367 A.2d 698 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1976
Among the least attractive mechanisms in the law are the legal fictions that tend to restrict the right of the public to have access to the courts. Such a fiction is the established rule that a person aggrieved by the action of an administrative body may appeal to this court, but that he does not have a cause or right of action. Carbone
v. Zoning Board of Appeals,
Under the Inland Wetlands and Water Courses act, General Statutes §§
In 1967, the legislature recognized the injustice that might result if a sheriff, through inattention, oversight or lack of time, failed to serve papers in time. It gave the sheriff a grace period of fifteen additional days. The law, now §
It is the position of the defendants that since an administrative appeal is not a cause or right of action §
Apparently, all of the reported cases followingCarbone v. Zoning Board of Appeals,
An examination of the oft-quoted paragraph inCarbone v. Zoning Board of Appeals, supra, 607-608, in the light of the facts in the present case reveals some fairly sharp distinctions between the two cases. In the Carbone case, the appellants were claiming the right to appeal within one year under § 6024 of the 1930 Revision, the predecessor to General Statutes §
Since 1940, the date of Carbone v. Zoning Boardof Appeals, supra, there has been a proliferation of the number and types of administrative appeals. This is attributable, in part, to the expanded concepts of open government and due process. As a consequence, the legislature, in 1971, passed what is known as the Uniform Administrative Procedure Act. General Statutes §§
Many state and local agencies, however, maintain their own appeal periods making appeals hazardous for the unwary. A few examples which come to mind are: the public utilities control authority, from which appeals may be taken within thirty days after the filing of the order, General Statutes §
In Carbone v. Zoning Board of Appeals, supra, the source of the rule, the court did not take as rigid and unyielding a position as subsequent cases seem to indicate. In the very last sentence in the body of the decision (p. 608) the court stated: "It may be that there are cases where upon the failure of an appeal taken within the time allowed, an appellant should be given the opportunity to bring another appeal after that time, but whether that should be allowed and under what restrictions are matters for the consideration of the Legislature." *176
In 1967 the legislature passed §
the brief grace period of fifteen days that §
Finally, there are three additional arguments against the claim that §