46 A.2d 896 | Conn. | 1946
The plaintiffs, Nick S. Dudow and Walter N. Dudow, are permittee and backer, respectively, of a restaurant liquor permit for premises located at 259-261 Congress Avenue in New Haven. On November 1, 1944, the defendant suspended their permit for an indefinite period on the grounds that the place was an unsuitable place because it was not kept, used, maintained, advertised and held out to the public as one where the regular service of hot meals at least twice daily was the principal business conducted therein, and that the permittee was an unsuitable person in that he had falsified his records to deceive the defendant. The plaintiffs appealed to the Court of Common Pleas. It concluded that the permittee conducted a bona fide restaurant within the meaning of General Statutes, Cum. Sup. 1935, 1012c(7), that there was no falsification of records to deceive the commission within the meaning of 55 of its regulations, that on the basis of the evidence presented on the trial to the court the action of the commission in suspending the permit was improper and illegal, and *666 that the appeal should be sustained. Judgment was rendered for the plaintiffs and the defendant has appealed to this court.
Upon evidence produced at the trial before it, the court made a finding of subordinate facts which the defendant expressly concedes is sufficient to support the court's conclusions and judgment. During the trial the defendant introduced in evidence as exhibit 1 a statement of the facts which it found proven at the hearing before it, with its conclusions thereon. The defendant was entitled to have this statement admitted as evidence. General Statutes, Sup. 1941, 463f; Cripps v. Liquor Control Commission,
A full answer is found in the decisions of this court. Prior to the enactment of 463f by the legislature in 1941, the legality of an order by the commission could be tested only "upon the basis of the proceedings before it, if they were available, or upon a finding of facts by the court upon the assumption that these were the facts upon which the commission acted." DeMond v. Liquor Control Commission,
It is evident from the decisions above referred to that the defendant, in order to obtain for future cases redress of the nature urged upon this appeal, must resort to the legislature. Whether this has already been accomplished by its enactment of 640h of the 1945 Supplement to the General Statutes, in which, among other changes, the provision that "the trial shall be de novo" is omitted, we have no occasion to consider at this time.
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.