The plaintiffs appealed to the Superior Court from the assessment of damages for the taking of a portion of their property for highway purposes. General Statutes § 13a-76. After a hearing, the referee, to whom the case was referred, filed his report, finding that the value of the entire property before the taking was $30,000, that the value of the portion remaining after the taking was $5600 and that the plaintiffs therefore sustained damages of $24,400. After the report had been filed, counsel other than the one who had represented the plaintiffs at the hearing filed a motion to
As stated in their brief, “[t]he plaintiffs’ basic argument is that an inadequate presentation of their case was made to the State Referee with respect to the value of the property before taking and the value of the property after the taking, particularly in view of the fact that the entire property was previously non-conforming under the Greenwich zoning regulations before the taking and obviously remained non-conforming under the regulations after the taking.”
The assignment of error based on the refusal of the court to order the case opened so that the plaintiffs might offer further evidence is without merit. “The granting or denial of such a motion rests in the sound discretion of the trial court, reviewable only in the case of abuse, and the situation presented is like that where a petition is made for a new trial for newly-discovered evidence under § 5701 [now § 52-270] of the General Statutes, and the same conditions are applicable. See
Meriden
The remaining assignments of error relate to the decision of the court overruling the plaintiffs’ objections to the acceptance of the referee’s report and the rendering of judgment thereon after the referee denied their motion to correct the report. In essence this is an attack on the finding of the referee as made “without evidence or without complete evidence” necessary to determine the value of the remaining property taking into consideration the zoning regulations. The appendices to the
There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
Proper procedure dictates that in the usual ease a motion to open which is designed to secure the addition of further facts to the referee’s report should be filed with the court, which should then return the file to the referee for consideration of the motion. See Practice Book § 358. The plaintiffs, however, raised no objection to the procedure which the court followed in the present ease in itself deciding the merits of the motion without referring it to the referee for consideration.
