Northeastern Gas Transmission Co. v. Benedict

89 A.2d 379, 139 Conn. 36, 1 Oil & Gas Rep. 1094, 1952 Conn. LEXIS 155
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMay 22, 1952
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 89 A.2d 379 (Northeastern Gas Transmission Co. v. Benedict) 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
Northeastern Gas Transmission Co. v. Benedict, 89 A.2d 379, 139 Conn. 36, 1 Oil & Gas Rep. 1094, 1952 Conn. LEXIS 155 (Colo. 1952).

Opinion

Inglis, J.

This motion for the review and setting aside of an order terminating a stay of execution is made pursuant to the second paragraph of § 411 of the Practice Book. The first paragraph of the section provides that in civil actions proceedings to enforce the judgment shall be stayed pending an appeal, “but if the judge who tried the case is of the opinion that... the appeal is taken only for delay or that the due administration of justice requires him to do so, he may at any time, upon motion and hear *38 ing, order that the stay be terminated.” The second paragraph reads: “The sole remedy of any party desiring this court to review an order terminating a stay of execution shall be by written motion filed within five days after the order was made....” This paragraph was inserted as an amendment of the section and became effective January 2,1952. This is the first motion we have had under it. The filing of a motion for review under this rule operates as a further stay until a decision thereon by this court.

The plaintiff instituted sixty-six actions in the Superior Court for Fairfield County for the condemnation of rights of way for a natural gas pipe line. Ancillary thereto it made application pursuant to General Statutes, Cum. Sup. 1951, § 1076b, for permission to enter immediately upon the properties involved and devote them temporarily to the public use. On April 7, 1952, after a full hearing, the Superior Court (Murphy, J.) found that public interest would be prejudiced by delay and ordered immediate possession. The defendants in the thirty-six cases in which the present motion is made filed their appeals from that order on April 26. An appeal from such an order is permissible. Northeastern Gas Transmission Co. v. Brush, 138 Conn. 370, 374, 84 A.2d 681. The taking of the appeals ipso facto stayed the execution of the order for immediate possession, but the plaintiff moved Judge Murphy for a termination of the stay, and after a hearing the judge “ordered that the stay of execution be and hereby is terminated and the clerk shall issue the necessary executions.” This order was entered on May 5 and the present motion was filed on May 7. The ground upon which the judge ordered the termination of the stay of execution was that the due administration of justice required it.

*39 The first question to be decided is just what is the issue before this court on such a motion as we now have under consideration. Is the ordering of the termination of a stay of execution on the ground that the due administration of justice requires it something which lies in the discretion of the trial judge ? If it is, the only question before us is whether he has abused that discretion.

It was early recognized in the common law of this state that in spite of the pendency of a writ of error in any case the trial judge who had heard the case might order the issuance of an execution if he was of the opinion that the writ of error was taken solely for the purpose of delay. Dutton v. Tracy, 4 Conn. 365, 372; Brewster v. Cowen, 55 Conn. 152, 156, 10 A. 509. The power of a trial judge to terminate a stay of execution on the ground that justice required it was never recognized in our law until a statute granting it was adopted in 1882. Chapter 50 of the Public Acts of 1882 substituted the method of appeal for the old motion for a new trial and motion in error as a means of obtaining a review of claimed errors in the trial court. Section 6 of that chapter provided that execution should be stayed pending an appeal, but that the trial judge might order the issuance of an execution if, in his opinion, the appeal was taken only for delay or if the due administration of justice required it. This was couched in essentially the same phraseology as that of the first paragraph of the present § 411 of the Practice Book. The statute remained on the books in substantially the same form until 1929. In that year the General Assembly repealed most of the statutes which governed procedure on appeal, including the section in question, and authorized the judges to adopt rules for that purpose. The authorization specifically in- *40 eluded the power to adopt rules concerning the “stay of execution during the pendency of appeal.” Public Acts, 1929, c. 301, §12 (Rev. 1949, §8012). It was pursuant to that authority that the first paragraph of the present § 411 of the Practice Book was adopted.

Although the question of the validity or effect of an order terminating a stay of execution has been before us on several occasions, we have never decided whether the entering of such an order lay in the discretion of the judge. See Bock v. Meriden Trust & Safe Deposit Co., 135 Conn. 94, 95, 60 A.2d 918; Reilly v. State, 119 Conn. 217, 222, 175 A. 582; Quinlan v. City National Bank, 105 Conn. 424, 429, 135 A. 435; Coughlin v. McElroy, 72 Conn. 444, 448, 44 A. 743; Grelle v. Pinney, 62 Conn. 478, 487, 26 A. 1106; Brewster v. Cowen, supra; Dutton v. Tracy, supra.

Inasmuch as the power to terminate a stay on the ground that justice requires it is, as we have already pointed out, one which was created by statute and continued by rule, the exercise of it is necessarily controlled by that rule. Whether such termination lies in the discretion of the judge depends altogether upon the interpretation of the rule. In the interpretation of the rule the controlling consideration is that it provides for a termination of the stay if the trial judge is “of the opinion” that the due administration of justice requires it. An opinion is a belief less strong than positive knowledge. Webster’s New International Dictionary (2d Ed.). The forming of an opinion, therefore, ordinarily involves the exercise of discretion in determining the weight to be given to various conflicting considerations. The General Assembly in adopting the statute and the judges in adopting the rule obviously recognized *41 that the trial judge, with Ms background of familiarity with the case, would be in a peculiarly advantageous position to determine what the due administration of justice required. It is the intent expressed in the statute and the rule that in the determination of that matter the trial judge should use his sound discretion. It follows that the question now before us is whether the trial judge abused his discretion in coming to the opinion that the due administration of justice required the termination of the stay of execution.

One other question with which we are faced is how we are to test that discretion. We have no formal findings of the facts upon which the judge arrived at his opinion. Before the adoption of the amendment of the rule which is now the second paragraph of § 411, there was considerable doubt as to how an order terminating a stay of execution could best be brought before this court for review.

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Bluebook (online)
89 A.2d 379, 139 Conn. 36, 1 Oil & Gas Rep. 1094, 1952 Conn. LEXIS 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northeastern-gas-transmission-co-v-benedict-conn-1952.