30 A.2d 547 | Conn. | 1943
The plaintiff appealing from the liquor control commission, merely alleged that on and before September 29, 1941, he had held a restaurant beer permit and that on that day the commission revoked it, assigning violation of one of its regulations as the reason. The defendant demurred to the complaint substantially on the ground that the plaintiff had failed to allege any facts upon which the court could render judgment in his favor. The demurrer was overruled and the plaintiff moved for judgment because of the defendant's failure to plead over. After some intervening proceedings not necessary to relate, judgment was entered for the plaintiff and the defendant appealed. The question is whether the allegations of the complaint were sufficient to bring the matter before the court so that it could adjudicate the issue between the parties.
The plaintiff relies, in support of his claim that the appeal was sufficient, upon two amendments made in the section of the Liquor Control Act concerning appeals which added to the former law the provision *644
that upon an appeal "the trial shall be de novo," and that the court, "after a hearing thereon, may reverse or affirm, wholly or partly, or may modify or revise the decision appealed from." General Statutes, Sup. 1941, 463f. In determining the legislative intent expressed in these provisions, it is necessary to have in mind the functions which under our constitution can properly be vested in the courts in matters of this nature. In Hopson's Appeal,
We cannot attribute to the legislature an intent to pass a law which would contravene the constitution if the statute can reasonably be construed to avoid such a result. Sage-Allen Co., Inc., v. Wheeler,
The other addition to the statute, that the court "may reverse or affirm, wholly or partly, or may modify or revise" the decision of the commission, does not indicate a different intent. Under that provision, the court cannot, on an appeal, substitute its discretion for that vested in the liquor control commission; it can go no further than to make the decision of the commission conform to law or to a conclusion which is the only reasonable one upon the facts proven. Colonial Beacon Oil Co. v. Zoning Board of Appeals,
As the appeal is not a transfer of jurisdiction from the commission to the court but a process for invoking the power of the court to decide whether, upon the facts it finds proven, the decision of the commission was unwarranted in law or in abuse of its discretion, the amendments to the act did not change the nature of the proceeding, and the appellant must allege in his appeal the grounds upon which he claims that he is *647 entitled to relief, as has been the accepted practice in all appeals of this nature. Practice Book, Forms 576 et seq.
There is error, the judgment is set aside and the case is remanded with direction to sustain the demurrer.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.