303 A.2d 117 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1973
This is an appeal from a conviction of operating a motor vehicle on a public highway in the city of Bristol on February 7, 1971, in violation of §
The state offered evidence and claimed that it had proven that the defendant was observed by Officer Richard Ross of the Bristol police department operating a motor vehicle on the public highways of Bristol on the day in question, that the commissioner of motor vehicles of the state of Connecticut had sent, by certified mail, on December 22, 1970, a notification of suspension to the defendant at his last known address (131 French Street, Bristol, Connecticut), that on January 11, 1971, the letter was returned to the motor vehicle department with the post office notation "Unclaimed," and that his license and right to operate a motor vehicle remained under suspension from January 6, 1971, through the date of his arrest, February 7, 1971.
It was the contention of the defendant that, prior to his being notified by mail of his suspension for failure to post a $300 bond for an accident which occurred on June 4, 1970, when a car backed out of a driveway and struck his vehicle, which was on the highway, he never had a hearing at the motor vehicle department in connection with responsibility for the aforesaid accident and that he never received notice of his suspension until after the effective date of suspension, January 6, 1971. The principal argument of the defendant, both throughout the trial and on appeal in this court, has been that the United States Supreme Court decision in Bell v. Burson,
Counsel for the state has argued that the criminal trial before the Circuit Court was the improper forum to consider the examination of the suspension and that the defendant should have appealed the license suspension in the department of motor vehicles and to the courts if administrative relief *558 was denied. The record discloses that the criminal trial was delayed several months to permit such an approach but the defendant chose rather to raise the issue of the constitutionality of the suspension in the criminal proceeding. We need not reach the issue of forum since we decide the appeal on other grounds.
The threshold question is the applicability of the United States Supreme Court decision in Bell v.Burson, supra, to the instant proceeding. In that case, a unanimous court considered Georgia's financial responsibility act, essentially identical to that of Connecticut. It held that the act, which provides for the suspension of licenses of uninsured drivers and which excludes any consideration of fault at a presuspension hearing, is violative of procedural due process. The court stated that the act must provide a procedure for determining the question whether there is a reasonable possibility of a judgment being rendered against the uninsured driver as a result of the accident. The court held that licenses are not to be taken away without procedural due process as required by the fourteenth amendment. See Goldberg v. Kelly,
Bell v. Burson, supra, was argued before the court on March 23, 1971, and decided on May 24, 1971. The arrest in the instant case took place on February 1, 1971, and we are faced with the initial question of the retrospective effect of the holding inBell v. Burson to the facts in this case. Where the Supreme Court of the United States has not decided whether to give retrospective effect to one of its decisions, we must be guided by the law of this state as enunciated by the Supreme Court of Connecticut. Our Supreme Court has held that a decision of the court would apply only prospectively but would include any case where the final judgment had not yet been entered. State v. Brown,
Prior to Bell v. Burson, supra, the Connecticut financial responsibility statute, with its automatic suspension provision,1 had been held constitutional *560
by the Connecticut Supreme Court, the United States District Court and the United States Court of Appeals. Dempsey v. Tynan,
In the present appeal the defendant has made five assignments of error, the import of most of which are directed to the applicability of the ruling in Bell v. Burson,
The third assignment of error was based on the assertion that the state failed to produce proof *561
beyond a reasonable doubt that the license of the defendant was under suspension and that proper notice had been sent to the defendant. A review of the record discloses facts sufficient, if believed, to prove the statutory elements of driving while license is under suspension in violation of §
There was no burden on the state to prove that the defendant had actual notice; constructive notice was sufficient under the statute. State v. Baltromitis, 5 Conn. Cir. Ct. 72.
There is no error.
In this opinion MISSAL and SPONZO, JS., concurred.