DocketNumber: No. CV96 0382337S
Citation Numbers: 1996 Conn. Super. Ct. 2738, 16 Conn. L. Rptr. 366
Judges: BOOTH, JUDGE.
Filed Date: 3/22/1996
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 7/5/2016
Acting pursuant to §
Section
The parties appear to agree that the return date in the present case was January 16, 1996. The sheriff's return makes it clear that the registrar of voters was served on January 15, 1996.
In instituting the present action the petitioners sought two distinct remedies. They sought a review of their erasure pursuant to §
On January 16, 1996, Attorney Hugh Keefe appeared for the defendant registrar of voters. On January 24, 1996, Attorney Keefe filed a motion to dismiss the action claiming subject matter and/or personal jurisdictional defect.
At the hearing on the temporary injunction, this court denied the registrar's motion to dismiss on jurisdictional grounds, and issued the temporary injunction to preserve the status quo. The denial was specifically made without prejudice to the right of the registrar to renew the motion to dismiss at the time of the hearing on the permanent injunction.
The petitioners fail to distinguish between their application for a temporary injunction, which was served in a timely manner in accordance with Judge Thompson's order, and their petition under §
The decision on erasure was made or at least mailed on January 5th. Accordingly, an appeal pursuant to §
The registrar, citing cases such as Simko v. Zoning Board ofAppeals,
"Our precedents make it abundantly clear that, except in the special circumstances of administrative appeals, defects in process do not derive a court of subject matter jurisdiction."
This action is not an administrative appeal. The Supreme Court in considering § 561d, 1995 Cumulative Supplement [Erasure for party disaffiliation, the predecessor to this section] specifically held:
"This section provides that any elector who is aggrieved by the removal . . . may, within ten days after the removal," bring a petition . . . ."
Although denominated an appeal in the title of this section, the proceeding authorized is not in reality an appeal from an administrative office in the ordinary sense." Kiernan v. Borst,
144 Conn. 1 ,4 ,5 (1956).
The petitioners further rely on In Re Gilhuly,
The petitioners then proceed to the uncontested proposition that a personal jurisdictional defect may be waived by a defendant. They cite In Re: Baby Girl B.,
"a party may waive its objection to a trial court's erroneous exercise of personal jurisdiction if that party generally appears in the case and actively prosecutes the action or contests the issues."
The petitioners assert that the defendant appeared before the court on the date designated on the show cause order, that the defendant asked for and received a continuance, the defendant submitted to the court's entrance of a temporary injunction and that the defendant should not now be provided an opportunity to dismiss for lack of personal jurisdiction after receiving "beneficial orders."
The defendant appeared by counsel on January 16th, requested a continuance at the special proceedings list of January 22nd, filed its motion to dismiss on January 24th, and argued it at the hearing on the temporary injunction.
The court finds that the defendant did no more than comply; with the show cause order issued by the court and appear at a mandatory hearing on a temporary injunction. In Re: Baby Girl B. is a case involving a motion to reopen a judgment of termination of parental rights and therefore cannot be fully compared to the institution of a new action in which a motion to dismiss is filed within the time allowed by the Practice Book. Moreover the court in Baby Girl B. found that the complaining party had waived its objection to personal jurisdiction because the party had, without reserving objection, filed a "pervasive amendment to its original petition in the case and had participated in extensive evidentiary hearings pursuant to that amended petition." The court held that the active and ongoing participation in the case by the objecting party prevented it from later raising an objection to personal jurisdiction. The actions of the defendant in the instant case fall far short of the participation by the defendant in In Re: Baby Girl B.
It is the holding of the court that the special statutory procedure set forth in §
However the court further finds that there is an absence of CT Page 2742 personal jurisdiction because of the failure to serve in a timely manner. In Castro v. Viera,
Accordingly, the petition for restoration of names onto the democratic party enrollment list is dismissed for lack of personal jurisdiction. The temporary injunction previously issued by this court in aid thereof is vacated.