The plaintiff appealed to the Court -of Common Pleas, under § 1048c of the 1953 Cumulative Supplement to the General Statutes, from the suspension of his license and motor vehicle registration by the commissioner of motor vehicles. The court sustained his appeal and ordered judgment entered vacating the suspension. The commissioner has appealed from this judgment. The case concerns *204 the interpretation and application by the commissioner of the so-called financial responsibility provisions of the motor vehicle law. Cum. Sup. 1953, §§ 1047c-1069c.
The facts are not in dispute. The plaintiff was not insured with respect to his car against liability for personal injury or property damage, he was not exempt under § 1053c from the requirements as to security and suspension, and he had not been required to furnish proof of financial responsibility under § 1044c. On July 28, 1954, while he was operating his automobile, he was involved in an accident in which Michael Durkin, a pedestrian, was injured. Durkin sued the plaintiff for negligence and claimed $20,000 damages in an action returnable to the Superior Court in Hartford County in October, 1954. He caused an attachment to be made on real estate owned by the plaintiff and his wife jointly, with right of survivorship. This property had a market value of $6500 and was subject to a mortgage for $4175. The pleadings in the case have been closed and it is now awaiting trial.
On October 25, 1954, the commissioner, pursuant to § 1051c, requested the plaintiff to deposit $800' in cash or its equivalent as security for Durkin’s claim for injuries or suffer the suspension of his motor vehicle registration and operator’s license. The plaintiff failed to comply, and the suspension became effective. Thereupon the plaintiff asked for and was given a hearing by a duly authorized representative of the commissioner. § 1048c. At the hearing the plaintiff claimed that the attachment on his real estate was sufficient to satisfy any judgment which Durkin might recover, at least to the extent of $800, and that the commissioner should accept evidence of the attachment as the security re *205 quired by him. The plaintiff presently earns $73 a week, and he could increase his income to $5000 a year by selling insurance if he could have the use of his automobile. He makes no claim that the amount fixed by the commissioner, $800, is excessive. The commissioner refused to accept evidence of the attachment as security unless the plaintiff could secure from Durkin or his attorney an affidavit to the effect that the attachment was satisfactory and that Durkin did not desire additional security.
The trial court reached the following conclusions: (1) The commissioner must consider the attachment on real estate as security in the amount represented by the equity in the real estate; (2) he could not refuse to accept evidence of an attachment on real estate as a deposit; (3) in so refusing, he had acted illegally, arbiti*arily and in abuse of his discretion. The certificate of registration and operator’s license of the plaintiff were ordered to be returned to him. These rulings furnish the basis of the commissioner’s appeal. The plaintiff claimed that the statutes under which the commissioner purported to act were unconstitutional. The court overruled this claim, and the plaintiff filed a cross appeal. He has, however, failed to appear and urge his cross appeal either in argument or brief. We will therefore consider it as having been abandoned.
This is the first case in this court in which the powers of the motor vehicles commissioner under the financial responsibility statutes have been directly questioned. We shall consider first the nature of this proceeding. The commissioner is an administrative officer to whom the legislature has given the power to administer this law. § 1048c. He is specifically authorized to give a hearing upon the request of any person claiming to have been aggrieved by *206 Ms action, and Ms acts and orders are subject to review upon appeal to the Court of Common Pleas. Ibid. The court may decide, as it did in this case, that the appeal should operate as a stay of the-suspension.
Section 1048c states: “The court may, in disposing of the issue before it, modify, affirm or reverse the order ... of the commissioner in whole or in part.” This means no more than that the court may decide whether the commissioner, upon the facts-before him, has mistaken the law, and so has acted illegally, or whether he has been arbitrary to the-extent of abusing his discretion.
Gibson
v.
Connecticut Medical Examining Board,
The purpose of the law requiring the registration of motor vehicles is identification and revenue.
Gonchar
v.
Kelson,
It appears from the court’s finding that the commissioner would have accepted as security in the amount of $800 any one of the following: (a) a cash deposit; (b) a surety company bond; (c) a mortgage on real estate with proof that the equity mortgaged was at least equal to the amount of the security requested; and (d) evidence of the attachment, if proof was submitted that the equity attached was at least equal to the amount of security required and if Durkin filed an affidavit that he was satisfied with the attachment and desired no further security. The commissioner was clearly authorized to propose and to accept either (a), (b) or (c). The basis of the court’s decision was that his refusal to accept evidence of the attachment as security without the approval of Durkin was illegal, arbitrary and in abuse of his discretion.
The purpose of the legislature in enacting the financial responsibility provisions of the motor vehicle law was to keep off our highways the financially irresponsible owner or operator of an automobile who cannot respond in damages for the injuries he may inflict, and to require him, as a condition for securing or retaining a registration or an operator’s license, to furnish adequate means of satisfying possible claims against him. It is remedial legislation and must be given a construction sufficiently liberal to accomplish its purpose.
Derench
v.
Administrator,
The commissioner argues that the only “security” which he can accept must be of such a nature that it can be deposited with the state treasurer and by him applied to the payment of a judgment. § 1057c. So far as requiring “security” is concerned, this is a proper interpretation of his powers. Section 1069c, however, states that nothing in the law “shall be construed as preventing the plaintiff in any action at law from relying for relief upon any other process provided by law.” This means that a plaintiff who is bringing, or has brought, an action for damages arising out of the operation of an automobile need not depend entirely upon such “security” as the commissioner may require to satisfy any judgment. He may proceed by the process of attachment upon any property belonging to the owner or the operator *210 of the automobile and levy upon it after final judgment. Under such circumstances, the commissioner is bound to consider this attachment in determining what, if any, “security” may be required. Exercising the powers conferred by § 1051c, he may determine that under all the circumstances the attachment provides adequate guarantee for the satisfaction of any judgment and that no security is required; or he may decide that the attachment is insufficient and demand security in addition; or, if security has been previously ordered, he may, under § 1056c, reduce the amount. The institution of actions claiming damages by the process of attaching property of the defendant to compel his attendance in court and his response to a judgment if one is obtained is a well-known and long-established practice in our courts. In conferring power upon the commissioner in such broad language as that which is used, the legislature surely did not intend that he should refuse to take into consideration, in a determination of what, if any, security is required, the existence of a substantial attachment. In refusing to accept evidence of the attachment in the instant ease, he mistook the law and abused his discretion.
The judgment of the court went further than was proper. The appeal should have been sustained and the ease remanded to the commissioner for the purpose of ascertaining, in determining the amount of security to be required of the plaintiff, the value, if any, of the attachment.
There is error in the form of the judgment, it is set aside and the case is remanded with direction to render judgment in accordance with this opinion.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
