173 Conn. 303 | Conn. | 1977
This appeal arises from the following circumstances: The plaintiff town brought an action in the Superior Court in Fairfield County alleging, in brief, that the defendant owned and operated the Igor Sikorsky Memorial Airport situated within the plaintiff town, that the defendant had recently acquired additional real estate in the immediate vicinity of the airport for the purpose
The defendant pleaded in abatement that the Superior Court had “no jurisdiction over the above action since jurisdiction over the matters referred to in this complaint is lodged exclusively in the United States of America.” The defendant asserted four reasons why the court had no jurisdiction. The first was that the defendant had purchased the additional land for clear and transition zones to protect the approach and departure of aircraft on the existing runways, in accordance with a grant agreement between it and the federal aviation administration (hereinafter referred to as FA A). The second was that under the provisions of the Federal Aviation Act of 1958 (49 U.S.C. §§ 1301— 1542) the federal government possesses and exercises complete and exclusive national sovereignty of the air space of the United States, which includes air space needed to ensure safety in the takeoff and landing of aircraft. The third was that insofar as § 13b-43 purports to regulate or prohibit the defendant’s acquisition of clear and transition zones it is
The plaintiff pleaded a general denial to the allegations of the plea in abatement. After a hearing, the court sustained the plea and the present appeal was taken by the plaintiff from the judgment sustaining the plea.
The basic ratio decidendi of the court appears from its finding. It found that clear and transition zones are part of navigable air space because these zones are necessary to protect the approach and departure patterns of aircraft at airports, and that the federal government possesses complete and exclusive sovereignty over navigable air space, as provided by § 1108 (a) of the Federal Aviation Act of 1958. 49 U.S.C. §1508 (a). It then concluded that the regulation of navigable air space is within the exclusive jurisdiction of the United States government by virtue of the Federal Aviation Act of 1958, that a determination of what constitutes an adequate interest in land for the establishment of clear and transition zones lies solely within the jurisdiction of the United States government acting through the FA A, and that the Superior Court is without jurisdiction to grant the plaintiff’s prayer for relief because that prayer seeks to impose limitations and restraints upon access to navigable air
The plaintiff’s principal assignment of error goes directly to a fundamental issue of federalism, as it pertains to the relationship between state courts and federal courts and state courts and federal law. The constitution of the United States, article III, § 1, states in part: “The judicial Power of the United States, shall be vested in one supreme Court and in such inferior Courts as the Congress may from time to time ordain and establish.” In Federalist Paper No. 82, Alexander Hamilton commented on this provision: “This might either be construed to signify, that the supreme and subordinate courts of the union should alone have the power of deciding those causes, to which their authority is to extend; or simply to denote, that the organs of the national judiciary should be one supreme court, and as many subordinate courts, as congress should think proper to appoint; in other words, that the United States should exercise the judicial power with which they are to be invested, through one supreme tribunal, and a certain number of inferior ones, to be instituted by them. The first excludes, the last admits, the concurrent jurisdiction of the state tribunals: and as the first would amount to an alienation of state power by implication, the last appears to me the most defensible construction. . . . When . . . we consider the state governments and the national governments, as they truly are, in the light of kindred systems, and as parts of one whole, the infer-
Hamilton’s view of state court jurisdiction has prevailed and has been observed since the establishment of the nation’s constitutional government. An eminent constitutional authority even before his appointment to the United States Supreme Court, Mr. Justice Felix Frankfurter wrote, concurring, in Brown v. Gerdes, 321 U.S. 178, 188, 64 S. Ct. 487, 88 L. Ed. 659: “Since 1789, rights derived from federal law could be enforced in state courts unless Congress confined their enforcement to the federal courts.” Enforcement of rights is not necessarily consonant with application of law but the mandate of state courts to enforce rights emphasizes their judicial function in a federal system and their jurisdiction and responsibility to apply federal law unless such jurisdiction is expressly prohibited.
Over one hundred years ago, in Claflin v. Houseman, 93 U.S. 130, 136, 23 L. Ed. 833, Mr. Justice Joseph P. Bradley discussed the precise question, expressly approving the analysis propounded by Hamilton in the Federalist Papers. He wrote: “The general question, whether State courts can exercise concurrent jurisdiction with the Federal courts in cases arising under the Constitution, laws, and treaties of the United States, has been elaborately discussed, both on the bench and in published treatises, — sometimes with a leaning in one direction and sometimes in the other, — but the result of these discussions has, in our judgment, been ... to affirm the jurisdiction, where it is not excluded by express provision, or by incompatibility in its exer-
As recently as its decision in Charles Dowd Box Co. v. Courtney, 368 U.S. 502, 82 S. Ct. 519, 7 L. Ed. 2d 483, the United States Supreme Court has reaffirmed the principles enunciated by Hamilton in the Federalist Papers and approved in Claflin v. Houseman, supra, and Robb v. Connolly, supra. Speaking through Mr. Justice Potter Stewart, the court stated (p. 507): “We start with the premise that nothing in the concept of our federal system prevents state courts from enforcing rights created by federal law. Concurrent jurisdiction has been a common phenomenon in our judicial history, and exclusive federal court jurisdiction over cases arising under federal law has been the exception
In this case, it appears that counsel and the trial court overlooked these basic principles of federalism. The court has mistaken the supremacy and exclusive sovereignty of federal law with exclusive federal court jurisdiction. It has construed the existence of federal law in the present case to mean that not only is federal law wholly dispositive of the issues presented but that only a federal court can apply that law and, accordingly, being a state court, it did not have jurisdiction to reach the merits of the case.
Though federal law is supreme, we have neither been referred to nor find any exclusive grant to the federal courts of jurisdiction over the subject matter of the present action. Therefore, the trial court erroneously concluded that the Superior Court lacks jurisdiction. Although it is true that where the supremacy of federal law exists it requires that state courts apply that law, the mere fact of such supremacy does not oust a state court from jurisdiction. See Hart & Wechsler, The Federal Courts and the Federal System (2d Ed.), c. 4, § 2.
There is error, the judgment is set aside and the case is remanded with direction to overrule the plea in abatement and then to proceed according to law.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.