Rohm v. Hill

18 Conn. Super. Ct. 258, 18 Conn. Supp. 258, 1953 Conn. Super. LEXIS 78
CourtConnecticut Superior Court
DecidedMarch 5, 1953
DocketFile 87048
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 18 Conn. Super. Ct. 258 (Rohm v. Hill) 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
Rohm v. Hill, 18 Conn. Super. Ct. 258, 18 Conn. Supp. 258, 1953 Conn. Super. LEXIS 78 (Colo. Ct. App. 1953).

Opinion

Comley, J.

This is an action for a declaratory judgment as to the powers of the defendant as highway commissioner to plan, lay out and construct a highway which is generally referred to as the Pair-field County “expressway” and for various forms of injunctive relief. There may well be a question as to the standing of certain of the plaintiffs to maintain this action. As to the status of others, especially those whose properties are directly within the limits of the right of way adopted by the defendant, there can be no question. Since the result would not be affected by a decision as to which of the plaintiffs are proper parties and which are not, no such determination is necessary and will not be made.

The plaintiffs’ request for a declaratory judgment is justified by the facts, for there certainly exists a sufficient practical and urgent need for a judicial determination of the defendant’s powers. See Connecticut Savings Bank v. First National Bank, 133 Conn. 403, 409.

A large mass of evidence in the form of testimony and exhibits was laid before the court. Much of it has to do with the nature of the proposed layout and especially with the large number of properties involved, the numerous families who will be displaced by it and the great expense which the project entails. In the interest of a prompt decision of the ultimate *260 question no review of that evidence will be here attempted. Moreover, the salient facts are now a matter of common knowledge. They have been widely disseminated for the past year or two in public meetings, in newspaper articles and in radio broadcasts.

The sole question before the court is whether or not the defendant has the power under the statutory law of this state to do what he has already done and what he plans to do in the future. It cannot be too strongly emphasized that this is the only question of which this court may take cognizance. Whether or not the proposed highway is necessary, whether or not it is wise, whether or not it imposes hardship and whether or not it represents an extravagant use of public funds are not judicial questions. They are legislative and executive questions with which the courts may not interfere.

The defendant’s power to construct the expressway must be derived from one or more of four legislative enactments. These are: first, Special Act No. 235 of 1951 (26 Spec. Laws 172), which is entitled “An Act Authorizing the Highway Commissioner to Plan, Lay Out and Construct a Highway in Fairfield County”; second, General Statutes, § 2257 entitled “Parkways and freeways”; third, General Statutes, § 2194, entitled “Altering of highways; entry upon private property”; and, fourth, General Statutes, § 2231, entitled “Relocation.” These statutes will be considered separately.

First, as to Special Act No. 235 of 1951. This act reads as follows: “The highway commissioner is authorized to plan, lay out and construct a highway in Fairfield county between the New York state line and the Housatonic River to relieve traffic congestion on route No. 1.”

On its face the statute appears to confer upon the defendant the broadest powers and, at first blush, *261 it would seem to authorize the expressway. Upon analysis, however, this result cannot be sustained for the reason that it does not confer upon the commissioner the two most necessary, auxiliary powers to enable him to build the road, viz., the power to purchase or condemn property for the acquisition of the right of way and the power to enter into contracts for the expenditure of funds in the actual construction of the road. The great weakness of the statute lies in the fact that it does not designate the proposed road as a trunk-line highway. In this state the highway commissioner has jurisdiction over only two classes of highways — trunk-line highways or state-aid highways. With the latter class we are not concerned in this case.

The trunk-line system of highways was established by chapter 174 of the Public Acts of 1913, which provided as follows: “A system of trunk line highways, as shown on the accompanying map marked ‘Connecticut Showing System of Fourteen Trunk Line and Connecting Auxiliaries Charles J. Bennett June 2, 1913, State Highway Commissioner,’ is hereby established.”

Since that date there has been a tremendous expansion of the trunk-line system but no highway has ever been added to the system without express legislative designation. The original map of the trunk-line system is still recognized in General Statutes, § 2255, which provides: “The highway commissioner shall prepare a map showing the trunk line highway system as established by law, and shall publicly display such map in his office.” In other words no highway in this state can be considered a part of the trunk-line system except “as established by law.”

When the General Assembly expressly designates a new highway as a trunk-line highway, the commissioner then has full power to purchase land needed for the purpose under General Statutes § 2226, or to *262 condemn land under § 2264 and to call for bids for the actual construction under § 2229. He has similar powers with respect to state-aid highways. See § 2224 and the other sections therein referred to. But, unless a highway is expressly designated a trunk-line highway or is a state-aid highway, the commissioner is without authority to acquire property for it or to contract for its construction.

The special act of 1951 does not place the proposed highway in the trunk-line system. It is impossible for the courts to supply this omission in the statute or to read into it an intention not expressed by the legislature. It is true that in Stock v. Cox, 125 Conn. 405, the so-called Merritt Parkway Act of 1935 was construed to refer to a trunk-line highway although there was no special designation in that act that it was to be a part of the trunk-line system. However, that construction was only justified on the ground that earlier statutes, enacted in 1927,1931 and 1933, did expressly describe the Merritt Parkway as a trunk-line highway and these earlier statutes were in full force and effect and were not repealed, either expressly or by implication, by the act of 1935.

In the present case the legislative history of the 1951 act is precisely the reverse of the act of 1935 which was under consideration in Stock v. Cox, supra. In 1943, by Special Act No. 365 (24 Spec. Laws 254) a highway from the New York state line to the Housatonic River “in the vicinity of U.S. route number one” was authorized and, by the language of the act, was “included in the trunk line system of highways.” Again, in 1945, by Special Act No. 361 (24 Spec. Laws 753) the highway authorized in 1943 was recognized but certain limitations upon the expenditure of funds therefor were prescribed. If these two statutes were still in existence, there could be read into the 1951 act the implied provision that the highway was to be a part of the trunk-line system by *263 analogy to the reasoning in Stock v. Cox, snpra. But that is impossible, for in 1947 by Special Act No. 131 (25 Spec. Laws 170) the General Assembly expressly repealed the acts of 1943 and 1945.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
18 Conn. Super. Ct. 258, 18 Conn. Supp. 258, 1953 Conn. Super. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rohm-v-hill-connsuperct-1953.