172 A. 861 | Conn. | 1934
This is a proceeding brought to determine the compensation due the defendant for certain land taken for the use of the state park and forest commission. The matter was referred to a state referee. He filed a report in which, aside from certain statements of a formal character as to the taking of the land and the inability of the parties to agree upon the price to be paid for it, he simply found that the defendant had sustained damages by the taking to the amount of $14,500, and appraised the damages to be paid at that sum. The plaintiffs remonstrated against the acceptance of the report; the defendant demurred to the remonstrance; the trial court sustained the demurrer; and from the judgment accepting the report the plaintiffs have appealed.
Aside from certain rulings upon evidence, the plaintiffs were by their remonstrance seeking two main objects, first, to attack the finding of the referee as to the damages suffered by the defendant on the ground that they were excessive and, secondly, to present to the court for review the question whether the referee, in determining the amount of the damages, had taken into consideration certain elements not properly to be regarded, particularly the effect of the taking of the land in question upon the value of other land owned by the defendant and the possibility of the use of the land taken for development and sale as building lots. The form of the remonstrance and the demurrer both indicate a misapprehension as to the proper methods of procedure to present to the court the real issues which the plaintiffs desired to have determined.
The referee made a definite finding as to the amount of damages suffered by the defendant. The plaintiffs *353
might have remonstrated against the acceptance of the report upon the ground that this finding was without evidence to support it. Practice Book, p. 266, § 102. The trial court should then have examined the evidence to see whether there was evidence which, considered in the light of the situation of the property and the applicable rules of law, afforded reasonable support to the finding of the referee. Instead of asking the court to review the finding of the referee upon that basis, the remonstrance alleged that the amount of damages awarded was "excessively high and contrary to the evidence." Such an allegation is but a request to the trial court to weigh the evidence in support of and contrary to the finding of the referee. Ferguson v.Cripps,
Two of the paragraphs of the remonstrance were to the effect that the referee failed to find certain facts set out in them, which the plaintiffs alleged to be necessary to enable the court to render judgment on the issues. While these facts seem to be matters as to which there was no dispute, the remonstrance did not so allege and hence afforded the trial court no basis upon which it might add them to the finding. Practice Book, p. 266, § 102. Instead it left these matters *354
under its general claim that the report be rejected or recommitted for a further finding in accordance with the remonstrance. One of these paragraphs consisted merely of a statement of the price paid by the State for certain land bought by it contiguous to the tract in question. Such a fact was purely evidential and would have no proper place in the report of the referee.Walsh v. Hayes,
Another paragraph of the remonstrance set up that the referee failed to state the basis of his award of damages, more particularly, that he failed to state whether he included damages to other land of the defendant and whether he determined the damages upon the basis that the land taken represented building lots or that it was undeveloped; that the referee failed to find that the land was not developed or available for sale or use for building purposes in its condition at the time of the taking and that he failed to find that the evidence as to value presented by the defendant was based upon conditions which did not exist at the time the land was taken. If a committee or referee has no reason to believe that any question will arise in connection with the acceptance of his report as to rulings or conclusions entering into his ultimate findings of facts, he may properly confine the report to such findings. Fox v. South Norwalk, *355
Where, as in this case, a necessary basis for reviewing the rulings of a committee or referee is the importation into the record of the facts upon which those rulings are based, the party aggrieved has two courses open to him. If such facts are admitted or undisputed, he may ask the trial court itself to add them *356
to the finding. If, however, a finding as to some or all of them must be based upon conflicting evidence, he should seek a recommittal of the report. A remonstrance seeking relief of this nature should either state the particular facts the remonstrant seeks to have added to the finding or indicate them with reasonable certainty, so that the trial court can determine their relevancy and the referee can know the matters upon which a finding is desired. The evidence attached to a remonstrance seeking a recommittal for this purpose enables the trial court to determine whether there was evidence before the referee from which he might reasonably find facts necessary to present the rulings. If the court finds that there is such evidence, in the absence of some countervailing circumstance, it should recommit the report so as to enable the remonstrant to present to it the correctness of the rulings of the referee. Walz v. Bennett,
The remaining grounds of the remonstrance seek to present certain rulings upon evidence made by the referee. A remonstrance, in order to present a ruling by a committee or referee, should state it as is required to be done in findings of a trial court upon appeal to this court. See Rules for Appellate Procedure, 1930, *357 § 14. The remonstrance before us failed properly to present any rulings upon evidence and, while no ground of the demurrer was directed to them, the trial court might properly have disregarded this portion of the remonstrance.
We have reviewed at length the procedure adopted in this case in order to point out a correct procedure to secure a review by the court of the actions and rulings of a committee or referee. The upshot of the matter is that the remonstrance was defective in the respects indicated but the demurrer failed to specify a sufficient ground for so holding.
There is error and the case is remanded to be proceeded with according to law.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.