349 A.2d 150 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1975
In this action, raising an issue not heretofore determined by Connecticut courts, the plaintiff, Frederick M. Feigl, an elector and resident of the town of New Fairfield, seeks a writ of mandamus to compel (1) the board of selectmen to warn a special town meeting pursuant to a petition presented to it on September 17, 1974, under General Statutes §
The defendants have filed a return or answer pursuant to § 466 of the Practice Book, and the parties have agreed that that answer is in effect a demurrer and may be treated as such. The court will act accordingly.
The facts which have given rise to the request for relief are not in dispute. A school budget prepared and submitted by the board of finance for approval at the annual town meeting on May 11, 1974,1 was rejected at that meeting and was again subsequently rejected at special town meetings on June 8, 1974, and June 29, 1974.2 Acting pursuant to section
The initial question to be considered is the propriety of the refusal of the board of selectmen to warn a special town meeting. The petition requesting such action by the selectmen reads as follows: "Resolved that the Selectmen, Board of Finance and the Town Treasurer are directed and authorized to rebate to all taxpayers of the town of New Fairfield the amount of $342,460, which was levied in excess of the 1974/75 budgets as approved by the Town Meeting." While the board of selectmen is required to warn a town meeting on petition of twenty inhabitants qualified to vote; General Statutes §
"Municipalities have no powers of taxation other than those specifically given by the statutes. NewBritain v. Mariners Savings Bank,
Clearly, the established rule in this state is that, except for an express statutory or charter provision, neither the board of selectmen, board of finance, nor town treasurer has the authority even to consider a tax rebate. In addition, the body politic of a municipality cannot order such a rebate. Those situations in which abatement or refund is possible have been carefully circumscribed by the legislature. See General Statutes §§
The plaintiff's further request for a writ of mandamus to compel the board of finance to meet *242
and recalculate a mill rate must be viewed in light of the above discussion. The writ of mandamus is not issued as a matter of right but in the exercise of sound legal discretion. It should issue only when the duty of which enforcement is sought is the performance of a precise act requiring no discretion on the part of the defendant, the right of the plaintiff to have the duty performed is clear, and the plaintiff is without adequate remedy at law. Stateex rel. Lacerenza v. Osborn,
While the factors to be considered and the procedure to be followed by a board of finance in laying a tax are set forth fully in §
The plaintiff refers in his writ to the "temporary" tax laid by the selectmen under General Statutes §
Section
It should be pointed out that the language of §
The court is called upon to determine here whether the board of finance, the selectmen, or the treasurer has an obligation and duty to respond to the ultimate lowering of the educational appropriation by changing the mill rate, reducing the taxes, and refunding those taxes already collected.3
Clearly, the issuance of a writ of mandamus under the facts alleged by the plaintiff is neither warranted nor proper. Carilli v. Pension Commission,
The petition for the town meeting is illegal and improper for reasons indicated and therefore not the subject of mandamus; the board of finance cannot now revise the established mill rate downward for want of statutory authority to do so; and for the same reasons the tax collector cannot be subject to mandamus. The remedy for the plaintiff's dilemma lies not with the courts but with the legislature from which flows the power to tax.
The defendants' demurrer is sustained.