DocketNumber: No. CV 94-0361071
Citation Numbers: 1997 Conn. Super. Ct. 530-U, 18 Conn. L. Rptr. 670
Judges: HODGSON, J.
Filed Date: 1/17/1997
Status: Non-Precedential
Modified Date: 4/17/2021
The defendant claims that the motion to vacate was improperly filed in the same case file as the plaintiff's application to compel the arbitration and that the filing of the motion to vacate is therefore ineffective.
Connecticut General Statutes §
It is undisputed that the application to vacate the arbitration award was filed within thirty days of notice of the award, as required by C.G.S. §
Section 525 of the Practice Book states that in proceedings brought to vacate an arbitration award under C.G.S. §
The movant has identified no provision of law that required the plaintiff to commence a new proceeding rather than filing her application in the existing case file. That file, which was opened when the plaintiff filed an application to compel arbitration, was still an accessible court file when the application to vacate was filed, and the clerk of the court accepted the application for filing in that existing file. Other CT Page 530-W than P.B. § 325, which requires the court to issue an order scheduling a hearing, no statute or practice rule specifies the procedure for filing an application to vacate or requires that a new court file be opened.
The Appellate Court has, moreover, indicated that even the limited procedures indicated in P.B. § 525 are merely directory, not mandatory. In Shelby Mutual Insurance Co. v.Evans,
The purposes of a citation and order to show cause are ordinarily to obtain personal jurisdiction over and give proper notice to a party. Where the parties are already in court regarding the arbitration proceeding, there is no vital need for a citation and order to show cause.
The Appellate Court noted that the provisions of P.B. § 525 are "unaccompanied by negative words," indicating that a party is not precluded from proceeding in another way that fulfills the goals of C.G.S. § 420 et seq. of prompt filing, notice and adjudication.
The Connecticut Supreme Court has suggested that courts should not needlessly construe procedural provisions in a way that precludes substantive adjudication. See, e.g., ConceptCT Page 530-XAssociates, Ltd. v. Board of Tax Review,
The objection of the defendant is overruled. The substance of the application shall be heard in Courtroom 4D, 235 Church Street, New Haven, on January 27, 1997.
Hodgson, J.