406 A.2d 9 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1979
The defendant made a series of charges against officials and employees of the town of Fairfield, including allegations of unethical conduct, corrupting influence and illegal activities. The plaintiff board of selectmen of the town of Fairfield appointed an ethics panel to investigate those allegations. The ethics panel requested the board of selectmen to issue a subpoena requiring the defendant to appear and testify concerning the allegations he had made. The board of selectmen *669 granted the request and authorized the issuance of a subpoena to compel the defendant to testify before a joint session of the board of selectmen and the ethics panel. The subpoena was issued and signed by the town attorney in his capacity as a commissioner of the Superior Court. The defendant appeared at a joint session of the board of selectmen and the ethics panel, but he refused to testify after the board of selectmen adopted a resolution ordering him to do so. The plaintiff board then commenced this action to compel the defendant to give such testimony. The trial court concluded that "[t]here are no procedures by which the [plaintiff] may apply to a court for an order to compel compliance with its subpoena power," and rendered judgment for the defendant. The plaintiff appealed, contending that the trial court had the power to order compliance with the subpoena because the power to issue a subpoena carries with it the power to apply to a court for enforcement.
Subpoena powers were originally granted to the board of selectmen of the town of Fairfield by Special Act 527 of the 1947 session of the General Assembly. The granting provision reads as follows: "The selectmen shall have the power to investigate any and all departments, offices and agencies of the town and for such purpose shall have the power to issue subpoenas." 25 Spec. Acts 698, No. 527, c. 4, 4. This subpoena power was retained by the board of selectmen under subsequently adopted charter provisions. See Fairfield Charter, c. 4, 3 (1961) and Fairfield Charter, c. 4, 3 (1975). Although the General Assembly gave the selectmen of the town of Fairfield the power to issue subpoenas, it gave them no power or procedure to compel their enforcement. The special act and charter must be applied as their words direct. Dental Commission v. Tru-Fit Plastics, Inc.,
In the absence of expressed legislative authority, the mere granting of the power to issue a subpoena does not carry with it the implied power of enforcement. "The power to compel a witness to answer is inherent in a court of justice; but when the power to summon and examine witnesses is given to a mere administrative officer, the power to compel an answer cannot be inferred, but must be clearly given by statute." In re Application of Clark,
The special act and charter do not grant subpoena powers accompanied by a grant of power to punish summarily those who refuse to obey the subpoena or testify, nor do they grant subpoena powers coupled with the authority to apply to the court to compel compliance. If the General Assembly desired the plaintiff to have those powers, it could have so provided by special act or by statute. "`The General Assembly is always presumed to know all the existing statutes and the effect that its action or non-action will have upon any one of them. And it is always presumed to have intended that effect which its action or non-action produces.'" Hartley v. Vitiello,
In Noyes v. Byxbee,
In Blakeslee Sons v. Carroll,
In its brief the plaintiff argues that
There is no error.
In this opinion A. HEALEY and PARSKEY, Js., concurred.