DocketNumber: No. 438659
Judges: BLUE, JUDGE OF THE SUPERIOR COURT.
Filed Date: 10/20/2000
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/17/2021
Some of the facts underlying the present case have been found by Satter, J. in a recent administrative appeal. Hultman v. State, No. 422879 (N.H.J.D. June 21, 2000). These facts are corroborated by independent evidence submitted by the defendant in this case. Additional facts, not before Satter, J. have also been submitted to this Court. From 1993 to 1995, Countryside Manor, Inc. was a long-term care facility in Bristol. Dorothy Huitman was its president, and Barry Hultman was its CT Page 12792 administrator. The Hultmans submitted cost reports to the Department of Social Services (DSS) to enable DSS to determine their rate of Medicaid reimbursement. Countryside's accountant subsequently informed DSS of several concerns regarding the cost reports.
On April 4, 1997, DSS issued a notice of regulatory violations and proposed sanctions to the Hultmans. On April 7, 1997, Attorney General Richard Blumenthal, through the Attorney General's office, issued a "News Release" that is the cynosure of this case. The News Release states in relevant part as follows:
Attorney General Richard Blumenthal and Department of Social Services Deputy Commissioner Michael P. Starkowski today charged a mother and son who operated a Bristol nursing home with cheating the state out of more than $1 million in Medicaid reimbursements. They allegedly used the money to help build their state-of-the-art, luxury home in Avon and for other personal expenses.
Dorothy Hultman and Barry Hultman of Avon are accused of billing the state for approximately $1.15 million in Medicaid reimbursements that they allegedly used for personal benefit — including $551,853 in salaries for people who built their home and payments to relatives and others who spent little or no time working at the Countryside Manor nursing home in Bristol.
"Our audit showed that the Hultmans pocketed money meant for medical care — looting programs designed to help our most vulnerable citizens," Blumenthal said. "Their luxury home in Avon was literally built on the backs of taxpayers and their self-dealing deprived people in real need of aid. This case is one of the most reprehensible and outrageous Medicaid frauds we have seen. We want the money back and we want to shut these people out of the Medicaid program."
The News Release was subsequently posted on the Attorney General's internet web site.
On or about December 15, 1998, Blumenthal stated to a reporter for the Hartford Courant that the Hultmans were guilty of the most "egregious" and "blatant" abuse of Medicaid funds he had ever seen. CT Page 12793
Following a hearing before a hearing officer, DSS ordered the Hultmans to reimburse it for overpayments set forth in the notice of violations and suspended them from the Medicaid program. The Hultmans filed a timely appeal to the Superior Court. On June 21, 2000, Satter, J. dismissed the appeal. Huitman v. State, supra. Satter, J. specifically found that the various statements of the Attorney General quoted above were insufficient to establish bias on the part of the hearing officer. Id. at 12.
On May 8, 2000, the Hultmans commenced the present case by service of process. Barry and Dorothy Hultman are the plaintiffs; Richard Blumenthal is the sole defendant. The complaint does not state whether Blumenthal is being sued in his official or personal capacity. The summons, however, expressly describes Blumenthal as "Attorney General" and gives his address as "55 Elm St., Hartford, CT 06106." The plaintiffs' principal brief refers to the defendant as "the chief lawyer of the State of Connecticut." The plaintiffs' supplemental brief repeatedly refers to the defendant as "Attorney General Richard Blumenthal," "Attorney General Blumenthal," and "The Attorney General."
The plaintiffs' complaint is in four counts. The first count alleges that Blumenthal's publication of the News Release on the Attorney General's internet web site was defamatory as to Barry Hultman. The second count makes the same claim with respect to Dorothy Hultman. The third count alleges that Blumenthal's statement to the Hartford Courant reporter was defamatory as to Barry Hultman. The fourth count makes the same claim with respect to Dorothy Hultman.
On June 16, 2000, Blumenthal filed the motion to dismiss now before the Court. The motion contends that the Court lacks jurisdiction over the plaintiffs' claims. The motion was heard on October 16, 2000.
Our Supreme Court has recently explained the relationship between the common law doctrine of sovereign immunity and the statutory immunity provided by Conn. Gen. Stat. §
This inquiry here is more difficult than it should be because the complaint fails to state the capacity in which Blumenthal is being sued. CT Page 12794 Under Connecticut law, however, the identities of the parties are determined by their description in the summons. Conn. Gen. Stat. §
"[A] suit against a state official in his or her official capacity is not a suit against the official but rather is a suit against the official's office. . . . As such, it is no different from a suit against the State itself." Will v. Michigan Dept. of State Police,
There can be no question that the first two Spring criteria are satisfied here. Blumenthal is a state official, and the suit plainly concerns a matter in which Blumenthal represents the State. The applicability of the fourth criterion is reasonably clear as well. The judgment sought, though nominally against Blumenthal, would operate to control the activities of the State. The substantive legal questions presented concern the material that the Attorney General can post on his official web site and the content of the statements he can give to journalists about a pending case. The resolution of these questions will necessarily control the activities of the State. The only question that is even arguably close is the third criterion: is the State the real party against which relief is sought? Nominally, of course, relief is sought against Blumenthal, but that is not dispositive of the issue. Blumenthal is represented by an Assistant Attorney General, and there can be little question that any judgment against him would ultimately be paid by the State. The plaintiffs contend that Blumenthal acted ultra vires in doing what he did, but for reasons that will be explored shortly, that CT Page 12795 argument cannot be successfully maintained. "[M]odern cases make clear that a state officer may be said to act ultra vires only when he acts without any authority whatever." Pennhurst State School Hospital v.Halderman,
Because Blumenthal has been sued in his official capacity, the case is controlled by the doctrine of sovereign immunity. "[T]he doctrine of sovereign immunity implicates subject matter jurisdiction and is therefore a basis for granting a motion to dismiss." Amore v. Frankel,
The inquiry here is thus whether in making the statements at issue here Blumenthal acted sufficiently outside the normal scope of his statutory authority to invoke the doctrine of sovereign immunity. This inquiry necessarily begins with Conn. Gen: Stat. §
Conn. Gen. Stat. §
The provenance of this authority dates to Spalding v. Vilas,
In the decades following Spalding, the scope and frequency of "official communications" made by the heads of Executive Departments increased significantly. By 1940, Vinson, J. (later Chief Justice Vinson) could say that, "The practice of cabinet officers to issue public statements in respect to the activity of their departments is too well known to require comment. Indeed, such announcements serve a useful if not essential role in the functioning of the democratic processes of government." Glass v.Ickes,
The Spalding line of cases has been applied to Attorneys General at least since Matson v. Margiotti,
CT Page 12797 Disturbing as the factual situation in Matson was, the analysis of the case is consistent with that of Spalding and Barr. Matson's holding that an Attorney General's press releases are within the scope of his duties remains the accepted law on the subject. Press releases continue to be considered "within the outer perimeter of the prosecutor's authority and discretion." Blake v. Rupe,
The plaintiffs principally rely on Rule 3.6 of the Rules of Professional Conduct. Rule 3.6(a) provides that, "A lawyer shall not make an extrajudicial statement that a reasonable person would expect to be disseminated by means of public communication if the lawyer knows or reasonably should know that it will have a substantial likelihood of materially prejudicing an adjudicative proceeding." Blumenthal, an attorney, is bound by Rule 3.6. The administrative matter about which he commented was, moreover, a form of "adjudicative proceeding." But the context of the comments at issue here is not the factual context that Rule 3.6 was designed to address. The limitations of Rule 3.6 "are aimed at two principal evils: (1) comments that are likely to influence the actual outcome of the trial, and (2) comments that are likely to prejudice the jury venire." Gentile v. State Bar,
In any event, this is not a case in which a professional grievance has been filed against the defendant. The plaintiffs argument here is not that Blumenthal should be disciplined for his comments but that Rule 3.6 limits the power of the Attorney General's office. This argument is unpersuasive. Rule 3.6 does not purport to limit the power of any public officer. The rule instead visits certain professional consequences on any attorney — public official or not — who violates it. But because the evidence does not support the proposition that the rule was violated here, this argument need not be further discussed.
For the reasons discussed above, the doctrine of sovereign immunity applies to the claim against the defendant in his official capacity. For reasons also discussed above, it does not appear that a claim has been brought against the defendant in his personal capacity. To the extent that a personal capacity claim exists, however, the plaintiffs fare no CT Page 12798 better. Shay v. Rossi, supra, explains that, in cases involving both official capacity and personal capacity claims, the question of statutory immunity for the personal capacity claim is to be reached only "if sovereign immunity does not apply to the claim against [the official] in [his] official capacity."
The motion to dismiss is granted
Jon C. Blue Judge of the Superior Court