244 A.2d 57 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1968
This is a petition by the selectmen of the town of Woodbridge to the Superior Court for the appointment of a committee to assess the benefits and damages accruing by reason of the town of Woodbridge, acting by its selectmen, taking land in the "layout, opening and alteration" of Woodfield Road, an existing public highway in the town. The board of selectmen, acting under General Statutes §
In argument upon the demurrer, counsel were not in dispute on the fact that the highway was being widened by the acquisition. The essence of the demurrer is that §
In 1963, the legislature undertook a comprehensive revision of the highway laws. Public Acts 1963, Nos. 226, 570 (No. 570 amended No. 226 §§ 61 and 62, now General Statutes §§
Ordinarily, the authority to condemn is to be strictly construed in favor of the owner and against the condemnor, and such authority must be strictly *471
pursued. The statute, however, should be enforced in such a way as to effectuate the purpose for which it is enacted. West Hartford v. Talcott,
The parties have not called to the attention of the court any preceding legislative history relevant to the legislative intention of the pertinent statutes connected with the instant question. A consideration of the express language of the three sections mentioned above, in the light of chapter 238 of the General Statutes (Highway Construction and Maintenance), discloses a clear legislative intention to grant a more limited authority to the selectmen of a town in condemning land for highway purposes than in the parallel situation involving the state highway commissioner. If the legislature had intended to grant power to the selectmen in §
The "laying out" of a highway has been construed to embrace all the measures for the creation or establishment of the way. Wolcott v. Pond,
A legislative intent to limit the power of selectmen to take land for highway purposes may be found also in a comparison of §§
A further legislative limitation of the power of selectmen is found in §
The fact that §
The conclusion of the court is that §
In accordance with the foregoing, the demurrer is sustained on the second ground thereof. This view makes unnecessary a determination of its first ground.