The plaintiffs, wholesale distributors of beer in Connecticut, appealed to the Superior Court from the action of the defendant liquor control commission (hereinafter the commission), dated March 20, 1978, wherein the commission modified sanctions it had previously imposed upon the defendants Miller Brewing Company and Warren H. Dunn, an officer of Miller Brewing Company (hеreinafter Miller and Dunn), relating to the sale by Miller of Lowenbrau beer in this state. The court granted a motion to erase the appeal filed by Miller and Dunn, joined in by the commission. The рlaintiffs assign
As the defendants’ motiоn was directed to the complaint as a whole, the only facts appearing of record in the present ease, prior to the filing of the motion to erase, are thоse appearing in the plaintiffs’ writ, summons and complaint. The complaint alleged the following facts: On May 12, 1975, the commission issued to the defendant Dunn, with the defendant Miller as backer, an out-of-state shipper’s permit, No. OSB-39, for the purpose of shipping beer into the state. On October 1, 1975, the commission issued a notice to Miller to show cause why the permit should not be revoked or suspended for refusing to supply Lowenbrau beer to the plaintiffs as wholesalers holding distributorships for that brand. 1 Thereafter, following a hearing on the charges notiсed, the commission, finding that Miller had committed certain statutory violations; see General Statutes § 30-17; revoked its out-of-state shipper’s permit. The plaintiffs were permitted to intervene in this proceeding, and in Miller’s subsequent appeal to the Court of Common Pleas, which affirmed the decision of the commission.
On July 1,1977, Miller, again opposed by the present plaintiffs as intervenors, moved to open the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas, which motion was denied on December 30, 1977. In the interim, however, in October, 1977, the commission
Upon the plaintiffs’ appeal to the Superior Court, and the defendants’ respоnsive motion to erase, the court determined that the plaintiffs had not alleged aggrievement in their appeal, nor had they alleged facts from which the court could determine a basis for a finding of aggrievement. See General Statutes §4-183 (a). Furthermore, the court found that the plaintiffs did not fall within any of the classes of parties permitted to appeal from commission action under § 30-60 of the General Statutes and, accordingly, dismissed the plaintiffs’ appeal. From the judgment rendered, the plaintiffs have pursued an appeаl to this court.
The twin bases of the trial court’s decision sustaining the defendants’ motion to erase are clear: that the plaintiffs had a right to appeal neither under the appeals provision of the Liquor Control
In their complaint in the trial court, and before this court, the plaintiffs assign great significance to the fact that they were permitted to participate as intervenors in the administrative and judicial proceedings which have culminated in this appeal, suggesting that this somehow strengthens their claim of aggrievement in respect to the commission’s acceptance of a fine from Miller in lieu of the permit revocation. Mere status, however, as a party or a participant in a hearing before an administrative agency does not in and of itself сonstitute aggrievement for the purposes of appellate review.
Beckish
v.
Manafort,
We agree with the trial court on both of the bases of its decision. First, the plaintiffs do not fall within the catеgories of parties statutorily entitled to appeal commission action under § 30-60 of the Gen
It is well settled that the question of aggrievement is a jurisdictional one and that claims of aggrievement present an issue of fact for the determination of the trial court with the burden of proving aggrievement resting upon the plaintiffs who have alleged it.
Nader
v.
Altermatt,
There is no error.
Notes
For explanatory purposеs, we note that in 1975 Miller became the successor to Hans Holterboseh, Ine., which had prior to that time been the exclusive distributor of Lowenbrau beer. The initial dispute between thе present plaintiffs and Miller arose from Miller’s post-acquisition refusal to sell Lowenbrau to several former Lowenbrau distributors, comprising the plaintiffs in this appeal.
The plaintiffs mounted a procedural argument — that the defendants’ motion to erase was improperly being utilized to serve the office of a demurrer in attacking the legal sufficiency of the plaintiffs’ cause of action — which was rejected by the court. The court’s aetion was clearly correct. Failure to allege aggrievement, or facts from whieh a dеtermination of aggrievement could be made, is a defect demonstrating “want of jurisdiction appear[ing] on the record”; Practice Book, 1963, § 94; not merely a pleading deficiency. A motion to erase properly filed does not involve niceties of pleading, but attacks the very power of the court to hear and determine the cause. In suсh circumstances, the defendants’ jurisdictional attack was eorreetly premised upon their motion to erase.
Tuccio
v.
Zehrung,
That section permits an appeal from commission аction by the following parties: (1) Any applicant for a permit or for the renewal of a permit for the manufacture or sale of alcoholic liquor whose application is refused; (2) any person whose permit is revoked or suspended by the commission; or (3) any ten residents who have filed a remonstrance pursuant to § 30-39 and who are aggrieved by the granting of a permit. The limited exception to these categories, establishing aggrievement as a matter of law for “resident taxpayers” contesting the granting of a liquor licеnse; see
Beards Appeal from County Commissioners,
See, e.g., Hartford Distributors, Inc. v. Miller Brewing Co., No. H-78-290 (D. Conn. 1978).
