviction for violation of statutes relating to motor vehicles is involved, and such authority resides in him, provided (1) that such a delegation thereof is valid. Plaintiff contends that it is void as an attempted illegal delegation of legislative functions.

The rule to which courts try to adhere is, that while a legislative body may not delegate its powers to make laws to a board, commission or officer, yet having announced a purpose, formulated a policy or prescribed a rule of conduct, it may commit to such a board, commission or officer the performance of administrative and executive functions necessary to make effective the policy which it has declared or the purpose which it has disclosed, and in so doing clothe them with the right to exercise discretion commensurate with the duties thrust upon them. Connecticut Company vs. Norwalk, 89 Conn. 528, 531; Woodruff vs. New Yorkl & New England R.R. Co., 59 id. 63, 83. This, of course, conceives a legislative declaration in which a standard of conduct is prescribed by which the acts of the delegatee of the power may be tested and to which it must conform; otherwise, the delegation would be unlimited *171 and, being so, would amount to a void attempt on the part of the legislative body to part with its own functions and prerogatives. Connecticut Company vs. Norwalk, supra, 531, 532.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
7 Conn. Super. Ct. 165, 7 Conn. Supp. 165, 1939 Conn. Super. LEXIS 63, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meany-v-connor-connsuperct-1939.