224 A.2d 404 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1966
This is an appeal by five banking institutions located in the town of Meriden, hereinafter called the plaintiffs, from the issuance on December 1, 1965, by the defendant banking commission, of a temporary certificate of authority for the operation of the proposed Laurel Bank and Trust Company, hereinafter called Laurel bank, pursuant to §
The organizers filed the articles of incorporation of the Laurel bank with the bank commissioner on or about August 13, 1965. The bank commissioner issued an order, dated August 18, 1965, that a hearing be held before the banking commission on Tuesday, September 21, 1965, at 11 a.m., on the application of the organizers of the Laurel bank for a certificate of authority to complete its organization for the purpose of doing business as a bank and trust company, and further ordered that notice of such hearing be given by publishing a copy of the proposed articles of incorporation and notice of the time and place set for the hearing "at least once each week for three successive weeks before said day of the hearing in the Meriden Record, a newspaper published in the City of Meriden and having circulation in Meriden." The organizers of the Laurel bank sent by certified mail a copy of the articles of incorporation on September 1, 1965, to the plaintiffs and to the other state bank and trust *364 companies and savings banks having an office in Meriden, and also published a copy thereof in the Meriden Record on September 3, 10 and 17, 1965.
The banking commission conducted a public hearing on September 21, 1965. On that day the following persons participated as members of the commission: Phillip Hewes, the bank commissioner; Gerald A. Lamb, the treasurer of the state; and James J. Casey, the deputy comptroller of the state. On December 1, 1965, the commission as above constituted approved the application by a majority vote. Lamb and Casey voted to approve, and Hewes voted in opposition. On December 6, 1965, notice of this decision was published in the Connecticut Banking Department Bulletin No. 143. The parties stipulated in open court that the plaintiffs are aggrieved by the action of the banking commission.
The first principal claim of the plaintiffs is that the organizers of the proposed bank failed to give adequate notice of the hearing on the articles of incorporation of said bank pursuant to §
The plaintiffs further contend that by sending a copy of the proposed articles of incorporation of the proposed Laurel bank to the plaintiffs and other banking institutions in the community on September 1, 1965, giving notice of a hearing on September 21, 1965, the organizers of said bank failed to give notice "not less than twenty nor more than forty days prior to the hearing," as provided by §
In Lunt v. Zoning Board of Appeals,
"Failure to give proper notice constitutes a jurisdictional defect. Smith v. F. W. Woolworth Co.,