This case was brought to the City Court of Hartford, and from the judgment *Page 429 there rendered an appeal was taken to the Superior Court, where a motion to erase the case from the docket was denied. The sole question on the appeal to this court from the judgment of the Superior Court is whether that court erred in refusing to erase the case from the docket.
Section 10 of an Act concerning the City Court of Hartford (14 Special Laws, p. 602) provides that any party aggrieved by a final judgment or decree of that court in any cause in which the matter in demand exceeds $500, may appeal therefrom to the Superior Court. This provision was in force when the present action was commenced. During its pendency and before judgment in the City Court, said § 10 was repealed (16 Special Laws, p. 500), as follows: "Section 1. Section ten of an act concerning the City Court of the city of Hartford, approved April 17, 1905, being section two hundred and three of the compiled charter of the city of Hartford, is hereby repealed. Sec. 2. This act shall take effect from its passage."
Before the passage of this Act a litigant was thus able to bring his action in these cases in the City Court and have a trial and, if unsuccessful, appeal to the Superior Court and there have another trial on the facts, as was done in this case. The double trial upon issues of fact and law was unduly burdensome to litigants and wasteful to the public. The manifest intent of the repealing Act was to take from the Superior Court this appellate jurisdiction. The Superior Court refused to grant the motion to erase, undoubtedly because it was of opinion the repealing statute did not act retrospectively as well as prospectively, and apply to pending cases. "The presumption is that statutes are intended to operate prospectively. They should never be construed as having a retrospective effect unless their terms show clearly and unmistakably a legislative intention *Page 430 they should so operate." Humphrey v. Gerard,83 Conn. 346, 352, 77 A. 65; Smith v. Lyon, 44 Conn. 175,178.
The majority opinion would seem to hold that this general presumption does not hold in respect to statutes relating to procedure and remedy, and that such statutes apply to pending cases and cases to be brought, alike. Some support is found for this contention in Hine v.Belden, 27 Conn. 384. But the rule adopted in Perkins v. Perkins, 7 Conn. 558, 563, Thames Mfg. Co. v.Lathrop, 7 Conn. 550, and Skinner v. Watson, 35 Conn. 124, was the rule of construction of this jurisdiction before the passage of General Statutes, § 1. In Skinner v. Watson we considered the effect upon a pending case of an Act changing the basis of costs awarded, and held that the Act did not apply. We there said (p. 126): "It seems therefore to be the settled law of this State, that a statute is not to be so construed as to have a retroactive effect, unless it appears that such was the manifest intention of the legislature. We are not satisfied that the legislature intended that the statute now before us should have such an effect. . . . Had it been intended that the proviso should embrace appeals then pending, such an intention could easily have been expressed, and it is reasonable to presume that the legislature would have clearly expressed it. The fact that there is nothing in the language of the act to indicate such an intention, is strong evidence that it did not exist." We thus made the determinative test the legislative intent: unless the Act by its terms or its necessary implications indicated an intention that the Act should have a retroactive effect, we held it inapplicable to the past.
We think the rule of construction adopted in General Statutes, § 1: "The passage or repeal of an act shall not affect any action then pending," was declaratory of *Page 431 our existing law. But whatever the law may have been before the passage of this Act, this enactment is so precise and unambiguous as to admit of no doubt as to its meaning. General Statutes, § 1, did not limit the power of the legislature to provide that an Act should apply to pending cases. It did limit the power of the court to construe any Act as according such power unless the legislative intent to have the Act apply to pending cases was clear. Lew v. Bray, 81 Conn. 213,217, 70 A. 628. The last expression of the legislative will must control the earlier. Rowen v. New York,N.H. H.R. Co., 59 Conn. 364, 367, 21 A. 1073, presented this case: The defendants had, under the law existing when the action was begun, a right to have the hearing in damages to the court upon taking a certain course. A statute passed pending the action, provided that this hearing should be to the jury unless defendant gave a certain notice, the time for which, as to this case, had expired. The question at issue was whether the Act affected the pending case. The court, by SEYMOUR, J., said: "Is the statute thus retroactive? There is no provision in the Act itself that it shall affect pending suits. As a rule of construction section one of the General Statutes declares that the passage or repeal of an Act shall not affect any action then pending. . . . Such an intention, if existing, should not be left doubtful. In view of the rule of construction expressly imposed by the statute, the language should necessarily carry an intention to act upon pending suits, or pending suits should in terms be made subject to it." In State v. New York, N. H. H.R. Co.,71 Conn. 43, 48, 40 A. 925, mandamus was brought to require defendant to build a bridge across its tracks; while the action was pending an Act was passed providing that no such structure should be built without the approval of the railroad commissioners, who were to *Page 432 determine the plan and manner of its building, and the necessity for it. We held: "The language of the Act does not expressly make it applicable to cases pending in court, much less to cases already adjudicated; and in the absence of express words or necessary implication it cannot be so construed." In Peltier v. Bradley, Dann Carrington Co., 67 Conn. 42, 48, 34 A. 712, the plaintiff filed exceptions to the finding, and the evidence was made a part of the record under the Act of 1893. We held, BALDWIN, J.: "This Act was repealed in 1895, but by General Statutes, § 1, such repeal did not affect actions then pending, of which the present suit was one." In Lew v. Bray, 81 Conn. 213, 217,70 A. 628, we held that the legislature had the power to enact laws relating to procedure and affecting pending cases by changing the costs to be recovered, and that it could do so "where the legislative intent is clear." InAtwood v. Buckingham, 78 Conn. 423, 62 A. 616, we held the legislative intent to be clear to apply an Act to the pending case. Ferguson v. Stamford, 60 Conn. 433,443, 22 A. 782.
In our construction of General Statutes, § 1, we have never varied in our application of this rule of construction, except in the case of Hubbard v. New York, N. H. H.R. Co., 70 Conn. 563, 564, 40 A. 533. This case follows the rule adopted in Hine v. Belden, 27 Conn. 384, and fails to follow the construction given to § 1 in Rowen v. New York, N. H. H.R. Co., 59 Conn. 384,21 A. 1073, and is at variance with the construction invariably thereafter adopted. It makes no difference whether the Act relates to procedure or not. Section 1 applies to all Acts, of every kind, and we do not have one rule for determining the legislative intent in an Act relating to procedure, and another rule for all other kinds of Acts. There is nothing in the language of the Act, and nothing to be implied, that points *Page 433 to the past. The circumstance that the legislature esteemed the Act a beneficial one and the change in the remedy provided desirable, does not tend to indicate that it intended the Act to have a retrospective effect. Nor is its provision that it shall take effect from its passage at all persuasive of the legislative intent that it should apply to pending cases. Such a provision is not uncommon in legislative enactments, and it has never been regarded as furnishing indication of an intent that the Act should apply to pending cases. State v.New York, N. H. H.R. Co., 71 Conn. 43, 48,40 A. 925, is an example of the construction of an Act taking effect from its passage. If this Act were held to apply to all pending cases, we should have this anomalous situation: A case tried in the City Court of Hartford is on appeal tried in the Superior Court, and, while pending on appeal to the Supreme Court, is by the passage of the Act ended, since the appeal from the City Court vacated its judgment. So too, a case pending on appeal to the Superior Court on the passage of the Act is ended. An appeal allowed according to law, and duly taken, undoubtedly annuls the judgment of the court. Calhoun v. Terry Porter Co., 21 Conn. 526,531. The rights of litigants are thus destroyed by the legislative Act. No other result is possible, unless it be held that the cause pending in the City Court cannot be appealed to the Superior Court because affected by the Act, while the cause pending in the Superior Court already appealed is not affected by the Act. No legal or logical reason can be suggested why we should hold that it was the legislative intent that the Act should apply to cases pending in one court and not the other. To hold that the language of § 1 of the General Statutes, "The passage or repeal of an Act shall not affect any action then pending," applies to matters of substantive law affecting pending cases *Page 434 and not to matters of adjective law, is to import into the statute something the legislature did not place there, and to ignore a provision, the terms and history of which, from its first appearance in our statute law, show the legislature intended should apply to all matters relating to pending cases, whether of substantive law or matters of procedure.
The majority opinion is clearly contrary to our repeated decisions, and it assigns no adequate reason for overruling the settled law and refusing to give effect to the plain terms of the statute. In my judgment the trial court did not err in its denial of the motion to erase.