The principal issue before us on this appeal is whether General Statutes § 51-29 (now § 51-183b) is applicable to an appeal from an administrative proceeding.
1
The relevant procedural history underlying this appeal is- undisputed: Pursuant to General Statutes § 4-183, a provision of the Uniform Administrative Procedure Act; General Statutes c. 54; the plaintiff, Connecticut Light and Power Company, sought review in the
The initial question before this court is whether certification for appeal was properly granted. The plaintiff contends that an appeal would lie from the granting of a motion to set aside a judgment in order to determine whether the trial court had acted beyond its jurisdiction in granting the motion. The plaintiff’s claim is that if § 51-29 does not apply to this case, the court below acted beyond its power in setting aside the judgment, and its action therefore would be appealable. In these circumstances, we agree that in order to determine whether this court has jurisdiction over the present appeal, we must determine whether the trial court had jurisdiction to grant the motion to set aside the judgment.
Although the granting of a motion to set aside a judgment and for a new trial is not ordinarily a “final judgment” within the purview of either General Statutes § 52-263 or Practice Book, 1978, § 3000; see
State
v.
Phillips,
Hence, the plaintiff’s claim concerning the lack of jurisdiction of the court {Kelly, J.) puts us in the anomalous position of having to decide the plaintiff’s principal claim on this appeal, i.e., that § 51-29 does not apply to administrative appeals, in order to decide whether we have jurisdiction to entertain the appeal. In light, however, of our conclusion that the court below did not err in determining that § 51-29 applies to administrative appeals, we need not reach the plaintiff’s jurisdictional claim that if the court below did err in deciding the applicability of § 51-29, its ruling on the defendant’s motion to set aside the judgment and for a new trial would be beyond its jurisdiction.
We have consistently held that General Statutes § 51-29 requires a judge to decide a case before the close of the session of the court next succeeding the session at which it is commenced and that a judgment, rendered after the time specified, is erroneous absent waiver or consent by the parties.
Bogaert
v.
Zoning Board of Appeals,
Nor, under the facts of this case, would any claim of waiver or consent be tenable. Referring to
Spelke,
supra, 646, this court, in
Bogaert,
supra,
These observations concerning waiver and consent in our prior decisions are in accord with the clear intent of § 51-29 to place the onus on judges to decide cases in a timely fashion. Section 51-29 is not directed at litigants, their attorneys, or the subject matter of the cases. 3
This argument overlooks, however, two well-established rules of statutory construction. First, § 51-29 employs the phrase “civil cause” and not
Moreover, since the scope of proceedings which will be included within a term, whose precise reach is uncertain, depends upon the nature and purpose of the particular statute in question;
Carbone
v.
Zoning Board of Appeals,
Since we conclude that § 51-29 applies to administrative appeals, we are constrained to dismiss this appeal for lack of jurisdiction and to conclude that we improvidently granted certification for appeal. “When an appeal is dismissed for lack of jurisdiction no costs are taxable.”
Hoberman
v.
Lake of Isles, Inc.,
The appeal is dismissed without taxable costs to either party.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
Although the most recent decisions of this court interpreting § 51-29 were in the nature of administrative appeals;
Bogaert
v.
Zoning Board of Appeals,
Section 51-29 was amended when it was transferred to § 51-183b of the General Statutes.
The record in this case raises an important jurisdictional question that was neither considered by the trial court nor raised in the briefs of the parties: if a judgment is not entered within the time prescribed by General Statutes § 51-29, may an attack on the judgment be made by a motion to set the judgment aside filed in the court but heard by another judge of that court. If the latter was without jurisdiction to decide the claim that the judgment was erroneous, then this court would be without jurisdiction to review an appeal from the judgment on the motion. See
Guida
v.
Public Utilities Commission,
Similarly the Practice Book sections the plaintiff relies on dealt with the transfer of causes and the transmission of files and papers.
This definition of “cause” has changed insignificantly since the time the predecessor of § 51-29 was first enacted as chapter 3 of the Public Acts of 1879. Webster’s American Dictionary of the English Language in its 1871 edition defined “cause” as “A suit or action in court; any legal process by which a party endeavors to obtain his claim, or what he regards as his right.”
