This is an action for a declaratory judgment determining whether the plaintiff has a right under his restaurant liquor permit to sell liquor on his premises in New Hartford on Sunday. The case was submitted to the trial court upon a stipulation of facts. The court rendered judgment for the defendant, denying the plaintiff’s claimed right and incidental contentions. The plaintiff has appealed.
The court’s decision involved a determination of the effect to be accorded the action taken by certain meetings of the defendant town pursuant to § 979e of the 1939 Supplement to the General Statutes and amending statutes. The statute as amended (Sup. 1949, § 438a) provides that Sunday sales shall be unlawful except on December 31 or January 1, “except that any town may, by a vote of a town meeting or by ordinance, allow the sale of alcoholic liquor on Sunday between the hours of twelve o’clock noon and nine o’clock in the evening in hotels, restaurants and clubs.” The underlying question determinative of the appeal is whether the word “and” as used in the phrase “hotels, restaurants and clubs” is to be construed in the conjunctive sense, as contended by the plaintiff, or in the disjunctive, as claimed by the defendant.
The court concluded that the statutory provision in question is to be construed in the alternative, so that a town is not required, upon an affirmative vote, to allow Sunday sales by all three types of permittee but may permit such Sunday sales in hotels only; that the town meetings referred to above were properly called, conducted and concluded; that the action taken thereby was according to law; and that the plaintiff does not
An action for a declaratory judgment is a special statutory proceeding under § 644a of the 1949 Supplement, implemented by the rules in § § 249 and 250 of the Practice Book.
Newington
v.
Mazzoccoli,
Whether the word “and” in the statute is to be construed in the conjunctive or the disjunctive sense is determinative of the validity of the calls and votes of the town meetings concerning Sunday sales and also of the claim of the plaintiff of an existing right in him to sell on Sunday. His principal claim is that the word should be construed literally and so in the conjunctive sense because it signifies “that something is to follow in addition to that which precedes.” 3 C. J. S. 1067. To effectuate the intention of the legislature, however, “and” may be construed to mean “or.” 3 C. J. S. 1068. What the legislative intent expressed by the phrase “hotels, restaurants and clubs” as used in the statute is cannot be determined by resort to a definition of the word “and” per se but must be deduced from a consideration of the several pertinent statutory provisions indicative of the policy of the state in conferring upon each town certain rights of local option as to the sale of alcoholic liquor within its borders.
Chambers
v.
In considering other relevant statutory provisions which illuminate the legislative intent expressed by the phrase in question, it is to be had in mind that the liquor traffic is a business which admittedly may be dangerous to public health, safety and morals, and that because of this fact the legislature’s power to regulate it is much broader than in the case of an ordinary lawful business essential to the conduct of human affairs.
Francis
v.
Fitzpatrick,
The only reasonable interpretation of these provisions for control by the town of the liquor traffic within its confines is that they express the purpose of the legislature to allow the voters of the town to determine whether the sale of alcoholic beverages shall be permitted at all within the town under other than a manufacturer or railroad permit and if so during what hours on weekdays and by what class of permittees, if any, on Sundays. This power so delegated to the towns, like the state’s broad power of regulation referred to above, is to be liberally construed to sustain the town’s right to protect its inhabitants against probable harmful effects of the liquor traffic, whether it decides that these are more likely to ensue from Sunday sales by one type of permittee rather than another or for some other reason which it deems sufficient. The full realization of this purpose requires that “and” as used in the provision in question be interpreted as meaning “or,” and we so construe it.
State ex rel. Ryan
v.
Bailey,
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
