Norwich Gas & Electric Co. v. City of Norwich

57 A. 746, 76 Conn. 565, 1904 Conn. LEXIS 12
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedApril 14, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 57 A. 746 (Norwich Gas & Electric Co. v. City of Norwich) 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
Norwich Gas & Electric Co. v. City of Norwich, 57 A. 746, 76 Conn. 565, 1904 Conn. LEXIS 12 (Colo. 1904).

Opinion

Baldwin, J.

The special commission properly denied the motion for the dismissal of the proceedings, filed before it on the ground that the statute upon which they are based is unconstitutional and void. Its only business was to execute the powers which had been confided to it by the order of the court, without inquiring into their legal validity. New Milford Water Co. v. Watson, 75 Conn. 237, 245.

A similar motion filed in the Superior Court was properly overruled on its merits.

*569 The statute in question (General Statutes, §§ 1978-1997) allows cities, towns and boroughs, to set up plants for the manufacture and distribution of gas or electricity for furnishing light for municipal use, and for that of such of their inhabitants as may desire and pay for it, and "to meet the expense of procuring any such plant by an issue of bonds ; with the proviso (§ 4) that “ no indebtedness shall be incurred by any city or town or borough, in connection with such plant, except as aforesaid, and excepting further, that money may be borrowed temporarily to pay the running expenses thereof.” By § 12, “ when any city, town, or borough shall decide, as herein provided, to establish a plant, and any corporation incorporated by the general assembly, for the purpose of furnishing gas or electric light, heat, or power, shall at the time of the first vote required for such decision, be engaged in the business of making, generating, or distributing gas or electricity, for sale for lighting purposes TcT consumers in such city, town, or borough, such city, town, or borough shall, if such corporation shall elect to sell and comply with this act, before establishing its plant, purchase of such corporation, such portion of its plant for gas, and property suitable and used for such business or in connection therewith, if the city, town, or borough shall have decided to establish a gas plant, or of its. plant for electric lighting, and property suitable and used for such business or in connection therewith if such’ city, town, or borough shall have decided to establish ... an electric lighting plant, as shall have at the time of the first vote, been engaged in or acquired for such business. If, in any such city, town, or borough, a single corporation owns or operates both a gas plant and an electric plant, such purchase shall include both of such plants. . . . The price to be paid for such plant, whether gas or Electric, or both, shall be its fair market value for the purposes of its use (no portion of such plant to be estimated, however, at less than its fair market value for any other purpose), including as an element of value, the earning capacity of such plant, based upon the actual earnings being derived from such use, at the time of the final vote of said *570 city, town, or borough to establish a plant, and also including the market value of any other locations or similar rights acquired by the owners of such plant or plants, with the intention of using the same in connection with such plant or plants, less the amount of any mortgage or other incumbrance or lien to which the plant or plants so purchased or any part thereof, may be subject at the time of the transfer of title; but such city, town, or borough may require that such plant or property shall be transferred to it free and clear of any mortgage or lien, unless said superior court, through its special commissioner as hereinafter provided, shall otherwise determine.”

There were also the following provisions : “ Sec. 13. Any corporation desiring to enforce the obligation of any city, town, or borough, under this act, to purchase any property shall file with the clerk of said city, town, or borough, within thirty days after the passage of the final vote, whereby said city, town, or borough shall have decided to establish a plant, a detailed schedule, describing such property, and stating the terms of sale proposed.

If the parties fail to agree as to what shall be sold, Or what the terms of sale or delivery shall be, either party may, after thirty days after filing the schedule, apply by petition to the superior court for the county in which such plant is located, or to any judge thereof in vacation, setting forth the facts, and praying an adjudication between the parties, and thereafter such court or judge shall, after notice and hearing, appoint a special commission of one or three persons who shall give the parties an opportunity to be heard, and shall thereafter adjudicate whether the property contained in said schedule, real or personal, including rights and easements, properly belong to such plant, and should be sold by the one and purchased by the other, and what the time, price, and other conditions of sale and delivery thereof shall be. Such commission shall report its doings to the superior court for the county in which the plant is located for confirmation by said court.

“ S.ec. 14. Any party aggrieved by the doings of the com *571 mission may, within fourteen days after its report has been filed with the clerk of said superior court, or such longer time as such court may allow, file a remonstrance to said report, and such court shall hear the questions arising on such remonstrance, and if the matters of the remonstrance are found true and sufficient, such court may set aside the report in whole or in part, as the justice of the case may require, and appoint another special commission to rehear the case, in whole or in part, as the justice of the case may require, who shall make report of its doings in the premises to said superior court, which will be subject to remonstrance in like manner as the original report, and in case such remonstrance is sustained, the court shall likewise send the case to another commission for action, and like proceedings shall be had, until the report of such commission or commissioners, covering all the questions involved, shall have been confirmed by the said superior court.”

The defendant contends that so much of this statute as authorizes municipalities to acquire, set up, and operate such plants is valid, but that the provisions for forcing them to buy out any such plants already established is void.

The first point urged in support of this contention is that the special commission is entrusted with such judicial power' as to make it a court, although it is not established in the manner in which courts, by our Constitution, must be. That the statute uses the term “ adjudication,” as descriptive of the decision which the commission is charged with rendering, is not enough to change the obvious character of that body. Whether it be. regarded as an arm of the court in the exercise of its legal or equitable jurisdiction, analogous to a special jury or committee, or as a tribunal in the nature of a board of appraisers or other body appointed to ascertain the just compensation to be paid for property condemned for a public use, it is clear that it is not a court, nor its members judges, within the meaning of the constitutional provisions prescribing the mode by which judges are to be appointed. Its functions are but quasi-judicial. State v. New Haven & N. Co., 48 Conn. 351, 382; New Milford Water Co. v. Watson, *572 75 id. 237, 242, 247.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 A. 746, 76 Conn. 565, 1904 Conn. LEXIS 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/norwich-gas-electric-co-v-city-of-norwich-conn-1904.