Vecchio v. Sewer Authority

408 A.2d 254, 176 Conn. 497, 1979 Conn. LEXIS 685
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJanuary 23, 1979
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 408 A.2d 254 (Vecchio v. Sewer Authority) 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
Vecchio v. Sewer Authority, 408 A.2d 254, 176 Conn. 497, 1979 Conn. LEXIS 685 (Colo. 1979).

Opinion

Cotter, C. J,

The plaintiffs, Anthony and Sara Vecchio, owners of land in Branford, appealed to the Court of Common Pleas from an assessment of *498 benefits levied by the defendants for the construction of a town sewage system. The defendant filed a plea in abatement alleging that the court was without jurisdiction to entertain the appeal because the plaintiffs failed to file their appeal within twenty-one days of the filing of the assessment as required by § 7-250 of the General Statutes. 1 The trial court sustained the plea in abatement and, from the judgment rendered thereon, the plaintiffs have appealed.

The court found the following relevant facts: The plaintiffs, by a deed dated September 3, 1974, acquired title to the property in question “subject to . . . sewer assessments, if any; and taxes on the list of 1973, which taxes and sewer assessments the *499 grantees . . . assume and agree to pay as part of the consideration.” A few months prior to the closing, Anthony Vecehio visited the property in question where he observed sewers being installed in the area. On December 5 and 12, 1974, a legal notice was published in the Branford Review, a local weekly paper, advising that a public hearing was to be held regarding the proposed assessments. Additionally, prior to the public hearing, the defendant mailed notices of the hearing to the owners of the properties affected. That notice was mailed to the plaintiffs at their address as shown on the last completed grand list in the Branford tax assessor’s office. On December 23 and 30, 1974, following the public hearing, lists of the sewer assessments levied were filed with the town clerk; and on December 26, 1974, and January 2, 1975, the lists of assessments for residential and commercial properties, respectively, including the property of the plaintiffs, were published in the Branford Review. The defendant also published legal notices on January 16 and 23, 1975, in the Branford Review notifying the public as to when the assessments became due and payable.

The plaintiff Anthony Vecehio, who resides with his wife in Woodbridge, received two bills for the assessments on February 26, 1975, at his Branford mailing address, which was the address of the plaintiffs as listed in the assessor’s records. The bills received in the mail on February 26 were the first mail notices the plaintiffs received from the defendant relating to the sewer assessment. Thereupon, the plaintiffs immediately commenced the present action challenging the assessment and claiming damages. Since the plaintiffs’ appeal from the assessment was not taken within twenty-one days after *500 the filing as required by § 7-250 of the General Statutes,, the trial court sustained the defendant’s plea in abatement and dismissed the plaintiffs’ action.

The plaintiffs’ special defenses to the defendant’s plea in abatement may be summarized as follows: (1) Notice by mail of the hearing on the proposed assessment was never given to the plaintiffs as required by § 7-250, and the provision for newspaper publication of notice was not satisfied in this case by publication in the Branford Review; and (2) although the appeal admittedly was not filed within the statutory period, this defect was cured by a special act of the General Assembly which was motivated and justified by equitable considerations. In view of the fact that the plaintiffs conceded, as they must, that their appeal was not timely filed, our review of the trial court’s action sustaining the plea in abatement is limited to a determination of the validity of either or both of the special defenses noted above, since the statutory remedy for review must be pursued unless the assessment is void. See Vaill v. Sewer Commission, 168 Conn. 514, 518-19, 362 A.2d 885. Failure to take a timely appeal from a sewer assessment can only be upheld generally on the grounds of lack of jurisdiction or want of power to make the assessment. Meriden v. Camp, 46 Conn. 284,290.

I

General Statutes § 7-250 provides that, prior to the levy of a sewer assessment, a public hearing shall be held at which the owners of the property affected shall have an opportunity to be heard concerning the proposed assessment. Notice of the scheduled public hearing is to be given through publication “in a newspaper having a circulation in the muniei *501 pality,” and by mailing a copy of such notice to the property owner’s address “as shown in the last-completed grand list of the municipality.” 2 Once the amount of the assessment to be levied is determined, the sewer authority is required to file a copy of the assessment in the office of the clerk of the municipality and, within five days, to publish notice of the assessment in a newspaper having a circulation in the municipality.

The action initiated by the plaintiffs in the present ease was an attempted appeal from the defendant’s assessment by which they sought a reduction in the amount of the assessment and other relief pursuant to §7-250. As such, the plaintiffs were required to file their appeal within twenty-one days of the date the assessment was filed. General Statutes § 7-250. Since the plaintiffs admittedly failed to comply with this statutory directive, and because no claim is made that the actual filing of the assessment or subsequent notice thereof was, in any way, insufficient, the plaintiffs’ appeal was fatally defective.

By way of special defense, however, the plaintiffs claimed that the appeal period provided by § 7-250 did not begin to run until the bills for the assessment were actually received since notice of the public hearing held prior to the actual filing of the assessment was not given to them in the requisite manner. Although such an allegation would be relevant in a collateral action brought by the plaintiffs claiming that, due to insufficient notice, the defendant was without jurisdiction to levy the assessment in the *502 first instance; see Vaill v. Sewer Commission, supra, 518-19; Schwartz v. Hamden, 168 Conn. 8, 14, 357 A.2d 488; Meriden v. Camp, 46 Conn. 284, 290; where, as here, the validity of the assessment is conceded and the proceedings initiated merely seek an alteration of the amount of the assessment through the remedy of a statutory appeal, challenges directed at the assessment procedure itself cannot operate to validate an otherwise untimely appeal. “A statutory right to appeal may be taken advantage of only by strict compliance with the statutory provisions by which it is created. In re Nunez, 165 Conn. 435, 441, 334 A.2d 898; Chanosky v. City Building Supply Co., 152 Conn.

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Bluebook (online)
408 A.2d 254, 176 Conn. 497, 1979 Conn. LEXIS 685, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vecchio-v-sewer-authority-conn-1979.